|
This newsletter will keep you up-to-date on 23 Things On a Stick and offer hints on the Things. If you have hints to share, send them our way at minn23@gmail.com.
|
|
Who Are All These People?
|
Close to 750 library people from all
over the state haveregistered blogs with 23 Things On a Stick! Wow, what a
great response! There is still time to encourage your colleagues to join the
fun; registration closes February 15. It's fun to click around to the various blogs and see what others have to say about the Things and their experience. People are funny, clever, thoughtful, and serious. Take some time to check out your fellow 23ers blogs--it's worth it.
|
 |
Get On the Stick
|
A few ambitious types are almost
finished with all 23 Things. Others still have not posted anything. 23 Things
On a Stick will end April 16, so don't let any more time pass before you "get
on the stick" and work through the Things.
Remember to label each post about a
completed Thing with the Thing number and title.
|
 |
Thing 3. RSS
|
By now we hope you have discovered Bloglines or Google Reader. These tools compile information from the blogs or Web sites you choose
and then deliver the information to you. They can be great productivity
enhancers. You can easily keep up with your favorite sites. No aimless
clicking, hoping for updates or new info. What more could an information junkie
ask for?
How about an even easier way to add the feeds to your
reader? One click subscription buttons make it super easy to add a feed to your
reader.
To add the Google Reader Subscribe button to your toolbar,
go here and follow the simple instructions. Once the Subscribe button is
installed, you just need to click it to add a blog or other site to your Google
Reader
Bloglines lets you drag a button to your toolbar to
subscribe. On this page, look in the left pane for Get Easy Subscribe Bookmarklet. Click on that link and then follow the instructions
for installation in your preferred browser.
Google Reader also has keyboard shortcuts to make reading, tagging,
and starring items faster and easier. Go to this article to learn more.
A final hint-delete the feeds of the blogs that no longer
interest you, that you don't read, or that have stopped updating. Reducing the
clutter in your feed is another productivity enhancer.
Posted by Ann WS
|
 |
Thing 4. What's Fun About Flickr?
|
IMO, just about everything! The ability to
easily upload your photos to Flickr, tag them for ease of finding, then share
them with family, friends, or the world, plus ability to easily interface with
some great Web 2.0 tools makes Flickr a favorite. Plus it is easy to post your
photos to Blogger, MySpace, Facebook, and other sites, often with just a click
or two. So, what hints do I have?
- Friendly URLs: I didn't do this for either my personal
account or for the 23 Things On a Stick accounts because I just learned this.
(Read the directions!) If you haven't set up a Flickr account, go here to learn about creating easy to remember URLs.
- Privacy: You can make all or some of your photos private.
- Use tags: Tags make it easy to find your photos as well as
others that people have tagged with the same words. There are no rules-use
whatever words that seem useful/make sense to you. Separate tags with a space
(so a tag library reading program is actually three tags). To join words use
double quotes- "library things" -or create a new term with no
spaces-23thingsonastick. If you have "librarian" tendencies, you can create a
controlled vocabulary (in a separate document) and refer to that list as you
tag.
- Resize your photos before you upload
them. Flickr limits the amount of bandwidth
you are allowed for uploading images, so if you upload images straight from
your camera you are severely limiting the number of photos you can upload each
month.
- Once you get into Flickr for yourself or your library, consider an upgrade to Flickr pro. A few of the features are unlimited storage and uploading and permanent archiving.
- Flickr Uploadr (Linux, Windows &
Mac) is a downloadable tool that makes it quick and easy to add photos to your Flickr account. Drag photos to upload window, batch tag if you want, and click upload. More uploading tools can be found here.
- Public photos can be fair game for others to use (just as you may have in your blog post about Thing 4.). You can choose how people can use your photos. Read the license options with Creative
Commons on Flickr and make a decision about how you want to allow use of your photos.
One of my favorite sites, Lifehacker, has this Flickr Advanced Users Guide. Some good information there.
Don't forget to look at the pictures tagged with 23thingsonastick in Flickr. The link is in the sidebar.
Posted by Ann WS
|
 |
More Hints
|
Someone left a comment on the Wiki suggesting that it would be nice if all the links opened in a new window. For some, it would be easier to have the "mother blog" instructions side-by-side with the site in the link.
You can make that happen by using these shortcuts or changing your browser settings.
Internet Explorer and Firefox You may know that to open a link on a web page in a new
browser window, you can just right-click the link and choose "Open in New
Window" on the pop-up box that appears. There's an easier way to do the
same thing. Just hold the SHIFT key down while left-clicking the link.
Firefox lets you choose between tabbed browsing and opening all links in a new window. Go to Tools and choose Options then Tabs. Select how you want new windows to open either as a new tab or in a new window.
Safari for Mac users lets you choose open in a new window as an option from Safari Preference menu.
Posted by Ann WS
|
|
Keep it up! It is great to see the number of people participating and reflecting on the Things.
Sincerely,
The 23 Things On a Stick Team
Patricia (CMLE), Ann WS (Metronet), Linda (NCLC), Ruth (NLLN), Robin (SAMMIE), Ann H (SELS), & Nancy (SMILE) The Minnesota Multicounty Multitype Library Systems
|
|
|