Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Catching the Travel Bug (MToaS 33)

I love the options for Travel 2.0! The blogs are fun, and interesting. I love My Kugelhopf! I was thrilled to see that the writer, Kerrin Rousett, is writing from Zurich. And showcasing chocolate. Very yummy.

We're planning to go to Europe next summer. We'd love to go this year, but we're not sure that will happen, what with paying off our fantastic new energy efficient windows. We are saving a lot on heat this horrid winter, but not two plane-tickets-worth.

I've been a big fan of the travel site reviews for a while. We used a few different sites when planning our trip to Lake Tahoe last year, and it was so helpful. I can't now remember which site we used, but because of the online reviews posted by real guests we were able to find a great little cabin, clean but cheap, right on the lake and near where we wanted to be. I went back and wrote my own review after we got back from our trip, figuring I should give kudos where they were due.

My one problem with these sites is that I suspect that for every 500 to a thousand happy guests, perhaps one will write a review. That means that small towns typically don't have any reviews. Even small cities like St. Cloud will only have a few reviews. However, if a person is traveling to a new big city or tourist destination, these sites are brilliant!

Pic Info: Hey, I took this one! Lake Tahoe, from the Nevada side looking toward Sugar Pine Point State Park.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Vermeer Tour (Google Maps)


View Larger Map


(I couldn't figure out how to keep the map at a wider view, so minimize greatly to see what I was actually doing with this.)

I blew way too much time playing with Google maps. This is serious fun, and I can imagine lots of possibilities... from making maps of library service areas and points of interest to planning vacations, to commemorating a favorite meandering weekend with your Sweetie. This was very fun.

I loved the ability to add pics, URLs and other things to the maps, although I didn't do as much of that as I could have. I'll go back and fine-tune this map later, because some day I really do want to take this trip. I find Vermeer's work to be so profound, sensual and compelling... I would love to meet these works in person.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

More Twitter (MToaS31)

Forgive me, MoreThings Folks. I know you are trying hard to get us up to speed with the latest and best web technologies, but, I just cannot get excited about Twitter. I'm not sending Tweets. I'm not following anyone. I just can't bring myself to do it, not even to be a good sport for your sakes.

I am, however, thoroughly bemused by Twitter as a social phenomenon. I found this article on Mashable.com that says that Twitter is not only growing at 1,382%, but Facebook is changing its format in order to stay competitive against Twitter's growing popularity. 

So, it seems I will be drug, kicking and screaming, into the Twittersphere. But that doesn't mean I have to like it. 

Gabi and I were talking about Twitter on Monday while we were not kayaking. She said that she could see Twitter being really useful if you lived in a city or on campus, and you wanted to go out for dinner, and so instead of e-mailing or calling all your friends you just send out a Tweet saying, "I'll be at Joe's Cafe at 6. Join me."

From a library perspective, I can see the potential in sending out Tweets about programs, author visits, interesting items in the collection, etc. 

However, my library patrons are the one group who I have not heard talking about Twitter. I've heard co-workers, friends, news personalities... Jon Stewart does a fabulous mock-up, see below... but not the good folks who come to visit my particular library. 

Right now, throughout GRRL, we are offering beginning Internet training for seniors. And when I say beginning, I mean "Here's your spacebar. This is a mouse." And even though the majority of my patrons are not at that level, they are surely not interested in Twitter, either. 

Perhaps this is simply the issue for small, rural libraries. I'm trying to be a good sport with the MToaS program, but I simply can't see how Twitter is relevant for the people who come to my library.

Pic Attribution:Image: 'Rubber duckies.... one last image'  www.flickr.com/photos/43078695@N00/307506216

My Stalker just Grunted on my Twitter

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Rampant and Unrepentant Silliness

It was warm last weekend, here in Minnesota. Twenty-or-so above normal. Which means upper fifties. Warm, sunny, breezy: spring was in high gear and we responded in kind.

Rambling through town, we saw many folks out in shorts or capris, and a few uber-exuberant souls in t-shirts too. A few wore sandals but, really, the plethora of muddy puddles meant that sandals were kept to a minimum.

Admittedly, most of the people wearing shorts and capris were under 20. And we older and wiser ones could look at them and say, "Well that's just silly. It's not that warm."

No, Gabi and I did not wear shorts. We wore jeans, turtlenecks and flannel shirts, sturdy tennies. 

Yes, this is what we wore when we took our kayaks out for a drive.

There is open water, here and there, on the Sauk, Platte and Mississippi rivers. The trick is finding an open stretch between landings. The water's way too high and quick to paddle back upstream if you don't have to. But, oh, we wanted to be on the water.

Fortunately, when we went out to Cold Spring on Sunday to scope out the Sauk, we met the wife of a man who was bravely setting off from Frogtown Park for the six-mile float to the next public landing in Rockville. We jumped for muddy joy to see someone setting off, and Monday (we both took the day off) we were back with kayaks in the truck. We stopped in Rockville to leave the car so that we could shuttle ourselves.

We were smart enough to check the landing. 

An ice bar swooped out from the landing, still covering half the river. We walked a little upstream and down, where the ice had receded. We could see where a person could land, muddily, but no signs that anyone actually had landed his canoe.

In other words, somewhere along the line, the ice still covered the river thick and wide enough that our brave canoe enthusiast hadn't gotten through. We went back to the truck, looked at the map. Was the dam at the heron colony, or where the river bends back on itself at mile three, or at the gorgeous boulder garden after the ninety-degree turn at mile four?

Regardless, we wouldn't be floating down the river, not yet.

We got back on the road, me in the car and Gabi in the truck, and headed back to town. I saw her swear out loud in the cab and called on the cell phone to tell her. We laughed about being twenty feet apart and talking on the phone to each other. So we had to wave some more.

Neither of us could stand to let the day go by without a little exploring, so we stopped at Grande Depot, a fantastic shop where I94 and Highway 23 intersect. The Depot is full of gourmet treats, lovely cookware and dishes, artisan candles, handmade jewelry... you get the idea. Very fun. If you're in the neighborhood and need to find a special gift for someone, The Depot would be at the top of my list of recommendations.

We bought a bottle of very yummy dipping oil and, a few miles later, bought some good bread to go along with. Then we went home, put our plastic chairs on the sunny patio on the south of the house, and had a snack. It wasn't what we really, really, wanted to be doing, but it was good all the same.

Pic attribution: Image: "Colors" http://www.flickr.com/photos/13238706@NOO/2730411175

Thing 30 -- RSS & Delicious

This is a great Thing, perfect for my occasional bouts of information overload. I love the ability to filter RSS feeds by tags and keywords. I've been exploring FeedRinse and the others to figure out which works the best for me. 

I loved FeedRinse's Crud Cloud which shows the what users most commonly filter out of their RSS feeds. What is beautiful about the Crud Cloud is that it looks, I suspect, oddly similar to what you would see if you had a tag cloud for most common RSS feeds. "Facebook" is huge on the Crud Cloud, as is "immigration," "Obama," "poverty," and "sex." What I want not to see is exactly what my neighbor is searching for. There is something lovely about that.

At this point, FeedRinse is the front-runner for me.

The other thing that floors me is just how expansive the RSS-iverse has become. You can e-mail them to yourself, use them to set up reminders for yourself, set meeting and event dates and even add a component to your social networking. 

Whod-a-thunk it?

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Don't forget the Almanac

Last Friday I was subbing on the reference desk at HQ ~ and loving it! ~ and received a call from a gentleman who wanted to know about current US troop levels around the world.

A short parenthetical comment: this is why I love working the reference desk. I love getting questions that need thought and detective work! It is so fun to not just follow your own creative, curious lead, but follow one for a complete stranger. The world becomes so big when you discover how many questions people have, how many things they wonder, worry and want to know more about.

So, I took his name and number and spent several minutes looking online for information. I tried the Department of Defence web site, Ask sites, and, of course, the information landfill that is Google. I asked the two other reference librarians for suggestions, and they also typed in ever narrower and more specific queries. We found articles and information about this country or that country, this defense issue or that pundit's ideological calling card, but no simple, straightforward answer to the patron's question.

Then one of my co-workers said: "Try the almanac."

Within 45 seconds of touching the book, I had the patron's answer. A simple table of information: troop levels by country and region. Perfect.

We librarians stood there and shared a moment of joy. All the Internet's information power at our fingertips, and we found the exact answer we needed in a book.