Friday, February 1, 2008

susie-q-t

as promised, here is my take on the assignments for weeks 3 & 4 of UK's Blue 2.0

First, let me say that I love the whole idea of RSS (really simple syndication). When you want to keep up with a variety of feeds, whether they're business or personal, this is the fastest, most efficient way to do that. I don't think I'm unusual in that I have little or no time during a normal day to read extraneous stuff. RSS helps me maintain some semblance of a normal life outside the confines of my job.

I think I would be ok with bloglines if it were not for the fact that I am, and have been for some time, using Google Reader. The reason I will stick with Google Reader instead of bloglines is because I have it on my Google page with several other key widgets (is that what they're called?) that I look to for various and sundry meaningless things....like my horoscope..... but I digress.

Bloglines is very easy to use, set up, and maintain. I don't find it particularly appealing aesthetically speaking, but it is minimally sleek and a lot of people like that look.

Oh, and the question I believe was: "what blogs do you like?"


I love, love, love Mustache's of the Nineteenth Century. mustachesofthenineteenthcentury.blogspot.com This is one of the most creative endeavors ever and it's very educational is a funny kind of way.


The other blog I enjoy is zemkat.blogspot.com This blog is packed with intellectual tidbits about everything: from techie stuff to slis stuff to general good humor...that's appropriate.



The blog I've been keeping an eye on the longest is stuckincustoms This guy is one of my fav photogs. He does some really incredible work and is very communicative via his blog. If you're into photography at all, he is not to be missed! And he includes a tutorial on how he achieves his incredible HDR photos!



Oh, and finally, I don't keep up with this blog but I stumbled across it recently when I was a panelist for the blogger awards. There were a lot of categories that I just would never look at ordinarily and that's where I found Cap'n Dyke, Lesbian Pirate Queen and Rogue Blogger lesbianpiratequeen.wordpress.com This woman is hysterical and, if you've ever read any of the Daniel Defoe Pirates! books, you'll love this.

PBwiki, on the other hand, is not extraordinary, intuitive, marginally fun, or or or or or or (can you tell I don't like it?)

In keeping with the day's theme, here is the link to my wiki susieqt.pbwiki.com it is sparse, sparse, sparse, and will remain so. Instead, I will build a wiki using mediawiki as referenced in another Blue 2.0 blog called zemkat's blue blog (remember I said it was a wealth of information?). It's free and open source and that's a huge plus when it comes time to understand what you're building. In fact, in talking with a fellow artist, I think we'll build a wiki for our small artist group as a collaborative project. We tried years ago to make some collaborative artwork but not eveything we did was......good......I think we'll have more success with something akin to wiki-ness. If nothing else, it will foster our communication in other ways than a simple yahoo!groups connection.

As to wikis in general, they're great tools. Wikipedia is awesome and, while it's not accurate 100% of the time, it is, none the less, a fantastic source to at least point you in a legitimate direction when you need good information. There's a lot to be said for that.

Wikis are absolutely fantastic tools for the workplace. We use a wiki here in our office. For me, and I know for some of my co-workers, it took some getting used to. I was of the paper club (that's what I call those of us who just have to have something written down, something to hold in their hand, something to mark on and doodle all over) and, I',m still in the club to some extent, but I've come to depend on the wiki as a real collaborative tool where anyone with the expertise, however big or small, can contribute to the overall brain-trust of the department. In this way, you're not isolating the knowledge base but making it accessible to everyone and anyone who may need it. It has proven invaluable and completely changed my perspective of what can be accomplished with this kind of technology.

In short, I don't like PBwiki but I love wiki-ness.

...and now, for something completely different....

1 comment:

Stacey Greenwell said...

Thanks for the nod to the mustache blog--I know Jason will get a kick out of it!

We tried to keep it really simple with Bloglines and pbwiki. I agree that they aren't the best tools (really Blogger isn't either) but they seemed manageable for this group. I'm glad you are an RSS fan, too!