NHLA Library 2.0 Workshop yesterday

So Jessamyn, Lichen, and I presented to a group of New Hampshire librarians about Web 2.0 technologies, and I think it was a wicked good time.

NHLA talk - Andrea As promised during my presentation yesterday, the simple Technology Planning Timeline document that supplements is now available for download (.doc file). (photo c/o Jessamyn West)

Some bits worth sharing:

  • Jessamyn reminds us: Don’t forget that you can search Flickr (scroll to the bottom for options) for images with Creative Commons licenses for, say, kids working on class projects at the library, craft projects, whatever makes you happy. You don’t even need an account or anything. Just make sure you abide by the license, to accrue happy internet karma.
  • Lichen says, “A library badge, wouldn’t that be rad?!” Seriously, like a badge of titles or recent borrowings, straight from the catalog. Or, imagine a list of your 5 favorite books in the catalog, and then the ability to instantly blog those titles to a blog, a la Flickr “Blog This.” You know it.
  • Did you know you can integrate LibraryThing fun into your existing catalog (for a fee after 60 days) using Library Thing for Libraries. Only issue is that your mileage may vary (YMMV) if you’re in a consortium. I do that that Innovative is planning significant updates, and if there are others, I’d be interested in hearing about them.
  • I got to show off Miro, a free, open source video aggregator I’ve been playing with for about a month now. I’ll do a separate post on that, with a list of the techie shows I watch that help me stay current. I also got to show off my new Blackberry 8830, who I’ve affectionately named Piper, but that’s a whole other post, too.

When we were setting up the workshop many months ago, I mentioned the speed geeking idea to Andrea Thorpe, and she loved the concept. She tweaked it a bit to just be a timed session where people could just wander around to the different speakers and ask questions, instead of the time-then-move model, and it worked out really well. It was a really nice alternative to the endless end of session nightmare when you have the one person who monopolizes the Q&A with their very specific comment/question/kvetch about their very specialized situation, keeping other people from asking questions.

This was probably the best presenting gig I’ve done so far. It was relatively small, which was cool because there was the ability to have contact with all attendees, it was interactive, and had a nice, open feel to it. Everyone was so open to learning, and it was super keen. And, well, any event where I can give a presentation on technology planning and actually keep people engaged while making them laugh is a win in my book. ;)

A final testament to the coolness Andrea Thorpe and NHLA: *right after* our presentations were over, she blogged the locations of our presentations right away on the NHLA blog.

Rock. Star.

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who am i?

What you should know about me
An avid social networker, I've always been a technologist and information science, with a penchant for problem solving and bent for the creative. I was a librarian for a little while, too.

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