#13 Tagging, folksomonies & social bookmarking in Del.icio.us
February 19, 2008
Delicious allows you to find out who is interested in certain topics. From there you can learn about things that you didn’t even know enough to know that you wanted to learn about. Kind of like having lots of knowledgeable friends.
#12 Roll your own search engine
February 13, 2008
It’s funny that using Rollyo to search several sites at once is actually easier that going any individual site and searching it. I suppose you could probably get better quality results if you go to the individual sites, though, depending on what you’re looking for. For me, and with this topic, the advantage would be primarily the convenience of one-stop searching, along with eliminating all the usual garbage you would get with a normal web search.
Here is my search engine on ballroom dancing:
#11 A thing about LibraryThing
February 13, 2008
I entered six of my favorite books into my catalog. It would have been five, but I thought I’d better add another one to show that I’m a grownup. (Did it work?) I can see using the social information as a fun way to decide what to read next.
#10 Play around with Image Generators
February 13, 2008
I’m not much of a photographer, so I don’t have a lot of images laying around to work with. But I thought that this image and this image generator from Lunapic worked well together.

#9 Finding Feeds
February 13, 2008
I used the same search terms for all the search tools listed. Topix felt more like a regular web search. I found news stories and webpages but could not find the feed symbols. Syndic8 only came up with two results. Technorati gave me blogs with only occasional on-topic posts. The only one of the search tools I found useful was Bloglines. The results all had feeds that I could find and use, and they were generally fully on topic. Bloglines wins!
#8 Make life “really simple” with RSS & a newsreader
February 13, 2008
After going through the process of deciding which of my co-worker’s feeds to subscribe to, the value of newsfeeds became quite obvious. I went through the entire list, which took quite some time. I used to do this regularly at the beginning of this project Then, when the list got too long, I would only look at a few, but I always wondered what I was missing. Now that I have added most of the blogs to my Bloglines account, I can go there first and immediately see who has posted. Everything is right on one page and right at my fingertips. Cool.
Here is my public Bloglines account: http://www.bloglines.com/public/leafygreen
#7 Blog about Technology
February 13, 2008
Speaking of Babel Fish…
I use the Babel Fish website occasionally when I want to translate something from a foreign language or when I want to write something in Spanish. It can be very helpful, but you gotta watch out, as the example below with the dancing doggies demonstrates.
Here is a special discovery exercise for you that you may have heard about. Use Babel Fish to translate a sentence into another language, and then use it to translate it back into the original language. Hilarity usually ensues. Let’s try “Cook the brown eggs.” The Korean translation of this actually translates back correctly back into English. Now let’s try Russian. This yields “You will weld the brown of egg.” So Babel Fish has not quite reached the Star Trek universal translator standard just yet.
Playing with flickr
January 10, 2008
I thought that Spell with flickr was kind of fun, but I couldn’t figure out how to download the result onto my own computer where I could use it.
The trading card application, fortunately, worked out better for me.
DANCE with ME
January 8, 2008
There seem to be a lot of library folk who like dogs. I like dogs, too, but what I really like is dancing. This photo should please everybody.
When you mouse over this photo in flickr, there are hidden captions. I used Babelfish to translate from the Italian (at least I assume it’s Italian). Apparently, the taller doggy is saying “Ugly one kills how much six!” to which the shorter pooch replies, “How much six beautiful one, my dancer in black!” You gotta love Babelfish.
7-1/2 lifelong learning habits
December 13, 2007
Which of the 7-1/2 habits is hardest? I would say Habit 1: Begin with the end in mind. It can be difficult to come up with a concrete goal, and goals are such elusive things. Sometimes I prefer to just point myself in a general direction and see what happens.
The easiest – Habit 7 ½: Play. Not a problem.

