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Tech Gear to Carry on Your Travels

San Francisco Chronicle travel editor Spud Hilton lists the many gadgets he packs for audio, video, communications, Wi-Fi, and emergencies on the road.

The article is in three parts, with listings of essentials, optional but important gear, and high-tech gadgets for the “gear junkie.”

Perhaps the most interesting item on the list is one that doesn’t require electricity: a small roll of gaffer tape: “Easier to work with than duct tape, and has saved me in dozens of situations.”

Source

Spud Hilton, Gadget Junkies Love to Take Technology on Trips (published on paper as “Gadget Junkies Taking It Along”), San Francisco Chronicle, Nov. 10, 2010.

Managing the Online Persona

We live in a culture of sharing, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook told Wired.com in 2009:

people choose to share all this information themselves…. people need to move through this process of realizing that sharing information is good, and slowly sharing more and more information over time. But by doing that you get a lot richer information…

We feel more connected when we share, and the sense of being in community can have positive effects.

It’s often said that the Internet is a global village. But anyone who’s lived in a village knows that a village has both its cranks and its heroes, its gossip and its town crier, its snoop and its police, its fool and its sage.

Which one will you be?

Web usability expert Jakob Nielsen says you should think twice before posting to the Internet. “Think about how [what you write in email, blogs, or discussion forums] will look to a hiring manager in ten years,” advised Nielsen in 2005.

What is the dividing line between sharing about your life and projecting a professional image that will help you get that job interview?

Nobody likes a person who shares too much, but nobody likes a big phony either.

Sources

. Jakob Nielsen, Weblog Usability: Top Ten Design Mistakes (see rule nine), Alertbox, Oct. 17, 2005.
. Fred Vogelstein, The Wired Interview: Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, wired.com, June 29, 2009.

Related Postings

. Social Networking, Privacy, and the Law
. Tamar Weinberg: Social Media Etiquette Handbook

Videos from the Library of Congress

Updated Dec. 6, 2010

The Library of Congress now has a video channel on YouTube, says ResearchBuzz.

Here’s a selection titled Early Films of San Francisco, 1897-1916. What’s striking is the silence. The viewer has to fill in the blanks.

Research by film historian David Kiehn dates the making of the film A Trip Down Market Street to a few days before the great San Francisco earthquake and fire (April 18, 1906).

Sources

. ResearchBuzz, circa Nov. 16, 2010.
. Edward Guthmann, Historian David Kiehn Traces Old Bay Area Films, San Francisco Chronicle, Dec. 6, 2010 (published in hard copy as “Detective Work Tracks Earliest Bay Area Films”).