Archived entries for

Testing WP clients: ecto

I started to review a client called BlogDesk, but found the product so clunky and unimpressive that I gave up. Let’s move on to ecto.

Ecto was a bit skeptical about because all of the screenshots looked very Mac-themed, but it seems if you download the Windows version the client has a very standard light blue Windows theme. Have I mentioned how sick I am of standard light blue Windows?

Anyway, the first thing I noticed about the client was the relatively easy setup. A bit more was required of the user than BlogJet asked, but it was fairly painless. Next thing I noticed is that ecto automatically generates a list of previous entries upon login. This is nice as I never did quite figure out how to find that list in BlogJet.

Tagging is fairly easy although it does require use of the mouse which is not my favorite. I will reserve judgment on tagging until I see how tags render in the post.

Another obvious feature are the flickr, Amazon, and YouTube buttons. When I click on the flickr button I am prompted to head to flickr to authorize the exchange. Pretty straightforward stuff…

You do have to read the screen to realize that in ecto you publish by saving, with the dropdown set to “Save entry as: Publish”. Nothing too tricky and the client will confirm that you want to post before publishing.

It took a little time for ecto to push my post once I ordered it to publish. It’s been three minutes and the post has not shown on the blog yet. I also noticed that the tagging feature automatically uses the text “Technorati tags” which I don’t particularly like. I think I need to readup on tagging in WP…

Testing WP clients: BlogJet

I am on the hunt for a blogging client. I am not fond of doing anything via a webclient—unless I have to. To that end I have installed a few different software trials.

The most visually interesting application – BlogJet is what I am using first. It’s a Windows client that has a free 30 day trial. If I am honest, I am cheap so having to pay is a detractant… but not a big one, if the software is good.

The interfacing seems good thus far. I didn’t have to do any wonky setup work, I simply entered my login information and the client has done the rest. The GUI is modeled after an older MS Office look—so it’s ok, but could use an update.

The features you would expect to find are present: WYSIWIG editor, spell check, tag and category functions, comment and trackback control, timestamp control, Flickr/YouTube support, etc.

Let’s see how the publishing goes…

…it was easy. The client displays a confirmation and a link to “view post”, which is nice. I am assuming that I can edit by continuing to type on the same post and hitting publish again—we’ll find out. Also, I forgot to add tags the last time I posted this so I’ll just tack those on as well.

Now I’m on the third edit of this post and I have to say that I’m not pleased with how BlogJet rendered the tags. Tags are actually just text inserted at the bottom of the post. Also, they have little plus signs in them instead of spaces, which bothers me. I’ll have to play around with the options to see if that can be changed. I very seldom use tags (I know, I know) so it may not be a huge issue. That remains to be seen.

So long Vox, hello WordPress

In a fit of inspiration I started cleaning house in a major way today. Invariably I got tired of the dust and moved on to electronic housekeeping instead.

I’ve long been disatisfied with Vox and despite some of the good features and cute themes I have decided it’s time to take this show elsewhere. So you can now find the blog integrated with the rest of the shiny content over at shinylib.

Until I get my php and css up to speed I’m sure I’ll spend some time missing the ubercute themes here at Vox, but ultimately it’s that customization that I’m looking for. Well, that and the ability to embed your blog somewhere non-Vox.

I don’t expect the new address will lead to more frequent posting just yet, but you never know…

Late to the party…

So I finally understand the beauty of IMAP. I don’t know where I was while everyone else was out installing Thunderbird and simplifying their email accounts, and thus their lives, with IMAP–but I finally get it now.

My workplace is kind of confusing with regard to email. We send and receive a lot of it and at some campuses the staff use Outlook. At other campuses the staff seem just fine with the webmail access through the so-called portal. I never know what kind of access I will have at which campus and I think next term I’ll be at a webmail campus.

Last night a friend said to me, “Girl, get yourself some Thunderbird.” Boy was she right. I now have my umpteen Gmail accounts and my work email routed through the Tbird client and thanks to the glory of IMAP, everything stays in the exact same place as when I last saw it–regardless of where I login. Next week I will go to work and recreate this process for my computers there. Bingo bango.

I lament my technical inability to explain to you how IMAP works, I just know that it does.

Here’s to a slightly more organized new year!

I am definitely human.

  • My freakin’ wrists are killing me. No combination of anti-inflammatory, brace, and stretching has come close to fixing it. A smart person might take this as a sign to type less. Me? I have two handouts to create by Wednesday.
  • I totally did not apply for ACRL Emersion 08. I really wanted to, and I sat down a few different times to write the application mini-essays. It just never happened. You know how it is. Really, I am going to give myself a break on this one. I am doing quite enough stuff as it is. There’s always next year or, praise jebus, the year aftah.
  • I am really looking forward to winter break. This is one major plus for working in academic libraries. Or minus if you’re hoping to escape some visiting in-laws. Fortunately, I am not. I need some time off to not think about work. I love my job, but as I have mentioned before–I work a lot.
  • Did I mention I have two handouts to create by Wednesday? This might seem like a minor thing, but I have to create them for CINAHL with Ebsco interface and for some heinous Sage publication (a database that looks like a website), both of which are extremely buggy right now. No one seems to know why. Ah the vagaries of databases. And I am actually creating these handouts for the 8am class the first Monday of winter term. It’s just weird.

Catching Up

Phew. The impending arrival of finals week gives me a minute to breathe and compose a post. Of course the knocking on my office door from frantic students looking to find me does hamper the writing somewhat.

I can’t believe that my first quarter as an academic librarian is coming to a close. I have been following the First Year Librarian posts over at ACRLog and am relieved to see that many of my experiences are very normal.

First, there is the ever-present inability to go the heck home at the end of my shift. It’s not as though I mean to stick around the library for umpteen extra hours–it’s just a really long walk from my office to the door and any number of things are likely to occur on the way. Some examples include printer jams, discussions of cafeteria-induced food poisoning, who threw away whose perfectly good milk, and the occasional friendly chat with that one lunatic faculty member who does that thing with the thing. Imagine that I am, right now, making shifty eyes at you.

This relates to item the second, gossip. Gossip exists in various forms in all libraries, in all departments. I am learning to try to steer clear of this as much as possible. It doesn’t help that everyone knows I am funny and I like to talk– I suppose I seem like the natural choice for sharing gossip. I’m not, it pretty much goes in one ear and clatters around in there until I stuff enough other crap in after to consume the space.

I am horrified and amused to realize that my research skills are totally rusty. I have gotten so good at dumbing down my inner research geek to help students (sure, that’s the internet button, just click on it and away we go!) that I actually stared at Library Lit & Inf Science in consternation a few minutes ago, trying to sort out how to begin finding articles that speak to any sort of research interest whatsoever.

I vaguely remember going through a similar phase after the completion of my BA. I just forgot how to develop my own research topics and go after them. I recall soliciting essay topics on LJ just to have something to write.

Needless to say I don’t have anything resembling the time to write let alone to do research most of the time so this is an exercise in futility… or at least in collecting PDF versions of articles that I will likely never find a chance to read.

Absent in this list, quite notably from my perspective, is any discussion of the future job scenario. Like I have said before, I just don’t have the time to worry about a future job–I have too much to do with the job I have right now. That said, I still worry, a lot…

Wesch does it again.

Mike Wesch, professor at K State and paragon of digital anthropology has done it again.
His video “The Machine is Us/ing Us” provided brilliant oversight on what this whole cult of 2.0 is really about; separating content from format and coming away empowered by the process. The 4-and-a-half minute film really makes you think about how humans think, create, collaborate, and organize. If you haven’t seen it, I highly recommend checking it out.

What I really want to talk about is a video that came out last month, “A Vision of Students Today” created by Wesch and 200 students enrolled in ANTH 200: Introduction to Cultural Anthropology. You can see it (and the rest of his videos) here: http://www.youtube.com/user/mwesch

What really strikes me about the video, which is another of the brilliance in under 5 minutes variety, is not the overwhelming number of statistics presented that tell me our students are totally not listening but rather the hope it gives me that if we can only pry ourselves out of our boxes we can still reach them.

[Stop reading here, watch the video, and move on with your day unless you really want to read my thoughts on so-called Millennial student learning styles.]

The video begins with a quote from Marshall McLuhan, “Today’s child is bewildered when he enters the 19th century environment that still characterizes the educational establishment where information is scarce but ordered and structured by fragmented, classified patterns, subjects, and schedules.” Although McLuhan said this forty years ago it could easily have been said just the other day. To acknowledge the existence of varied learning styles only to then insist that our students do it the way we like best is a shame and a disservice to our students and our profession.

Whoa, okay, backing off of my soapbox… but really, doing this is like going to a really expensive hair stylist. You tell the stylist what you want, because after all it is your head and one hopes you know it best. Sure you expect them to tell you that cutting bangs will make your head look like a potato and not be especially flattering. But you also expect them to understand the difference between “take a little off the ends” and “scalp me.” When your stylist veers off the beaten path without checking with your first you have a right to feel both uncomfortable and underserved. This is no different in our profession. Sure I will tell my students that checking their MySpace during my lecture is likely to result in them missing some key elements of the lesson because it’s just common sense and part of my job is to impart those little gems. I also point out that I will only see them this one time, for 50 minutes, which creates a “blink and you missed it” aspect to library instruction.

I also have to acknowledge to myself that I earned a masters degree by sitting in class with my laptop open to no fewer than 5 websites at a time, two word processing panes, a One Note file going for my lecture notes, and crocheting afghans and various Xmas goodies. And really? I didn’t miss much. I took the time and courtesy to notify my professors that I am a fidgeter and apt to disrupt class with bouts of talkative if not allowed to let my fingers roam around. I asked for feedback and made it clear that I would discontinue any of my sporadic learning-related (to me) activities if asked to do so. No one asked.

Certainly there is merit to some claims that students are lazy and suffer from an extreme lack of work ethic, prompting them to sit in class watching the world go by on their laptops. I believe it is just as likely that their instructors just do not “get” them and that by stubbornly refusing to move away from the chalkboard (chalk! egads!) they are going to do nothing but lose those students who have embraced alternate modes of learning. For instance, I recently taught a WR 115 class in which a number of students were clearly exploring other things besides research on the Internet. I was concerned about this but when the writing faculty and I debriefed after the class we found that some of the best interaction came from a kid who was hunkered down in the back row watching skateboarding videos on YouTube for at least half of my lesson…

Now having said all of this, how do we deal with the fact that our community college students are as diverse as they come? That some students are as likely to have never used a web browser as others are to have their own laptops is a complication to say the least.

The end of all of this for me is a circle– understanding that education is complicated. Teaching is complicated. Learning is complicated. That we repeatedly confuse these terms. Showing up is not the same as coming prepared to learn. Simply showing up and talking a lot at the front of the room does not really constitute teaching; although it certainly does pass for education in many places. Challenging ourselves to out-perform MySpace is daunting, but not too different than trying to keep students from staring out of windows… I can’t outshine the sun, no matter how hard I try…but I can certainly challenge myself to be engaging on a daily basis. Is that enough? I don’t know…

Today’s shiny.

If you are looking to avoid that sunshine taunting you through your window here is a reason to clap your eyes
on the screen for a moment…

One of Google’s current experiments regards alternate views for displaying search results. With the correct syntax, results are available in timeline, map, and “additional info” formats.

I haven’t played much with maps and additional info, but Timeline is pretty darn cool. Try the following search, to get
an idea of the ways this could be used (currently I am thinking about some U.S. History assignments that were
just assigned)…

“Portland community college” view:timeline

This yields a pretty decent collection of results displayed by timeline. Of course some of the dates are subjective…
dates of submission instead of date of occurrence, etc. but it is still pretty cool. Clicking on a specific
decade range yields more specific results. This feature does work with other Google limiters (such as site:.edu).

[The timeline command could be replaced with view:maps or view:info--the default "Google" view is called list view.]

I see usefulness in terms of deciding on paper topics, understanding a larger context, etc. Clearly this is not
a good way to do in-depth research or to cheat on a “make a timeline” assignment.

Check it out if you have the time or inclination.

Stop the insanity!

Oh jeez. It’s ok if you laugh at me for this, I promise.

I just found another something for which I just have to apply. It’s nothing as huge as EL 08, but is really cool and important to me. So yeah, I will once again be frantically cranking out letters and applications. This is for the ACRL-sponsored Immersion 08 teaching institute. Also, it’s in San Diego at the end of July. I know, what? Damn those people sure know how to book a good location.

So once again I will begin the process of hunting for letters of reference, etc. because I really need a scholarship. There’s not a chance in hell I could afford to attend this thing on my own. Even with a scholarship I would still be on the hunt for $1000 that I know my employers sure don’t have.

If you ever wanted to know what it’s like to be shiny… it’s all about applications and cover letters.

Updates on the shiny librarian and thoughts on the state of the world…

Less a real entry than a list of updates…

  • I finally got around to putting content on shinylib.com. As ever there’s “more to come”. We’ll see.
  • I am not sure where I was for the past several months, but I have only just become aware of the Jena Six controversy, in which several escalating racially-focused incidents at a high school lead to six black students beating a white student (who apparently was feeling well enough to attend a party later that evening).I don’t understand what I heard reported on NPR, which amounted to the FBI stating that hanging nooses from the “white tree” is not a hate crime and therefore there are no laws under which to charge the white perpetrators. I don’t advocate the beating of a white student by six black students, or really the beating of anyone except parents of small children left unattended at libraries. If you are not already following this case I would suggest you do so, the fallout is sure to be immense.
  • Shiny! The college library I work for has just doubled my contract, meaning that I will be temporary full time faculty through the end of winter term, at least. I also am eligible for benefits now, and really–who doesn’t need health care?

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