I've been working with the new OPAC for a while and noticed several things that I passed on to "the powers that be." Originally when I looked up Lewis, CS a list came up with all kinds of Lewis's, but CS was down the page a ways. When I clicked on CS Lewis at the top under Suggested Topics, it took me to a page-long biography that I had to scroll down before finding his titles. If, however, I searched CS Lewis, I went directly to his titles. I see that it has now been fixed!
Browsing was also problematic. I chose to browse by author and then alphabetically, but discovered that what came up was a list of authors organized by the number of titles they had and not necessarily alphabetically. I found that confusing and unhelpful. I see that has NOT been fixed: Dickens, Dixon, Dahl are the first 3 listed under the D's.
Nancy is also aware that there is no Spanish option for the OPAC at this point and I'm sure they will be addressing that as soon as they are able.
Today I put The Memory Keeper's Daughter on hold from Clifton. Like that very much; the ability to see what is where and choose (we had only the audio here). This will be a MAJOR improvement when all the kinks are worked out.
I will very much enjoy the Cart Feature both personally and professionally when it's up and running!
Survey is completed!
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Friday, July 16, 2010
Library of the Future in Plain English
What impressed me is that we're already doing a lot of this!
Presentation by Mal Booth, Sophie McDonald and Belinda Tiffen, UTS Library. Ideas and concept for the video format were borrowed from the Common Craft website at www.commoncraft.com
Presentation by Mal Booth, Sophie McDonald and Belinda Tiffen, UTS Library. Ideas and concept for the video format were borrowed from the Common Craft website at www.commoncraft.com
Saturday, June 26, 2010
Newseum Museum
Great resource for getting the daily headlines.
I checked out El Nuevo Dia from San Juan, Puerto Rico and murder was the major headline. What I found odd was there was very little print on their front page; mostly photos with brief captions.
Moved on to Portugal and Spain which both had the World Cup splashed across all their newspapers: El Pais, Granada Hoy and Diario de Sevilla
I could see using this just to follow "What's up" in headlines around the world. It's also nice to see what's going on within Colorado; patrons often read something from another Colorado paper and kind of expect us to be aware of "local" happenings.
I checked out El Nuevo Dia from San Juan, Puerto Rico and murder was the major headline. What I found odd was there was very little print on their front page; mostly photos with brief captions.
Moved on to Portugal and Spain which both had the World Cup splashed across all their newspapers: El Pais, Granada Hoy and Diario de Sevilla
I could see using this just to follow "What's up" in headlines around the world. It's also nice to see what's going on within Colorado; patrons often read something from another Colorado paper and kind of expect us to be aware of "local" happenings.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Free e-books
Lots to learn here.
I used ManyBooks to download The Secret Adversary in LP, which sounded like a great idea, yet didn't look any different than the regular sized print. I could zoom in, but was able to do that with any title. Not sure what the differentiation was there.
Had used Project Gutenberg for school, so skipped over it this time.
Was interested to see the offering of magazines on Google Books; checked out Cruise Travel (I can dream, can't I?).
Memoware kind of confused me. I checked out a mystery: Bicycle Shop Murder and liked the sidebar with related e-books, but when I clicked on something there, it took me to a confusing page with no apparent connection to the titles I chose. I also found titles "for sale" though it was not immediately clear that these were not freebies.
Online Books Page looked more academic to me. Primarily nonfiction-I didn't see much "light" reading here. And, after all the reading I've done for school, I'm much more into the light stuff right now!
I used ManyBooks to download The Secret Adversary in LP, which sounded like a great idea, yet didn't look any different than the regular sized print. I could zoom in, but was able to do that with any title. Not sure what the differentiation was there.
Had used Project Gutenberg for school, so skipped over it this time.
Was interested to see the offering of magazines on Google Books; checked out Cruise Travel (I can dream, can't I?).
Memoware kind of confused me. I checked out a mystery: Bicycle Shop Murder and liked the sidebar with related e-books, but when I clicked on something there, it took me to a confusing page with no apparent connection to the titles I chose. I also found titles "for sale" though it was not immediately clear that these were not freebies.
Online Books Page looked more academic to me. Primarily nonfiction-I didn't see much "light" reading here. And, after all the reading I've done for school, I'm much more into the light stuff right now!
Labels:
E-books,
Google books,
ManyBooks,
Memoware,
Online Books Page,
Project Gutenberg
Wednesday, June 23, 2010
Librarians do Gaga
You can tell they had fun doing this; wonder how many of their patrons actually saw it?
Video: Librarians Do Gaga
Video: Librarians Do Gaga
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Optimal Resume
What great timing to have this and our job series too! These are terrific resources for job searchers with clear examples. I checked out resumes and letters and was impressed at the scope of the letters. Someone recently asked me to right a referral and I thought it was interesting to check out what Optimal Resume had for the different levels of one's career. This should be a valuable resource for our community!
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Print-Friendly Tools
I can see using this a lot! I already knew about the print preview and tell patrons about it each week. I really like Print Friendly because it is SO easy to use. I checked out the St. Petersburg, FL Newspaper and had no trouble editing photos and paragraphs I didn't want.
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