Claim Keys

February 19, 2007

WRiting blogs is getting complicated when I have to post claim keys. There have to be easier ways to claim ownership. I haven’t had time to learn how to do complicated html. I need to be able to do fast and furious thinking & sharing, not complicated web design. Sorry for the vent, but these companies insist on silly hoops for us to jump through.

Perhaps I am just irritated. I want to show librarians at school how they can use bloglines and RSS feeds, but ENA filters me. I do have an override password that works some of the time, but not for everything (youtube). Not everyone that I will share this with has their override password because they have to ask their principal to please send an email to ENA enabling them to have override priviledges. I want to do quick and simple professional sharing with colleagues. What will I do? I’ll go to Panera Bread and use their free Wi-Fi with a few close friends to do professional sharing.

I guess it’s just a grumpy Monday hour. I refuse to be grumpy all day, so I’ll go find something positive to do quickly.

Cynicism, Chain Letters & MeMe

March 7, 2006

My eyebrows are raised at the MeMe phenom hitting blogs. I don’t forward chain letters. I seldom fill out the surveys of personal data to send on to 15 of my favorite people (who if they really knew me wouldn’t need the survey anyway). But, I keep getting tagged, so I am having to rise above my cynicism and respond. Perhaps I am such a rebel that having to follow the rules and keep anything to 4 chafes! I may not comply.

Meme of 4

meme [’mEm] Function: noun
: an idea, behavior, style, or usage that spreads from person to person within a culture

Four non-library jobs I have held:
Waitress
Detassler
Cashier
Lawn Mower & tree counter

Four authors, books, or series I read over and over again: HAH! Four?!
Tamora Pierce
Diane Mott Davidson (& all food mysteries)
Elizabeth Peters (& all strong-willed female mysteries)
Janet Evanovich (& all funny sleuths)
Patricia Cornwell (& all coroner books)

Four movies I can watch over and over:
Apollo 13
Twister
French Twist
The Princess Bride

Four TV shows I love(d):
Crossing Jordan
Law & Order
Scooby-Doo
Laugh-In (I thought I was the Sock-it-to-me Gal as a child)

Four places I have lived:
Washta, Iowa
Taipei, Taiwan
Chicago, Illinois
Ansbach, Germany

Four sites I visit/use daily:
Google
Metro Nashville Public Schools
Bloglines
Democratic Underground

Four foods I yearn for:
White pizza
chocolate syrup
Drippy cheese
Coffee with Amoretto creamer

Four inventions I’m grateful for:
Laptops
Gel pens
Digital cameras
The Mute button

Four musical choices for my personal soundtrack:
Mama’s & the Papa’s
U-2
Sheryl Crow
Mary Chapin Carpenter

Four nouns that describe me:
Worker
Pollyanna
Singer
Reader

Four Bloggers I’m Tagging:
Gary Price http://www.resourceshelf.com/
David Lee King http://www.davidleeking.com
Amanda Murray http://buildingbridges.blogsome.com
Christopher Harris http://www.schoolof.info/infomancy/

Speedy Service

February 6, 2006

I do love the two county Public Library systems that I deal with. Remember I grew up in a small town where the library was open 2 hours Wed and 2 hours Sat afternoons. After that, most public libraries are big improvements. Still, there is something to be said for “Speedy Service.” I was in a branch of the Library asking for help in locating a book that the computer OPAC said was on the shelf. The library staff at the circ desk checked and discovered that it had been returned either that day or the day before. They then advised me to order it to be delivered from another branch library and that they would hold it for me at the desk. This would be quicker than my waiting for them to get around to reshelving the books at that branch. When I questioned this, they explained they had 10 carts of books to put away and only 2 people to do it. Plus they had 2 tables of returned books to sort and put out. They thanked me for my patience and understanding. Of course I understood, I even felt bad that I didn’t have time to volunteer to help them put them away, but then I was “thinking.”

Here I teach with a very high circulation daily and a half-time aide. My library is extremely busy and I can never do enough to keep everyone satisfied. Yet I work to get the books out so that patrons can at least look through the carts while they are waiting for me to get them back on the shelf through creative use of staff and volunteers. At my other job in retail my supervisor told me the average time a customer is willing to wait is four minutes. Imagine the library patrons who are unwilling to wait for service. I could have ordered this book from Amazon.com quicker and had it delivered to my home. Do we hurt ourselves when we fail to provide speedy service?

Podcasting & Captioning

January 10, 2006

While podcasts are the rage, I have a basic problem with the format. I have a serious hearing problem and can’t always understand what is being said. Since I discovered the thrills of closed captioning on my new TV, I won’t go back to uncaptioned movies for entertainment. The difficulty in listening while viewing videos or podcasts results in my refusing to download long podcasts. Am I the only one in the blogosphere with this difficulty?

Marketing Tech to Women

November 23, 2005

When you check your RSS feeds, some days everyone is talking about the same thing. How much original thinking and writing is going on versus clipping and quoting others and adding a pithy statement to the beginning? Just because something shows up on 3 or 4 blogs, doesn’t mean the original thought is written in stone. In the age of fluidity, creative thinkers are the ones putting together ideas and generating new products. They will survive the outsourcing of tasks because they are focusing on the big picture of what is wanted and how to deliver.

Now for the issue that irritated me today: women buying more of the market share of technology. You know that journals take a long time to recognize trends, admit there may be something, send reporters to gather facts, decide that it would be newsworthy enough to print, and actually print the article. By the time you read the article half of the population dismisses it as “old news” and the other half was oblivious all along and overreacts. You may notice some disdain on my part for the over-reactors.

Businessweek came out with an article called Meet Jane Geek which details the fact that more women are buying technology. The article verges on demeaning when it superficially lists the things that stores are doing to attract women shoppers. One comment on the site warned them about being condescending.

One of the TechDirt blog entries is from Mike with the great tag line ” from the took-’em-long-enough dept.” Tech Companies Finally Realize That Women Buy A Lot Of Gadgets. It’s funny that this comes up again because in January 2004 CNN had a study showing women buying more technology than men. In September of 2004 Hilde Corneliussen discussed this issue in Gender and Computing and warned against tech companies making tech gadget pink as the only attempt to attract women shoppers. A more in-depth linking report came out from the Crutchfield Advisor in February of 2004 called Suddenly, Technology is a Girl’s Best Friend.

There are some differences between the ways some men and some women shop (not all). Is it gender-based or knowledge-based? For example, I don’t dart into a store and buy a gadget because it’s new. I research it. I study similar products and compare, look at the purposes and functions, read online reviews by real consumers, and sometimes visit stores twice before buying major products. For small tech gadgets, I determine whose opinions I trust, read their ideas, price around, and shop quickly. Now, my best friend is the opposite. She’ll rush out and get the new thing, bring it in to show me, hand me the manual and say, “Now tell me what I’m going to do with it?” Are the differences gender based? No, way! Consumer shopping techniques vary.

Take the issue of gender-biased sales clerks when you are shopping. More and more clerks are being knowledgeably trained to stop making assumptions about people based on whether they are male-female, wearing blue jeans, older-younger, etc. When I shop with my husband, no clerk directs his “intelligent sales pitch” to my husband because he doesn’t participate in the asking of questions. I know the questions to ask and pin them to the floor until I get genuine answers. My husband doesn’t shop on his own because he is not an informed tech purchaser. Doesn’t have to do with his gender…it’s his consumer knowledge. Not all men and women are the same.

Years ago little girls were taught that they would be mistreated by mechanics because they were girls. When I would head in for a repair, I’d first call my father who is a great mechanic, and I’d ask him for the proper vocabulary to use. When I hit a spot where I didn’t know if I had the correct information or the repairman was trying to bamboozle me, I’d pause the conversation, call my father, and tell the repairman that I was getting a second opinion. I currently have a great group of mechanics that I trust 6 states away from my parents. They know that I will research what they tell me, get a second opinion, and make only the needed repairs. When I talk to other female friends, they tell me that they do not get mistreated any more by mechanics. What changed? We became more informed. We demanded better service. We became tougher and held people to a higher standard. I also refuse to be condescended to and have been known to refuse to deal with an employee who belittles women and I am unafraid to call a manager over. In the 1970s my mother and I may not have been as tough as the women I meet now. Society has changed. I believe women are MUCH tougher now, more informed, and taught to seek the best, not settle for the immediate.

Back to technology. Why do we have to fight a battle of genders over technology? Who is coming out there stating that men are the only techies and geeks? Look at the field of library information science. Women KNOW what’s going on. We can use the technology, repair it, purchase it, plan for it, implement it, and let companies know what is and isn’t working. Why are the majority of the technicians men in my district? Not because women aren’t capable! I think that I have the ability to juggle far more details in my life than simply repairing the same type of network and CPU issues over and over. I’m focused on using the technology to increase productivity. Does this mean that I am any less knowledgeable than my technician? No! But, to the children in my school do they see me as a techie? Perhaps not because they don’t focus on the product or tool I’m using, but they focus on the end result of our lesson. We aren’t teaching digital camera usage, we are focusing on choosing the best image to tell our story and share our learning.

Is there something that I should be doing differently? Perhaps, I now take the time to mention to everyone - male and female - that they can grow up and do what I do (recruitment); I mention to kindergarten girls that are afraid to touch the mouse that I believe they will become experts by the end of the year with practice (encouraging experimentation and changing mindsets); and I provide opportunities for creative thinking and using tech tools as communication devices (ICT skills). Maybe more importantly for both genders, I should continue to emphasize their questioning what they see, hear, and believe. I should continue to give them the skills they need to gather information and make informed decisions.

I know times have changed. Recently my father called me while he was purchasing some technology and he said, “I need the vocabulary to use with this guy before he tries to sell me something on the new computer that I don’t need.” I’m happy to be your second opinion, Dad.

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