Friday, February 18, 2011

Five balloons, six balloons, seven balloons, more!

I probably spend more time using Twitter's search function than most people. I like to know what people are talking about and I find it easier to isolate the conversations of interest to me by searching for the relevant keyword or hashtag. Essential online resource for me personally at this point.
I'm of two minds on Facebook privacy. On the one hand, I thought it absolutely critical that we steer people in the direction of the privacy settings for this exercise. And I keep my profile very locked down and reveal very little to people who I don't consider friends.
On the other hand, I'm of the mindset that online privacy is a myth. You don't really have any. If you don't want what you say to be used against you, don't say it. Facebook provides information to vendors all the time. They could also be hacked. Your friends could decide they aren't your friends and exploit the personal information that you've given them via your profile. And so on and so on.
And yet, I choose to live a pretty high profile online life in general. I embrace all the things that come with being highly connected in the profession and amongst my social groups. I'm more hesitant about dragging my children into that high profile existence, so I tend to post pictures more guardedly and just about never use their names.
I'm not someone who necessarily thinks we need to know everything about every emerging technology that comes along, but Facebook is so pervasive amongst our patrons, that to ignore it is to position ourselves to provide poor service. And that shouldn't be acceptable.
Social networking? I mostly love it. I've had to dial it back to be a better father and husband. But the pull is still pretty strong for me, since my friends are scattered across the globe.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Two, no wait, three, no, four balloons!

How do you solve a problem like Google?

Well, it all begins with play, of course. Google Docs has been critical to 23 Things. It's the mechanism for producing and keeping track of the survey and the tool we use for tracking everyone's progress with 23 Things.

Google Books has also become an important part of my life, but more on the personal side. I have been using it to get free books to read to my children.

I love Google Scholar. If I may stroke my own ego for a second, what I really love is seeing an citation for an article I wrote back in 2003 that has been cited by 10 other resources that you can find in Google Scholar. Love that.

Google Maps is pretty much the only navigation tool I use these days, especially since I've moved to an Android phone. Essential.

Google Patents is fascinating and can become a huge timesink for curious folks like myself. Just refreshing the front page and seeing what comes up is entertainment enough.

Google Uncle Sam is a huge resource as well. Not something I'd be likely to use often in my position, but everyone should know its there.

Google Sites...I've never known anyone who created a site with it. Not much to say there.

Great stuff overall. In retrospect, I wish we had directed people to Google News. The way it aggregates news from around the globe is just astonishing.