Thursday, June 24, 2010

Being a follower

OK, I've had fun looking at colleagues' blogs and opting to "follow" them. I hope I get some followers as well.

I've found that recently, I've been dividing up my social media writing energy. Basically, I use 4 social media sites:

Facebook--for quick checks on friends and acquaintances (Jane Claspy Nesmith--friend me!)
Nesmith Family Blog--for sharing longer "essaylets" about things that I'm interested in or things my family does
Twitter--for short outburts/soundbites about my life (I'm @jcnesmith)
Ravelry--for musings, questions, and lists pertaining to my crochet projects. (Again, jcnesmith on ravelry)

I don't want to spend TOO much time staring at a screen (and as a freelance writer, I have to use the computer for work, too), so I'm finding that my posts on our family blog have become less frequent.

Does anyone else sometimes feel like their life is being swallowed by Web 2.0?

p.s. thanx for the reminder to add tags! I often intend to do this, but I forget.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Becoming a wikipedia editor

13 Things blog suggested that we go to wikipedia and look up a topic we knew about:
look up a topic you have interest in or know something about (it can be anything...knitting, dog care, astronomy, Greek mythology...there are over 3 billion articles, you are sure to find at least one you are interested in or know something about). Do you have anything to add? If so, click "Edit" on the upper left hand side and add your knowledge.
So I went to . . . amigurumi, of course!

The entry was quite short. . . I wondered what would bulk it up. One could write about the best type of yarn to use (cheap acrylic is best), or about the eye/mouth placement (low on the face for highest Kawaii quotient).

Of course, one could even write about Kawaii--cuteness in Japanese. 可愛い

(The amigurumi entry is linked with the "cuteness" Kawaii entry . . . )

But I noticed that each statement had a footnote. I wondered if one could add statements without footnotes. I mean, using cheap acrylic yarn is . . . common knowledge to those of us who make amigurumi. The mighty "F" hook is always used with worsted-weight cheap yarn--everyone knows that. But is that OK in wikipedia? I've noticed recently lots of "citation needed for this" notes in the entries.

And maybe these details are too technical.

I liked that the amigurumi entry noted that amigurumi "have no practical use." Or, as I always say, they are "totally useless items."

Wacky wikis

I used a wiki for the first time this past spring term. I felt my Advanced Writing Workshop students needed to learn about professional writing for Web 2.0, and I figured it would be better for THEM to do the research than for me to do it and give it to them. So the students brainstormed various topics--professional writing for Facebook was the most popular!--and divided them up. Then they did some web research on the topics and created wiki pages for each one. First they just dumped their info on the page; later, I had them integrate and synthesize the material so it wasn't just a patchwork.

That last part was the hardest: synthesizing all the material. Students seem to think if they find, copy, and paste material, they've "researched" it. Always has been that way, but web 2.0 makes that process really easy. Synthesizing the material is still hard. I need to think more about how I conduct that assignment if I do it again so that it's not just a patchwork of cut and paste.

I use Wikipedia as a "first source" when I'm finding out about something I know nothing about. Like pop culture!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Google Calendar

I put an item on Google calendar, and got an email notification. I wasn't actually ON the computer at the time, but I still made it to my ballet class on time :-)

This should be very useful if I am working on the computer and not aware of the time (happens quite often). So many times I look up and "OH!" I'm late for something!

I wonder if I could combine my Google calendars from both of my gmail accounts. Right now, I am "sharing" calendars between my two personae. I sure would like them to be combined somehow, and for email notifications to go out to both email accounts.

Anyone have any ideas?

Maybe it would just be easier to log on to and use one!

In the clouds!

I enjoyed thinking about Web 2.0 apps I use this week. There's one other I just found out about this year--from Lisa--it's Piknik, which allows you to edit photos very easily. My students in journalism used it for our web stories.

As for Google Docs, I'm not crazy about it. It does something funny to the formatting, which is often an important part of documents I'm working on (syllabi, etc). Also, until recently, I guess, it didn't want to upload docx files. It seems to do that now.

But I am going to use it today! I started on an assignment for a fall class yesterday at Coe, and will work on it from home today.

As for the other apps, ScribD was interesting. Nice that the site allows users to categorize the docs so that other like-minded writers/readers can find it. But probably they don't, unless they're looking for it, or it's somehow viral.

Like most of the rest of the web, there's no editor, so anything can get published--a good and bad thing. I like the idea that you can use it for civic participation like the city of Marion did.

I couldn't get logged on to Zoho with my Google account, so didn't get to explore that one too much.