Library 2.0 Toolkit
Online Collaboration
Textflow is an Adobe AIR-based collaboration app that allows you to incorporate changes from several different people into one Word document.
ebooks - Nintendo e-book reader has been confirmed.
From Gizmondo's Paul Lester...
It turns the DS into an eBook viewer, which is handily already designed to open up like a book, allowing you to use the stylus to turn pages. You'll also be able to zoom, search for key words or phrases, add bookmarks and change the amount of text displayed on screen.
As the title suggests there are a bunch of classics in the box, including Shakespeare, Sherlock Holmes, Alexandre Dumas and Oscar Wild, but what's really interesting is that it'll allow you to use the built-in WiFi connection to download more.
There's no word on exactly how extensive Nintendo's catalogue will be yet but based on how easy it should be to reformat the massive range of titles already out there for the DS's screen and controls, we'd expect quite a lot.
100 Classic Book Collection will be available for £19.99 from the 26th of December, or you can pre-order it on Amazon now for £17.99.
Page Feeds - Newzie.Free application Newzie is a feature-rich desktop newsreader designed to keep you up to date with the latest web content, whether that content is coming from a traditional RSS feed or not.
Circulation
Another method of pursuing those much lamented, 'overdues' may be possible in the shape of Dial My Calls. Although early days yet, the technology may well feature sooner, rather than later in the world of Next Generation Libraries.
Social Communication - Tarpipe
Tarpipe streamlines your updates to various social web sites, creating simple or complex workflows to update several buckets in one fell swoop.
Labels: Library 2.0, RSS, Social Networking

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