Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Thing 6 - Workflowy and Readability

I'm a list maker and a list loser.  I have a couple of paper notebooks/journals in which I list tasks or take notes;  I'm a woeful Luddite when it comes to lists.  I like the solidity of a spiral bound notebook or a tiny memo book that I can carry in my purse.  (I still have a dumb phone so keeping a list within it isn't do-able.)  Workflowy may help me make the break to digital list keeping.  I have several work and home lists posted to it now and have shared one home list virtually  with my husband.  The Workflowy shortcut is on the taskbar of my home desktop and laptop computers.  The only drawback I foresee now is that I won't be able to use it at school because it'll be blocked by the filter.  That said, I once-upon-a-time had an iGoogle list going which I could access at school.  I didn't consult it much so the second drawback is my short attention span coupled with fickleness.  Will I forget about using Workflowy or abandon it for another productivity tool?

Readability has made online reading a breeze in the past day and a half.  I love the way it cuts the extraneous matter from the screen so that you can concentrate on the text rather than be distracted by peripheral ads and links.  This one will most likely be a keeper.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Thing 5 - Pinterest and Diigo


Pinterest grabbed members of my family before it sank its claws into me, but it’s got me at last.  I’m collecting ideas for our current house renovation and grabbing library signage ideas as well.  Then there are some travel ideas…and recipes…  I love the visual aspect of Pinterest.  Its graphic nature makes it a natural for collecting sites to use with elementary students and in libraries, in general.  http://edudemic.com/2012/03/20-ways-libraries-are-using-pinterest-right-now/ 
Pinterest competitor Clipix  www.clipix.com offers a privacy or friends-only option for clipping/pinning graphics.  That might be a nice option in a school setting.  I haven’t tried Clipix at school yet, but I suspect that it may be blocked by our filter as is Pinterest and a great many Web 2.0 tools.  The filter is a topic for another day.

Diigo is less visually appealing than Pinterest, but its sticky note and highlighting features make it very useful.  Kids could benefit from gathering information on a Diigo page, annotating the site and assigning tags.  I’m not yet up to speedwith Diigo but have been diiging pages to read later. 

Thing 4 - RSS - iGoogle and Google Reader


Happy Spring Break, a perfect opportunity to catch up on -- count ‘em -- 4 things.  Let's start with Thing 4.

I’ve had an iGoogle page for several years and used this assignment to change some  of the scenic themes and add a couple of new tabs.  On the children’s literature tab,  I follow some perennially favorite blogs, e.g. Fuse 8 and Educating Alice.   I added some new ones, including the UHLS feed – so now I can quickly reserve titles that I’ve read about on the blogs.  I added a Cool Tools tab, too.  Facebook updates provided by Twenty by Jenny, Reading Rockets and the like have eliminated some of my dependence on iGoogle, but I’m still a great fan.

My home tab, as of last night, includes a link to Google Reader.  It’s only been a day and I’ve subscribed to only a few rss feeds through the Reader, but I suspect I’m going to feel overwhelmed with updates soon.  A secondary 0r college student doing a major research project would probably find this info inundation on his/her topic extremely useful.