Thing 3: Photo Sharing

Posted by Picasa

Since I’m so familiar with Flickr, I decided to challenge myself a bit and take a better look at Picasa, both the online photo album service and the desktop software.  I’ve had the desktop software installed for a long time, though I haven’t used it as much as I could.

Two features that I love are the collage making option and the face recognition feature. The collages are simple to create (once you remember where the option is!) and are a great way to make visuals for presentations. Or just pretty collages of spring flowers. :)

The face recognition stuff is kind of amazing to me. It’s so darned smart about picking up who’s in your photos, even when someone’s face has changed a lot over time. I had to laugh when it even picked out a face that was in a photo hanging on the wall in a photo that I’d taken in someone’s living room!

Picasa has terrific options for organizing photos, adding tags to index them and editing tools. Naturally, being a Google tool, it has an option to upload photos to Blogger, which is how I posted the collage above. But even better, for us Flickr addicts, you can send photos to Flickr as well. This article explains how.

I also took another look at the online photo storage service also and scouted around to find the features that  are similar to familiar Flickr features. I won’t be switching my loyalties from Flickr though, I have too much time and energy invested in building a community of friends and colleagues there.

More RSS, sort of.

zite
Zite knows me!

Thanks to a post by one of our participants (SkillCollection) I learned about a new iPad app called Zite. While not really an RSS app, it is a content aggregator. I gave it a try and told it what my twitter name is and gave it  access to my Google Reader account. In a flash it created a personalized ‘magazine’ with articles it thought I might be interested in. What was most impressive was the topic categories it picked up on – see the photo. Pretty spot-on for me.

I further customized it by adding sections on gardening, photography, macintoshes, wine, food, and more. As I read articles and give them the thumbs up or down, Zite will get to know me better and get better at recommending articles. It will be interesting to see how this develops.

flipboard
Flipboard
Though it takes a slightly different approach, another amazing iPad app that serves a similar purpose is Flipboard. It connects with social media tools like twitter and Facebook and turns your stream of status updates and shared links into magazine-like pages of content. What I like most is being able to add a folder of RSS feeds from Google Reader and have a specialized magazine on just the topic of that folder. 
I think Zite may be useful for discovering new blogs, news sites and such. While Flipboard is a good way to sort through all the sources you’re already aware of.  I’ll be using both of them for a while to compare. 

Thing 2: RSS

I know this has been a challenging topic for many, but everyone who has written a post so far seems to have made good progress understanding what RSS is. Some folks just don’t want to subscribe to any blogs and that’s fine, maybe somewhere down the line they’ll find a blog they want to get updates from and the RSS lessons will come back to them.

So what have I learned this week? Mainly that Netvibes can be pretty flaky with getting updates to some feeds. And that the toolbar button isn’t the best way to add feeds to a Netvibes page. I still think it’s a good tool for sharing a public page of information, but I won’t be using it for my own RSS aggregator. Google Reader is just too efficient for me to bail on it.

I love that I can connect with other people via Google Reader and that we can share interesting posts with each other. This really helps filter the ton of content that I try to sift through. Some people are really efficient about going through their lists of feeds and sharing the most interesting posts. I’m not so good at that and  feel a bit guilty when I depend on their hard work, so I do try to share interesting posts as often as I can. Building a strong community of people who are interested in the same topics is key to making this work.

Thing 1: Blogging

Ok, I’m going to join in the fun too and see what extra things I can learn about all these tools too.

One thing I discovered today is that it’s not uncommon for Blogger to default to foreign languages. Someone had a problem with everything being in Japanese today. There’s a fix for that! See the drop down box highlighted below? That’s the language box – English is towards the bottom of that list.

I’m not as familiar with Blogger as I am with WordPress.com, so that’s why I picked this tool.

Oh, right, forgot – Who am I?  I’m a librarian and have worked in the Capital District for over 30 years. First at RPI in Troy. And since 1997, I’ve run my own consulting company. I work with libraries and schools, mostly helping with technology issues, training and web projects. Most of my clients are in the Northeast, but I have had some fun trips to other parts of the country too.

When I’m not at the computer, you’ll probably find me in the garden battling the weeds. Or maybe traveling overseas and exploring.

SimpleViewer

SimpleViewer creates some very elegant photo galleries for adding to your web sites. The galleries can be standalone pages or embedded in other pages. But what got me excited is the WordPress plugin.

This  plugin adds a little button to the editing toolbar that pulls up a control panel. Photos can be pulled from a flickr account or your WordPress photo uploads. There are a few settings for size and style. But nothing complicated or confusing! This is truly simple and elegant. I think this is my new favorite WordPress plugin!

SimpleViewer requires JavaScript and the Flash Player. Get Flash.

Before I forget…

I’ll be surprised if anyone finds this site, but if you do find it, welcome!

This site is nothing more than a bunch of notes about tools I’ve tested. I tend to forget what I’ve tested, so hopefully this will be a memory aid for me! If you find useful information here, yay! Happy to share.

It’s also a WordPress playground for me. Kyle Jones & I are in the midst of writing an ALA Library Technology Report on WordPress for Libraries. – due out in spring 2011. So  don’t be surprised by sudden changes here!

My “real” website is over at pafa.net. And you’ll find lots more information about the training sessions I run for schools and libraries on my wiki pages.

QuoteURL for Twitter

QuoteURL for Twitter

What it Does:

Handy for gathering a bunch of related tweets into a single page that can be linked to or embedded on other web/blog/wiki pages.

“QuoteURL helps you group different Twitter updates from different people into a single page that has a permanent URL. So you can put it on your blog or send interesting conversations to friends.”

Examples:

  1. polly
    pollyalida RT @sphericalfruit: Non-librarian followers: what’s #libday5? It’s a web-wide initiative for librarians to report their work. Ever wonde …
  2. polly
    pollyalida Today’s the first day of Library Day in the Life / Round 5, July 26th, 2010 http://ow.ly/2gR5X R U participating? #libday5
  3. polly
    pollyalida http://yfrog.com/17hvgwj 1 goal 4 this week- clean up my office! Been a very busy few months & it’s out of control. #libday5
  4. polly
    pollyalida Spent much of the afternoon looking for YA book trailers 4 summer reading site: http://ow.ly/2gRDm #libday5
  5. polly
    pollyalida Caught up on some reading of articles tweeted by colleagues. #libday5

this quote was brought to you by quoteurl

Glogster EDU

Glogster EDU

Create online, interactive posters! Fun and engaging. Include graphics, text, audio, video. Add links to other web resources. Attach documents related to poster content. Terrific way for students to present school research projects, supplement teacher presentations and as an alternative to PowerPoint as a presentation tool.

Examples:

Notes:

  • Educators qualify for free EDU version which includes classroom management for up to 100 student accounts.
  • Students don’t need email to sign in, teachers create account names & passwords.
  • Content is private unless instructor makes it public.
  • Free account does have advertising
  • Upgrade to Premium version to get rid of advertising and add more students.
  • Account pricing for individual teachers and school-wide.
  • Be sure to set aside enough time for Glogster, there are lots of features to explore and students will want to test them out.
  • Glogs can be embedded on other web pages.

More Resources:

  • Using Glogster in the Classroom – Good, quick intro to getting started with Glogster in a classroom setting. Includes links to examples and lesson plans.

Twuffer

Twuffer – heard of this one via @laurasolomon – very simple interface to schedule tweets ahead of time. Handy to write a bunch of new tweets all at once and then let twuffer post them throughout the day. Gives you organization’s twitter stream a consistency and saves you time not having to keep posting all day. Hootsuite and tweetdeck also have this feature, but twuffer is just so easy.