Thursday, April 30, 2009

Week 8: Cloud Computing

Cloud computing is a great technological innovation. It allows you to store data somewhere in a remote server for editing, distributing, and storage -- without any worry that flood, fire, or computer crash may damage or erase the data. I'll upload some of important work-related documents onto Google Doc lest they be destroyed by computer malfunction. I can see the role of cloud computing in building a digital campus because students, faculty, and staff could share information and ideas more easily. Is it better than Blackboard? But the biggest downside of cloud computing is security and reliability. For many companies, their business data is the core asset. Will they trust their data and its reliability, security, and confidentiality to others in the cloud? I don't think so. I believe that cloud computing will be a big trend only when security problem can be solved. How can our library benefit from this technology? I am still thinking.

Friday, April 24, 2009

Week 7: Social Bookmarking and Tagging

Social bookmarking is a great way of saving bookmarks to a public Web and “tagging” them with keywords. Here is my Delicious account. It can be a very useful tool for the library to effectively select and organize the web resources and make them easy for patrons to search from any computer with any browser.

Like any technology, social bookmarking has its share of shortcomings. This tag-based system has no standard set of keywords and can be subject to errors or ambiguity. I don’t particularly like sharing personal bookmarks with people I don’t know. Because I am concerned about privacy, I will make those bookmarks private so that they are only viewable by me.

I have a problem with my Delicious account. When I use Internet Explorer to add bookmarks, Delicious keeps asking me to log in. I wonder if anybody else also encounters this problem and knows how to fix it.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Week 6: Beyond Internet Explorer

I have Firefox on my office computer, and I downloaded and installed a Google toolbar—as required by this training program. I first installed Firefox on my home computer because IE crashed very often for no reason. Firefox definitely performs better than IE in this regard.

The two browsers both look very good. IE 7 thoughtfully offers more customization than in the past, such as the ability to add more search engines to its search field. Firefox's open-source status and myriad add-ons give it a community edge over IE 7. Firefox is very adaptable and customizable between all of its add-ons and themes. At this point, I am not very familiar with Firefox. For point-to-point comparison of these two browsers, I need more time to study their detailed features.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Week 5: Jing

Here is my video how to search Melvyl catalog for online resources on children and family education – published between 2007-2008. It took me a while to figure out how to use Jing. I am still learning how to add voice narrations to the video. But it is worthy of the time and efforts. Jing is not only fun, but can be a very effective tool for the library to create a screencasting video to show our patrons how to use the subscription databases anywhere that has an Internet connection. We can also create library of navigation videos that show how to get from the library or institution homepage to the desired resource.