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This newsletter is for participants in 23 Things On a Stick. Previous issues addressed Things 1-4 and offered hints on using Blogger. Issues 1 & 2 are archived. If you haven't read those, please click the links in the sidebar to catch up on news and hints.
Issue 3 moves on to the Flickr tools and Online Image Generators. People seem to be having a lot of fun with both.
Share any hints you have by sending them our way at minn23@gmail.com.
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Keeping Up
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- Check your blog on the mother blog. There are still some mystery blogs out there that are
hard to identify (no title and/or no posts). We want to comment on your
progress and reflections, but it is hard without your participation, too.
- If you re-registered or changed your blog name, be sure to check the mother blog under both names you registered and let us know if one should be deleted/updated.
- Keep posting! Label the posts with the Thing number and title, so we can
easily track your progress.
- Be sure to allow comments, but maybe not anonymous comments. If you
don't allow comments, no one can respond to your posts. In Blogger, go to the Settings Tab then
Comments in the Menu bar under the Tabs. Make a choice under Who Can Comment. While
you are on that page, set the time to Central Standard time so posts are time
stamped accurately.
- Consider adding some information to your Blogger profile. It doesn't have to
identify you by name, but gives the reader some sense of who you are (type of
library, location, interests, some books or movies you like, gender, zodiac
sign -- whatever). In Blogger, you edit your profile from the Dashboard. Click
Edit Profile at the top of the right sidebar and fill in the fields. Note that this
is where you can change your Display Name (the name you post under), too.
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Thing 5. More Flickr Fun
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One of
the things has made Flickr so successful is
the number of toys that people have built using it. Plugging into your account and
manipulating your pictures is a piece of cake (usually!).
With close to 300 Flickr mashups, it
is not possible to read about all of them, let alone try them out. The point of
including some mashup tools in 23 Things On a Stick is to show the vast level
of creativity and imagination that Web 2.0 allows its users. The Flickr mashups
are a great example of not only user-generated content, but the ability of
users to create and publicize programs that then let other users create new
content-and on and on.
Mashups go far beyond Flickr. A mashup is a web application that
operates by combining information from two or more pre-existing applications.
Google Maps that combine addresses of businesses with the map of the location
is a common mashup.
And while some mashups may be silly , others offer the chance to
display your photos in interesting and unusual ways, display a changing array
of photos , create "art"
with your photos, and much, much more.
Looking for a real challenge? Have an idea for a cool Flickr mashup?
Develop your own! That might be more than most of us are ready for, but here are some
resources, just in case you want to try. Be sure to share anything you create.
You can keep up with photo mashups in general by searching Flickr one or more of
these sites. Add the Flickr Blog to your RSS account to learn what's new.
Like books? Here's a useful one: Flickr Hacks: Tips & Tools for Sharing Photos Online By Paul Bausch, Jim Bumgardner. Order from the publisher (O'Reilly), other online retailers, or search
MnLink to see which Minnesota libraries own
it. Creativity, imagination, sharing-all hallmarks of Flickr and Web 2.0.
And the absence of the "e" is another hallmark of Flickr tools!
Posted by Ann WS
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Thing 6. Online Image Generators
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"I almost burned the banana bread
because I was playing with photos rather than paying attention to the timer." Based on comments like this, it seems the
online image generators are not contributing to productivity. Participants are
finding them a lot of fun, however!
Online image generators have many uses in libraries and media centers.
They are quick and easy to use to create images for bookmarks, posters, Web
sites, and more. Since most of us are not artists, online image generators make
it possible to use illustrations. Think of it as the new version of clip art,
but customizable without a lot of copying and pasting.
Need more ways to play? The Generator Blog recommended by Impromptu Librarian has 927
generators posted that go beyond just images, although there are plenty of
those, too. There are crossword generators , a cross stitch generator, font image generator, and if you need a bold new look for winter, a hair style generator, and many, many more. Some are useful and some are not!
Add the Generator Blog to your RSS account to keep up with new
generators. So have fun; just don't blame us if the banana bread burns! Posted by Ann WS
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We are busy reading and commenting on your blogs. Take some time to read & comment on other 23ers blogs. You will enjoy it!
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
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