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Archive for 2005

Choosing the Right CMS - Jeff Wisniewski

Jeff starts the presentation with a discussion of the workload of web maintainance. The open part of the talk was terrifically entertaining and funny. He provided a overview of the core functionality of CMSs.

Creation: Every CMS provides an interface through which writers (content owners) can add, edit, delete content.
lots [...]

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il2005

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Shifting Worlds - by Lee Rainie
Lee Rainie is the Director of the Pew Internet and American Life project. He talked about including IRC content in the presentation. The content showing on the screen while a presentation is going. He asked how many people were blogging live or going to blog the session later. He talked [...]

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Library Terms that Users Understand
John Kupersmith

Alot of the words that we (librarians) put in front of our users don’t have any meaning for them. If you put words like catalog, database, ILL, Periodical in front of a college freshman, its like showing them a wall of noise. Problems with library jargon are not new! In [...]

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The first step to getting WYSIWYG editing for Movable Type is by adding the EnhancedEntryEditing plug-in. The directions on this page a very good and they will help you get the plug-in installed and working in a snap.

So you’ve added the plug-in, but you notice that whenever you create a new blog you are missing [...]

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I said that I would get back to everyone about how set up linked templates as the defaults in Movable Type. I did some investigating and found out its possible. However, I will say in advance of my explanation that you might want to polish your Perl readings skills and Unix permissions skills a bit. [...]

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Tweaking Movable Type

We’ve been in the process of installing Movable Type to use here for the Libraries’ weblogs. However, Movable Type doesn’t completely meet all of our needs out of the box. So the web developers and I have been working to tweak it. Some of the tweaking has been creating a template for the weblogs that [...]

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Its only Tuesday and the week is already shaping up to be quite busy. At the end of the last week, I got several requests concerning conducting web-based surveys. In the past the Libraries had built each survey individually for the person conducting the survey. This isn’t very efficient and means that the survey builder [...]

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Warning extended rant
Anyone who reads this blog knows that I’m a technology geek. Recently my husband and I acquired a second cell phone to add to our plan and he wanted a hand-free headset, so we bought a bluetooth compatible phone. This move prompted me to look at all the neat applications for bluetooth on [...]

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Bloglines has a nifty new feature that helps you keep track of what items from feeds you have saved to read later and which ones really are “new” to your aggregator. Basically, what it looks like is this.
Library Web Chic (3/1)
The title of the blog comes first as usual. However, it is followed by two [...]

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