Saturday, May 16, 2009

Week 11 - eBooks & aBooks


Well this wasn't particularly hard but time consuming. Every time I looked I came across something interesting and would get distracted; start reading or listening then whoosh. Guest that's why I am not a librarian, I would be like a chocaholic trying to sell chocolate.
I found an interesting recipe book and started to reformat it, install a full index, highlight the tips etc this is still a work in progress, but you can see the listing in my LibraryThing. (had to stop as I was spending all my time doing this and not my homework). This also highlighted another reason why I am learning so much more from this course that I have been able to on my personal explorations.

Another thing I noticed and it annoyed me, was to discover that most of the sites did NOT have much more than an alpha list. My wish would be to have eBooks accessible as a search-able catalogue available to LibraryThing. In fact why aren't they just in the library catalogues like every other book? After-all they are just another format that doesn't take up shelf space (nor collect dust).
The intention would be to have the entry as a hot link and thus available for immediate recall when I needed access to it again. (I think a majority of books will end up this way before long, especially "text" books).

Audiobooks (why aren't they called aBooks?) was a bit of a revelation; another one of the shocks to my once neat and tidy picture of the world. For some reason I still had audiobooks pictured as cassettes. That they have evolved onto the web & MP3 etc had not entered my consciousness; another time consuming distraction. Plan is to investigate this further and burn a CD (my player will play MP3 CD's which makes it a lot easier).

Once the readers develop to a similar quality (contract & brightness & Full colour) to "real" books (will we then have a catagory call rBooks?) I think they will really take off.

Current tech articles indicate that this need is well understood (google has released an A4 better contrast Kindle in the last few weeks) and much better units are in the labs.

Looking forward to a bright exciting future.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Week 9 Wikis

n interesting subject. I have (like anyone else who searches the web) used Wikipedia and always found it useful. I have been aware of the concept and thought in passing of areas that could gain value from its use.

I found the NZ goverment post extra interesting. Maybe there is a guide here for how Mr Rudd can address some of the negative feedback from his 2020 gabfest. (I also found the New Zealand Police Act Wiki link is broken and should be -
http://www.policeact.govt.nz/wiki/ )

However, I have never seriously looked at implementing one. I was fascinated to find, as I dug into the subject and viewed many Wiki's, that I clearly considered reliable and accurate, that my mindset was "this would not work". I seemed to have lots of worries that fundamentally boiled down to - the effort of keeping it accurate would be too large. This despite the many references I found that highlighted the many tools that were in place to make the job easy, plus the evidence in front of my eyes that it works.
Slowly, I realised that I was thinking more of putting up a subject that I considered I knew about and allowing others to edit it. I realised this is more what a blog is about. Thus week one got a little clearer.

As I thought about it a little more I realised that the value of a Wiki arises from the pooling of knowledge & information in areas where knowledge & information is diverse and fragmented; where no one individual has the total picture.

So synergy is at its core.
In these circumstances the effort involved in keeping the integrity of the production is rewarded (and balanced) by the value gained.

I would expect also that to retain value there will need to be a defined process for resolving conflicts. In some fields, especially where knowledge is still evolving, there will be bodies of thought that are opposed to each other. A clear, well understood mechanism for managing this must be in place as by definition they cannot yet be resolved. A quick search showed that there has actually been a conference & set of papers on this. (but not being a librarian I wasn't able to get to the details)
"He says, she says: conflict and coordination in Wikipedia
Source
Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems archive
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems





ROLLYO
This was less than the expected experience.
My expectation was that it would search the websites I specified and only those. I tried it with a very restricted base so I would be able to check its results. I choose my blog and it couldn't even find it, let alone something in my blog. Okay so a blog is not technically a web site so back to the drawing board.

So then I searched my personal web site and found I couldn't get it to just search my web site it insisted on adding the rest of the web and I could find out how to get rid of it. Anyway, it did find it and returned the entries I expected. Here it is

http://rollyo.com/ibpservice/ibpservice/

give it a try.
Another thing I found annoying was that it gave no indication of the number of hits. the reason for this is that when I search for something common it is handy to know if I have only a few pages of hits; then I will look at them all to find the obscure ones. If I have 30 pages then 1 pages is sufficient before I tighten the search criteria.
And I could not find a way to have it start in a new tag.

Making an Intention Clear


About Me

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I am a student of change and how people and organisations approach it.