 Hello and welcome to Encompass Live! I'm Krista Burns from the Western Nebraska Library Commission. I am your host and your presenter today. Encompass Live is a weekly online event that the Library Commission has started doing this year, 2009, where we cover NLC activities and topics, anything of interest to librarians in Nebraska. We do these sessions free for one hour, Wednesday mornings, 10 a.m. central time. You can come anytime and join us with these sessions live, or you can watch recordings afterwards. This morning, I am going to do a presentation on changing libraries, how they are changing. Lots of changes going on in the library world, how you deliver your services, changing tools that you can use are changing and new things are coming out. And the Commission has been experimenting with a lot of these tools. I'm going to show you some of the things that we've been doing here that you can use in your libraries. Tradition. Lots of libraries have been doing things the same way for years and years. You've been providing services, you've been helping your patrons, and that's great. And some things work. There's lots of new things. There's always new things that you can try. You don't have to keep doing the same things the same way. There's new services, new tools that are emerging, new technologies that can help you do these things better and serve your patrons better. Some of this can be a little imposing. That's okay. You need to try these new things. Just check them out, see what they are all about. It doesn't take too much to do that. You can do it. You can question what your director wants to do, what your other staff want to do, and try and explore these things. And there are lots of things out there, lots of new tools. You've probably seen them and heard about them. Twitter and RSS feeds and blogging and podcasting and it's just the list is endless. And some people, it's like a train just going past and it's fast and new things are coming every day. New things are being expanded and explored every day and improved and you need to either be on that train with everyone and some people are and they're trying these things out and exploring them and using them and that's great. And some people, not so much. You may feel like these things are just passing you by. That you're trying desperately to keep up or learn them and figure them out and you're just not getting it. And then you're just wondering, what is this all about? Some people may be feeling a little differently. The train is going to run you over with all of this information and new technology and new services and new things that are available to you and that's okay too. And that's what we're going to go over today is to give you a little overview of some of these things and services that are out there. What they're there, what they can be used for, why you might use them in your library, all the library commission is using them here to do to provide our services to you. We're hoping that we're doing a good, set a good example for you in this way. We actually have a website that we have put together that is all of the different services and Web 2.0 and Library 2.0 type things that we are using on a regular daily basis or just experimenting with. And I'm going to switch over to that website and show you some of these services that we have set up. I'm not going to show you every single one of them, there's a lot there. But we'll go through as many of them as we can this morning just to give you an overview. But at any time you want to, you can go to this URL that is here on the screen and see what we're doing in all these different areas. See there are different profiles that we have up there, the things that we have going and set up your own and become friends with us on all of these. So I am going to go over to my app sharing here. There we go. Get this opened up. Okay. So can everyone see the commission goes to 2.0 web page that I have up now? It's kind of adjusting the size and view of it here a little bit. Look at that. Okay, great. So this is the page that I said that we have set up. At any time you want to, you can go to this URL, the nlc.state.ne.us, forward slash service, forward slash index, and it will bring up this web page. The pretty long page and it gets added to a regular basis as we add new things to it, new things. We just added something new yesterday. I'll be talking about as well. First thing we have right here at the top is our Encompass blog. This is our main source of getting information out to you that we have set up where we talk about all the different new technologies that we are using, experimenting with, and just make general announcements about things going on at the commission. Here is the blog itself, our most recent post from yesterday that I actually put up, our new Rascal Learns 2.0 program. Our blog has arranged lots of different categories. If you're interested and over here on the right-hand side in a particular topic that the commission works with, you can go to just post it and put up in those categories and put in those topic areas. This most recent post actually is very appropriate for what we're doing today. Last year, over the winter, we did a Learning 2.0 program here at the commission where we did 23 things in 16 weeks. 23 little lessons about new technologies and web 2.0 things. A lot of people participated in that. It was a great, huge success. We had so much response for that that we've decided to continue it in our ongoing Rascal Learns 2.0 program. We just announced it yesterday. This can go along with a lot of the things that we'll be talking about today. A lot of the services are what we did in our previous Rascal Learns. Some of them we maybe do again or more in our upcoming ones. But every month, there'll be a new thing, a new lesson that you can follow along and learn. Some new technologies, some new service, something new that's out there. And you can earn an AC credit for each one. Every month, there'll be a new one. So take a look at that, and that may help you learn a lot of these things that we're going to be talking about today. So blogs, you can set one up for your library as well. This one, as I said, for the commission, we do our announcements, things that we're doing from Rascal Learns. Our Rascal Libraries match up. I'll be talking about that later. Fundation for SNCCC Libraries. Hosting that had their wine and weave fundraiser. All sorts of different things we put up on here. And this is the kind of thing you could use for your libraries as well. Start a blog, pushing out the information about whatever's going on at your library. Announcing new services coming up, new projects, new, just anything that you're doing. Or encouraging people to come to the library, talking about services you've been doing. Just a great way to get out there and get in touch with your patrons. Now once, and I'm going to be jumping around a lot on this page. Our Nebraska Commission Goes 2.0 page is a range alphabetically, which is great for finding things. But for my session today, I'm going to be jumping around and trying to do it in a more logical order of how things are related. So I will be scrolling up and down around on this page here. After you've gotten into doing blogging and either creating your own blog or following other people's blogs, you are going to want to figure out a way of how to follow them or how people follow you of our blog. RSS feeds is the way to quickly and easily do that. This is a way where people can follow you and have the information automatically come into them, rather than having to go around out and about to every single blog that is out there and have multiple tons of tabs open on their browser. This is a link to the Library Commission's RSS feeds. We actually have put various different pages have a feed where people can follow anything that's been updated on these pages. Our announcements page, our book talk podcast, our encompassed podcast. The blog itself, of course, and then the blog we actually have broken up by category. So if you're only interested in a particular category on our blog, you can just follow that particular topic. And anything that has been posted with that topic assigned to it is you will get fed out to you. Our WhatsApp blog for government documents is on here. Any publications that we do, you can have that fed to you as well. So everything that we have on here is things that you can follow. And you can set these up for your own blog as well. Make sure that you have this available for people to follow your blogs very easily. Once you've got this set up or you are finding these RSS feeds from other blogs and websites that are out there, you're going to need a way to easily organize them and follow them in one way. And aggregators are things that can do this for you. Bloglines is just one of them. There are other ones as well as Google Readers one. Lots of different ones are out there, but this is just one that we show you as an example of an aggregator that you can use for reading those RSS feeds, blogs, news feeds, whatever. And this links out to the one that we have here that we've set up at the Library Commission. We suggest some different feeds that you might be interested in. Other library blogs that are out there, a couple different public library blogs, librarian bloggers that we follow and think maybe have interest to you that are out there. This is not an exhaustive list of every single one that is out there, not at all. But it's a good place to start. So what you can do is when you're in here, you have just this one website that you go to your bloglines account. And if you want to see what posts have been put up on a particular blog, they will come up here in the side window and you can see what that particular version has been blogging about. Here's a marketing blog about marketing libraries. She's speaking in Amsterdam on the game you learned symposium being held there. So you can see she's just announcing where she's going to be speaking. And other conferences reporting about different conferences that she's been to. This is Nancy Dowd's blog. She does a lot of pushing about marketing and how to get your library out there. So with using bloglines, you can just keep track of all sorts of different blogs all in one place instead of having to go everywhere out there to follow them all. And as long as they have an RSS feed, it's very easy right here within the system to add a new blog into your bloglines reader. There we go. Now following blogs is a good way to follow pages and update on a regular basis because every time there's a new post, it will automatically be just pushed out to your bloglines account. Sometimes you may want to just bookmark static webpages or other pages that you just want to check on a regular basis yourself or you just want to remember new stories you might see that you want to keep track of and a lot of you may have been using in the past the bookmarks feature or the favorites feature on your browser. Which is great when you're sitting at your computer. However, if you go somewhere else, like if you're at home and you save something and you go to work and want to show it to someone, you don't have it anymore. Delicious is a website you can use for bookmarking pages and it's an account you log to on the web and mark things there. And then anywhere you go, you have access to your bookmarks. It's not specific to just your workstation that you're sitting at. So this is great. I use it for everything. Now I have a personal one. I also use a commission one for work related things. So you can just as long as you're logged into it, save things and then show it, share them with anybody anywhere. This links us to the commission's delicious account. There we go. An LC reference. It was started up originally with our reference staff putting our best of the web websites into here as a test. So it has lots of different websites that have been looked at and evaluated by our librarians here and put into here as good resources. What I've also been doing is as we do these encompass live sessions, I add any links that are used in any of the sessions that anyone talks about or references into our library commission's delicious account as well. So after a session is done, you'll have a place you can go to and find all of those links. You don't have to try and remember them or write them down. You think they'll all be here in our website and you can go to anyone else's website as long as you know their account, ours is NLC reference, and you can set up your own bookmarks. You can share them with other people. You can have friends on here, very social, and it's just a really great way to keep track of these things when you're bouncing around from computer to computer. You can tag these with different terms. You can see I've done some here. I've actually just this morning added the commission goes 2.0 website so that it's here in our bookmarks. You can also see over here in these numbers here how many other people have also tagged these pages. Have also added these pages to their delicious accounts. So you can see how very popular some of the things we have are. Nine people have actually saved the commission goes 2.0 page. But down here you can see that we did a session on ways to go on doing security on your public computers. Lots of people bookmarking things on antivirus software for Windows, over 3,000 people on this one. Earlier this month we also did a thing about the summer reading program. 121 other people besides us have bookmarked that same website for the collaborative summer reading program. So you can see the kind of things that are popular out there and what other people are also bookmarking. So it's a great taking your bookmarks with you application is delicious. So that's saving bookmarks and websites out there. So the thing else you can do is create videos to promote your library. And there's a couple of different websites that we actually use here at the commission. YouTube and BlipTV are two. YouTube you can upload on YouTube. Everyone sure has heard of or seen videos on YouTube. And YouTube is great. You can upload videos that can only be up to 10 minutes long is the maximum length. So they're good for short things, promotional things. Towards your library. We have a video here, our main one here on our page. Now hiring at your library, we did a PSA about getting people interested in becoming librarians. So you can go ahead and create your own account in here and post up videos. We've also put some things up here, some presentations. We've done a virtual reference to the library commission. The one in the laptop, one child program about ebooks, all sorts of different things. The gaming workshops that we've been doing, we've posted various things on here. You also can favorite things. You can save things that you've seen that you might really like. We have things here, blogging, Sesame Street, rock and roll reading. The Erex and Sports Nintendo Wii Bowling, this is where assisted living homes with seniors had a Wii Bowling tournament amongst themselves in the competition with prizes and bowling shirts and everything. It's great, there's a whole series of those. So you can save these things here and you can see all the ones that we have favorited. We favorited 37 different videos and see what kind of things they are on there. So it's a really great way just to promote your like brand. YouTube is great. It's very popular. It has good quality. But the videos can only be up to 10 minutes long. For longer things, we've signed up also for an account called BlipTV. This is where you can put longer videos up. So you can have our full sections up here. The ones that you saw that were presentations on YouTube were just shorter versions of the like kind of like a preview of what the full sections were for some of those because they were much longer than 10 minutes. BlipTV, we can post the full programs. And this is our library commission account. Okay, I'm not sure if you're here. That's Michael Sowers. He's doing a presentation on Creative Commons here. And now this one has the full presentation up there for you. So you can watch the entire thing with the live video and whatever he did here on the BlipTV. So depending on what kind of thing you're trying to promote and put out there, YouTube is great for short things. BlipTV can be great for longer presentations that you might want to post. So those are two great things for videos. And both of those, you can also embed those videos into your library's website as well. So if you create a PSA or do something, you can then put it onto your library's website and have the links right from there and run them right from within there. Or you can embed it into a blog post. We've done that with a lot of ours where we've been promoting something and saying, here's a little blurb about it and here's the video of this session that we did. Or here's a little preview video of a session we're going to be doing, those kind of things. So they can all be embedded into your blog and website as well. So those are great for video type things. Pictures you may want to also do as well. Flickr is a great site for sharing and saving photos out there for your library. You can upload photos to there. You can organize them into categories. You can share them with people. You can use these photos in your website or your blog post and anything else. This is our commission's Flickr stream. There we go. Where you can see I've done some screenshots. These are screenshots that it's here right now that we use for that commission. It goes to 2.0 page. But then we also have pictures. We had some librarians come to Pakistan and visit here. We have pictures from that event. Let's see. We did a library camp and on conference here last year. So we have pictures of people attending that conference. So you can share all these kind of things with your patrons and anyone who may be using the library. On the Rest of the Book Festival pictures we have from there. Any conferences that we present on or go to like the Rest of the Library Association and like a NEVA conference. We are there. We post pictures of. So anything and everything you can think of that you may be doing at your library you can share the photos here on Flickr. Now depending on what you're doing of course in your library you may have to be aware of getting permission from people if their children are going to be in the photos it's a whole thing you have to worry about with policies and things and decide how you're going to handle that. But lots of libraries are doing it on here. We actually have lots of friends that we are friends with on here so we can see other people's photos. Other libraries are on here that the Nebraska Library Association has an account. We also have the commission have Nebraska Memories a separate second account for Flickr in Flickr where it is pictures from our Nebraska Memories project. We have historical photos from different libraries and museums across the state. So in addition to having that as its own website we also have put them in their own account and to Flickr to share them there as well. So you can see a lot of old historical pictures in this case it's lots of libraries that we've got here. So Flickr definitely a great place to post up your pictures share them and then be able to use them in other resources as I said posting them into your website sharing them in there embedding them into your blog. So that's a good way of sharing things that are going on at your library. Now you may be doing sessions and presentations on things and you want to share your presentations that you've been doing as well. What we use here at the commission is the service called Slideshare where you can upload any PowerPoint presentations you may use to the website and then share them with people from there. When I do presentations and we do presentations here in Encompass Live we post all of them up to our Library Commission Slideshare account and then that's where we send you to go and if you want to download the presentation for your own reference to take notes on whatever. And this is our Commission Slideshare account I'm going to set those up there we go where you can see all sorts of different presentations that have been done by staff at the commission. We have right now 69 and actually once I put today's up 70 I haven't uploaded this morning's yet. All the slides shows that we have up here and you can see most a lot of the recent ones are Encompass Live some of the recent ones we've done in back to memory the summer reading program public access computer security so any one of these maybe you didn't see the summer reading program session you can go to that presentation and you can view it just here on the Slideshare page if you want to and go through the slides on here or you can also download it download the presentation to your own computer and print it out for your own reference. Every presentation has its own unique URLs that's what we send you to as a specific URL for whatever that presentation was. You can also have contacts within here people that you know that you want to that will share information with you they'll share their slides with you I have my own Slideshare account for personal things that I do I've got Sourced has one, lots of other librarians that you may know or have heard of have some as well so this is great for if you are doing presentations you can share them in here you can also search it for ideas for presentations or if you're interested in a topic and you want to learn more about it and you think maybe somebody did a presentation on it you can do a search in here on a topic and see what people have been presenting on it you might get some good slides with good information on them that can help you learn about things you might just find people who are really good at teaching these kind of things or know these topics and you can explore a little bit more about them find their web pages and other things that they've posted about so it's a good resource just for information for your own learning as well as posting up things that you're doing at your library okay, as you can see we're doing a lot of jumping around here the next topic I have here is Twitter Twitter is a service called micro blogging application where you can put up little short blurbs of things that you're doing or things you want to share or questions you want to ask of other people you've probably heard about it's been in the news a lot lately a lot of famous people are using it Oprah is on Twitter now that's the most recent big name person that has joined up and started sending out information on Twitter but a lot of the news sites and big places use it as well CNN, MSNBC, New York Times send things out lots of libraries use it libraries can use it to push out information about their library we have a lot of people I follow that so you can get little messages saying so I'm reading a program this Saturday and what time and then I'll link to the main page about it these Twitter messages are called tweets they can only be very short 140 characters you've got to really think small when you're just creating thinking of what to write but you can link out to other web pages so that's okay you can just say this so-and-so author is coming Friday and go here for more information and people can follow you on Twitter just like you can follow a blog or a website and get these messages and then learn more about what your library is doing a great way to push out information and you need to promote it so people know that you're out there doing it you set up your Twitter account start using it and then promote it on your web page put it in your newsletter let people know if you want to know what we're doing and you're using Twitter follow us and we will see all the new things you're doing here at the library commission what we're doing with it is we're posting the reference questions that we get downstairs at our reference desk so if you want to this is more want to know what the library commission does what do we hear what do we do as a library you can see the kind of questions that were asked now we're not putting the answers up which to some people has been a problem they want to know what is the answer I want to know that too well you can call us and find out if you want to we're also not posting as you can see or anybody's personal information so if you contact us and just ask a question all that gets pushed out here is the question itself just basically trying to give an idea of here's the kind of things that we do with the commission so you can see here these are just from today we've gotten questions about does the state require a license to install CCTV I've been searching all over for a stapler with a chain so our students can have one handy by the computers but not inadvertently run I assume this means run off with it the question of the Omaha sewer project something called here the library commission about it labor laws for pregnancy and brass all sorts of things were asked here so this is just very interesting I follow it just to see what kind of questions that we are asked but this just gives you an idea of the kind of things that you can do you can follow people and people can follow you so the commission is following some of the librarians and other people out here tour books is one that we're following there's another tour books oh a different person there and then people can follow us we actually have 261 individuals who are following our Twitter stream so 261 individual people or libraries or institutions whoever who are listening and seeing what we're saying so it can be a very popular and really be a great way to get your information out there so the thing else great that you can do with Twitter is you can create little HTML code Twitter badges that you can post on your web page so people can see the most recent tweets that you have posted out and get them that's one way to have it promoting it be promoting it and get people sucked into actually following it on here so it's a really great resource for pushing out information about what you're doing at your library and that's what a lot of people want now users want they want to know instantaneously what's going on they want to have you contacting them telling them here here what we're doing get yourself out there so that's kind of it you can also do back and forth questions and answer things on Twitter now in the library questions when we don't answer these questions we don't reply to people a lot or mainly just pushing out what we're doing but a lot of libraries they use it as a resource where people can actually ask questions and say hey what time is blah blah blah happening and if someone is monitoring the Twitter account you can reply right there within the Twitter and reply right back to them so it's instant kind of instant messaging within Twitter however you can do standard instant messaging which we also do here at the commission used IM to communicate that so a lot of people are communicating here at the commission some of our staff members communicate with each other and instant messaging some libraries are doing instant messaging as virtual reference chatting so people can come to your website and just type in a message and say hi I need to know blah blah blah and someone's monitoring in that and get an instant response back let's see we have two different ones here at the commission one for general reference questions and one specifically for questions about our Nebraska access databases and we have a link right here I'll just go to the general Ask Librarian page this is our page to the commission for all the different ways you can contact our librarians to ask them questions phone call there's an online form for questions or you can use the Ask Librarian chat window right here which I will do that I haven't warned them I'm going to do this but I'll just see who's downstairs so I just had a message down there and hopefully someone's paying attention and you can see here let you know if the person is actually on the line it says Ask Nebraska Library Commission is online so we're live downstairs someone hopefully is monitoring it there we go hi Chris this is Beth Beth is downstairs at the reference desk she just answered me in what was it 20 seconds or so and said hello so I could ask her a question she could ask me right here boom boom boom I've got an answer to whatever my reference question was very similar to doing a reference over the phone but it's online a lot of people are very internet centric people are using instant messaging all the time to communicate and this is the very comfortable easy way that people like to do it so we've put this box on our page where people can contact us right away so I'm just going to let her know that I'm playing so right there back and forth you can get really good this is something you can easily do on your page as well we have specific internet or instant messaging accounts that people can contact us directly with or we have this box it's a little bit of another thing a little bit of HTML code from a service called Meebo where you can sign up for and then people can just you can just put this little box on your page and people can immediately start contacting you what some people have done also is in they can if you have access to it in your own local catalog people have taken this box and put it on their can't find any results for your search pages error-paid messages pages that come from searching the catalog and get them an instant link right to their library and asking them okay I did a search on blah and I didn't find anything can you help me find more things and you're right there you're right on the pages where they need you the most when they're at home or their office or whatever you're trying to search your website you're right there able to answer their question right when they're having the problems so big part of a lot of this learning of this library 2.0 web 2.0 type services is being where the users are being in the instant messaging services being on Twitter being where they're already at you don't force yourself on to them of course but just be there in case they want to you know find you and communicate with you a couple of obviously well known places to do this as well is MySpace and Facebook where you can set up an account and a profile and people can just find out more about your library get more information about you get to your web page people as we know lots of people have MySpace accounts and have Facebook accounts and are using them from major communication with their friends with their family with anyone be there for them and they will find you and the commission has set up a MySpace page there it is our picture is the front door to the library commission rather than a picture of someone here and we have blog posts here that we put up information about the commission a link to our website on here our affiliate career account we have our as you can see right here what I was talking about is the twitter badge a little bit of html code you can put on our web page we put it here on our MySpace page as you can see this is that most recent question automatically it's fed to here by this little piece of code we don't have to go here every time and do it we just do it once in twitter and boom it pushes it out to this page this little code can be put anywhere on any web site you want to and we have right now 229 friends following us 229 people who also have MySpace accounts that keep track of what we're doing and want to know what we're doing at the commission this is my account this is Alana Navani's account here at the commission this is Michael Sowers so lots of people we know in other libraries following us the Idaho commission for libraries Boulder University so lots and lots of people are on here and institutions that you could use just be where your users are and let them find you promote it on your web page say we have a MySpace if you're a big MySpace user some people prefer Facebook there's my Facebook the other alphabet there we go so for Facebook we also have a Facebook account so if people are there we tell them hey follow our Facebook become a fan of our page and keep track of what we're doing we'll be posting up new items and things that we're doing on here our Facebook account we have 54 fans not as popular yet but we do have 54 people that follow what we're doing and want to know what we're doing we have information about the commission on here our address phone number hours that link right to our website so you still have your main web page out there you still have that but you put yourself there where the people are lots of places lots of departments in the state of Nebraska have pages on Facebook now too you can find all sorts of things the tourism department Nebraska jobs you can find on there they're posting things on friends with them so I follow them lots of institutions are doing this and just pushing out the information to wherever the people are so it's definitely a good idea to get yourself out there where people are already and just put a presence there doesn't have to be anything fancy agency ours is very simple we just have our logo here and basic information about us but it's a place for people to learn about us and know what we're doing and keep track of what we're up to now one most recent really cool thing we've done once you've got a lot of different pages out there you can get all really creative with it and mashups is one thing that a lot of people are doing where you can take multiple different things like a map and data and information and whatever and put it into something new create something new and useful and this is something that John Felton our statistics person here at the library commission has put together for for Nebraska libraries he's combined data from our Nebraska public library statistical survey with maps with a map and and you can see let's have loads up here there it goes there are little bubbles for every public library in Nebraska this is just a public library because it's from the survey we do of just a public library right now you can see color coded bubbles for every library in the state now if you click on one of these like here I'll just do Fairbury public you get a pop up that tells you basic statistics about that library taken from the statistics report that they submitted information from if you want to you can go to that libraries website if we know they have one we have a link to that you can get directions to go to that library if you want to do this is really cool you just put this up a couple of days ago and you can also sort them by the size of the population filter out so if you want to find a library that are of the same size of yours and compare your statistics you can do that I can click on these and you'll see that doesn't remove any libraries that are in a population of over 50,000 that wasn't very many can be that's just like in Omaha then they can take off the ones that are even bigger like size down and you can see they start disappearing here now I've eliminated all of the marks for the larger populations and I've only been I'm only left with the smaller ones anything any population 20 less than 2,500 of their channel these are the libraries we have and you can go all the way down to our smallest of the ones this is people this is all the libraries we have in towns that have populations of less than 500 that's a lot of libraries I think that's pretty awesome but you can play around with all you want you can say I'm in a town of this size let's see who also goes the same size town and you can see our only big ones as they said I don't know how to do big and they can start adding in the bigger libraries anyway it's just a very cool thing that we've done here so you can get really creative if you know start learning a little bit more about these things get some statistics get some stuff that you can work together all sorts of things that can be specific to your town or to your library or your population or something that your town may be interested in this is a general one for all Nebraska public libraries because that's what the commission one of the things the commission is interested in okay that was the last cool thing I wanted to show you guys on here as I said there's a lot of different things on this webpage not on this time to go through every single one of them but you can go here I haven't seen anybody come up with any questions during the session but you have any questions about any of these that I showed you anything you want to know more about them about any of these services or you want to see something on them I can give you more information about any of these does anybody have a question you can either use a microphone if you have one or you can type it in the text chat box I have that open here so I can see any questions you might have okay Jan Sears from Alliance Public Library has a question she said what is WordPress WordPress is a product that you can use a service you can use to create a blog it's blogging software we here the blogger is also the one that we use but WordPress is another service that you can use to actually create a blog you can get pretty creative with the setup and the design of it they do have it's a slightly more advanced version I would say you can do a lot more with it but that's a good way that you can create a blog for your website if you wanted to some libraries have actually been using blog software and a blog as their main homepage a good way to have some static information in it and pushing out new information and WordPress would be a good way a good thing to use for that as well Blogger is another service as well that's the one but not by any means the only one out there does that answer your question? I hope, Jen a quick answer anybody else have any questions about the things the commission is doing any services that you didn't show that you wanted to know more about I'll wait and see if anybody has it's still typing a question possibly if you do have a question you can also use a little hand raising thing in Icon in the center in your face let me know if you do have a question stay quiet I hope that's good that means that either I totally stunned you with all of this information or did a pretty good job whichever as I said you can go to this this website the URL here and check out look at any other things that the commission is doing to explore them more a printout option of this Jen will start to say we have print out option of this list you can just print out this webpage yourself if you want to absolutely have a special printout of it but you can go to this URL here and print it if you want to and then that will give you I printed it out and it came to depending on how you do your sizing and margins four or five pages it'll print out onto this entire huge long list of everything we're doing also the PowerPoint presentation I did will also be available on our slide share probably this afternoon once I get it up there so that will have the URL also for this on there and here is that where for all that I was talking about so any other questions comments any questions you want to know over here okay as I said go to this website go to the URL check out what we're doing keep track of it if you have any questions about any of the services that we're doing you can contact me you can contact Michael Sowers here at the commission as well he's also involved a lot of doing this lots of people are involved using these pages everyone here has the ability to blog to our YouTube accounts everything that's out there everybody uses it here so you can take a look at what's out there and contact the appropriate people for more information about it so feel free to call us with anything you want to know more about this for any other services that we did I didn't get to go into today and that will wrap it up for this morning oh Dana you had a question you can go ahead and type it into the text chat if you use the text chat button at the top or you just blogging okay okay alright thank you very much for attending bye bye