Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Lesson 9 Part 2- Zinio
Three of the titles available through SAPL's Zinio website are American Craft, National Geographic Traveler, and Vegetarian Times.
The Zinio reader app is available for iPhone, iPad, Android, Windows 8, Mac, PC, and Kindle Fire.
Lesson 9 Part 1 Hoopla
In Hoopla, three of the top Audiobook titles are The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up, People I Want to Punch in the Throat, and Orange is the New Black.
Services like Hoopla are making the library more accessible for some of the populations we serve - those with fast, reliable internet at home and a device with which to access content. They can be very convenient, but they can also cause significant confusion and often necessitate specialized library programs to help users learn to use and navigate the services.
Some libraries are circulating devices and tools (like WiFi hotspots) to make these services accessible to more of their patrons, which I can certainly appreciate and understand. I'm looking forward to seeing how these programs work.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Lesson 8 Part 2 Challenge
I searched OverDrive and Hoopla for eAudiobooks on the topic of electricity. There was only one nonfiction title in each platform on the topic.
Overdrive: The Boy who Harnessed the Wind, by William Kamkwamba
Hoopla: The Story of Electricity, by Professor John T. Sanders
Both were fairly simple to search, but I liked that Hoopla suggests categories to search within, as you can see in the image below.
Overdrive's advanced search has the functionality of searching within formats. If you do a basic search for a term, you can narrow your results using the limits, which is easy enough.
I have to say, I vastly prefer Hoopla's browsing interface. I like the Netflix-style scrolling covers within categories as well as the large number of categories.
Lesson 8 Part 1 Challenge
In the library's Overdrive catalog, I searched for the titles below, and these are my results.
Nora Roberts – Chasing Fire
Formats available, copies owned/available:
eBook - 17/15, eAudiobook - 2/1
David Perlmutter, MD – Grain Brain
Formats available, copies owned/available:
eBook - 14/11
Lesson 6 Part 2 Challenge
Social media can certainly have unintended negative effects. If you watch the news regularly, you'll see people (from celebrities to police officers to corporations) enduring and responding to negative reactions from the public because of social media gaffes and missteps. One's public social media presence can be limited with privacy settings, but it's best to always keep in mind that what you post online may very well be seen by someone you didn't anticipate.
I've posted a link below, as an example of what can happen if you don't consider your possible audience when posting on social media.
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