Posts Tagged ‘Internet’

Here’s where I’m not

Posted on May 7th, 2013 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve deleted my accounts on a number of profile / social networking-type websites that I no longer have any need for, along with a number of sites that have recently, or are about to, go defunct.

I’ve removed all of the links below from the sidebar of my website.

If you can find a profile at any of these addresses, it’s not me.

  • ACM (http://member.acm.org/~pstainthorp)
  • Blogger (http://blogger.com/profile/09480156575692685770)
  • Delicious (http://delicious.com/pstainthorp)
  • Diaspora* (http://joindiaspora.com/u/pstainthorp)
  • Flavors (http://flavors.me/pstainthorp/)
  • Formspring (http://formspring.me/pstainthorp)
  • Foursquare (http://foursquare.com/pstainthorp)
  • Friendfeed (http://friendfeed.com/pstainthorp)
  • GetSatisfaction (http://getsatisfaction.com/people/pstainthorp)
  • Google+ (http://gplus.to/pstainthorp) – my actual Google profile is at: https://profiles.google.com/pstainthorp/
  • Google Reader (http://www.google.com/reader/shared/pstainthorp)
  • Identi.ca (http://identi.ca/pstainthorp)
  • Lanyrd (http://lanyrd.com/people/pstainthorp)
  • Last.fm (http://www.last.fm/user/pstainthorp)
  • Library 2.0 (http://library20.org/profile/pstainthorp)
  • LinkedIn (http://www.linkedin.com/in/pstainthorp)
  • Myspace (http://www.myspace.com/pstainthorp)
  • Paper.li (http://paper.li/pstainthorp)
  • PicPlz (http://picplz.com/user/pstainthorp)
  • Posterous (http://posterous.com/pstainthorp)
  • Rollyo (http://rollyo.com/pstainthorp)
  • Scribd (http://www.scribd.com/pstainthorp)
  • Yammer (https://www.yammer.com/lincoln.ac.uk/users/pstainthorp)
  • Youtube (http://www.youtube.com/user/pstainthorp)

Library staff training: web browsers available in the GCW

Posted on August 5th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’m doing a short staff training session for library colleagues this morning, about the various web browsers available to users in the GCW at the University of Lincoln, and some of the pros & cons of each. With slides. See also this blog post.

Ahead we roam

Posted on April 19th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

This has slipped out rather quietly (I think ICT services are favouring a gentle release rather than a big splash), but the University of Lincoln has now signed up with Eduroam.

Eduroam logoEduroam is a service that allows you to connect to a wireless network and use the Internet while you are visiting other universities and colleges in the UK, using your Lincoln credentials to log in.

Instructions on the ICT Support Desk site.

I tried to log in to Eduroam when I was in south London last week, but couldn’t get it to work (I had borrowed someone else’s netbook, and I kept getting a certificate error). However I do know that several other Lincoln people have successfully used it while they’ve been out and about, and that visitors from other universities were happily logged in to Eduroam on the Brayford Pool as far back in time as Pancakes and Mash.

I’m all about the Web

Posted on January 13th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve started to use the links feature of this WordPress site to keep a record of my presence on a whole range of other external websites, blogs, wikis, and social networking sites, which I’ll add to as I register a new account (or remember existing registrations).

You should be able to view the list of links on the right-hand side of http://paulstainthorp.com/

Screenshot of my links

22 links and counting. I’ve tried (and been reasonably successful so far) to use the same account name (pstainthorp) for all my registrations.

Q. Where are you on the Web? How do you keep track?

My library ‘footprint’

Posted on December 21st, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

Very slightly inspired by a recent blog post by Joss Winn:

A couple of things have reminded me recently that it might be useful to describe how I use libraries.

Historical interlude: my first experience of libraries would have been in visting Cullercoats/North Tyneside Central public libraries in the ’80s. After moving down to Lincolnshire, I borrowed books from Horncastle public library (more on which later), and used my secondary school’s Jobson Library (named after local benefactor George Jobson).

As an undergraduate, I didn’t use APU’s university library all that much. I remember, vaguely, a library induction talk in a large lecture theatre. I used to cycle in to campus early and read their newspapers before my first lecture. Over three years, I might have borrowed a handful of books (not really course-related) and a few music scores. And occasionally used the study carrels to work on maths assignments, when I really needed to concentrate.

Overall, looking back, it was a bit of a missed opportunity. I didn’t understand the value of the campus library: at the time I was much more excited by our course lab and studio facilities, and by the Sinclair computing centre, which gave me my first taste of the Internet, email, IM, Yahoo! and Lycos, web design and HTML, and which stayed open until 9pm (I remember being surprised and impressed by that; just as I was by the first 24-hour garage I found in Cambridge. Such things did not exist in rural Lincolnshire).

After having worked as a librarian at the University of Lincoln for a few years, I made a slightly better stab at using the services of the Robert Gordon University’s Georgina Scott Sutherland Library while I was studying there for my MSc. Because Aberdeen is a long way away, I never actually visited the library in person (I still haven’t), but I made heavy use of both their e-resources and their postal loans service.

Great Central Icehouse

Now, in 2010, I regularly use the services of four libraries:

  1. Horncastle public library, which is ten minutes’ walk from my front door. My children go there every week for storytime and activities. From time to time, I check my LibraryThing wishlist against the Lincolnshire County Council ‘Virtual Library‘, and reserve books to read on the bus. (What would be really nice would be if I could point my LCC library account at an RSS feed of my LibraryThing wishlist, and be alerted when a new title becomes available). And I’ve recently been getting into researching my family history, for which the public library’s online access to Ancestry is invaluable. Horncastle library has also been a great place to work ‘from home’ when the roads have been bad this winter. I’ll be pleased when they upgrade from IE6, though.
  2. I’ve also joined Essex public libraries. I was tipped off about them by a colleague: they don’t require that you be resident in Essex to join, and they have a very good collection of e-books (Lincolnshire public libraries don’t do e-books, yet). I think I might also still be a member of East Riding Libraries, from when I lived in Beverley in the East Riding of Yorkshire.
  3. As I mentioned last week, I often base myself in the British Library when I’m in London: because it’s so close to King’s Cross and St Pancras railway stations; because they offer decent, free wi-fi; because there’s always an exhibition to see; and because there’s plenty of coffee to hand.
  4. Last but not least, the 5 libraries of the University of Lincoln – because that’s where I work.

Libraries I’d like to visit include the Ward Library, Henry Bloom Noble Library, and Castletown Library (all on the Isle of Man), the Lit & Phil in Newcastle, and Cambridge University Library.

Tech tips for libraries: QR codes

Posted on October 1st, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

Techtips1QRcodes.html

This is the first in a planned series of short articles on useful technologies for academic libraries. QR codes (“Quick Response” codes) are two-dimensional, black-and-white, square barcodes that can be used around the library to provide users with links to additional information about resources and services.

View this item on the University Repository: http://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/3409/

N.B. I’ve put an embargo on this item, which will lift after the article is published in SCONUL Focus.