Categories
Libraries

Conference #1 plus vacation

I am back at work today after a few days on the road. Last Friday and Saturday I attended the Code4Lib Midwest meeting (you can see my smiling face front and center). Then I went to Pennsylvania to see Becky and go to her baby shower. Yikes, time flies.

Code4Lib was a great experience for me to meet others in the Midwest who have been doing work similar to me for much longer than I have.  Someday I’ll make it to a national Code4Lib, but timing-wise this was perfect. As of tomorrow I will have been doing this job for a month, and now I begin to have a sense of what types of projects I will want to work on once the most urgent things are done. Also I am reassured that things don’t have to be perfect or the first idea the best one.

ALA Annual comes up in a few weeks. That’ll be quite a different experience, and not least because I’ll have to actually do something (i.e. present a poster).

Categories
Internet Libraries

Scary

That is what everyone finds linked data to be.

For everyone who is living under a rock, a lot of people are upset over Facebook making changes. I can understand why, since for a lot of people (myself included) it’s one of the most important sources of information, so it needs to be reliable. If the telephone book changed formats all the time back in the day, that would also have been an issue.

The funny thing is that what seems to upset people the most is the idea that their interests and activities were not only linked to other people with those same interests, but actually turned into linked data. So, you actually automatically followed any of your interests or activities that had Facebook pages and got information that should be of interest to you automatically generated.

Maybe it’s just me, but I found that really helpful. Yes, you have to clean up your metadata, but welcome to the world of information. I wonder if people are so freaked out by this because it’s new, or because it genuinely unsettles them? This makes me think that my future forays into linked data might not be seen as the cool service I’m imagining it would be.

Guess I’ll just have to be more transparent than Facebook in explaining the benefits to the users and how privacy will be protected.

Categories
Libraries Writing

Private writing

Earlier this week I went a faculty development workshop on using technology in teaching. Michael Stephens was presenting on how one can use Twitter and blogging to create a constant conversation among the class about the course material. A lot of this was review for me, but I found the idea of a very public and constant conversation potentially really exciting for student engagement. So, for instance, I decided to give my students in my course-integrated instruction sessions my Twitter name and my Google Voice number for texts. These are first year students, so I don’t know how many of them are on Twitter, but I know they text. Note I did not give them my real cell phone number. There’s student engagement, and then there’s creepiness.

What struck me this week is that for all my fascination with the public and the social in media, lately I have personally been most satisfied by the most private of media. Since January 1 of this year I have written every single day in a private paper journal for at least five minutes. Over the years I’ve been a sporadic journal writer, and for the last 2 years I’d only written in my journal a handful of times. Some say that blogging helps hone the craft of writing, but that never has been true for me. For me, and probably for most people, writing starts with the private and moves toward the public. When I was a teenager and throughout college I wrote very personal things on my various blogs, but that was, in retrospect, not such a good idea. So I haven’t been worrying about my public writing at all (other than a book review, deadlines being what they are), but focusing on the writing that takes places in the intensely personal space of paper, pen and thought. By taking the pressure off myself, I am getting excited by engaging with words, even in the high pressure and intense conversational worlds, for instance, Twitter. I just hope that student writers (of any age) are finding the same thing, and not being made to write everything in blogs or tweets, and that young writers still have some private writing spaces in which to develop.