Thursday, November 15, 2007

The Happy House: Applause

Well, I never would've believed I could finish all the exercises, EVEN the online image generator, which gave me a box of choclates (below) with a little help from Image Chef. Some of these features are really cool and great for me --del.icio.us and librarything, for example. And I even got to Ancient Rome on Rollyo and found out how useful it could be to have all the searches in one place. I've got really good at blogging! And if I ever need to post a video to YouTube, to show you my dog running around the yard at my new house, I'm sure I can find out how. With other things, wikis, online word processing, rss feeds, podcasts and ebook downloads, I see the educational system changing faster day by day. Research will be a new experience. Libraries will have to change with 2.0, and we all need constant updating (monuments as we are) or constant playing with the marvels of the internet, to keep running in the same place. It's true that Flickr and I did'nt see eye to eye: I found out my computer needs broadband and in my new house I'll have a whole new connection to the internet. Thank you, State Library, for making Learning 2.0 available to us. You know one of the most fun things? Was telling a colleague at work about librarything and watching his eyes light up. A lot of people didn't take this course because they were too busy. Well, I was too busy moving house, but I've done it anyway! Sorry, have to go pack some boxes now...

Vertical Houses

ImageChef.com - Custom comment codes for MySpace, Hi5, Friendster and more

Archive Boxes

My exploration of eAudiobooks led to even more fascination. Besides the many printed books you can download from Project Gutenberg (including some in languages such as Finnish and Tagalog), you can download audio books in various formats both by human spoken and computer voices. The most interesting thing I did here was explore the links on this site. One link led to the Internet Archive and since I have lots of archive boxes to move myself, I wanted to know what they were archiving. Lots: including moving images, video games, software, and vlogs...so I found out that a video log is like a blog on film. And I found out about the Internet Archive Wayback Machine. With this site, you can type in a date range and surf an archived version of the Web---well, as much as the Alexa web crawler could find at the time. This is truly Time Travel! Science fiction come real: return to 1992 and see what the Web says then. The Internet Archive contains more text than any library in the world, including the Library of Congress. Project Gutenberg is already being used in university courses instead of textbooks: I downloaded a lot of original documents from the Reformation last year. This is going to have serious consequences for publishers, just as audio books and podcasts will change the way media is produced and consumed.

Moving from UK to Canada

The podcast journey was enlightening. I searched on podcast.net and very quickly got turned off anything church related because the American religious right has a truly frightening presence on the Web. From sheer numbers and tech literacy the rest of us are going to have to learn about 2.0 and get a more moderate position out quickly! I think a number of enterprises of society have been gravely uninformed about the speed of uptake and importance of these new internet styles, and that's why I'm taking this course even though I have a lot to do moving house. I searched instead for Canada, and got a podcast on 'Economics and Social Justice' from CBC radio. When I tried to put the URL into Bloglines, it said 'no files found', so I instead did a search for feeds and got CBC radio feeds. I was so pleased to see the series there: The Best of Ideas. When I added the feed to my feeds list, I was thrilled to discover that at the same time I could get rid of the BBC news feed which by now has accumulated 200 unread items. I feel so much less guilty!

YouTube in the box: Mighty Mouse

I moved ahead to YouTube before my computer gets put into a box and transported somewhere else. Because I have a dial-up connection, I thought I should try something simple instead of a movie, so I searched for 'cartoons'. Some of the most popular cartoons seemed to be 'Banned Cartoons' -- one of these had 163,637 hits --- which gives us all a hint about instant popularity in the library. I remember when the book 'Little Black Sambo' was banned from the San Francisco Public Library, and now here it is featured as a banned video on YouTube. (So you can watch it, after all). Mighty Mouse: Wolf! Wolf! was the only public domain cartoon the poster could find. (Is poster? right?) And it attracted vivid comment from the spectators who all had an opinion. Example: "Mighty Mouse's costume looks pink here. That's not the way it was. It was yellow and red'. (It does look pink). Maybe I should get out my clunky analogue video camera and film my moving house day. A vertical house might look good on YouTube.

Changing Boxes

I looked at Technorati and discovered 9,149 results for Learning 2.0 in Blog search. It even breaks them down on a per day basis with graph. But the blog directory put this 15th on the top blogs list, and a lot of these were about Web 2.0. The tags could be as specific as Web 2.0 or a vague as Internet, and I wonder how many decades of thousands the last as a tag would produce. Obviously 2.0 is the way to go. Library 2.0 talks about 'constant change in a development cycle' rather than upgrades. Upgrades are about monuments that get refinished. This exercise really spoke to me because one reason I'm moving house is to be closer to my church. (St. Peter's Eastern Hill, Melbourne: fantastic 16th century music, try it, you'll like it). The ideas of 2.0 for the library relate equally to the church: simplicity, interactivity, user participation, collective intelligence, self-service, new and re-identified content. And access to Everything!!! The Anglican national synod recently empowered 'free expressions', a way to 'take our services to the patrons'. It's about getting integrated into 'daily patterns of work, study, and play'. And adapting to 'radical, fundamental change' in people everywhere. My house, needless to say, is about to radically change: next week. Keep you posted.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Out of the box


Psalm 131

...neither do I exercise myself in great matters, or in things too high for me.

Wow, I got my zoho writer doc to come across to my blog!!! I must really be learning something! I went and looked at the awards list and I selected to look at craigslist which has all kinds of cool features. When I looked up Sydney on craigslist I found that I could rent a room with a view in Bondi for $500 a week or alternatively I could have a ski lodge in Colorado for $1750. (It's cheaper to stay with my brother). So when my house becomes an empty box and all my posessions are in storage I can box up enough for one room and live in luxury. How much room does $500 buy in Sydney, I wonder? The way house prices are going, I fear it might be a very small room.