Friday, December 19, 2008

Thing #9

I found this to be kind of weird as it seems that all this thing and a few of the others are, is different ways to do the same thing, such as creating a presentation, although I have to admit that gmail has a very effective way of filing, storing and archiving emails. I wish the library's groupwise was designed as well. I did gmail doc sharing and while I did it I wasn't that impressed.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Thing #8

This has been the most interesting so far. I made a Picture Trail slowslide show of a number of photos of an antique brass baby bed that I picked up at Gold Rush this past August in Rochester, Mn. It was in a pile of pieces laying on the ground. I new it would be missing some pieces but wasn't sure how many until I rigged it up on a work surface in my garage. It is missing one brass tube and three iron rails. The pictures are also the way I will have to put it back together after I completely dismantle the bed.

The major problem I will have is to locate the three rails. They don't reproduce the pieces and the cast iron ends can't be faked as they taper and slide into other pieces. So, I am now looking for and old iron baby crib that I can rob the rails from, I can cut the length down and weld the pieces back together but really need the ends. Anybody got an old rusty antique iron baby crib they want to get rid of???

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Thing #7

It seems to me that Cell phone, email, IM and SMS are just different ways to do the same thing, communicate and that choice depends on age and how much you like gadgets. The phone company seems to get the best deal monetarily. The library uses email constantly and it definitely allows us to keep in touch and share information. Personally I would rather talk face to face. I think you pick up a lot of information by observing people when you interact with them. Phone is my second choice and i would guess that IM and SMS will be things I use very seldom. I sit in on a monthly web conference and get frustrated by the fact you really only see what the camera sees and hear what the mike picks up. I spend two hours and reallly only know who is at the table in camera range and depending on how good the mike is, loose a fair amount of the conversation. It cuts down on travel time but I feel I would be farther ahead being in the same room.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Thing #6

This is my trading card for Thing #6. This was fun but I think I need to get some more pictures

Thing #5

This was a little weird. I played around, tracked photos of tools by searching the tag TOOLS, then I created my name using Flickr free photos. It is at the bottom of the blog page.

Thing #4


I have a picture will post it from Flickr now

Thing #3

Found out that I have been collecting things through RSS since january and have over 1300 to read through. Did add unshelved. Fun now that I understand it. need a week of vacation to catch up in my reading.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Thing #2

John said...
I am finding l2 interesting. I taught in a private school for 30 years and after that ran a history center for 7 1/2 years and it seems that I really never picked up the sliis that quite a few of you have with all this new technology, so for me this is an adventure and at the same time like walking through a maze. It would be helpful if everyone was not so in to acronyms or if there was a list to refer too. If it wasn't for talking to others in the libray I would be lost. I believe that I am to literal. I was taught and learned that you follow the direction, in the right order and things should work. I am finding with technology that is not true. Some people take that in stride and seem to know a way to backdoor it. Maybe I'll learn how to do that but for now it frustrates me.With all of the info I read in this "Thing" I can't help but reflect on how education always seemed to have a new way to do things- they came and went. We learned about them and in awhile something new was all the rage. I will be curios if this works the same.
January 30, 2008 9:14 AM

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Thing #1 The Blog is done, as of October 29, 2008the avatar is also

The following are some books that I have read that deal with art, antique and archeology theft:

Restoration ------------------------- John Ed Bradley
Illuminated ------------------------- Matt Bronleewe
The Art Thief ------------------------ Noah Charney
Consigned to Death ------------------ Jane K. Cleland
Deadly Appraisal --------------------- Jane K. Cleland
The Perfect Fake -------------------- Barbara parker
The Lost Painting ------------------- Jonathan Harr
The Judas Pair ----------------------- Jonathon gash
Buried Stuff -------------------------- Sharon Fiffer
The Wrong Stuff --------------------- Sharon Fiffer
Dead Guy's Stuff -------------------- Sharon Fiffer
Killer Stuff ------------------------- Sharon Fiffer
Hollywood Stuff -------------------- Sharon Fiffer
Loot ------------------------------ Aaron Elkins
The Bookman's Promise ------------ John Dunning
The Sign of the Book --------------- John Dunning
The Bookman's Last Fling ------------ John Dunning
The Bookman's Wake --------------- John Dunning
Booked to Die ---------------------- John Dunning
Chasing Cezanne --------------------- Peter Mayle
The Fuhrer's Reserve ---------------- Paul Lindsay
Stealing With Style ------------------ Emyl Jenkins
The Last Templar ------------------- Raymond Khourx

Monday, January 28, 2008

Art & Antique Theft On A Stick

This creation is part of the library "23 Things On A Stick". The blog was easy to do after a friend helped me to figure out why the site would not accept my email address. It kept coming back with an error message that said the address already had an account. Knowing I didn't I went to someone younger who figured out a way to get a new password and everything worked... at least this far.

The title refers to my passion for any type of book that deals with art, antique, or archeology theft. I have always wished that there would be a way to collect titles and authors that wrote books out these subjects as I read them faster than I find them. If you can suggest titles and authors, I would appreciate it. As I feel more comfortable with this I will begin listing books in my collections and see what happens. Bye for now.