Task Force on Social Networking Software

Medical Library Association

SharePoint for Dummies

Filed under: Current Awareness — Gabe_Rios at 8:54 pm on Thursday, February 28, 2008

Many of our institutions use Microsoft SharePoint implementations to increase collaboration, manage projects, share documents, use group calendering, etc… Over the years, I have worked with some with similar (but NOT as fully featured) inexpensive/free Web-based products such as the 37Signals products - Basecamp and Backpack or some of the Google Apps like Google Docs and Presentations. These services are great but SharePoint has better integration and team collaboration features.

Today, I signed up for the new Google App called Google Sites. Using the former wiki service, JotSpot, Google has increased its capacity to compete with Microsoft Heavyweight SharePoint in terms of integration and team collaboration. The most obvious feature to me is how easy it is to use Google Sites. SharePoint has a much steeper learning curve due to the amount of flexibility available on the platform.

Using your work e-mail, Google Apps will create a landing page named after your domain (in my case uab.edu). If someone on your e-mail domain has already logged in, you will see a list of people that have logged in using the same e-mail domain you used. From the landing page (see the picture below), you can create Google sites (similar to Web Part Pages in SharePoint) that are accessible to everyone in your e-mail domain or only people that you invite. Other Google Apps already integrated into the landing page named after your domain are Docs, Calendar, and Chat.

Google Apps Landing

With the addition of Google Sites, the Google application suite now closely mirrors all of Microsoft SharePoint’s most popular features.

Announcing a Free CE Course on Web 2.0 for MLA Members

Filed under: TF — Bart Ragon at 1:19 pm on Friday, February 22, 2008

Web 2.0 101: Introduction to Second Generation Web Tools

Want to know more about Web 2.0? Here is your chance to learn more and earn eight hours of free CE credit. That’s right—eight hours of free CE credit will be awarded to MLA members who complete the program!

MLA’s Social Networking Task Force, in partnership with the National Program Planning Committee (NPC) Geek Squad, is hosting this free CE course for MLA members wanting to explore and discover both established and emerging Web 2.0 technologies. Course content will include background readings, discovery exercises, and a discussion blog. The program will run from March 10 to May 4, 2008, following MLA’s Web 2.0 webcast and leading up to MLA ‘08 in Chicago.

For more information and to register, visit the MLANET members-only area; you will need your MLA ID/username and MLANET password to register.

http://www.mlanet.org/members/snstf_ce.html?focus_20080221 

Registration deadline is March 9, 2008.

If it is useful, they will come

Filed under: Tools in Use, Current Awareness, TF — Molly Knapp at 4:38 pm on Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Ask a scientist what blogs, wikis or social networking sites they use, and you’re likely to draw a big blank stare. But make something useful, such as software that helps geneticists replicate one another’s experiments, and you’ll have users coming in droves. An article by Lila Guterman from the Chronicle of Higher Education this week reports on trends in online tools for scientific collaboration at the annual conference of the Professional/Scholarly Publishing Division of the Association of American Publishers.

Click here for article