How do the searches work? How are the results organized?
What can you do with your results? • Check out this article at Resourceshelf (http://www.resourceshelf.com/2007/07/27/new-report-online-video-57-of-internet-users-have-watched-videos-online-and-most-of-them-share-what-they-find-with-others/) that profiles some sites that help with the search process – try one of their searches and see what happens. • Try using a service like dabble (http://dabble.com/) to gather groups of your favorite videos from everywhere so that you can share a whole list, and ‘dabble’ in other people’s lists. Think of the collection development possibilities for libraries – YouTube and other sites are chock full of how-tos and craft videos, not just people acting stupid for the camera. • Check out these two science video sites: Sciencehack (http://sciencehack.com/) and JoVE (http://www.jove.com/). To read more about them both, see this Infodoodads post (http://infodoodads.com/?p=136). • Explore other video related sites: • Jumpcut (http://www.jumpcut.com), an onli