Tracking Technology Trends – My Workshop at SLA in Baltimore

Tracking Technology Trends – My Workshop at SLA in Baltimore

If you’re planning to attend the Special Libraries Association conference in Baltimore in June, come to my workshop!

Tracking Technology Trends: Staying Current in a World of Information Overload.

This interactive workshop will offer some of the best resources for keeping up with the latest technology trends, along with strategies to evaluate emerging technologies.

In addition, it will include the following activities: 1) A quiz to determine your “tech personality”— are you a visionary or an implementer? Which type?  2) Hands-on demos of 2 apps that help you stay current. 3) A “worst idea brainstorming” activity for designing library services with new technologies.

It’s on Tuesday, June 12, 3:30 pm – 5 pm.
See schedule of workshops.

This workshop is based on information in my book, Keeping Up with Emerging Technologies.

I hope to see you there, and please introduce yourself to me if I’ve met your virtually but not in the physical world! (Newsletter readers, former students, webinar attendees — you know who you are!)

Librarians: Become an Expert in Mobile Apps for Education with These Courses

Librarians: Become an Expert in Mobile Apps for Education with These Courses

Are you the type of person who prefers to learn at your own pace? And do you want to improve your expertise in mobile technologies for education?

If so, then these self-study versions of my online courses are a good choice for you.

I teach other courses on specific dates (through the American Library Association and Library Juice Academy), but many librarians don’t realize that I also offer courses you can work on at any time.

There are several advantages to the self-study versions:

You can go at your own pace, start and finish the course at any time (with no deadlines).

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You’ll have ongoing access to the materials in years to come — so you can review at any time. (I update these courses once a year).

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The prices are more affordable (usually less than half the price of taking them via ALA).

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Previous students love these courses (see testimonials).

Learn more about what’s covered in each course:

Sign up below.

Organize Your Life with Mobile Apps

Learn to use 4 best types of apps for keeping track
of all your information.

Organize Your Life with Mobile Apps: I found this class to be extremely informative and helpful. I learned about applications that help me manage everyday activities while becoming acquainted with applications that assist with storage, organization and security measures evolved for safekeeping. This class also gave me knowledge that I can share with library customers and staff.

Jan Banks

Casey County Public Library

Apps for Librarians

Become an app expert for your community.

Apps for Librarians is a fantastic course! Take it if you want to become confident in acquiring and using apps. Learn how to effectively apply them in an educational setting. The course format and instructor were excellent and galvanized my understanding of these very useful tools.

Ann Kenney

Rice Memorial High School, Burlington, VT

The Book as iPad App

Learn about interactive, multimedia book apps.

This four-week course gets five stars not only for the information it contains but also for the level of empowerment it provides. I signed-up not knowing a thing about book apps, and in a month’s time I am using them at work and collaborating with a library colleague to create a book app of our own for use in story times. The topic is timely, relevant and fun! I couldn’t ask for more.

Susan Hansen

Head of Public Services, West Hartford Public Library, West Hartford, CT

Become a Power Searcher: Using Internet Search Tools Effectively

Become a Power Searcher: Using Internet Search Tools Effectively

90-minute workshop, Wed., Jan. 24, 2018
2:30pm Eastern | 1:30 Central | 12:30 Mountain | 11:30am Pacific
(You’ll get a recording if you are unable to watch it live).

Sign up now — ALA Store

Everyone knows how to dash off a quick Google search, but do you know how to go deeper with your searching? This webinar will show you how to search for many types of information effectively: websites, news, images, videos, statistics, maps, books, definitions, translations, and more. You’ll learn tips for Google, Wolfram Alpha, and several other search engines.

 

We’ll cover

  • Advanced tips for Google searching
  • Pros and cons of Google’s search personalization and how to turn it off
  • Searching other parts of Google: News, Translate, Videos, Books, Google Scholar, and Maps
  • Protecting your search privacy: using DuckDuck Go or Private mode in your web browser
  • Social media search tools and when to use them: Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest
  • Multimedia searching: videos, podcasts, images, and how to filter by usage rights, color, and other criteria
  • Finding old websites with the Wayback Machine
  • Finding data, statistics, and much more with Wolfram Alpha
  • Searching by voice with Siri, Alexa, and Google Assistant

Outcomes

  • You’ll learn how to search Google and other search engines more effectively.
  • You’ll learn about several different free search tools and when to use each.
  • You’ll get information you can use to teach your patrons about searching.

Become a Power Searcher

This will be both useful and fun!

25 ideas for using mobile apps in library services

25 ideas for using mobile apps in library services

In my online course, “Apps for Librarians,”⁠ one of the assignments is to participate in a brainstorming activity about this topic.

Librarians in my course are from many types of libraries (public, academic, school, and special), and this list is based on ideas they came up with.

25 Ideas

    • Introduce graphic novels both print and for mobile devices, do presentation about them with iPad and projector.
    • Have an app share event – everyone shares apps that have been helpful to them. Librarians provide a list of apps to start with. Call this “Appy Hour.”
    • Host app clubs – like book clubs, but for apps.
    • Offer a collection of interactive book apps on iPads for loaning either inside the library, or as take-home devices.
    • Collect and categorize the best reference apps and put them on the iPads used by reference librarians. Use these reference apps to answer questions.
    • Purchase print books that can be used with specific apps (augmented reality books), and make the iPad, the app, and the book available together.
    • Provide tablet stations where people can use tablets pre-loaded with excellent apps in different topic areas.
    • Introduce the Scanbot app to genealogy society members who meet at the library as a way to scan their research treasures into their devices and reduce the amount of paper they have.
    • Use the Kindle app or the Overdrive app for readers with dyslexia. These apps offer the OpenDyslexic font. According to opendyslexic.org, the font helps dyslexic readers distinguish letters and words for easier reading. Features include weighted bottoms for each letter to help indicate letter direction and wider letter spacing.
    • Use a comic strip creation app with kids for a project to create their own comic strips. They can work alone or in groups to tell their stories. The activity promotes creativity, collaboration, and lets them come away with a digital comic strip that they can share with others.
    • Offer a “Student Success Workshop” in order to introduce useful apps such as Dropbox, 1Password, Wunderlist, Evernote, and JotNot.  Also show examples of using Apple’s and Google’s apps for word processing and slide creation, for ease of creating required papers, presentations, and collaborative group work.

 

Do you have more ideas?

Share them by commenting on this post. Tell us what you’re doing with mobile apps in your library programs.

Want to learn more? Join the Apps for Librarians course!

Enhance your career – become an app expert for your community.

Is it safe to use a password manager to keep track of your passwords?

Is it safe to use a password manager to keep track of your passwords?

What is a password manager?

A password manager is an app that remembers your passwords, so you don’t have to. You only need to remember one master password for opening the app to get access to all of your saved passwords.

Most password manager apps also:

  • generate secure passwords (long, random ones that would be hard to remember, and hard to hack)
  • auto-fill them when you need to use them
  • synchronize your data between your desktop computers and mobile devices
  • securely store other information, such as credit cards, passports, addresses, wi-fi passwords, and more)

Some examples of password managers:

What if the password manager gets hacked?

Many people tell me that the reason they don’t use a password manager app is that they worry that it will get hacked and someone will then have access to ALL of their passwords.

That feels like a reasonable fear when you first think about it. But if you look into it a bit more, you’ll see why it’s a good idea to use one.

Trusting a password manager

I look at two sources of information when evaluating the safety of apps like these:

  • The app developer’s security documentation
  • What independent security experts have to say about this issue

How security works — 1Password example

Let’s use 1Password as an example. Here are some useful things to know about how it works, from their documentation.

If you’ve been imagining your master password floating around the Internet somewhere, vulnerable to being hacked, no wonder you’ve been worried. It stays only in your head (or wherever you write it down… and store in your home).

Security experts recommend using a password manager

Here is what security expert, Bruce Schneier says about using password managers in “Choosing Secure Passwords

“Even better is to use random unmemorable alphanumeric passwords (with symbols, if the site will allow them), and a password manager like Password Safe to create and store them”

The Electronic Frontier Foundation recommends the use of a password manager on their page, “Creating Strong Passwords.” They also remind us why using the same password on multiple sites is a very bad practice.

Reusing passwords is an exceptionally bad security practice, because if an attacker gets hold of one password, she will often try using that password on various accounts belonging to the same person. If that person has reused the same password several times, the attacker will be able to access multiple accounts. That means a given password may be only as secure as the least secure service where it’s been used.

Why I like 1Password: convenience and security

I’ve been using 1Password for many years. I use it on my iPhone, iPad, and Macbook Air. I’ve never had a problem with it, and it makes it possible to use long, random, secure passwords that I would never be able to remember without it. It’s great to have all that data with me on my iPhone, whenever I need it (fully encrypted and secure).

Learn to set up and use a password manager (and other useful apps for organizing your life)

In my course, Using Apps to Manage Information and Stay Organized, you’ll get step-by-step help with setting up 1Password, and other apps for managing the information in your personal and professional life. The course includes video demos, handouts, readings, and plenty of chances to ask questions.

With the knowledge from this course, you’ll be able to

  • Synchronize information securely between all your devices (mobile and desktop).
  • Generate secure passwords.
  • Automatically back up your smartphone’s photos.
  • Create to-do lists that are accessible from all your devices.
  • Go paperless if you wish, and make best use of your mobile devices.
  • Understand best practices for security and learn how to decide what levels of security make sense for different types of information.
  • Create your own app guides, offer workshops, and advise your users and colleagues on best practices for managing their information.

Learn more and sign up! (Begins September 5, 2017, and runs for five weeks).