“Kindle 2 Tips & User’s Guide”…02.18.09

18 02 2009

bezo

(photo: © Copyright 2009, Charleston City Paper )

I found the following useful information on the Kindle 2, Kindle 2.0 Books Reader, Amazon Kindle 2 Review site.  I just wish I had the cash to get a Kindle 2.  :-(  I would trade in my XBox 360 and gaming, etc… for one. 

“Waiting for the 24th Feb Kindle 2 release date, and suddenly realized that the Kindle 2 User Guide must have some interesting details (thanks to Kindle Chronicles for the tip). And I do find it rather disconcerting that the Kindle 2 User Guide is a PDF -

Basic Kindle 2 Tips

  1. To turn the Wireless On/Off - Press the Menu button, then use the 5 way controller up to underline ‘Turn Wireless On/Off” and then press the 5-way button to select.  
  2. To Change Text Size on Kindle 2.0 – Press the Text Key (Aa key), move the 5 way controller to choose the size you prefer, and then press the 5-way to select. 
  3. To Use Read To Me (Text to Speech) – Press the Text Key (Aa key), move the 5 way controller down to the Text To Speech row, and then select 5-way to start Text To Speech. You can also use the Aa Key and then 5-way to change the speech rate and the speaking voice.   
  4. Look Up the Dictionary – use the 5-way controller to move the cursor in front of the word you want defined. A definition appears at the bottom of the Kindle 2’s Screen. Press the Return key on the keyboard to look up the full definition.
  5. View your Content - Press the Home button on the Kindle 2.
  6. Read Newspapers and magazines – Pressing the 5-way controller’s left and right buttons, you can move to the next and previous articles.  Also, pushing the 5-way bring up the periodical’s section list.”

The post goes on to list more specific Kindle 2 tips.





Getting a Library Job in a Recession Requires More Than Social Media…02.18.09

18 02 2009

This is an interesting, relevant, and useful tidbit found at the Knowledge Workers blog:

“You can Twitter all you like. Poke half the world on Facebook. And polish your Linkedin profile until all those buttons shine. But according to Jason Falls, social media activity on its own isn’t going to find you a new job.

He says if you’re seriously looking for employment, you need to get out and meet people or, at least, get on the phone.

two things make his point of view particularly valuable. First, he offers his own personal story as evidence. Second, Falls is a director of social media and his view was published on his Social Media Explorer web site.

It would be worthwhile to read Why Social Media Will Not Get You A Job in a Recession whether or not you are currently looking for a new position.

Jason starts out by saying, “I love the optimism springing forth from the social media evangelists. It’s almost like because we have social media, none of us ‘insiders’ have to worry about tough economic times, losing our jobs or finding new ones. I’ve got news for you. Not only have social media advocates not had enough time in most organizations to illustrate the benefits of their positions, but the classically trained marketers and executives that are making hiring and firing decisions probably think the social media bible-thumpers are nuts…”





“Library Website of the Future”…02.18.09

18 02 2009

Inside Higher Education  has a lengthy article titled The Library Website of the Future  excerpted here:

“…The primary function of the contemporary academic library Web site is to connect a user to content, be it an article database, e-book or e-journal article, and to do it with minimal barriers and maximum speed and ease. Faculty and students tend to have their one or two favorites, for example, JSTOR for many faculty and Academic Search Premier for students. For those highly popular e-resources the portal may get the job done. A serious flaw needing correction is the failure of the academic library Web site to invite the user community to, in simple ways, discover the full range of resources available for their research. Bruce Springsteen laments having 57 channels and nothing to watch. Faculty and students can access from dozens to hundreds of databases with little or no idea what they are or how to find them.

So it is little surprise that faculty and students rarely use the library’s Web site to connect to content that satisfies their scholarly needs. Instead they invent their own backdoor routes to the content, but in doing so may miss related or new electronic resources made available by the library. You may argue that faculty and students forged their own paths to circumvent the library back in the print only days, but now the possibilities for and associated risks of missing important resources are astronomically greater…”





FREE Webinar to Booklist Online…02.18.09

18 02 2009

booklist

Here is a FREE webinar tour/introduction to Booklist Online (ALA book reviews) posted on the Library Professional Development blog today:

Reserve your Webinar Seat Now at:
https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/638377917
Don’t miss your chance for a guided tour. This free orientation, led by Senior Editor Keir Graff, demonstrates Booklist Online’s value as a selection, collection development, and readers’ advisory tool—for both library staff and library patrons. Reserve your seat today!   

 

Title:   An Introduction to Booklist Online
 
Date:   Wednesday, February 25, 2009
 
Time:   3:00 PM – 4:00 PM CDT




Studying Tweeter Viral “Retweets”…02.18.09

18 02 2009

twitter

Since Twitter is getting ubiquitous in many circles, finding out what makes certain “tweets” viral has many implications for libraries and other Twitter users.  There is an interesting post on Mashable! today by Dan Zarrella titled  The Science of ReTweets which is excerpted here:

“…ReTweeting is a rich source of data for this type of analysis: a larger number of ReTweets are posted every day, pertaining to nearly every imaginable topic and Twitter’s API gives us the ability to quantify and map viral behavior in a way that has never been possible before.

When I set out to answer the question of what makes certain Tweets more viral than others I found four factors that I believe have strong impacts on how far content spreads on Twitter.

1. The Original Twitterer

The most obvious factor that could be blamed for a Tweet getting ReTweeted a lot is the number of followers the user who posted it has. It makes sense, if you have 10,000 followers you’re bound to get more ReTweets than if you have 10, but the data shows your follower count has a less than expected impact….

2. The Semantic Content of Tweets

When we start to analyze the semantic content of highly-ReTweeted tweets, a few trends start to become apparent:

- Calls to action (as in: “please ReTweet”), while they might sound cheesy, work very well to get ReTweets.
- Timely content gets ReTweeted a lot.
- Freebies are popular.
- Self-reference (Tweeting about Twitter) works.
- Lists are huge.
- People like to ReTweet blog posts.

3. Timing

Another key factor I observed was the issue of timing. As one would expect there is a marked increase in the number of ReTweets that starts during EST business morning hours and that increasingly continues through the rest of the day and night. My own anecdotal evidence suggests that content that is Tweeted during the beginning of this time period gets more ReTweets than content posted at other times…

4. Retweet Cascades

The final factor is more subtle than the three above, I call it “ReTweet Cascading.” Similar toinformation cascading, as users observe others ReTweeting content, they become more likely to ReTweet it themselves. This may be due to the concept of social proof, repetition, or simply that seeing people ReTweet something forms a sort of implicit call to action.

Borrowing the concept of reproduction rates from epidemiology, I analyzed the likelihood of a tweet being ReTweeted again against the number of times it had already been ReTweeted and found a striking cascade effect. The more times content is ReTweeted the more likely it is to be further spread…”





Coming Soon–Not Leaving Home to Take Out Library Materials…02.18.09

18 02 2009

I’m surprised this future service talked about over at Shaping Libraries hasn’t taken off sooner:

“…We have all heard of home delivery but the process is becoming easier, quicker, and more libraries are doing it. On top of the traditional delivery book mobile, OCLC is partnering with Better World Books now (and hopes to get other book vendors like Amazon on board someday) to let users make an interlibrary loan request and have the book come straight to their house complete with a return envelope with paid postage…just due back in 30 days.”





Comprehensive Overview of Twitter…02.18.09

18 02 2009

I found this great overview of Twitter in the Why I’m all a Twitter post today on the The Blah, Blah, Blah Blog blog:

“…Twittering Libraries goes into detail about:





Kindle Will Survive and Flourish…02.17.09

17 02 2009

From PC World comes The Kindle: It’s Not an IPhone today from Scott McNulty of MacWorld which is excerpted here:

Ever since Amazon announced the Kindle 2, pundits and journalists have seemingly made a cottage industry out of doing two things: 1) explaining that, since it isn’t an iPhone, it will fail and 2) listing the features it needs in order for Amazon to convert those selfsame pundits to Kindle lovin’ fools.

Let’s ignore, for the moment, that those same people derided the iPhone as an expensive toy when it was first launched and focus instead on the one thing that most ‘people in the know’ are overlooking. The Kindle, as a device, is immaterial to Jeff Bezos’s stated goal of allowing people to access every book in every language in under 60 seconds. Sure, Amazon will gladly take your money for a Kindle 2 (I must admit that I pre-ordered mine while it was being announced, and I already own a first gen Kindle and a Sony Reader) but the secret to the Kindle isn’t the device itself–it’s the Kindle Store.

The Kindle Store makes it ridiculously easy to buy e-books. You push a button (thanks, one-click buying!) and around 60 seconds later there’s a book on your Kindle. Browsing Amazon.com on your laptop and see a book you want to read on your Kindle? Buy it, and the next time you turn on your Kindle the book is automatically downloaded…

Amazon knows how to sell things, whether it be physical books, tents, kitchen appliances, or e-books. I bet you (and this is where we enter the land of speculation, so strap on your seat belts) that in the not too distant future you’ll be able to buy Kindle books from Amazon on your iPhone. Better yet, you’ll be able to sync your place in a book across multiple devices, and since you’ll have your books on both a Kindle and an iPhone–no matter which device is with you at any given moment–you’ll never forget your place again. Sounds like a killer implementation to me… 

There you have it, folks. While Amazon might not sell a boatload of Kindles (and no, the Kindle will never replace your iPhone, nor was it even meant to compete with it) Amazon will make up the difference in volume…of e-book sales…

© 1998-2007, PC World Communications, Inc.





Cloud Computing Tech Tips for Libraries…02.17.09

17 02 2009

Ohio State University Libraries blog today has a good post about cloud computing titled TechTips: Cloud Computing that is excerpted here:

“I mentioned the concept of cloud computing in an earlier TechTip on Netbook computers.Network Diagram

Many library staff members are already experienced users of cloud computing – without even knowing it.  Some are using the cloud in the form ofGoogleDocs. Staff users of Facebook  take advantage of cloud, as do those that use photo sharing services such as Flickr

The important point to know about cloud computing is that represents a paradigm shift in how we think about our data and the role of our computing devices.

Most people rely entirely upon their devices (desktop or mobile) to store information and run applications. How many have panicked over misplacing a presentation disc, accidentally deleting a presentation file, copying the wrong file version onto a USB key, or simply grabbing the wrong USB key? A misplaced mobile device or a PC crash is devastating since all data and applications are lost if not aggressively backed up (and we all back up, don’t we!?).

With cloud computing, the focus shifts away from which devices can effectively store data and able to run applications and to which devices provide the easiest access to data and applications – which are stored at various places on the Internet. The iPhone has become very popular since it is in essence a cloud computing oriented device.

How libraries can use the cloud is a current topic of discussion within many library organizations and associations. At this point in the emergence of cloud computing in libraries there are many questions being asked. How can libraries use the cloud to both personalize and localize the user’s information seeking experience? Can the cloud save libraries money and resources by using computing devices more efficiently? How our users interact with the cloud, how our services may need to be modified to fit into emerging user patterns?

One thing that is certain, the way in which we think about library computing infrastructures and architectures need to change in order to effectively incorporate cloud computing…

The cloud is already out there and libraries need to start thinking about how they may need to adjust services in order to effectively adapt to how users are interacting with it.”

© 2009, The Ohio State University Libraries.





Australian Gaming and Interactive Content Initiative Relative to Libraries…02.17.09

17 02 2009

On the Bibliothekia blog today there is an interesting post entitled Government funding to support the creation of games and interactive content about Australian initiatives relative to libraries that’s worth checking out and is excerpted here:

“…In these dire economic times it was interesting to hear this morning that the Australian Government through Enterprise Connectis providing $17 million Australian dollars over 4 years to fund aCreative Industries Innovation Centre. This centre will be based at the University of Technology, Sydney, and will support ‘small and medium size enterprises (SMEs) in the creative industries sector improve their productivity and competitiveness by providing professional business advisory and development services. The Centre also builds collaboration between researchers and businesses, and assists creative businesses to access the latest technologies and market specific information.’

This is of interest to libraries because the CIIC will assist Australian creative industries in the areas of publishing, writing, games, and interactive content. For Australian libraries more LOCAL interactive content can only be a good thing, right!

Gaming and interactive content is becoming more and more important in LibraryLand no matter where you are. For example, the American Library Association (ALA) has launched a number of initiatives around gamming and interactive content. For details, check out their News about Games and Gaming blog.

Look at the following image from the Australian ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation (CCI) and see where libraries can fit in. I like the way CCI has mapped out the creative industry landscape, and from this diagram it is easy to see that libraries can fit into this space; either as part of the content industry sector, or the cultural industries sector.

The ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation or CCI is lcated at theQueensland University of Technology. Partner Universities include Swinburne,University of Wollongong, and Edith Cowan University. There is a growing amount of information and presentations available on the CCI Wiki so it is definitely worth checking out. The CCI does work in a whole lot of areas that are of interest to libraries including: broadband policy, creative commons, creative workforce 2.0, digital futures and digital liberties, they even do work on standards and metadata…”




“Library 2.1 & 10 Essentials for Any Library Website…02.17.09

17 02 2009

From Brian Matthews, the Ubiquitous Librarian:

Web Design Matters: Ten essentials for any library site

Library Journal, 2.15.09 

Looking for what’s next: Is it time to start talking about Library 2.1?(preprint)

Journal of Web Librarianship, v 3(2)





What is Information?-02.17.09

17 02 2009

Here is a good video which Virtual Dave highlighted that is worth a look:





“E-Book Revolution–Kindle And Beyond: 15 E-Reading Devices, Apps You Need to Know”…02.16.09

16 02 2009

ebookrevolution

“…While this week’s unveiling of Amazon’s Kindle 2 makes the device the hot item in e-readers, the Kindle’s hardly alone in the expanding market for e-reading devices and applications.

Channelweb.com saved you the trouble of rounding them all up by taking a long look at what’s out there.”

See their slideshow for more information.

 Copyright © 2009 United Business Media LLC





Happy President’s Day–No Work for the Lone Wolf…02.16.09

16 02 2009

presid-seal-2

Battle Hymn of the Republic” by Julia Ward Howe – poem below as published in the Atlantic Monthly in February 1862:

Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord:
He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword:
                       His truth is marching on.

I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,
They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps:
                       His day is marching on.

I have read a fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel:
“As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal;
Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with his heel,
                       Since God is marching on.”

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment-seat:
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet!
                       Our God is marching on.

In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me:
As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
                       While God is marching on.





Stress Management for Libraries and Librarians…02.14.09

14 02 2009

Here is an excerpt from a good post from the Librarian by Day about Stress Management in the Library Workplace:

“…As I was exploring I came across materials for a previous workshop -Stress Management in the Library Workplace.  There are a lot of workshops listed but since my post - Library usage will go up during a recession – management are you really prepared? is still getting a lot of hits, I thought I’d share this one specifically. You can download the PowerPoint presentation, some exercise and these handouts:

  • The ‘Bakers Dozen’ – How to Reduce Stress
  • Relieving Stress through Exercise
  • Stress Relief through Nutrition
  • Stress Relief and Sleeping Habits – 10 Tips for Better Sleep
  • Symptoms of Stress and Causes of Stress
  • Seven Quick Tips for Time Management”




“Libraries Loaning Kindles”…02.14.09

14 02 2009

The following post from the Shaping Libraries blog entitled Libraries Loaning Kindles is something that I have thought about recently as I’m sure have others. There are links for further consideration which may be helpful:

“I have been looking into the possibility of libraries using the Kindle to support circulation and Interlibrary Loan now for about 6 months. Now that Amazon has released their second version of the eReader, I thought I would share some of the things I have found on the web about libraries using it. If you know of others, by all means post in the comments.

New Kindle

Textbooks and kindle

licensing

licensing discussion private blog

more licensing

discussion on patrons purchasing direct with the Kindle and how to prevent this

new jersey library loaning kindle





Update on Cloud Computing…02.13.09

13 02 2009

A lengthy article on ComputerWorld today title Big Dogs Weigh in on Cloud: IBM and HP Show the Goods by Bernard Golden which updates us on the state of cloud computing is excerpted here:

“Serendipitously, both IBM and HP held events this week to describe their cloud computing initiatives. Their presentations offered insight into what they’re doing and provide some food for thought to IT organizations assessing what cloud computing means to their future-as well as some information that might give pause as well.

IBM announced a number of separate things as well as doing an actual demo of cloud capability. First, it’s created a Cloud Computing division that reports directly to IBM’s head-equivalent to the software, sevices, and hardware divisions…

HP‘s event was more focused on illustrating HP’s approach to cloud computing with presentations by several different groups. HP locates its cloud computing technology efforts within itsTechnology Solutions Group rather than breaking it out on its own…

So what does this mean for you, the IT practitioner?

First, the two biggest players in IT believe in cloud computing-and that means they believe that it’s important to you…Two, for you, in your everyday job, business-as-usual is going to look a lot different…Three, expect a real challenge in figuring out your cloud strategy. In talking with several of the attendees to the events, they mentioned that they got a sense the companies are struggling to present a coherent approach to cloud computing — it was a ‘work in progress.’

Overall, it’s impressive to see how big vendors are embracing cloud computing and reflects, I think, the ardent interest in the topic on the part of end users. I continue to poll everyone I talk to about cloud computing as to why end users are so interested in the topic; the range of responses are interesting but seem rooted in a dissatisfaction with the current modes and costs of enterprise IT. IT is getting more and more complex, seems to get more expensive all the time despite Moore’s Law. and seems unable to keep up with the dramatically changing global economic landscape. Something needs to change, and cloud computing seems like the candidate…” 

Copyright © 1994 – 2009 Computerworld Inc.





Libraries and the Library Profession Down Under…02.13.09

13 02 2009

From the Library Intelligencer which posted today about An investigation into the library and information services workforce in Australia: The institutional perspective–Final Report described as: 

“… survey has been undertaken by the Australian Library & Information Association (ALIA) and National and State Libraries Australasia (NSLA). The report provides a demographic, educational and employment picture of the Australian library and information profession, as well as identifying diverse issues that impact on recruitment and retention, and the training and development of library staff.

The final report can be found here. This major national study involved the participation of a wide variety of library organisations, representing the public, academic and special library sectors, ranging from the National Library of Australia to small regional libraries. The data collected was analysed from the perspectives of the different library sectors and the different geographical distribution.”

The Executive Summary begins:

“The neXus2 research project has sought to investigate the library and information services (LIS) workforce in Australia, from the institutional or employer perspective. The study builds on the neXus1 study, which collected data from individuals in the LIS workforce in order to present a snapshot of the profession in 2006, highlighting the demographics, educational background and career details of library and information professionals in Australia (Hallam, 2008). To counterbalance this individual perspective, library institutions were invited to participate in a survey to contribute further data as employers. This final report on the neXus2 project compares the findings from the different library sectors, ie academic libraries, TAFE libraries, the National and State libraries, public libraries, special libraries and school libraries…”





Copyright Section 108 Spinner Tool for Libraries and Librarians…02.13.09

13 02 2009

This is a really cool tool was brought to my attention by Jill Hurst-Whal’s post Section 108 Spinner on her Digitization 101 blog:

“Thanks to DigitalKoans for pointing this out. The American Libraries Association (ALA) has created a Section 108 Spinner that helps libraries and archives to understand if they can copy or digitize an item using the limitations provided in Section 108. Due to how Section 108 is written, anything that helps to make it intelligible is a benefit! This tools is definitely worth bookmarking.”

Yes, indeed!





Marketing 2.0 for Libraries and Librarians…02.13.09

13 02 2009

The following “Social media & Library Marketing” notes from The Connecting Librarian from a Library 2.0 “masterclass” with Helene Blowers that will be helpul to consider:

The strength of our libraries is our unique brand – which is the specific communities we each serve.  Mass marketing is no longer the key, it is now niche marketing

8 Steps to Marketing 2.0:

  1. Educate – learn about social media
  2. Experience – participate and join in the conversation
  3. Envision – develop a 2.0 marketing plan
  4. Engage – create social celebrations
  5. Enable – help your library brand & content travel
  6. Expand – play with multimedia
  7. Explore – learn as you go & track success
  8. Experiment, experiment, experiment

And to top it all off: ‘The best way to get your customers to market your brand is to allow them to promote (the library) by marketing themselves!’…

[Check out If I Made a Commercial for Trader Joe's - great example of an "unauthorized commercial" by a customer that has now turned viral--LW]

Innovative ideas come from focussing on quantity – not quality, collecting everything, getting out of the comfort zone and adding constraints to your thinking.

However, it can be not so much the ideas you need to focus on, but how to move those ideas through the organisation.

  • Sell it – tie it to your mission and vision statements
  • Create alliances – build relationships that will give you support
  • Don’t ask for permission – either ask for forgiveness where the risk is all yours, or ask for support and share the risk
  • Sell your vision personally – if you have to produce a report, follow it up personally – you can’t sell a vision on a piece of paper
  • Find a champion – if not a supervisor, find a mentor – even if they are outside your line of authority

Implementation requires time, resources and scope. If there is a problem here, you need to revisit the strategy. The profitability comes with how the idea is enacted within your organisation…”





Librarian Brand Thyself-Part 2…02.13.09

13 02 2009

As a great follow-up to a recent post, here is an important excerpt from Personal Branding 102: How to Communicate & Maintain Your Brand post by Dan Schawbel on Mashable! about “how to sustain your future growth by performing brand maintenance“:

“…Communicating your brand

Evangelize: Although you are the chief marketing officer for the brand called you, what others say about your brand (especially if they are respected and well-known) is more impactful than what you say about yourself. This means that you should try and find people who will help promote you when you aren’t even in the same room. You want people to blog about you, your products or your company without pitching. A fan base for your brand can really help you get the word out at the least possible cost and time commitment, but it takes timeThere are people out there who are already interested in what you have to say, but you might not yet realize it.  By starting a Ning network, for example, you have the infrastructure to support your own following and then communicate updates as you progress throughout your career.

Pitch media: Instead of spamming reporters, do some homework and figure out who covers what. Almost all newspapers and magazines have online versions and blogs now, which are easier to get into. It’s easier to pitch when there is actually news, but reporters are always looking for expert sources such as yourself. After you target the right reporter, email them your pitch and follow up after a week. If you still don’t hear anything, move on.  Always use the journalist/blogger’s preference when communicating with them, such as Twitter, email, skype, phone, etc.

EO: Ranking high for your expertise is extremely important. It takes time, patience and determination. It also helps to have evangelists that will link to your website. Reporters, conference organizers and customers are constantly using search engines to find expert sources, cool stories, speakers and solutions to their problems. If you’re at the top, they will contact you. It’s that simple, yet that challenging!  Here are 55 SEO tips to help you rank as high as possible in search engines.

Attend events: Getting out into an area where people are already interested in what you have to say (an industry event), is where you can do some real networking. Remember that people don’t know about you until they hear about you from your mouth or from a 3rd party. Tell them what you’re up to AFTER asking them about what they do.  Try some live video feeds using Qik or record video interviews during the event, so you can provide special content to your audience.

Speak at events: When attending events isn’t enough, speaking at events can satisfy your personal PR craving. It will be hard for you to speak without becoming known first though, which is why this falls after attending an event. When you speak, people automatically perceive you as an expert (unless you flop and prove them otherwise), so you’re bound to get attention, fans and new blog subscribers if you play your cards right.  Make sure you have a recording of your speaking engagement, so you can use it in your marketing kit to promote to get your next gig.  Try uploading it to YouTube for some added exposure.

Create your own event: The only thing bigger than being a speaker is actually starting your own event or event series. When you do this, you are perceived as a leader and a go-to-person at the event. Try using a wiki to get people to register for your event or create a blog around the event, so that you can get the attendees involved in the conversation before, during and afterward.

Comment on blogs: Bloggers love comments. Don’t even deny it! When you comment on someone else’s blog it’s like a kudos or a pat on the back. A blogger is more apt to comment back on your blog, subscribe and link to your blog if you’re a part of their community. If you comment on every blog in your industry on a consistent basis, people will get to know you based on your avatar (go to gravatar.com) and your brand will flourish.

Write articles: Article writing is a great marketing tactic. Depending on your writing portfolio and the strength of your brand, you can write for magazines, online sources or blogs (like Mashable!). There are also online article directories that you can submit your work to, such as ezinearticles.com. By contributing to these sources, you’re able to get your brand into new places, while marketing your current web properties.

Maintain your brand

Online “spring cleaning”: As your brand grows, you must ensure that all the online assets that you have control of grow in the same respect. This means that you need to constantly update your LinkedIn profile so it contains your latest contacts, experience information, and summary. It also means that your physical resume has to be updated, in addition to your video resume and so on.

I know this is a painful task, but the reasoning is simple: first impressions on the web tell you that someone’s entry point into your brand can be a variety of sources. If one of these sources isn’t current, then you may lose an opportunity. Update your picture if you look different and your interests have changed.

Careful listening: People are going to be talking about you in various places, such as Twitter, blogs, social networks and more. You need to keep track of what they are saying, so that you can respond accordingly. There are many tools out there to help you such as Twitter searchGoogle alerts, and more. By listening to your industry, you’re able to react and better position yourself, as the economy changes and your niche isn’t as relevant anymore.

It all starts with you. You can make anything happen and now, with these social tools, it’s easier to accomplish more in less time. People that can help you accomplish your dreams are at your fingertips. It’s up to you to figure out what you want to do and surround yourself with the people that can help in your personal branding conquest.

Remember that right now these social tools pose as a differentiator, but soon they will be so standard that they will be a qualifier...”

I think that the truth in that last line needs to repeated to procrastinators: “…right now these social tools pose as a differentiator, but soon they will be so standard that they will be a qualifier.”

© 2006-2008 Mashable!





Viva Colombia!

13 02 2009

Colombian Grammy winner Jorge Celedon “La Vida”:

 

Watch the following  musical/visual invitation from Jorge Celedon to see the real COLOMBIA here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BbtLcOUDIGA

(not embeddable-must click on link–well worth the trouble)

Colombia is passion!





“Twitter and status updating”…02.13.09

13 02 2009

A new Pew Internet and American Life report Twitter and status updating was released yesterday. Here is an excerpt from the report summary  :

“…As of December 2008, 11% of online American adults said they used a service like Twitter or another service that allowed them to share updates about themselves or to see the updates of others.

Twitter and similar services have been most avidly embraced by young adults. Nearly one in five (19%) online adults ages 18 and 24 have ever used Twitter and its ilk, as have 20% of online adults 25 to 34. Use of these services drops off steadily after age 35 with 10% of 35 to 44 year olds and 5% of 45 to 54 year olds using Twitter. The decline is even more stark among older internet users; 4% of 55-64 year olds and 2% of those 65 and older use Twitter.

The use of Twitter is highly intertwined with the use of other social media; both blogging and social network use increase the likelihood than an individual also uses Twitter. Twitter users and status updaters are also a mobile bunch; as a group they are much more likely to be using wireless technologies — laptops, handhelds and cell phones — for internet access, or cell phones for text messaging.

Overall, Twitter users engage with news and own technology at the same rates as other internet users, but the ways in which they use the technology — to communicate, gather and share information — reveals their affinity for mobile, untethered and social opportunities for interaction. Moreover, Twitter as an application allows for and enhances these opportunities, so it is not so surprising that users would engage in these kinds of activities and also be drawn to an online application that expands those opportunities.”

 

View PDF of Report





President’s Day Rememberance…02.16.09

12 02 2009

Battle Hymn of the Republic” by Julia Ward Howe – poem below as published in the Atlantic Monthly in February 1862:

Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord:
He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored;
He hath loosed the fateful lightning of His terrible swift sword:
                       His truth is marching on.

I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,
They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps:
                       His day is marching on.

I have read a fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel:
“As ye deal with my contemners, so with you my grace shall deal;
Let the Hero, born of woman, crush the serpent with his heel,
                       Since God is marching on.”

He has sounded forth the trumpet that shall never call retreat;
He is sifting out the hearts of men before His judgment-seat:
Oh, be swift, my soul, to answer Him! be jubilant, my feet!
                       Our God is marching on.

In the beauty of the lilies Christ was born across the sea,
With a glory in his bosom that transfigures you and me:
As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free,
                       While God is marching on.





Response to Text-A-Librarian Service Review…02.12.09

12 02 2009

Below is a reply from the Librarian in Black, Sarah Houghton-Jan who is the Digital Futures Manager for the San José Public Library, on the negative review of the Text-A-Librarian posted recently–Thanks!!

“Our library, the San Jose Public Library, is looking now at subscribing to Mosio’s product. We have been very impressed with it and its features. I was surprised to read the review, as the information is largely incorrect, and as an information professional, I hate the thought of people making decisions with wrong information.

The demo that Mr. Murphy reviewed was a very early version of the product and quite different from the product that exists now. As someone who has tried the service and researched it a lot, I can say with full confidence that there is a lot of factually incorrect information in his review. Most of the negative points listed in his review, which are echoed in the post here, aren’t true of the product.

I would encourage people interested in offering reference services through text messaging to look at the product information on the Text-A-Librarian website (http://www.textalibrarian.com/), which is current. You can and should develop you own opinion on the product from there, but you need to have the right information before you can make an informed and reasonable opinion.”





ARL Urges National Digital Information Infrastructure to Spur Recovery…02.12.09

12 02 2009

Research Information ,”Europe’s premier magazine for online content and information management.”, reports in a post entitled “Digitisation Could Help Economy, says ARL Ddirector” today on some good efforts to include digitization in the U.S. stimulus package:

The executive director of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) has urged the US government to finance a large-scale digitisation project as a way to help in the current economic crisis. The project that he wants President Obama and the US Congress to back would see the country’s library and other cultural collections digitised and put on the web.

In an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education, ARL’s Charles B. Lowry argued that ‘Investing in an open, universal digital commons will help ease the current economic crisis by creating jobs, equipping workers with 21st-century skills, and laying a foundation for innovation and national competitiveness in business and research.’… ’We should also build our digital infrastructure and equip workers with skills they can use in the years ahead—skills for the information age,’ he explained. 

According to Lowry, with immediate funding, up to 10,000 people could quickly be trained and employed scanning public-domain library materials. He estimates that creating a universal digital library of 10 million books would cost $300 million, which he sees as a modest price tag compared with many public-works projects.

Lowry’s opinion piece, ‘Let’s Spur Recovery by Investing in Information,’ appeared in the 6 February 2009, issue of the Chronicle.”

Europa Science © 2003-2009

GO ARL!!!!!!!!!!! If the Obama administration goes for this, I might be at least partially inclined to think the “stimulus” would do some good.





“Understanding Comics”…02.12.09

12 02 2009

I am not into comics per se but I have found some through the years that I have taken the time to read.  The evolution of comics though has been interesting.  Anyway, Chris Warren on his Library Riot blog brought to my attention a truly fascinating presentation by Scott McCloud, author of the book “Understanding Comics.” Taking the time to watch the video is well worth the investment.

Since I don’t think I can embed the video in this free version of WordPress, you can view the video here:  Scott McCloud: Understanding comics





Google Book Search Settlement Site is Up…02.11.09

11 02 2009

TechCrunch post by Erick Schonfeld excerpt on new website for the Google Book Search Settlement:

“…Google signed a $125 million settlement with the Author’s Guild to pay authors for copyrighted works it has scanned and made available on the Web through its Google Book Search project… Today, the Google Book Settlement site went up, which allows authors and other copyright holders of out-of-print books the ability to submit claims to participate in the settlement.

What do they get? Authors, publishers, and other copyright holders will get a one-time payment of $60 per scanned book(or $5 to $15 for partial works). In return, Google will be able to index the books and display snippets in search results, as well as up to 20% of each book in preview mode. Google will also be able to show ads on these pages and make available for sale digital versions of each book. Authors and copyright holders will receive 63 percent of all advertising and e-commerce revenues associated with their works… 

Remember, this settlement is only for the millions of out-of-print books that are making zero revenues for authors and publishers today. So it is not a bad deal all around. Copyright holders have until January 5, 2010 to make a claim.”

© 2009 TechCrunch





Librarians and Others-Finding a Job in a Recession…02.11.09

11 02 2009

This is good from Stephen’s Lighthouse:

“Jeremiah Owyang at his Web Strategy Blog has been running a series on finding a job in a recession. Obviously ths is a question that’s increasing at many libraries and it’s a core reference business for the foreseeable future…

I found this chart particularly relevant. Most people who found jobs in his survey recommended using social networking sites.

3266073418_4904585e31.jpg

This is a clear opportunity for library folks to assist job seeking folks as long as they’re involved and informed themselves. As Jeremiah notes most people find jobs through referral from friends, colleagues, alumni, or family and social netwokring sites like LinkedIn, Plaxo, Facebook, and MySpace can help you manage that process without being too intrusive…”





Library 2.0 Meme Graphic…02.11.09

11 02 2009

I thought this was a nice Library 2.0 graphic I found on the Connecting Librarian blog by The Geek Librarian Bonaria Biancu:

library-20-meme








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