Thursday, September 27, 2007

Target: My Best Finds Lately

I've written about how when I find a pair of jeans that fit, I buy two. Well, I bet the people I work with think I only own one pair of these Cherokee® black pants but actually I own four, plus brown and khaki. One pair was taken out of the rotation when they were ripped at work, but that has nothing to do with the quality and everything to do with that stupid door latch.

The other day these Merona Jeans were 20 bucks so I tried on a pair and found them to be soft and comfy. Even given the regular price, I'll probably snag another pair.

I read reviews of the Merona Brown Pin Dot Shirt Dress and since it was $22 I decided to try it on figuring it would be a nice dress for work. Sure enough, it looks super and feels good, too!

I'm road-tripping up to Chicago for a wedding and hope to have a little time on Sunday to meet up with the VeganDiva! How cool will that be?!



Taking 'Office' lessons from the world's greatest (inept) boss

The 4th season of The Office, my favorite tv show, starts tonight! I know plenty of people do not understand the show and maybe that is because they have never worked in offices like The Office. Although this part scares me because it is so true...
Michael has risen several levels above his incompetence, giving hope to workers everywhere that they, too, can someday be promoted to middle management and safely hide there until retirement," Alexander says. "He has also learned the value of management by walking around. This causes his staff to be highly productive, since they would much rather work than have another potentially awkward exchange with him."



Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Cincinnati: Financial Planning Week @ your library

The Public Library of Cincinnati & Hamilton County is holding programs of Financial Planning Basics, Budget & Credit Repair, Retirement Planning and Financial Planning for Young Married Couples.
In support of Financial Planning Week, members of the the Financial Planning Association of Greater Cincinnati will be conducting a series of programs at selected branches the week of October 1-7. These financial planning programs are designed to help people learn how prudent financial planning can help achieve their goals and dreams.
More Information



Friday, September 21, 2007

Library: Public Library of Cincinnati & Hamilton County Redesign Main Location

I am really excited to see the new main location of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County (PLCH) once it completes its $1.5 million renovation. A new chapter: Library redesign one for books

The changes will convert most parts of the library from a subject-based model to what is called the "popular library'' style, taking the most popular parts of the library's collection and putting them into one centralized department on the building's main floor.

"It really becomes a branch within a branch,'' said Greg Edwards, library services manager, who oversees the downtown library and six other urban branch libraries. "We want it to have more of a bookstore feel to it and less of a library feel to it.''

Although I completely understand this statement:
Privately, some librarians say they fear the changes were designed to cut or reduce the number of staff members, but library heads deny that is part of the plan.
PLCH is the eighth most popular library in the country and has an annual budget of just over $52 million dollars. About $48.3 million comes from state funds the rest is generated through fines, fees and investments, according to the library director.



Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Library: Wyoming Libraries Marketing Campaign

The Wyoming Libraries Marketing Campaign was posted to a library listserv and it is so clever! Then again, I have a B.A. in Public Relations along with my MLIS so I greatly appreciate the effort of any library that cleverly markets itself!

The have created billboard ads, bumper stickers and radio ads, which can be viewed at this web site. Libraries who want to increase funding and need to execute a marketing plan, take note!



Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Link Dump: Crafts

Rubik's cube cake! - I can't do a crafts post without a cake or cupcake link so here it is first!

Cat hat costumes - I'm sure if i could knit and had a cat, well, my cat would run away!

Thanksgiving hat costumes - and if that cat didn't run away and could knit, maybe she would retaliate and knit me this!

paper mache bobbleheads - remember Michael Scott's Halloween costume, which made a repeat appearance at Kelly's Diwali festival?

sock monkey art! - a chair, dress and coming out of a blender and meat grinder!

superhero sweater

summer headband - summer is over and look how long ago this was posted and I've been hanging on to it in bloglines (geez louise!)

sewing machine covers - I might need to make time to make one of these since I have a new machine (how many times am i going to say that?!)

sewing even corners

Quick pocket organizer

Ikea shower curtain dress

patchwork pot holders

Modern Baby Bib Pattern

HOW TO - make a sash belt or scarf

fabric binder cover tutorial

HOW TO - Make a Camera Cozy

Singlet Style Shopping Bag Tutorial- looks like a plastic grocery sack, but it is fabric!

Oilcloth lunchbag tutorial

plastic bag crafts

Bags Made from Garbage

Kids craft weekly - going shopping - my kind of kid toys!

Refashioned Bangle Bracelets

crafty tats

crayon nibbles



TimesSelect = Dunzo

The move comes two years to the day after The Times began the subscription program, TimesSelect, which has charged $49.95 a year, or $7.95 a month, for online access to the work of its columnists and to the newspaper’s archives. TimesSelect has been free to print subscribers to The Times and to some students and educators.

In addition to opening the entire site to all readers, The Times will also make available its archives from 1987 to the present without charge, as well as those from 1851 to 1922, which are in the public domain. There will be charges for some material from the period 1923 to 1986, and some will be free.



Monday, September 17, 2007

Video: Librarians angry over unfashionable stereotype

I saw this on Library Link of the Day. It is a video about how Librarians from New Zealand were upset by a style guru attending their national conference to provide tips for updating their wardrobe.

[Video]



Sunday, September 16, 2007

For Fun: Pacman @ UD

I was looking at Youtube videos that were tagged with University of Dayton and saw this Pacman @ UD video. They are sporting pretty creative costumes that are rather mobile and notice the ghost falls down at 3:20 but gets right back up without a problem - that's key to remember when planning your Halloween costume!



Thursday, September 13, 2007

For Fun: i can haz sprinkl?

I'm not even a cat lover (I know, a librarian who doesn't love cats) but I find I Can Haz Cheezburger to be ridiculously funny! Every week, I visit the site and pick a new photo for my desktop.

My friend, a law librarian, prefers Demotivators® by Despair - whatever gets you through the work day, bud!



Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Jo-Ann: Coupon Commotion Sale

This week at Jo-Ann Stores is their Coupon Commotion Sale. I received both the flyer and emailed coupons for 40% off fabric, notions, craft items and bridal do-dads.

If you are not on their mailing list and interested in receiving their coupons, see if this invite a friend form works (probably only works for the first person to use it).



Sunday, September 09, 2007

Ten Ways to Lose Friends and Alienate Coworkers

A few points of this article humored me because they were true of experiences I have had at jobs, including the first point.
1. Eat stinky snacks.
You may be the most likeable person in your office, but your popularity will definitely take a dive if you begin bringing in overly aromatic foods. If your lunch involves microwaving anything containing fish, leave it at home.
Read the other nine ways to Lose Friends and Alienate Coworkers



Friday, September 07, 2007

Make It: A drawstring waist skirt


skirt
Originally uploaded by udandi.
This is my first skirt and first project on my new sewing machine. I followed the pattern from Sew What! Skirts for a drawstring waist skirt. What I am most impressed with is that I made my own matching drawstring!

I started this pattern how many months ago, 2 or 3?! At the time I drew the pattern I did not want to skimp on measurements, where it said 2 to 4 inches for ease through the hips, I went with 4 because I did not trust this was not totally a pattern for stick figures.

As it turns out, I've also lost a few inches (I am trying to walk away from my a** but it keeps following me haha) so what I have is a skirt that provides plenty of ease through the hips (ease which is needed because even though it is an a-line skirt, it is a drawstring skirt that needs to be pulled on over my hips/butt) and really needs to be cinched at the waist. Not the worst predicament to have, but not the best fit either. I figure this will most likely be a beach/pool cover up skirt.

I plan to tweak my pattern and try it again with some black faux linen fabric and maybe use non-binding (or is non-rolling?) elastic with a drawstring waist.



Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Library: Online Privacy

No it does not really exist. Following up on yesterday's post, I found this article At Rapleaf, your personals are public, which is worth reading for more than the just the quotes I am following the quote I am highlighting.
Apart from the unusual TrustFuse business, Rapleaf is among a new generation of people search engines that take advantage of the troves of public data on the Net--much of which consumers happily post for public perusal on social-networking sites and personal blogs. The search engines trace a person's digital tracks across these social networks, blogs, photo collections, news and e-commerce sites, to create a composite profile.

There doesn't appear to be anything illegal about what these companies are doing. No one's sifting through garbage cans or peeking through windows. They've merely found a clever way to aggregate the heaps of personal information that can be found on the Internet. Indeed, in an age where Web sites offer to "pretext" or steal phone records and do complicated records checks for a modest fee, what Rapleaf and sites like it are doing seems modest.

And a follow-up to that article is People search engine Rapleaf revises privacy policy:
Despite the swift changes, privacy experts still say Rapleaf may be breaching the privacy of people using social networks like MySpace.com and Facebook, among the other social networks to which it links. Rapleaf lets you retrieve the name, age and social-network affiliations of anyone, as long as you have his or her e-mail address. But what the company does not disclose are the details on how it obtains people's ties to social networks through their e-mail addresses--a nifty feat considering social networks typically don't publish members' e-mail addresses.

Facebook is moving to public search listings "so that people can see which of their friends are on Facebook more easily." Or to entice more to sign up, which builds traffic, which increase revenue. When Rapleaf started it was supposed to be an open reputation system, but now it seems to be moving the same way as Facebook, motivated by money.

As a librarian who embraces technology and has watched other librarians run with the social networking as a means to go where the patrons/students are and help parents understand what it all means, this is a big deal. We, more likely our children, are living their lives online and littering the with their personal information.

As a glass half-full kind of gal, at least if you want more info on your next date you have some additional tools to search by!



Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Library: I Googled You (and beyond)

When I get curious about my and others online presence, I do not just do the usual Google, but also Pagebull for a visual display of results. My new favorite is yoname, which quickly combs the social networking sites and blogs and then I also check pipl and wink.

Some (not librarians) are surprised by the amount of information I can gather just from a little searching!

I would like to note that I do not sign up for any of the services that sites like wink offer (the ones that say sign up so your friends can find you because I am not that big of a fool). What is not always clear even by reading their privacy policy is what you have agreed to. One of these services does not explain that when you search for an email address, it than stores that email, which probably gets harvested.