So, morgen früh fahre ich nach München zur Social Software Fortbildung des VDB. Bin schon ganz gespannt auf die Diskussionen und wie mein Experiment mit dem Fortbildungsblog aufgenommen wurde.
Social Software
Blogs, Podcasts, RSS, Flickr, YouTube – there are many exciting services on the Internet for people who want to be heard. The maxim is: “From e-Services to Me-Services” or “Everyone is a publisher.” To put it simple, this services allow the broadcasting of text, audio, and video/images from many to many. They are developed for interaction of individuals, for communication in a social context, and for building communities, therefore they are called Social Software or Web 2.0. This regularly column will show the different services which are available at the moment and which may (and will!) emerge in the future. It will discuss these services in their meaning and significance for libraries. It will motivate you to use them personally or as a tool for enhancing your library services.
Using Web 2.0 in libraries is called Library 2.0 by some. Because this term is discussed somewhat controversial I will not refer to Library 2.0 in this column.
Items of possible interests
Let us start with blogs. Blogs is short for Weblogs or “Web log book” – a diary in web format. Blogs are organized chronologically by date (newest entries are usually at the top), are updated somewhat regularly with relatively short entries, includes many links, provides a unique URL (called a “permalink”) for each individual post, provide an “RSS feed” that “syndicates” the content, link to other blogs (called “blogroll”), and can be integrated via RSS into any other web site. In the very moment while you read this, Technorati (a popular search engine and aggregator for blogs) will track and organize over 60 Mio. Blogs world-wide – this figure doubles each six months. Most are private blogs, small diaries of every kind and quality: “I woke up this morning feeling really bad, nice breakfast with my dog I had, and a dispute which makes me really mad.” Kind of that stuff. But there are some professional blogs out there, which are of real benefit. In the following I will concentrate on blogs about any topic written by medical librarians or on blogs with the topic ‘medical libraries’ written by anyone. What blogs are out there and of interest for the profession? Four US/Canadian blogs are a continuously source of information, knowledge, tips, and hints: The Search Princple Blog or Google Scholar Blog by Dean Giustini, The Krafty Librarian by Michelle Kraft, T. Scott by T. Scott Plutchak, and davidrothman.net by … ok, you’ve got it. In table 1 you find an overview of North-American blogs, ranked by popularity according to Technorati.
Especially T.Scott is a must-read for anyone interested in the very nature of medical librarianship. The former long time chief editor of the Journal of the Medical Library Association is a huge source of wisdom and with his deep thinking postings his blog is like lighthouse, not only within the blogosphere (blogosphere is the network of individuals which are interconnected by their blogs.) For sure, in the following columns I will refer to T.Scott quite regularly. In table 2 there is a list of the blogs from European medical librarians or libraries. Surprisingly there are some blogs which started earlier than the US ones and also there are some which much more frequent postings. Only blogs with current entries are listed.
Tab.1: US- and CA-Blogs
Tab.2: European Blogs
Euromedlib – an experiment
At the 10th EAHIL conference at Cluj, Romania, I had the great opportunity to deliver an empowerment session on blogs and RSS. I started an demo conference blog just before the conference named EAHIL2006. Without ever thinking, due to the interaction with other bloggers at the conference, this blog suddenly emerged into a lively conference blog with reports on sessions, clips from social events, and interviews with participants. Pictures from the conference were published via the Web 2.0 service Flickr and could be seen almost immediately by the networked participants – thanks to the excellent wireless LAN at the conference venue.
Motivated by the success- and joyful cooperation at Cluj, five bloggers from Sweden, Netherlands, France, and Germany decided to take this idea one step further and build a cross-border blog with an real European scope, called EUROMEDLIB – Items of Interests for everyone working in an European Medical Library. As it is stated in the mission of Euromedlib, “There is a strong desire for networking among European medical librarians. This blog serves as a starting point for what is at the heart of EAHIL”. You find Euromedlib at http://euromedlib.blogspot.com/. Every European Medical Librarian is invited to participate, either by writing or commenting posts.
Enhancing conferences with a blog
Since Cluj I was thinking on enhancing a conference with an accompayning blog, but I’m not patient enough to wait till 2008 (Helsinki). So I started socialsoftwarefobi a week ago, a blog for a workshop with the same name. I’m curious about the experiences!
Stay current, use R|Mail!
Nicht, dass ich denke, irgendeiner würde sich für meine Elaborate so dermassen interessieren, aber … 🙂 There is a possibility to even subscribe to the newest articles written by me. Point your browser to www.r-mail.org and enter http://www.refworks.com/refshare?
site=028661130655600000/RWWS1AA537174/bibliography&rss and your Email address. Then, my latest articles or blog entries are sent to you via Email. This is true for every RSS feed.
Bibliography, Refworks & RSS
Never knew these three could work so well together. 😀 Now you will find a RSS feed of my bibliography at the profile/bibliography page for your convenience. I hesitated, because maybe that could be better accomplished by delicious or CiteUlike, but I already had everything in Refworks. At the moment you will find older resources on that page, because I’m updating my bibliographic files.
Imprint
This blog will be about everything from travels to library to mounted archery (my favourite sport) to whatsoever. I will write predominantly in German (for the time being) but offer translations (slightly corrected Google’s English, as I’m too lazy).
Let’s start!
Na, dann will ich mal den Blog füllen, wo ich doch heute* den Biostudenten im 5. Semester versprochen habe, dass sie unter oliverobst.de alles zum Berufsbild „Bibliothekar“ bzw. „Fachreferent“ bzw. „Bibliotheksmanager“ finden können.
* Anläßlich der Münsteraner Pflichtveranstaltung „Berufsbild und Berufsperspektiven“
Well, then I want to fill times the Blog, where today* I promised the bio students in 5. Term that they can find under oliverobst.de everything to the career profile librarian“ and/or „specialized technical“ and/or „library manager“. *On the occasion of the Münsteraner obligation meeting „career profile and job prospects“

