Thursday, November 27, 2008

MagMyPic


Create Fake Magazine Covers with your own picture at MagMyPic.com


Week 6/ No lesson!

The video was interesting, mainly because of the ice cream subject. I am not terribly wowed by ice cream, but my husband is a huge fan. He eats a bowl every night, without fail. How does he keep his figure? He weighs only five pounds more than he did when we were married, lo, these many decades ago. I think he has an imbalance - an ice cream imbalance. I don't think he'd eat the pickle ice cream, however. He has his standards... the Common Craft idea is an intriguing marketing/research idea. One of my offspring has started an importing business, a product from Japan customized for an American market. I'll ask him what tools he used to figure out marketing and potential customers. He doesn't like it when I ask him anything about the business, though. I'm his mother.

Lesson #5/social networking

Social networking is not something to which I'm attracted. I value my privacy too much, and I don't want to get bogged down in yet another computer-based time drain. Instead of setting up a site on one of the social networks I read some articles, which I did locate online!

The first is a news article from the A.P., dated 11/24/08 and accessed from the MSNBC website. The headline reads: "Jury gets case of MySpace hoax tied to suicide." It updates the story of the "Missouri mother accused of conspiring with her daughter...to harrass a 13 year-old girl on the Internet...precipitating the teen's suicide." The woman's defense rests largely on "whether (she)...violated the terms-of-service agreement of the MySpace social networking site." The prosecutor stated "the rules are fairly simple. You don't lie. You don't pretend to be someone else. You don't use the site to harrass others."

The next article is by Maria Aspan, written for the New York Times 2/11/08. The headline: "How sticky is membership in Facebook? Just try breaking free." Four people are interviewed about the near impossibility of "remove(ing) themselves entirely from Facebook," which archives info "indefinitely," even after members have deactivated their Facebook pages.

Last but not least is the article on matchmaking services written by John Tierney, published 1/29/08 in the New York Times. The headline: "Hitting it off, thanks to algorithm of love." This piece is a look at the various claims of several online servces - eHarmony; Perfectmatch.com; and Chemistry.com - all of which use methods such as algorithms, neural chemistry, the dyadic adjustment scale (!?), and more to help people meet their future mates.

In descending order, these three pieces touch on the aspects of social networking that I find troubling: safety, privacy, and b.s. How are we to keep our children out of harm's way online? It seems a daunting and ever more out-of-control problem. Kids are communicating constantly through these networks, and they are doing it at the library, at school, and at home. Who is responsible? Many schools forbid social networking on their premises. Some parents forbid it at home. Surely the kids are doing it anyway. I imagine most public libraries are not monitoring or forbidding social networking activity. Is there a potential liability? Is there a moral responsibility? I don't know the answer.
The issue of privacy is a broad one, but it trickles down to libraries. If a library patron sends out personal information from a public access computer, and that data is mined, does the library have a responsibility? If a user forgets, or doesn't know how to log out or purge data, are librarians supposed to take on the task?
B.s. is rampant online, of course, and buyer beware should be the rule. Only think, what if someone takes the marital plunge after an online courtship conducted from the library, and there is no happy ending? Librarians at fault?!! Could we be blamed?!! I think I know the answer on this one, but the safety and privacy issues are no jokes.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Lesson #4 RSS feeds

This seemed easy, so something must be wrong. I chose a feed from a New York theater/business newspaper, subscribed, set up an igoogle homepage, and now have the feed running. This is in addition to the NYTimes feed I already check obsessively.
Now I can track, on an up to the minute basis, how many shows are closing on Broadway and when Screen Actors Guild is actually going out on strike. Yay!!

Lesson #3 - Flickr

Good news - my latest general blog post avec photo finally showed up. Anyone know why it took so long?
Following this triumph, I successfully uploaded the same picture to Flickr, then ensconced it on the Vermont 23 things group page. I was able to do this only after making a general query on Google and discovering that I had to drag the photo onto the group page. There was no "Send to group" button to click. I found the Help feature on Flickr not very helpful.
On to Lesson 4!

Comfort food


Sunday my husband decided to walk down memory lane and make a pineapple upsidedown cake he remembered from childhood. Thanks to Google ( forget Joy of Cooking, Fanny Farmer, and Julia Child) he was able to find a recipe he could manage. Voila!
I created a new blog with photo and attempted to publish.  My post is "scheduled," but the scheduled time has come and gone with no post.  Why?!