Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Thursday, October 18, 2007
If you'd like a laugh, have a look at "Axis of Awesome - Rudd vs Howard" on myspacetv.com
The direct link is http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=20283172
It's worth your while. Enjoy.
No pontificating today, about Web 2.0, libraries or anything else.
Here's a couple more pics from New Zealand for you.
The first one shows the TSS Earnslaw receding into the distance on Lake Wanaka, early in the evening. The rainbow was a fortuitous inclusion.
The second one shows Christchurch 1920's vintage "Brill" tramcar no. 178 at Cathedral
Square on the tourist service that loops the CBD.
This is a pleasant way to access the various museums and galleries, as well the large and attractive botanical gardens. The service runs every 20 mins during the day and uses restored vintage tramcars from Christchurch, Dunedin and Melbourne.
Cathedral Square offers much to interest and is a very popular meeting spot.
The Cathedral is well worth a visit, too.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
I have been looking at YouTube over the last couple of days. I haven't been there before despite its popularity. Now I see what the fuss is all about. There's some wonderfully creative material on the site; lots to engage and entertain. I much enjoyed the various satirical clips relating to John Howard and Kevin Rudd in the context of the coming Federal election. There's a top effort from the Greens based around the Led Zeppelin song Rock and Roll; "Bennelong time since I rock and rolled". If your political sensitivities allow for a bit of satire, have a look. Very clever.
Libraries could certainly make use of Youtube
to present content in a lively, attractive and
contemporary way to appeal to a younger
client group.
Here's another NZ rail picture for you.
It's the Kingston Flyer at the Kingston end
of the line; a sight to please any steam rail enthusiast. The trip is long enough to be a worthwhile outing; well worth including on
a trip to the South Island.
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
I've been exploring more Web 2.0 tools including the extensive list of 2007 award winners at http://www.seomoz.org/web2.0/
There are many interesting tools here. The proliferation of web-based productivity tools such as word processing and spreadheets looks to be more than just a novelty. These will certainly prove useful and popular, to enable people to use these applications on a number of computers, avoid expensive software upgrades, the high cost of often underutilized software and the ability to share the documents with others.
Some example include: ThinkFree at www.thinkfree.com/common/main.tfo and EditGrid at www.editgrid.com/home There are several others,
including Google Docs.
Here's another New Zealand train pic for you. This is a tank engine (not Thomas) running at the Ferrymead Heritage Museum just south of Christchurch, not far from Port Littleton. This is an extensive complex with a whole village exhibiting lifestyles and crafts from the pioneer era in NZ, an amazing display of fire engines, a working tramway running for more than a mile, a railway with several engines, including electrics from Arthur's Pass, trolleybuses, a cafe and more.
Thursday, October 11, 2007
cool_cafe_christchurch
Here's a couple of pictures of the cool cafe I discovered in Christchurch and mentioned in a previous post. It's a shame I don't know the name, but it's in Oxford Tce, just south of Worcester Blvd, in the inner city. With decor like this, it wouldn't be too hard to spot.
The illuminated display of vegetables in jars was a nice touch; I liked it a lot.
Around the corner on Worcester Blvd, there's a very interesting store which sells vintage audio equipment, including some prestigious brands, especially British ones; worth a look.
Christchurch is a very attractive city; allow yourself some time to explore it at leisure.
I prepared this document using the free Web-based word processor Zoho Writer, at writer.zoho.com It looks to be effective and easy to use. I was able to use the Publish options in Zoho to send the page directly to this blog; that was actually quite straightforward. After posting it can still be edited in Blogger. Note that the title of the post is the file name you use to save the document in Zoho.
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
Today, I've been enjoying reading about the use of wikis in the library environment. The examples I found showed that a lot of useful, and more importantly, attractive and interesting things are being done. I have seen several uses I like and other possibilities come to mind: 1. A combination library user's guide and newsletter. Instead of coming out in editions, it could just be permanent with frequent updates and changes to keep it current and interesting. 2. Subject guides for library and web-based resources. Users would be welcome to contribute adding useful new information sources and deleting or revising dead links. 3. Books reviews and similar info available from the OPAC. Amazon.com is interesting and enjoyable just to browse. Why not make our OPAC just as appealing? 4. Information about the library in an open forum format. Users would be welcome to make comments and suggestions. This would be valuable to allow library policies and practices to be clarified and explained to users.
Valuable feedback could be gained from users,
so that services, policies and acquisitions could
be fine-tuned to serve them better.
Wikis offer plenty of possibilities.
And now it's time for another NZ train pic, just so we don't forget what this blog is really all about it.
It's another view on the Weka Pass Railway, north of Christchurch, in October 2006.
Have a great day.
Monday, October 8, 2007
I’ve been reading some ideas about the future of libraries in the OCLC newsletter (no. 2, 2006). At the risk of stating nothing new, a number of observations can be made.
Given that both libraries and the Web exist to provide people with information, the expansion and development of the Web obviously has significance for the materials and services provided by libraries. The Web has made many types of information much more accessible than before, especially the topical, esoteric and obscure. This renders the library obsolete as a repository for certain types of information, especially where currency and cost are issues, e.g. obscure serials needed for a very limited audience.
The Web also affects the nature of information publishing and distribution. Many forms of information are much more readily and cheaply distributed via the Web, e.g. think RSS feeds. In some cases, this has made traditional print publishing no longer worthwhile. In other cases, it has made possible the distribution of material that was not previously economically possible. There is also the ‘democratisation’ aspect; cheap technologies like blogging make it possible for many more people to distribute their ideas, albeit without the moderation and quality controls of traditional publishing. Obviously that has both plusses and minuses. The Web has also led to information being packaged differently to suit the distribution medium. That’s often just a point of difference, neither a gain nor a loss. A strong attraction of web-based materials is the ability to use them in a wider range of ways by adapting them or drawing elements from them, as Web 2.0 tools clearly demonstrate (within the limitations of copyright, of course, but that’s a topic for a whole discussion on its own).
Could the Web displace traditional library materials altogether? Probably not in my view. For some areas of study and enquiry, books will remain entirely suitable and attractive to meet users’ needs, cost-effective, easily accessible (if you can visit the library), and simple and convenient to use. Libraries make them affordable by sharing their use. For example, in our library, books on the visual arts remain attractive, suitable and popular and are likely to remain so for a long time to come. Just as TV did not displace radio, nor radio displace newspapers, the Web probably won’t entirely displace existing media. There’ll simply be an adjustment process and the various media will co-exist, each one in the roles for which it is best suited and economic compared to the alternatives. Against this, if we can escape from traditional ideas about how information should be packaged and found, the Web may reach further than we initially expect. While they are always likely to be with us, due to their relatively low cost, convenience and attractiveness, books may become much more limited in their future roles. They may become much more special, more like works of art than information sources. One attraction of a library without books would be the elimination of the problem of losses and damage to the library collection, an often serious problem undermining the service libraries now provide.
What of librarians in this changing landscape? With far fewer books and maybe no serials do they still have a role? It comes back to the fundamental questions; what are librarians, what do they do? The most useful librarians have always been more than mere organisers and custodians of information materials. They have sought to inform and guide their clients, to impart skills and to apply their own knowledge and skills to the recovery of relevant information to meet their clients’ needs. These are not simple, everyday skills, and librarians should not underestimate their value. (The NSW pay claim a few years ago formally determined that we have many skills comparable to professionals such as engineers or geologists.) In the new landscape of information, our information skills will still be needed, but they will be a different set. In a very complex information technology environment, there is likely to be an even greater need for skilled, knowledgeable guides to assist information users, suggest sources and possibilities for information use. This demands highly trained specialists, not just leaving things to chance, if information users are to make the most of the possibilities. So, as I see it, librarians will need to acquire a substantially new set of skills, but they will still be needed, as experts in information. They will also need to adapt to the Web as a means of delivering their services. In a busy and diverse online world, the old model of a physical library the client must visit, won’t suffice.
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
I quite like LibraryThing, a social networking site that allows you to list your own book collection with tags and reviews, if you want. Other users can visit your list and everyone can see what they have in common. From there, possibilities exist to interact with other participants. So there's the chance to network with people who share similar interests, even people who like to think. Woo hoo! Just viewing others' lists can provide useful possibilities to follow up. My entry at LibraryThing is under "Casper52"
Another wonderful site is the social bookmarking site del.icio.us This one allows people to store share their bookmark lists of favourite websites. It's a great way to unearth interesting websites you haven't seen before. I found lots to interest me, including a great blog on personal development and social issues at briankim.net/blog
Photos are not pertinent to these sites, so here's another one from my New Zealand trip last year. This is one of the two restored Rogers locomotives at the Plains Railway Museum. Both were restored from wrecks recovered from a river bed. It must have been quite a job to bring them back to life, and they look magnificent. This one is in the original colour scheme, which was later changed, being considered a little too flamboyant for the NZ railway authorities. Yes, gold wheels and multicoloured fittings are featured.
Wednesday, September 26, 2007
Back again. I've been looking at the Generator blog; lots of cool things there. I really liked this neat Rubik's cube device; here it is with one of my pictures taken in Christchurch last year.
The tram is one of the city's originals, totally rebuilt from a wreck. The running gear had to be made from scratch, with only old photographs to go on.
There is a very cool cafe in the heritage building behind this scene.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Well, there's a bit of a rave for you all; should get things going. :-)
* I'll be around to break your weaving frames later in the day.
Here's the sort of technology I like. It's the 1912 vintage steamship "Earnslaw" on Lake Wanaka, New Zealand. You can even get to watch the triple-expansion steam engine in action:
Monday, August 27, 2007
http://www.quickonlinetips.com/archives/2005/03/great-flickr-tools-collection/
Warning: the Flickr site can be a great time-waster.
Sunday, August 26, 2007
http://www.flickr.com/photos/southspeed/677761536/in/set-72157600582328892/
The engine is Ja class 1271. I travelled from Dunedin to Christchurch behind this impressive machine, double-heading with a similar Jb class engine. 1271 also hauled our train over the mountains on the Trans Alpine line.
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Please note these are original photos for which I claim copyright. You are welcome to take copies only for personal, non-commercial purposes.