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Yesterday I was down in Lakeville Massachusetts talking about social software in libraries. It was a longish timeslot and I split it up into a small talk about software, some examples of what New England libraries have been doing and less time than I would have wanted, discussing the difference between tools and brands in the social software world.
What I mean is, a wiki is a tool. Mediawiki is a brand or type of wiki. Wikipedia is an example of a Mediawiki wiki. I decided that part of really getting the idea of social software or technology generally is that many people confuse tools and brands and examples and I think people will feel more in charge of technology if they know how to explain it. From working with novice users, I know they use turns of phrases like “My Yahoo s broken” and don’t even realize that they’re not really speaking sensically to someone who understands the terms. On the other hand, I can understand how the idea of “a browser” can be pretty transparent and ethereal to someone who only knows that you click the blue E and you get the Internet. I had an Internet before web browsing, many people haven’t.
In any case, I met a lot of neat librarians, had less time than I wanted to — a perpetual problem for me and one that I work on constantly — and made some useful handouts and slides that you should feel free to adapt to your needs. They are here
Anatomy of a “social”- ite a list of the social sites I actually use along with the Tools vs. Brands handout (fixed link!)
I only have screenshots for the examples page but they are linked from the main page. I live in fear that I’ll set up a lot of excellent links and then I’ll have no Internet access to show them off so I try to prepare a zillion different ways. I think this can sometimes lead to a less-than-awesome experience because part of what’s great about social software is the sheer aliveness of it “Oh look, my friend is doing that right now” “Hey I can add this tag and see who else has used it right now” but hopefully I gave people enough to chew on and an enthusiasm to seek out more.
0 Comments on Social Software in Libraries, a presentation as of 1/1/1900
And so we made it to Oxford, and returned in one piece - indeed, we even managed to enjoy ourselves. The tourist season has not started yet, and it was possible to walk along the street without being pushed off into oncoming traffic. The city outdid herself, like a neglectful friend making amends for bad behaviour. She looks her best around this time of year I think, when the sky is almost painfully blue, and the sun bounces off the creamy white stonework of the University.
Ruskin College from the side
You could take several thousand photos of it, and still have only scratched the surface. This is a little present for Elizabeth in Marrakesh, as I believe she once attended the Ruskin School of Drawing.
Andy must be mellowing, as for the first time that I can remember, he not only noticed that noticed that there are an awful lot of gargoyles around (bearing in mind we have lived in this area since 1994)...
Gargoyles on Magdalen College
...but for the first time ever I persuaded him that visiting the Botanical Gardens would be a fun thing to do. And so it was. We had a splendid time marvelling at gi-normous ferns, gawping at bulbously sinister carniverous plants, ogling outsized cacti and getting brushed up by impertinent creepers.
I have always had a fondness for the banana tree, and hoped it was still here, as I last saw it back in 1990 when I was a foundation art student. It had moved, I think, but it - or a descendant - was still thriving.
I took more photos than I care to inflict on the unwary reader, so HERE is the entire set of our explorings in the glasshouses. For those of you who like plants and the like.
I even indulged in a little filmy-thing; it has noise but there is not much to hear above the hush of the moist greenery...
So well done Oxford, we are learning to love you again, and although we didn't make it to the Ashmolean, there will be another time. Soon.
For my dear friend Tara - I though of you when I was there, and how much you would have loved it - for you, on your birthday - (as my little posted gift is as ever, sent late)...
If the title sounds familiar, it’s because it is. I’ve been trying to combine more of my public speaking trips which means more weird weeks like this one and that one, but it works out a lot better on my end. After I got back to Massachusetts from Access, I drove over to NELA and gave three talks there. I really enjoy NELA but there were some complications this time around mostly involving iffy wireless (and hotel staff who were just repeating what their outsourced IT told them which the IT-librarians knew was a little fishy-sounding, but I digress) which means I wasn’t doing much blogging and had a period of radio silence here and on Flickr and on Scrabulous, etc.
I got home today and I’ve uploaded the latest talks. One was all new, one was a modified version of an earlier talk and one was a talk I gave earlier, but with twice as much time. All of them went really well but I have a sore throat and will be heading to bed as soon as they’re linked here so that I can be bright and bushytailed for work which starts tomorrow. Thanks to everyone who made my trip easier, more pleasant, and fun.
South by Southwest is a big conference thing in Austin Texas in March. It’s made of music, movies and something they call “interactive” which is basically Internet. It’s an interesting conference that I went to once in 2000 and it changed my life pretty much forever. I met a bunch of earlybloggers in the flesh and we became friends and the rest is pretty well trod-upon history. During SXSW since then I was often petsitting for my blogger friends while they went to Texas. This year I may be going. There is a panel called Social Network Coups: The Users are Revolting! put together by Annalee Newitz who is all sorts of excellent. There is a good chance I will be speaking on that panel in my role as moderator of MetaFilter. IF… if the panel gets chosen. Fortunately, SXSW is a pseudo-democracy so you can vote for panels you’d like to see. And I say pseudo because you can also implore your friends to vote for you and/or your panel and it’s all kosher. So, if you’re picking up what I’m laying down here, please consider voting for my panel, or any number of interesting panels you’d like to see, whether you’re going or not. And the title of the panel? Pure coincidence.
I decided to do something for the BIGWIG Social Software showcase even though I wasn’t going to be at ALA. I think I missed out on most of the awesome parts of this excellent idea/event, but I was still happy to put a little something together. Then I went to NYC for a long weekend, and ALA happend in DC and I sort of forgot about it until now.
I have to say, a wiki with the exhortation “Please note that all contributions to Social Software Showcase may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you don’t want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then don’t submit it here.” (as all mediawiki wikis have) seems like an odd place to put presentations that you’d sort of hope wouldn’t be mercilessly edited, but that’s a small gripe in an otherwise enjoyable exercise. My presentation is called Socially Portable and is a short and hopefully amusing look at portable applications (for Mac and Windows) for people interested in having identities that are not just flexible but actually mobile. I hope you enjoy it. Thanks very much to Michelle, Jason and Karen for putting this together.
There’s something very wrong with the formatting on that document. On Portable Firefox (heh) version 1.5.0.12 it shows up with very wide margins, so that the text is all squeezed into about an inch of space in the center of the screen.
In terms of content (I read it from the Printable Version, which is more readable, but not by much), I loved it. I’m a big PortableApps fan!
K.G. Schneider said, on 6/30/2007 6:15:00 AM
Jessamyn, I had the same double-take about the wording on the wiki… I mean to bring that up. Thanks. I don’t mind editing for clarity, but it’s interesting how (speaking strictly for myself and in a broad, thinking-about-wikipedia-et.-al sense) I’m not crazy about being the “contributor” and then facing the prospect of having my “contribution” “mercilessly” edited. I wouldn’t have qualms about an anonymous entry… but then I wonder, would I do one?
I did a short tour of some New Hampshire libraries over the past few days. I did a little talk called MyWhat? Decoding social technologies.. It’s only about five slides but most of it was doing a tour of some of the more popular social networks [Facebook, MySpace, Flickr] and showing how they worked, how kids were using them and what parents and librarians should know.
Remember that a lot of the digital divide that we deal with now isn’t that people don’t have computers per se, it’s that they’re not in networks and groups of people that understand them and can answer complex questions about them. The library is often an integral link in this equation. A lot of my time at these talks is spent answering questions about how these social tools work, how I use them, how librarians might use them, and how kids and teens can use them safely and effectively. A lot of the print materials I’ve come across err on the side of caution which is not a bad idea but often there’s no “Hey you really SHOULD try this” couterpoint. I hope I was able to offer that somewhat.
Social Networking Bulletin - » be social - said, on 6/12/2007 1:01:00 PM
[…] Continued here: jessamyn […]
Social Networking Bulletin - » Comment on b said, on 6/12/2007 4:04:00 PM
[…] More here: unknown […]
sarah louise said, on 6/13/2007 2:23:00 PM
As someone who tried blogging b/c you said “try it,” I am grateful also for this information.
What you do, you do well. THANKS for that.
xo,
SL
Stephanie Chase said, on 6/14/2007 4:45:00 PM
You definitely succeeded, as the librarians at the Nubanusit Co-op were most thankful. Especially after that AccuCut discussion.
Anne205 said, on 6/16/2007 10:44:00 AM
I am an undergraduate student studying education at a university in Michigan. I am currently taking a class called “Computers in Education,” and we have recently been discussing the “digital divide.” I truly feel that the answer to this problem lies in education. If we can expose students to computers and technology as young children, they will be more comfortable using those types of things in adulthood. We can also offer night or weekend classes or workshops for adults who would like to learn more about using technology and computers. If we educate people about how to use these tools and why it is important for them to use them, maybe we can lessen the digital divide. Who knows, maybe it would even improve our economy to have more people that are technologically literate. So, in conclusion, I support this program, and I hope to see many others like it in the near future.
Blog Response 3 « Anne said, on 6/16/2007 10:45:00 AM
Jenny points out the UIUC library search which is a widget that can be put on any user’s facebook page so they can search the library catalog right from Facebook.
Facebook recently opened up their site to other applications and there has been a huge explosion in what people are sharing on their profile pages. From my own subjective perspective, it seems like these applications are getting more people to Facebook and keeping them there, doing stuff. In my 2.0 talks I have often talked about how libraries could create “presence” using social tools and I’ve pointed to Facebook groups like Awesome Resources which is a group of 30+ librarians doing what librarians do best: sharing resources and helping each other find things.
When I went to Ann Arbor this week, I connected with Ed “Superpatron” Vielmetti on Facebook and it’s one of the fastest and best ways to get ahold of a small subset of my friends. When I was at the Berkman Center event last week listening to them talk about Digital Natives (versus tired old “digital immigrants” like myself) a professor mentioned that they did a show of hands survey of their incoming class to Harvard this year and asked who had a Facebook page. The answer wasn’t “most of them” but every single one of them. Granted Harvard skews in some ways towards the clueful and plugged in, but what an opportunity, knowing the one place that all of your students go online. I’m not totally sure if we know what to there once we get there, and I share the same privacy concerns as others about how much information we’re aggregating and personally identifying there, but I also feel that the UIUC search box is a little breakthrough application, sort of the way LibX was for Firefox. Exciting times, no?
Jessamyn, do you think Facebook is a US thing - because over here I’d say MySpace has cornered the younger ‘blogging’ demographic. (Nice for Rupert.)
I do wonder fleetingly if there are some demographic lines that can be drawn around certain applications - LiveJournal for writers is another example that comes to mind.
jessamyn said, on 6/10/2007 6:48:00 AM
That’s a really good question, I wonder if Facebook is a USian phenomenon. I know that because I logged in to MySpace when I was in Australia they now set my dates in European format (10-06-07 for today for example) even though I never said “oh hey I’m Australian!)
Dave said, on 6/10/2007 9:03:00 AM
At Huddersfield (UK), there are 3,580 Facebook users registered in the “Uni. Huddersfield” network, which would equate to about 20% of the total student population. We have a large number of mature students, and I suspect they’re less likely to have accounts that the 18-21 year olds.
Facebook is the third most visited external web site from on-campus (Google is first, followed by MySpace, with the BBC site and Yahoo in fourth & fifth places).
As soon as I get some spare time, I’m going to try and integrate library account info (holds, items due back soon, fines, etc) and personalised book recommendations into Facebook.
We already make all of that data available (either as RSS feeds or as stuff that appears once you’ve logged into your OPAC account), so it shouldn’t be too difficult.
Kate Sherrill said, on 6/11/2007 8:32:00 AM
At the university library where I work part-time, Facebook has been so popular, that at times it almost crashed their network. At the community college where I work full-time, MySpace rules and Facebook has very few users. Same town, similar demographic. *shrug*
Edward Vielmetti said, on 6/11/2007 9:45:00 AM
Note that the most popular application on Facebook is iLike, with almost 3 million users, giving music recommendations.
There’s room for someone to do a huge book recommendation network on Facebook & no doubt that it would get similar sorts of traffic.
It’s been a busy week this week. I had eight people come to computer drop-in time on Tuesday which was a tech frenzy of PayPal and email and inserting graphics and Yahoo mail address books. I’ve had a few of these links hanging around for a while waiting to find time to write proper posts, but I figured I’ll drop them in here. I see a lot of blogging as playing hot potato with a bunch of web content. You find it, you pass it on, the next person passes it on. The more content you shift, the easier it is to quickly ascertain which things you need to save for longer perusal and which need to just get passed on for the next person. I’ve read and absorbed these and thought you might like them.
One of the most favorited posts from MetaFilter this week is the Things Found In Books post
T. Scott is one of the many folks who have been reflecting on the idea that younger librarians have some time period of “dues paying” they must go through before getting their ideas heard and possibly implemented. This was the main thing that kept me from seriously considering running for Council again. Good long post and some great comments as well.
Love the Hollywood clip!! Blogging as hot potato, that’s a great analogy!
And I think ILA is very smart. I was at a “Online Safety Forum” paid for by (of all folks) Verizon last week.
Eleni said, on 5/12/2007 5:22:00 PM
Thank you so much for posting T. Scott’s article on “paying dues”… The library world needs more positive mentors for us newbies… I’ve passed it on to my peers as well
I might be going to this one… coolness.