Monday, November 24, 2008

I created my own wiki, the Moose and Maggie wiki (surprise!). It's about my obsession, my dogs, Moose and Maggie. As I mentioned in my previous entry, I am using a wiki for professional reasons, the MCMLA 2009 planning committee, but this one is for my own use. I thought it might be a fun way to communicate with my various dog sitters when I travel. I usually give them a list of "things to know about Moose and Maggie" to make the sitting job easier, but why not put all of this information, along with photos and stories, in a wiki? That way, Greg and I can continually update the information as needed, and the sitters can also update the wiki while we are gone, even add pictures of what the dogs are doing, so we can dote on them in our absence!

Are we ridiculous or what?! :-)

Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Wikis

I noticed that one library lists all of its annotated resources on a wiki and lets students add to the notations. I really like this because students usually know their assignments much better than the librarians do and can use these notes to guide other students to the resources that they find most useful. Plus, a glowing recommendation from a peer is bound to be considered more valuable than the opinion of a librarian ;-) .

I am a member of the planning committee for the 2009 meeting of MCMLA and we are using a wiki to organize our committee information. It has been very useful and prevented a lot of email clutter. Only committee members can edit the wiki.

The main pitfall I find for some wikis is the lack of control over who can edit the information. If this is not controlled, it can lead to too much oportunity for misuse and inaccurate information.

Image on Flickr

My favorite image from exploring Flickr was Forest pond (Vertorama) by Rob Orthen(http://www.flickr.com/photos/orthen/2935200572/) a beautiful picture of autumn leaves and trees on a lake. Here is the description:

Here is a vertorama from our lovely mushroom picking session today. We went out to pick the seasons last mushrooms, and I got to test the new Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8. It will most likely become my new favorite lense :) Oh yeah... we did get mushrooms too!The final image is a vertorama from two shots, that were HDR images from 5 different exposures. Tried to keep the saturation slightly lower here than previously, what do you think?

I assume a "vertorama" is a virtual panorama? I am now inspired to go take some pictures!

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

RSS Feeds

I am impressed - no - STUNNED- by the work done by the Ebling library! What an incredible resource! I used their page to pick up the RSS feed to Pediatrics in Review, a perfect resource for me as a pediatric librarian. I'm wondering how many of our residents, fellows, and attending physicians would be interested in using RSS. Right now, they seem more interested in getting Tables of Contents by email, but I'm not sure if that's because they don't use RSS or because they don't know that journals offer RSS. I need to make it a point to find out. I've had an RSS feed for some time now, but I have to confess that I often forget to go to my Google account and check it. I, too, tend to count on email alerts for my information. Perhaps if I had my email through Google I would check it more often...