Luddite learning (continued)

April 18, 2008 at 1:07 am (MLA 2.0 1.01, MLA 2.0 Week 2) (, )

I finally added a page to my wiki (http://pammlaweb20wiki.wetpaint.com). I’m sharing a few suggestions on Luddite Learning, or how to do Web 2.0 with a dial-up connection.

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slow progress

March 22, 2008 at 9:24 pm (MLA 2.0 1.01, MLA 2.0 Week 2) (, , )

I’m back again. By the end of yesterday I was so frustrated – I just could not figure out how to post my blog and wiki to the MLA wiki page without having the URL show. But today is a new day, and with my (cheap) husband watching, we figured it out and I successfully loaded up my links, finally. He noticed the BIG note on the MLA page to go here for help – and someone had posted my exact problem – and the solution was there. Whew – so I won’t give up yet.

Now – does anyone know how to get the RSS feeds into the blog? (mine are happily living in my new GMAIL account reader).

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MLA Web 2.0 101 Wk 2 – Wikis vs Blogs

March 21, 2008 at 7:53 pm (MLA 2.0 1.01, MLA 2.0 Week 1, MLA 2.0 Week 2) (, , , )

This week in the MLA Web 2.0 course we learned about Wikis. I also learned that the Blog that I set up last week actually had no message. Apparently I did not hit the final post buttons.

 

I’m going to start by listing some of the ways that we could use RSS feeds in the library – which I thought I had posted last week, but apparently not successfully:

- subscribe to selected news feeds, feeds from other key organizations, to keep up with latest developments

- subscribe to select ToC – perhaps find a way to incorporate these into the manually produced list that I currently produce each week (there were hints on how to do this in the MLA Web 2.0 course)

- encourage other departmental staff to subscribe to RSS feeds

- encourage organization to develop its own RSS feeds, consider how our library could use them.

 

And, now, on to my assignment for this week – Wikis vs Blogs:

 

Blogs seem to be more personal, more off the cuff, more on what the individual is thinking. Wikis seem more formal, better for institutions, better for links, better for more complex information, and are much easier to use (for me at least). People can respond to and interact with both forms.

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MLA Web 2.0 101 Wk 2 – Wikis vs Blogs « Pvanhine’s Weblog

March 19, 2008 at 6:23 pm (MLA 2.0 1.01, MLA 2.0 Week 1, MLA 2.0 Week 2)

MLA Web 2.0 101 Wk 2 – Wikis vs Blogs « Pvanhine’s Weblog

I hate blogging!

 

I don’t know how many times I THOUGHT I posted something on my blog, and it appears to be there, but when I check the next day or so, it’s gone. AGRRR! Anyhow, I’m trying again. I’m pasting in what I thought I had already posted on Wednesday…

 

Pam’s blog (again)

Somehow the original posting and my comment on it seemed to have gone missing. So I’m trying again. My first comment on blogs vs wikkis is that WIKKIS ARE MUCH EASIER!

Anyhow. This blog is for the MLA Web 2.0 101 course, and will contain some of my reactions to it (and for whatever is supposed to be added here).

Wish me luck! I’m trying to do this with a dial-up connection.

 

This week in the MLA Web 2.0 course we learned about Wikis. I also learned that the Blog that I set up last week actually had no message. Apparently I did not hit the final post buttons.

 

I’m going to start by listing some of the ways that we could use RSS feeds in the library – which I thought I had posted last week, but apparently not successfully:

- subscribe to selected news feeds, feeds from other key organizations, to keep up with latest developments

- subscribe to select ToC – perhaps find a way to incorporate these into the manually produced list that I currently produce each week (there were hints on how to do this in the MLA Web 2.0 course)

- encourage other departmental staff to subscribe to RSS feeds

- encourage organization to develop its own RSS feeds, consider how our library could use them.

 

And, now, on to my assignment for this week – Wikis vs Blogs:

 

Blogs seem to be more personal, more off the cuff, more on what the individual is thinking. Wikis seem more formal, better for institutions, better for links, better for more complex information, and are much easier to use (for me at least). Wikis are also collaborative efforts. People can respond to and interact with both forms.

 

http://pvanhine.wordpress.com/?p=6 (apparently not…)

 

 

Pam’s Blog and Wiki (just starting)

Link to Blog: http://pvanhine.wordpress.com/2008/03/13/hello-world/#comment-5

Link to Wiki: http://pammlaweb20wiki.wetpaint.com/

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