Friday, August 13, 2010

Very simple photo editing and cropping

Cropping and resizing images to post on Engaged Patrons has many solutions. Here is one way that is not hard to use.

Start by reading the posting on Picnik from the last Web Challenge: http://oclwebthings09.blogspot.com/2009/11/thing-14-picnik.html

Creating a free account is optional for Picnik but recommended.

By the end of this practice with Picnik, you should be comfortable making simple cropping, rotating/straightening, resizing and color corrections to photos and images. This should make it possible to take images from many different sources and edit them to work with Engaged Patrons, blogs and other purposes. Picnik makes it very easy to post and edit pictures with many services like Facebook as well.

It looks like I’m asking you to do a great deal this month but once you start playing and get used to Picnik, each task won’t take long.

Save a copy of the picture of Princess Ann below to your computer. Notice the stylized turtle in the lower right of the panel.

Crop the picture so all you see is the turtle.

Resize the cropped picture of the turtle so it is suitable in size for Engaged Patrons use.
Save and Post the picture to your blog by September 17, 2010.
In all the saving and posting, did you notice that Picnik tells you the size of the JPEG file you have created and with a sliding bar lets you make the file bigger and smaller?
Upload to Picnik a picture that you could see really needing to edit to put in OCL Connections or Engaged Patrons. Resize and save it and email it to the challenge email address by September 17.

Optional: Play with the picture of the turtle using the free tools under the Create tab. Notice many of the tools are limited to Preminium (paid) users. The most creative turtle wins this month’s chocolate prize (dark, milk or white is winner’s choice). This picture should be emailed as an attachment to the challenge gmail account by September 17 . Posting it to your blog is optional.

Google Images

You can sometimes avoid the whole photo editing process by using the advanced features in Google images. If you find an image that is the right size, color, file type, etc., to begin with you’ll save time and effort.

For more information on some image search features, this Google Blog post http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/search-options-now-on-google-images.html


Further suggestion

If you look on OceanNet, under Reference, then Workshop and Conference Notes, you'll see Free Graphics Software and Web Tools, notes from a presention in June 2010. It gives you some of the latest options in free web tools for working with graphics. My thanks to Meg R. for her notes on the workshop given by John LeMasney, Manager of Instructional Technology at Rider University.

Here are two of my transformed turtles:



Monday, May 24, 2010

Google Power User

Staff Development Day
June 4, 2010

Instead of handouts for this Staff Development Day class, everyone who attended received a card with the URL of this blogpost.

Most Google users take advantage of just a small part of what Google offers. Google is changing almost daily, from small refinements to whole new services. Becoming a Google Power User starts with keeping up with Google’s new features and knowing where to go to find what is already available and how to use it.


Exercise #1 - Simple Google Search Features

Visit Google’s page on search features and try out at least one search in each of the seven categories :

Everyday Essentials
Reference Tools

Local Search
Reference Tools
Query Refinements
Search by Number
Choosing Keywords
Trip Planning
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Exercise #2 - Playing with Top Level Domains like .gov, .mil, .edu
Search a major disease like diabetes or arthritis or influenza in Google. Then add site:gov to the search. Compare results. Try adding site:edu instead of site:gov to get results from college and university sites instead of government sites.
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Exercise #3 - Limiting a search to a specific website
To restrict your results to a single website, use site:website
(no space between site: and the website address)
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examples:
site:theoceancountylibrary.org
site:www.co.ocean.nj.us
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The State of NJ’s website doesn’t have the greatest internal search engine. Use Google to search just within the NJ state site: site:nj.gov or site:state.nj.us will both work.
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Try these comparing these sample searches in Google with what you get using the search engine at the State of NJ website:
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underground railroad site:nj.gov
nj town names site:nj.gov
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Compare results with using the search feature on the state website. Does Google with a site limit or the regular NJ state website search get you to better results? Did either find the 15 page pdf guide to NJ and the Underground Railroad or the great database for local NJ town names (Lacey & Forked River)?
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Exercise #4 - Google Book Search
Find information hidden in the books on your library's shelves with Google Book Search.
Compare regular Google and Google Book Search for local history.

Search: "point pleasant" o'neill

What differences do you notice in the results on Eugene O’Neill’s time in Point Pleasant with Google and Google Book Search?
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Other Searching resources
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Google News (Can you spot the archives button?)
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More Google Services to try
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Google Maps - more than just directions, street level view, Wikipedia and photos linked
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Google Earth - Bird's eye exploration of the world, including the undersea geography
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The below require a Google ID to access all the services
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Google Finance - create personal portfolios
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Google Docs - save documents on the web, invite others to collaborate
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Google Sites - create a public or private invitation only access wiki
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Google Reader - A RSS feed reader to track your favorite blog and website updates