Tuesday, 27 October 2015

Tech Tools 1551 Week 2, Day 2


Twitter. I was required to establish a Twitter account years ago and follow Tweets leading up to a conference. Today I logged in and found a lengthy list of Tweets accumulated since. Do people really read this stuff? I’m bothered that I apparently have 13 followers, and several of them aren’t identifiable. Does this mean their inboxes will be filled with my ION tweets? I tweeted my professor. I see he has tweeted a daily link. I think I need to change my Twitter options so that Tweets come through to my phone, or something like that.

Diigo. I am to install Diigo on my browser. Instructions are given, but they do not seem to be working. I google “browser bar” to make sure I understand what they are talking about. I google several other items on Diigo, watch a youtube video, and eventually figure out that most of these are talking about Firefox, but I am using Internet Explorer, or Chrome. This is a key, and I am quickly able to install Diigo on both. The instruction was to right click in an empty space near my browser bar, and this produced toolbar options I was unaware of. I installed Diigo in Favourites on Internet Explorer and in Bookmarks on Chrome. These are details that weren’t apparent in my first pass of the information. If I wasn’t in the ION course, I might have given up. However, lately I am pursuing these things more doggedly, and gradually building some comfort level these things. My computer use to date has been very basic.
I often find information written by other users more helpful than what is written in official user instructions. In skimming for help, I came to understand a major benefit of Diigo for organizing information. By tagging information with descriptors, you can search for items that might not be related in a mere alphabetical search of favourites. True confession: Over the past year I read many articles online, some academic, some popular press, in preparation for a talk at a conference. I kept a disorderly list of my sources in a word document. Diigo would have made my life easier, and prettier J I am resolved to use it.


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