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Hi Wendy, hi all :)

 

My name's Harpreet Dhillon and I'm a Bibliographical Support Assistant
at City of London. At the moment I'm only on Livejournal, Tumblr,
Goodreads and Librarything (only), but over the years I've used and
enjoyed Wordpress, Blogspot, Livejournal, Shelfari, Lastfm, Facebook and
Twitter. In fact, I think I enjoyed Twitter so much when it first
arrived that I had to give it up, but I still do the odd hash tag search
because it's quite an invaluable source of current information (I work
underground so it was nice to see a tweet by Zach Braff commenting on
how sunny London, helping me to decide if I wanted to go out for lunch
or not). I'm actually considering signing up with Twitter again, this
time for professional use as there's a good presence of information
professionals out there and a good stream of information. Also, as I
sometimes tweet for @GuildhallLib, it's reawakened my interest in that
particular site.

 

Facebook is a site that I used for about three months, intensely
disliked and then abandoned. I doubt I'll ever sign up for an account
again. I still can't quite put my finger on what I find so annoying
about Facebook, but it really wasn't for me. I have only recently
discovered Pinterest and have been lurking around it to see if it's
something I might enjoy using. At the moment, every time I visit
someone's Pinterest page it makes me feel quite anxious. 

 

Currently, none of my accounts are locked, but there's always a
hesitation to share usernames with colleagues, even if they're aware of
certain geeky proclivities they may not care for the whiff of political
leanings on my Tumblr, my reading choices on Goodreads and, back in the
old days, my extremely ropy taste in music. I can understand people who
lock accounts to separate the personal and professional because we all
do censor ourselves to a certain degree to present a professional image
and online interaction is quite brilliant at breaking your
think-before-you-speak filter (as anyone who has participated in a
'someone on the internet is wrong' argument will know). Also, having an
open account does leave you vulnerable to anonymous trolling. I remember
someone getting very vocal about a book review on my personal blog once
and it was quite a nasty experience. But I learned my lesson - never say
anything mean about Sherlock Holmes on the internet.

 

Anyway, late to the party, but really enjoying this discussion J

 

Harpreet.

 

Harpreet Dhillon 

Bibliographical Support Assistant 

Bibliographical Services Section
<http://prism.talis.com/cityoflondon/assets/-/bibservices.html> 

Culture Heritage & Libraries 

Tel: 020 7332 3095 

website: www.cityoflondon.gov.uk

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: CIG E-Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of
Taylor, Wendy
Sent: 28 March 2012 10:00
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: [CIG-E-FORUM] Welcome!

 

Hello and welcome to the CIG eforum on social media in the cataloguing
community!

 

This morning we will be discussing individual and institutional use of
Twitter and other social media. This afternoon, CIG are very pleased to
welcome guest moderator Nicola Osborne, Social Media Officer for EDINA.

Nicola wrote a live blog post for the recent CIGS Web 2.0 and metadata
seminar

(http://nicolaosborne.blogs.edina.ac.uk/2012/03/02/liveblog-cigs-web-2-0
<http://nicolaosborne.blogs.edina.ac.uk/2012/03/02/liveblog-cigs-web-2-0
> 

-and-metadata-seminar/); she also gave a presentation at the seminar on
Developments in Web 2.0
(http://prezi.com/yhvtvnly4evo/this-talk-is-meta-and-so-is-this-title/
<http://prezi.com/yhvtvnly4evo/this-talk-is-meta-and-so-is-this-title/>
).

From 1.30pm you will have the opportunity to ask Nicola questions about
her presentation and she will also be introducing the topic of social
media use in OPACs.

 

But for now, we'd like people to introduce themselves and describe their
use of Twitter and other social media for either personal or
professional use. I'll start by saying my interest is probably greater
than my knowledge! I have been on Twitter for a couple of years but have
only really "got it" in the last few months as a valuable tool for CPD.

I find it really useful for links to blogs and articles. I don't use
Facebook anymore but I am on LinkedIn and am very interested in
pinterest (I love the pretty pictures!). I work for the RNIB, which has
Facebook and Twitter accounts, including an account dedicated to
accessible reading @RNIBread.

 

So, what about you? Please share, whatever your level of experience -
whether you're a twitterholic or you think that tweets should be left to
the birds, we'd love to hear from you.

 

Wendy (@mrswtaylor)

 

Wendy Taylor

Librarian, Bibliographic Services

RNIB National Library Service

Far Cromwell Road, Bredbury, Stockport. SK6 2SG

 

t: 0161 355 2093

e: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> 

w: www.rnib.org.uk <http://www.rnib.org.uk>  

 

Join us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/rnibuk
<http://www.facebook.com/rnibuk>  Follow us on twitter:
www.twitter.com/rnib <http://www.twitter.com/rnib> 

 

 

 

 

 

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