Mashups and APIs
Mashups are interesting, but seem to be of varying quality. This is a concept GIS experts have used for some time now, with more sophistication. I looked at several of these but a few were too hard to read or did not seem very useful, at least to me. The one I liked the best combined job openings and maps. Though the maps were worldwide, I concentrated on U.S. looking for jobs for someone I know who is looking right now. The variety of postings was good and it was well displayed. There are doubtless many important applications for mashups.
Through Rollyo, I looked at several blogs on privacy written by librarians. That's an interesting concept in Web 2.0 since the web inherently can remove so much of that. I agreed with Annoyed Librarian that s/he should be free to post under a pseudonym. Some organizations are not comfortable with their employees expressing opinions they might not endorse, even in a non-working environment. Some people want to maintain their privacy for other reasons as well, not the least of which is the concern over identity theft. Shifted? Shifty? Librarian discussed the proposal to allow the government to have even more access to private information in the name of security for citizens. Does no one remember what happened before WW II when such things took place in Europe?
