Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Jacksonville Public Library and its Branches
http://picasaweb.google.com/eya328/JacksonvilleLibraryBranchesAndTheMainLibrary?authkey=H1ZjXIkDt1o#
Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Web 2.0 Experience

I'm giving myself a pat in the back. You should too!
Before this training, I already have a personal blog, http://eya-familylife.blogspot.com/,
I thought I know everything about blogging.
I Am Wrong!
I learned so much from this training. And the convenience of doing it is amazing.
My favorite discovery was FLICKR. I discovered all the services they do. It's awesome.
If there's another discovery program in the future, sign me in.
Thank you for this amazing journey!
Downloadable Media

Downloading Videos:
When JPL first introduced this service, I think my family is the first ones who tried it.
And we love it. It's great! Just download it and viola! You're watching a movie in your computer.
Too bad they discontinued that service.
Correct me if I'm wrong, I think we can only download audio books now.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Friday, August 22, 2008
YouTube
I made this slideshow when the Friends of the Bradham-Brooks library sponsored a Pre-Mother's Day Breakfast in cooperation with Applebee's.
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Discovering Web 2.0 tools

Being a picture person, I selected the category: Photos and Digital Images. I found out Flickr is number 1. So I explored http://www.picnik.com/, which is number 2 on the list. PICNIK is described as; an online photo editor with tons of cool features, you can use Picnik to edit and enhance images on your computer.
Picnik is still in Beta. The site smoothly performs many of the tasks that most users want from a photo editor. When you first visit Picnik, you are faced with four large tabs: Your Photos, Edit, Creative Tools, Save & Share.
The first, allows you to add photos from all sorts of places. You can upload images from your computer, take them from flickr, or take them from any other website.
When you have finished playing–oops, editing–you have numerous options. You can save images on your own computer, send them directly to flickr, or to several other websites, including Costco and Wal*Mart. cool, huh?
I found Picnik to be useful, fun, and easy to use. Try it and see for yourself. I think the library can use this tool for working with pictures . We now have the JPL blog and it sure will be a great help to edit pictures before publishing them in the blog.
Picnik is still in Beta. The site smoothly performs many of the tasks that most users want from a photo editor. When you first visit Picnik, you are faced with four large tabs: Your Photos, Edit, Creative Tools, Save & Share.
The first, allows you to add photos from all sorts of places. You can upload images from your computer, take them from flickr, or take them from any other website.
When you have finished playing–oops, editing–you have numerous options. You can save images on your own computer, send them directly to flickr, or to several other websites, including Costco and Wal*Mart. cool, huh?
I found Picnik to be useful, fun, and easy to use. Try it and see for yourself. I think the library can use this tool for working with pictures . We now have the JPL blog and it sure will be a great help to edit pictures before publishing them in the blog.
Monday, August 11, 2008
Library Poem
| I'm just playing here in Zoho and i choose this library poem to play with. MY LIBRARY by Varda One
|
Zoho Writer's
So today I’m trying out Zoho Writer to see how it works. I haven't used Google docs in the past and I'm so ashamed to say I haven't even heard about it.
I found Zoho really helpful. Before, when it came to crunch time and I needed to get my document edited quickly and reading for print, I went back into Microsoft Word to create the final product. Not to mention, I have to log in to http://www.remote.coj.net/ to get my documents from Word from the reference desk computer.
Just from the looks of it, Zoho Writer seems to be much more robust than Google docs. Some of the features in Zoho Writer that I found I like:
Page Setup
Web publishing
Library of Templates
Tables and Images
Special Characters, subscripts and superscripts
Comments
And more!
I found Zoho really helpful. Before, when it came to crunch time and I needed to get my document edited quickly and reading for print, I went back into Microsoft Word to create the final product. Not to mention, I have to log in to http://www.remote.coj.net/ to get my documents from Word from the reference desk computer.
Just from the looks of it, Zoho Writer seems to be much more robust than Google docs. Some of the features in Zoho Writer that I found I like:
Page Setup
Web publishing
Library of Templates
Tables and Images
Special Characters, subscripts and superscripts
Comments
And more!
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
JPL Learning 2.0 Sandbox

I had the hardest time logging to the sandbox. Thanks to Eric from San Marco I was able to log-in, finally!
After my "troubled" sign-in, I found the sandbox fun. You can add your input practically anywhere. And at the same time, you can see other people's input.
I noticed when you go to favorites and click on the favorite blog spot, you can't edit and put your comment there, like the rest of the choices.
Here's the link to the sandbox favorites:
http://jaxlearning20.pbwiki.com/Favorite+Blogs
After my "troubled" sign-in, I found the sandbox fun. You can add your input practically anywhere. And at the same time, you can see other people's input.
I noticed when you go to favorites and click on the favorite blog spot, you can't edit and put your comment there, like the rest of the choices.
Here's the link to the sandbox favorites:
http://jaxlearning20.pbwiki.com/Favorite+Blogs
Monday, August 4, 2008
WIKI
What's so great about wikis anyway?
It's obvious:
They are simple, efficient tools for managing knowledge and collaborating. They're particularly convenient in today's busy and international workplace.
With wikis, knowledge doesn't get buried in emails, locked into file systems, hard drives or servers, intranets or extranets, or closed in more specialised data management systems and knowledge management systems.
Wikis are online so users can access, collaborate on, and share content, knowledge and files anytime, anywhere.
Why use a wiki?
A wiki lets you and your teammates collaborate online. It's easy, efficient, and intuitive to use. Every user gets a voice and everyone's contribution is seen, heard, and can be commented upon. In this way wikis improve and democratize communication -- no one misses the 'memo' and anyone can send it. Wikis get information to the right people -- important information (documentation, processes, ideas, communication, etc.) is available to the people who need it, not locked and buried in one person's in-box.
It's obvious:
They are simple, efficient tools for managing knowledge and collaborating. They're particularly convenient in today's busy and international workplace.
With wikis, knowledge doesn't get buried in emails, locked into file systems, hard drives or servers, intranets or extranets, or closed in more specialised data management systems and knowledge management systems.
Wikis are online so users can access, collaborate on, and share content, knowledge and files anytime, anywhere.
Why use a wiki?
A wiki lets you and your teammates collaborate online. It's easy, efficient, and intuitive to use. Every user gets a voice and everyone's contribution is seen, heard, and can be commented upon. In this way wikis improve and democratize communication -- no one misses the 'memo' and anyone can send it. Wikis get information to the right people -- important information (documentation, processes, ideas, communication, etc.) is available to the people who need it, not locked and buried in one person's in-box.
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
Library 2.0 and Web 2.0
"No matter which side of the debate proponents fall, both sides agree that libraries of tomorrow, even five or ten years from now, will look substantially different from libraries today."
For some reason, this sentence caught my eye. And I totally agree with it. JPL offers a lot of library services that are technology based: the downloads, movies and audios; coming from a third world country, i consider the wireless service very technology oriented; JPL now accepts credit cards for fines; almost everything can be done electronically; from getting library cards, to reserving materials and renewing them.
Definitely, libraries of tomorrow will be different from libraries of today.
For some reason, this sentence caught my eye. And I totally agree with it. JPL offers a lot of library services that are technology based: the downloads, movies and audios; coming from a third world country, i consider the wireless service very technology oriented; JPL now accepts credit cards for fines; almost everything can be done electronically; from getting library cards, to reserving materials and renewing them.
Definitely, libraries of tomorrow will be different from libraries of today.
Technorati
Two interesting things i saw on Technorati:
1. The number one most research topic is NEWS; second, the California earthquake that happened today; third is:.....viagra. I'm not kidding.
2. This post really interests me: http://www.problogger.net/subscribe-to-problogger/
1. The number one most research topic is NEWS; second, the California earthquake that happened today; third is:.....viagra. I'm not kidding.
2. This post really interests me: http://www.problogger.net/subscribe-to-problogger/
DEL.ICIO.US

Very interesting.
Del.icio.us (pronounced "delicious") is a social bookmarking web service for storing, sharing, and discovering web bookmarks. The site was founded by Joshua Schachter in late 2003 and acquired by Yahoo! in 2005. It has more than three million users and 100 million bookmarked URLs.[1]
Wednesday, July 23, 2008
Wednesday, July 16, 2008
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
JaxCat Seach Gadget
Finally added the JaxCat Search Gadget to my blog. Whew!
This is very useful. I'm going to add this to my personal blog. That way, i don't have to log in to JPL website to find books.
This is very useful. I'm going to add this to my personal blog. That way, i don't have to log in to JPL website to find books.
Monday, July 14, 2008
Library Thing
here's my link to http://www.librarything.com/:
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/gloriab
this is a very good website. A co-worker pointed this page to me. And we were both cracking up:
http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.php?topic=37594. It talks about things found in the library.
http://www.librarything.com/catalog/gloriab
this is a very good website. A co-worker pointed this page to me. And we were both cracking up:
http://www.librarything.com/talktopic.php?topic=37594. It talks about things found in the library.
Tuesday, July 8, 2008
Looking for newsfeeds
It's not that hard looking for newsfeeds. The most easy thing for me to do, is KNOW what kind of news i want. I am so interested in Philippine news. So, i go to an online Phil. newspaper and and subscribe to their feed.
I love to look at the weather and track hurricanes as they develop, so i go to a weather site and subscribe to their feed it's that easy. Well, for me it is! It's just a matter of knowing what you want.
I love to look at the weather and track hurricanes as they develop, so i go to a weather site and subscribe to their feed it's that easy. Well, for me it is! It's just a matter of knowing what you want.
Rss Feeds
We're learning about Rss Feeds this week. This is really exciting. No more going to different websites. Here is my html from blogline.
http://rpc.bloglines.com/blogroll?html=1&id=Northwest Lady
http://rpc.bloglines.com/blogroll?html=1&id=Northwest Lady
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
web 2.0 3rd week 3rd post
web 2.0 3rd week 2nd post
I'm amazed with "SPELL WITH FLICKR". Really amazing!
Just type a word and viola! Comes in different shapes and colors.
wow!
Just type a word and viola! Comes in different shapes and colors.
wow!
web 2.0 3rd week 1st post
I chose this photo because this reminds me how inquisitive young minds are. J.J. , my son, is contemplating this "dog".
This is a dog park, anyway.
This is a dog park, anyway.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
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