Friday, February 27, 2009

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

 

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

 

by Robin Wauters on February 25, 2009

Mendeley, makers of a desktop and web application designed to make it easier for academics to manage and discover relevant research papers on any topic, has raised $2 million in early-stage funding from some high-profile investors, including Stefan Glänzer, early seed investor in and former Chairman of Last.fm, former Executive VP of Digital Strategy and Business Development for Warner Music Group Alex Zubillaga and ASI, the investment vehicle of Skype’s former founding engineers.

The connection with the popular social music network Last.fm doesn’t stop there, since the company is pushing to become the “Last.fm for research”, which means the startup essentially aims to enable academics to manage and sharing their research paper inventory and at the same time discover like-minded people and papers thanks to a recommendation and matching algorithm.

I registered for the service and downloaded the Windows version of the desktop app (it’s available for Mac OSX and Linux too) to give it a whirl. First thing I noticed is that you can easily invite fellow academics from your network to join Mendeley based on existing accounts for LinkedIn, Gmail, Windows Live, etc. I also took note of the fact that your profile settings, which include information about your field of research, a CV, etc. automatically has you signed up for the company newsletter, which I think should be optional. My entirely fake public profile can be located here.

The desktop app is actually quite nice: after installation, you can import PDF files using the tool’s “Automatic Medata Extraction” or import your existing library from EndNote XML, BibTeX or RIS files. Mendeley also features a Word Plugin which lets you insert citations and create formatted bibliographies in documents using Microsoft Word 2003/2007. Academics can also upload their own research papers and syncing files and information with the web-based version with just one click of the mouse. Mendeley also boasts features that let members connect with their peers online, and - taking a page from Facebook - the tool also features a newsfeed that displays newly shared or uploaded documents etc.

Mendeley claims to have “scrobbled” data on almost 3 million research papers in just two months, so it’s likely to become one hell of a resource if growth continues and enough academics take notice.

Similar services include Labmeeting (which we likened to a “social network for scientists”), Academia.edu (which we likened to a “Geni for researchers”) and Questia.

If you know of any others, please share in comments.

Others: 

Another company that is related here is Biowizard. While it does not work within the context of a research paper for footnoting, there are a lot of Digg-like social features to help find the best and most relevant research. More importantly, it also includes proprietary data on research presented at conferences, which is usually 1-2 years ahead of when it gets formally published. As such, it is the only place to stay up to date on the most current happenings in biomedical research.

A non-software and download alternative is twidox. Focus is on documents rather than the social-networking and now has over 30.000 already.

scholarz.net which is also a German concept by the way.

For computer science, Eventseer (http://eventseer.net) provides an alternative take on social networking for researchers. We mine the web for existing relations between scientists and use the information to help users find upcoming conferences and events that are relevant for them, or even other researchers that they might be interested in following.

CiteULike is similar; it’s a website that allows the building of collaborative bibliographies.

Since we’re talking about Mendeley, it is also worth mentioning Papers, which attempts to be the iTunes of reference managers rather than the Last.fm. I’m using this at the moment, but it’s not without its problems, so I’m always looking for alternatives.

Other reference managers worthy of note are connotea (http://www.connotea.org/) and Zotero (http://www.zotero.org/).

A related type of program is a research collaboration system. Laboratree (http://www.laboratree.org) is a system facilitates collaboration within and between organizations.

wePapers and Zotero

ResearchGate.net, fast growing social network for scientists, strong especially life sciences.

Basecamp/ Backpack for scientists, then Lab Engine (http://www.labenginehq.com) might be of interest to you

research grant application to Grants.gov (for the federal dollars). Check out Cayuse and Subawards.com.

 

Mendeley Snags $2 Million In Early-Stage Funding For Research Paper Management Tool

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Free online file conversion

File conversion sites -- HSM

Zamzar - Free online file conversion-- Zamzar - Free online file conversion

Online MIDI to MP3/WAV Converter -- http://www.hamienet.com/midi2mp3

Some websites, some software

SUPER: http://www.erightsoft.net/SUPER.html
Total Converter: http://total-converter.reviewstown.com
media-convert: http://media-convert.com

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

 Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Posted February 23rd, 2009 by Trevor

We are excited to announce two major releases. This morning the Zotero team launched both Zotero 1.5 and the first release of Zotero’s web application. Watch the screencast below for details on 1.5 and see the list below for a brief list of Zotero’s new features.

Zotero Blog » Blog Archive » Zotero 1.5 Beta Released: Join Us In The Clouds

Monday, February 23, 2009

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect 

Be the First to Know

Web Page Monitoring Services

for tracking pages without RSS feeds...

ChangeDetect is a FREE service that saves your favorite web pages, monitors content for changes and sends an automatic email notification to you whenever your web pages are updated.  Sign up now.

web page monitoring monitor changes pages webpages changedetect

Test Scribd

 

Customizing Endnote to Use the SFX OpenURL Link Resolver

Friday, February 20, 2009

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

More things to look at.....HSM

Library a’ la Cartehttp://alacarte.library.oregonstate.edu/ a content management system designed for creating and maintaining library research guides
Drupal - http://drupal.org/ a content management system
Moodlehttp://moodle.org/ a course management system used by many colleges and universities

Reference Today: Can You Open This for Me?

Thomas B. Fordham Institute -

Thomas B. Fordham Institute - 

The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption

September 29, 2004

by Chester E. Finn, Jr., Diane Ravitch

Statewide textbook adoption, the process by which 21 states dictate the textbooks that schools and districts can use, is fundamentally flawed. Textbook adoption distorts the market, entices extremist groups to hijack the curriculum, enriches the textbook cartel, and papers the land with mediocre instructional materials that cannot fulfill their important education mission. The adoption process cannot be set right by tinkering with it, concludes The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption, the latest release from the Thomas B. Fordham Institute. Rather, legislators and governors in adoption states should eliminate the process and devolve funding for and decisions about textbook purchases to individual schools, individual districts, even individual teachers.
The Mad, Mad World of Textbook Adoption is the first of a new Fordham Institute series, "Compact Guides to Education Solutions," that provides practical solutions to K-12 education problems for policy makers, legislators, school leaders, and activists. These concise guides are meant to help drive reforms at the local, state, and national levels by offering actionable policy recommendations.

Thomas B. Fordham Institute -

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Blog posted in comments area of Schol comm blog -- need to take a closer look at this ....seems good at first look -- HSM

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Open J-Gate, Open J Gate, Open Access Journals, Open Access, Free Access, E-Journals, e-journal, Periodical, Periodicals, Magazine, Magazines, Journal, Abstract, Articles, Quarterly, Research

Link Library of Open Access English Language Journals

Incompetech

Incompetech

Used this today to put royalty free music in a tutorial on citation searching... might screencast later but didn't want to loose the site....HSM

Music

Royalty-Free Music Music FAQ Music Licenses Scoring Services

PDFs

Graph/Grid Paper Mailing Labels Monthly Calendars Yearly Calendars

Literature/Arts

British Authors Name Database Theater Scripts The Movie Critic Guide to Art

Other

Gallimaufry Send Email! Donate

Incompetech

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

HOW TO: Make Firefox Your Productivity Machine

 HOW TO: Make Firefox Your Productivity Machine

Firefox extensions I’d pay for


Last, but definitely not least, I’d like to mention a handful of plugins I use every day and would most likely pay for (attention extension developers: do not send emails asking me to pay):

- Evernote - The Firefox plug-in from Evernote allows you to highlight and clip text or entire pages to your notebooks.

- Sharaholic - If you use Delicious, StumbleUpon, Digg, and similar sites - save yourself the hassle of having plugins for each site and just use Sharaholic to spread all your link love around.

HOW TO: Make Firefox Your Productivity Machine

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Sending Text Messages on AIM -- IM-to-Text with AIM

Sending Text Messages on AIM -- IM-to-Text with AIM

Need this to aim mm -- hsm

Sending Text Messages on AIM -- IM-to-Text with AIM

Customize Firefox to Fire up your Research | locate, evaluate, and use effectively

Customize Firefox to Fire up your Research | locate, evaluate, and use effectively 

Customize Firefox to Fire up your Research

I am a big fan of the open source web browser Firefox, mainly because it is so highly customizable.

Following are some of my favorite add-ons for academics.  Some of these have been around for a while, but have recently introduced significant new features to beta or stable versions.

zotero - an open source citation manager created by scholars at George Mason University.  Any web page can be saved with notes and organized into folders you define.  If the page happens to contain bibliographic records - Amazon, most library catalogs, WorldCat, etc., you will see a small icon in your browser address bar that allows you to import the record with one click.  Records can be imported and exported to/from several formats including html pages and rtf documents formatted to any of several common citation styles.  I am currently using the latest experimental version, zotero sync preview, which allows me to save and sync work across multiple instances of Firefox - but it does only work where you have Firefox. 

foxmarks - sync and backup your bookmarks and passwords across multiple computers.  This one doesn’t require you to have Firefox installed on every computer you use, because you can log into the website and access your data from any browser.

Read it Later - provides a simple one-click method for saving web pages to read later.  How is this different from ordinary bookmarking?  The intent is that bookmarks are for sites that you want to return to again and again.  This extension simply creates a reading list for pages you don’t have time for now, but want to come back to.  One click to save, one click to mark as read, and it keeps your real bookmarks folders uncluttered. It also syncs across multiple machines and can cache pages for offline reading, for example on your laptop when you are away from a Wi-Fi hotspot.

WebNotes - allows you to highlight and annotate web pages and easily share the annotated version with others, which will make it useful for collaborative research and for Information Literacy instruction. 

Sage - this is an RSS feed reader built right into the browser.  It is perhaps not as functional as a Google Reader, but it stores your feeds with your bookmarks, so if you are also using foxmarks, you will always be able to find and check them.

Google Toolbar - This one has definitely been around a while and has its detractors as well as fans.  Some library colleages even think of Google and Google-style searching as the enemy of Information Literacy.  I don’t intend to get into that here; I just want to tell you about the latest beta version of the toolbar, which allows me to sync my search settings, notebook clippings, and (the most useful in my opinion) web history across all my machines.  That’s right - if I visit a site on one machine, all my other Firefox machines remember it, so I can easily search for and find that site I forgot to bookmark or mark with Read it Later.

Do you notice a theme here?  These tools are are each made all the more useful because they make it possible to sync my data across multiple computers where I use Firefox. That’s true even if I need to use a public machine with no admin privileges, because I keep a portable copy of Firefox on my usb stick as well.  No matter where I find myself, my bookmarks, RSS feeds, citations, and annotations go with me.  Recently this phenomenon has been called “cloud computing,” and I think this is just the beginning. 

Customize Firefox to Fire up your Research | locate, evaluate, and use effectively

Saturday, February 14, 2009

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

MERLOT is a leading edge, user-centered, searchable collection of peer reviewed and selected higher education, online learning materials, catalogued by registered members and a set of faculty development support services. MERLOT's vision is to be a premiere online community where faculty, staff, and students from around the world share their learning materials and pedagogy.

MERLOT's strategic goal is to improve the effectiveness of teaching and learning by increasing the quantity and quality of peer reviewed online learning materials that can be easily incorporated into faculty designed courses.

MERLOT - Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching

Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies

Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies 

Centre for Learning and Performance Technologies (C4LPT). 

C4LPT was established by Jane Hart, as a place to keep track of learning trends, technologies and tools. There are two main elements: the Resource Centre and the Social Learning Network.

C4LPT Resource Centre

The C4LPT Resource Centre contains a number of free resources about learning tools and technologies, including:

Centre for Learning & Performance Technologies

E-print Network home page -- Energy, science, and technology for the research community -- hosted by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy

E-print Network home page -- Energy, science, and technology for the research community -- hosted by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy 

Energy, science, and technology for the research community!

The E-print Network is . . .

. . . a vast, integrated network of electronic scientific and technical information created by scientists and research engineers active in their respective fields, all full-text searchable. E-print Network is intended for use by other scientists, engineers, and students at advanced levels.

. . . a gateway to over 30,380 websites and databases worldwide, containing over 5 million e-prints in basic and applied sciences, primarily in physics but also including subject areas such as chemistry, biology and life sciences, materials science, nuclear sciences and engineering, energy research, computer and information technologies, and other disciplines of interest to DOE. We hope the E-print Network proves valuable to you in supporting your research initiatives.

E-prints are scholarly and professional works electronically produced and shared by researchers with the intent of communicating research findings to colleagues. They may include preprints, reprints, technical reports, conference publications or other means of electronic communication. Preprints, those selectively shared pre-published documents or articles going through the publication process, have long been recognized and utilized by peer groups throughout the scientific community. Recent technological advances, however, have incorporated preprints with other forms of peer communications to establish an information genre in its own right. Therefore, the more inclusive term e-prints is more appropriate to use currently in describing this rich and valuable source of scientific and technical information that now reaches beyond the scope of pre-published information.

E-print Network home page -- Energy, science, and technology for the research community -- hosted by the Office of Scientific and Technical Information, U.S. Department of Energy

About VIA

About VIA 

VIA (Visual Information Access) is a growing online union catalog documenting the arts, material culture, and social history. VIA contains descriptive records and images representing paintings, sculpture, photography, drawings, prints, architecture, decorative arts, trade cards, rubbings, theater designs, maps and plans. Participating repositories include archives, museums, libraries, and other collections throughout Harvard University. New material is added to VIA daily.

To receive monthly email messages highlighting the materials from contributing Harvard repositories, including updates on major VIA collections and advice on searching for these materials, subscribe to the viainfo mailing list. Go to the HUL Electronic Discussions Lists web page at http://hul.harvard.edu/hullists/ for subscription information

About VIA

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

The mission of the Museum of Broadcast Communications (MBC) is to collect, preserve, and present historic and contemporary radio and television content as well as educate, inform, and entertain the public through its archives, public programs, screenings, exhibits, publications and online access to its resources.

The MBC is an Illinois non-profit corporation that owns and manages two subsidiaries, Museum.TV and the National Radio Hall of Fame (NRHOF) and its website radiohof.org.

MBC Collection

Each subsidiary focuses on radio or television and the intellectual foundation of each entity is an encyclopedia—the Encyclopedia of Radio (EOR) and the Encyclopedia of Television (EOT).

Each entity has its own separate Steering Committee, made up of outside members as well as select MBC board members. Each Steering Committee reports to the MBC Board of Directors and each entity produces an annual fund raising benefit ---- the NRHOF Induction gala/broadcast held each November and MBC Salutes held each May.


MBC Collection

Since 1987 the MBC has offered free access for public learning to a diverse population, with the presentation of over 180 public programs, and through its online users around the world.

A Chicago-based professional staff and volunteers work on each subsidiary, with oversight of each entities' website provided by the MBC board's Online Committee.

The MBC opened to the public in June of 1987 at River City in Chicago’s South Loop neighborhood. From 1992 until 2003, the museum was located in the Chicago Cultural Center. It is currently raising funds to complete a new 62,000 square-foot home at State and Kinzie Streets in Chicago. Donations are welcome.

The Museum of Broadcast Communications

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Founded in 2001, Charity Navigator has become the nation's largest and most-utilized evaluator of charities. In our quest to help donors, our team of professional analysts has examined tens of thousands of non-profit financial documents. As a result, we know as much about the true fiscal operations of charities as anyone. We've used this knowledge to develop an unbiased, objective, numbers-based rating system to assess the financial health of over 5,000 of America's best-known charities.

Specifically, Charity Navigator's rating system examines two broad areas of a charity's financial health -- how responsibly it functions day to day as well as how well positioned it is to sustain its programs over time. Each charity is then awarded an overall rating, ranging from zero to four stars. To help donors avoid becoming victims of mailing-list appeals, each charity's commitment to keeping donors' personal information confidential is assessed. The site is easily navigable by charity name, location or type of activity and also features opinion pieces by Charity Navigator experts, donation tips, and top-10 and bottom-10 lists which rank efficient and inefficient organizations in a number of categories.

Charity Navigator - America's Largest Charity Evaluator | Home

Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Learning Blog - Courses.ie: Best Free Software Downloads for Students

 

The Learning Blog - Courses.ie: Best Free Software Downloads for Students

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

 Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking

Published by Mike Munsil on January 31st, 2009 in How-To, Reading.

Take Note, Writers!

Everyone has their own way of doing it. Some like it hot; some not. Some do it on paper, others do it on the internet. However you do it, it’s all good.

KISS ~ Let’s keep it simple:

I am NOT going to recommend using MS Word for note taking. That’s just ridiculous. Notepad is better, far better, and that’s ’cause Notepad strips out the non-essentials and just gets down to basics.

So, what ARE the basics of note-taking? Well, to me the basics are NOT trying to copy everything verbatim; nor is it trying to reword and rewrite the source material. To me, note taking is capturing JUST ENOUGH of the essentials to meet your needs, and making sure you refer others to the source of the information you use.

So, here it is, in a nutshell:

    ~ Firstly, define what your needs are; it won’t take long and it really pays off.
    ~ Once you know what you need, the hard part is done. Capture that info and if doing so with pen and paper is what works for you, just do it. No need to get fancy if you don’t want to.

MEMEME ~ If you’re like me:

Nah!
That’s too easy. I’m going to use free, reliable and easy to use software to do it, instead. There’s plenty of it out there and here are some links to a few of them:

KeyNote, TreePad Lite and MemPad are notable for their simple file-tree organization system and the
ability to maintain many notes within a single file.

KeyNote
TreePad Lite
MemPad

ENoteFile is very flexible and allows you to attach images as well as taking notes ~ EnoteFile

Tiddlywiki
is an amazingly extensible single-file program that can be read and used in any internet browser on Macs, Windows PCs and Linux boxes. The generic form of Tiddlywiki in particular is very well supported. The TiddlyBackpack version is specifically aimed at note taking.

GEARHEADS ~ Coffee and the Internet… a potent combination:

No, no, no! That’s too easy and none of it even includes the internet! What ARE you thinking?

Okay, if you’re REALLY like me, you can make it more complicated and do it on the internet, as an application that accesses the internet, using an application that resides in your browser, or implementing Web 2.0 technology by putting your very own Wiki up on the web.

EverNote allows you to easily capture information in any environment using
whatever device or platform you find most convenient, and makes this information accessible and searchable at any time, from anywhere.

Zotero [zoh-TAIR-oh] is a free, easy-to-use Firefox extension to help you collect, manage, and cite your research sources. It lives right where you do your work - in the web browser itself.

Dokuwiki is a standards-compliant, simple to use Wiki, mainly aimed at creating documentation of any kind. It is targeted at developer teams, workgroups and small companies. It has a simple but powerful syntax which makes sure the datafiles remain readable outside the Wiki and eases the creation of structured texts. All data is stored in plain text files – no database is required. Installing it is as simple as copying all the files via FTP to your web site, and executing ‘install.php’.

Tags: tech tip

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2 Responses to “Tech Tip ~ Note Taking”
  1.  Jake says:

    February 2, 2009 at 10:59 am

    I’d like to recommend a note taking software called NoteScribe. It’s great for creating, storing, and organizing notes on your computer, as well as creating and generating sources and bibliographies, attaching files (images, audio, video, spreadsheets, PDFs) to your notes, the ability to share notes, and much, much more.

    In the coming months there will be an online version available in addition to the desktop version. The online version will make your NoteScribe database accessible any where you go! Visit http://www.NoteScribe.net to learn more about the program!

    Jake

Tech Tip ~ Note Taking | Liberty Hall Writers

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Vertov » Getting Started

Vertov » Getting Started 

Vertov is a free media annotating plugin for Zotero, an innovative, easy-to-use, and infinitely extendable research tool. Both are Firefox extensions. Vertov allows you to cut video and audio files into clips, annotate the clips, and integrate your annotations with other research sources and notes stored in Zotero.

Vertov » Getting Started

Monday, February 9, 2009

Nebraska Memories

Nebraska Memories 

Nebraska Memories is a cooperative project to digitize Nebraska-related historical and cultural heritage materials and make them available to researchers of all ages via the Internet. Nebraska Memories is brought to you by the Nebraska Library Commission.

Nebraska Memories

International Gateway for Financial Education

International Gateway for Financial Education 

The International Gateway for Financial Education (IGFE) is established by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) as part of its overall comprehensive project on financial education.

The main objectives of the gateway are to:

  • Launch and develop the first global clearinghouse on financial education which gathers an extensive and comprehensive range of information, data, resources, research and news on financial education issues and programmes around the globe

  • Raise awareness on, and visibility of, financial education issues worldwide and ensure the wide dissemination of research, best practices and guidelines on financial education

  • Promote the access to and exchange of information, knowledge, experience and expertise on financial education

  • Support the creation of a worldwide network of governmental representatives and key stakeholders on financial education

  • Encourage further the elaboration of best practices and principles with the guidance of the network and under the aegis of the OECD [How to join].

International Gateway for Financial Education

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

FREE makes it easier to find teaching and learning resources from the federal government.

More than 1,500 federally supported teaching and learning resources are included from dozens of federal agencies. New sites are added regularly.

You are invited to link to FREE. (Use a FREE logo, if you'd like).

Get new resources delivered to you several times a week: sign up for the FREE RSS.

Federal agencies, if you're looking to involve teachers in developing teaching resources, see our lessons learned.

FREE was originally conceived in 1997 by a federal working group and launched a year later. It was redesigned and relaunched for the first time in November 2006.

FREE -- Teaching Resources and Lesson Plans from the Federal Government

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection 

Now over 100 new maps added to the Rumsey Historical Maps in Google Earth and to a new layer in Google Maps. Read more about these collections.. New! September, 2008, over 30 new maps in Google Earth, including the Wheeler Survey of the U.S. West, 1871-83.

The David Rumsey Historical Map Collection has over 18,460 maps online. The collection focuses on rare 18th and 19th century North American and South American maps and other cartographic materials. Historic maps of the World, Europe, Asia, and Africa are also represented. Collection categories include antique atlas, globe, school geography, maritime chart, state, county, city, pocket, wall, childrens, and manuscript maps. Some examples are United States map, maps New York, California map, Arizona map, America map, New York City map, Chicago map, and Colorado map. The collection can be used to study history, genealogy and family history.

David Rumsey Historical Map Collection

The Civil Rights Digital Library :: Home Page

The Civil Rights Digital Library :: Home Page 

Civil Rights Digital Library

From the collection

The struggle for racial equality in the 1950s and 1960s is among the most far-reaching social movements in the nation's history, and it represents a crucial step in the evolution of American democracy. The Civil Rights Digital Library promotes an enhanced understanding of the Movement by helping users discover primary sources and other educational materials from libraries, archives, museums, public broadcasters, and others on a national scale. The CRDL features a collection of unedited news film from the WSB (Atlanta) and WALB (Albany, Ga.) television archives held by the Walter J. Brown Media Archives and Peabody Awards Collection at the University of Georgia Libraries. The CRDL provides educator resources and contextual materials, including Freedom on Film, relating instructive stories and discussion questions from the Civil Rights Movement in Georgia, and the New Georgia Encyclopedia, delivering engaging online articles and multimedia.

The Civil Rights Digital Library :: Home Page

Sheet Music Consortium

http://digital.library.ucla.edu/sheetmusic/

The Sheet Music Consortium is a group of libraries working toward the goal of building an open collection of digitized sheet music using the Open Archives Initiative:Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI:PMH).

Harvested metadata about sheet music in participating collections is hosted by UCLA Digital Library Program, which provides an access service via this metadata to sheet music records at the host libraries. For technical details of the harvesting process and service, consult the Project Timeline and Technical Overview. Member institutions and data providers have chosen to catalog their sheet music in different ways, but a very large proportion of the original sheets in participating collections has been digitized, allowing users direct access to the music itself and — in many cases — covers and advertisements that offer evidence of the cultural context in which the songs were published.

http://digital.library.ucla.edu/sheetmusic/

ARTINFO - Art Sales Index

ARTINFO - Art Sales Index 

"Ahhh....If I only had money.......HSM"

ARTINFO Art Sales Index

Search Lots at Auction

Welcome to the new Art Sales Index Search Tool. To begin your search for lots at auction,
type an artist's name and click "Find artists".

ARTINFO - Art Sales Index

O*NET OnLine

O*NET OnLine 

The O*NET system serves as the nation's primary source of occupational information, providing comprehensive information on key attributes and characteristics of workers and occupations. The O*NET database houses this data and O*NET OnLine provides easy access to that information. Learn more about O*NET.

Get the most out of OnLine with OnLine Help. Our help system covers all of OnLine's features, with step-by-step examples to guide you. At any time, click the "OnLine Help" link in the top left corner of the page to get context-specific help.

If your search identifies occupations that require skills or abilities that may be difficult to use because of a health problem or disability, please consider job accommodations.


O*NET OnLine was developed for the U.S. Department of Labor by the National Center for O*NET Development. For more information about the O*NET project, please visit the O*NET Resource Center.

O*NET OnLine

Connexions - Sharing Knowledge and Building Communities

Connexions - Sharing Knowledge and Building Communities 

Connexions is:

a place to view and share educational material made of small knowledge chunks called modules that can be organized as courses, books, reports, etc. Anyone may view or contribute:

  • authors create and collaborate
  • instructors rapidly build and share custom collections
  • learners find and explore content

Connexions - Sharing Knowledge and Building Communities

Labordoc home page

Labordoc home page 

Labordoc contains references to a wide range of print and electronic publications, including journal articles, from countries around the world, on all aspects of work and sustainable livelihoods, and the work-related aspects of economic and social development and human rights. Labordoc provides an ever increasing number of links to online publications available on the Internet.

Labordoc home page

Welcome to the Digital Library of Georgia

Welcome to the Digital Library of Georgia 

The Digital Library of Georgia is a gateway to Georgia's history and culture found in digitized books, manuscripts, photographs, government documents, newspapers, maps, audio, video, and other resources.

The Digital Library of Georgia connects users to 500,000 digital objects in 105 collections from 60 institutions and 100 government agencies. Though this represents only a fraction of Georgia's cultural treasures, the Digital Library of Georgia continues to grow through its partnerships with libraries, archives, museums, government agencies, and allied organizations across the state.

Welcome to the Digital Library of Georgia

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

BusinessDictionary.com features over 20,000 definitions and over 115,000 links between related terms providing a clear and concise description of any and all business terms. To succeed in business, it's absolutely essential to have a solid understanding of the terms and concepts used every day in the business world. We have designed our dictionary to help you gain the knowledge you need to achieve your goals in business and in life.

BusinessDictionary.com includes a powerful search tool (at the top of every page), a browse by letter feature, and subject-specific dictionaries to help you learn the terminology you're interested in. In addition, you can subscribe to our free email newsletter, and receive a new term and definition each day, along with links to related information, so you can easily build your knowledge of business lingo every day. We hope you decide to bookmark the BusinessDictionary.com home page and use it whenever you need an accurate, precise definition of a business term.

BusinessDictionary.com is operated by WebFinance Inc., an internet company that designs, builds and nurtures business opportunities where technology and finance intersect. Among WebFinance's other properties are InvestorGuide.com (a comprehensive investor portal) and InvestorWords.com (a financial and investment dictionary). Our goal is to help as many people as possible, and for this reason everything we provide is free. Our sites are collectively used by over a half million people every month.

BusinessDictionary.com - Online Business Dictionary

Current Cites

Current Cites 

Current Cites

Roy Tennant, Editor

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A team of librarians monitors information technology literature, selecting only the best items to annotate for this free publication. The resulting issue of 8-12 annotated citations of current literature is emailed to a mailing list and is available as an RSS feed.

To suggest items to review, email the editor. If you have a print publication you wish to be considered, please send it to Roy Tennant, Editor, Current Cites, OCLC Programs and Research, 777 Mariners Island Boulevard, Suite 550, San Mateo, CA 94404, USA.

Current Cites has been published continuously since August 1990. If you want to know more, please see the history of Current Cites.

Current Cites

Consumer Action ::

Consumer Action :: 

Welcome to Consumer Action

Consumer Action, founded in 1971, is a national non-profit education and advocacy organization offering many free services to consumers. Scroll down this page to see recently posted information. Many more items of interest can be found by using the green navigation bar above and the pull-down menus and links at right. New posts are also available via RSS feed.

Consumer Action ::

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

About The Atlas

The Atlas of Early Printing is an interactive site designed to be used as a tool for teaching the early history of printing in Europe during the second half of the fifteenth century. While printing in Asia pre-dates European activity by several hundred years, the rapid expansion of the trade following the discovery of printing in Mainz, Germany around the middle of the fifteenth century is a topic of great importance to the history of European civilization. This website uses Flash to depict the spread of European printing in a manner that allows a user to control dates and other variables.

The Atlas of Early Printing - The University Of Iowa Libraries

Friday, February 6, 2009

Citeline

Citeline

Don't know how this differs from citseer or citeulike but its from MIT, so worth a look -- HSM

Citeline

OCLC and Open Access: Riding to the Rescue or Rustling the Herd?

OCLC and Open Access: Riding to the Rescue or Rustling the Herd? 

OCLC and Open Access: Riding to the Rescue or Rustling the Herd?
by Barbara Quint
Posted On February 5, 2009


In the midst of a firestorm about its proposed new WorldCat records policy (Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records, www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/recordusepolicy.pdf), OCLC (www.oclc.org) has announced a partnership that would ultimately transfer an open access icon, the University of Michigan Library’s OAIster service (www.oaister.org), to OCLC. While some concern has already been expressed about how OCLC’s revenue generation and content control issues might affect OAIster’s future, I have absolute—almost vehement—assurances from Chip Nilges, vice president of business development at OCLC, and John Wilkin, associate university librarian at the University of Michigan, that OAIster will remain a permanently free, open access service. Until the transfer is completed sometime in 2009, the OAIster.org site will remain active. But, when completed, it will move into OCLC’s free, open website—WorldCat.org. It will also become a "no extra charge" addition to OCLC’s subscription FirstSearch service. OCLC has also announced an arrangement to assist the new HathiTrust (www.hathitrust.org) in developing comprehensive bibliographic metadata for the digitized documents of member libraries.

Begun in 2002 under a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, OAIster was originally designed as a portal and a search engine reaching open repositories using the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI-PMH). Seven years later, it accesses close to 20 million records, mostly scholarly sources, from nearly 1,100 organizations. The records of digital resources harvested in OAIster cover deep web content extending from digitized books and articles, born-digital texts, audio files, images, and movies to data sets. Currently, users can search content by title, author/creator, subject, language, or an entire record. They can limit searches by resource type, sort by title, author, date, hit frequency, and data contributor. These access features will remain in place while OCLC works out the issues of how to handle OAIster content and how to integrate it with other OCLC services.

So why now? Why did the University of Michigan decide to ask OCLC to take over the OAIster service? There seemed to be some minor disagreement among OAIster management as to what drove the decision. Kat Hagedorn, OAIster metadata harvesting librarian and senior associate librarian for the Digital Library Production Service, considered it "untenable for us to run something this big," while her boss, Wilkin, thought it "no problem to keep on doing what we’re doing, to just crawl and search." But both agreed that to advance the service; to provide the improvements needed to make the data more uniform, e.g., reconciling alternative data formats; and to create a better user experience, it would require the commitment of serious development resources. So they turned to OCLC. As Wilkin put it, "It makes sense for someone in the business of global search to do this." Hagedorn thought that OCLC might even try to make the service more comprehensive by expanding its reach beyond OAI-PMH to other digital formats. Wilkin still holds to the grand dream with which he began the OAIster project. "I want to see more digital content on the web in OAIster. If we could have done it more neatly, we would even have added a search of Google."

But why was OCLC interested enough to take over OAIster operations? According to Wilkin, the university had approached OCLC 5 years ago about working with OAIster, but they found OCLC was not interested. The announcement of the new arrangement pointed to OCLC’s recognition that open access collections have become vital to scholarship. Nilges stated, "Adding records for open archive collections is a natural complement to WorldCat and will drive discovery and access of these collections for a broader community of scholars." Content should expand. Nilges pointed out that "We already have some digital repositories in WorldCat that could supplement OAIster. We absolutely see the need for development. We currently aggregate metadata for many ebooks, digitized content, and archival finding aids and now digital archives. This is strategic for OCLC. We’re interested in helping build and discover archival collections."

OCLC already has Collection Gateway software, according to Nilges, "designed to support harvesting. At some point we will use that software, which supports multiple formats." This all needs to be worked out, along with overall econtent synchronization programs at OCLC.

One thing, however, remains clear. Free and open access to the OAIster data will continue permanently. Nilges states, "We are absolutely committed to free and public access. We will run parallel tracks through 2009, while integrating OAIster into WorldCat.org [OCLC’s free service]." Wilkin confirmed that commitment. In fact, the issue of maintaining free open access is included in a clause in OCLC’s contract with the University of Michigan.

HathiTrust

The HathiTrust is a new player in the open access arena, but it’s a major one with more than 2.6 million documents. (For background information, read Beth Ashmore’s Oct. 23, 2008, NewsBreak, "HathiTrust: A Digital Repository for Libraries, by Libraries," http://newsbreaks.infotoday.com/nbReader.asp?ArticleId=51225.) Participants currently include 24 major research libraries. Many of the libraries have conducted their own digitization projects to create special collections. Some have also worked with the Open Content Alliance. But admittedly, the vast majority of HathiTrust’s digital repository comes from a source not mentioned once in the press release announcement—Google Book Search. All the current members of HathiTrust are Google Book Search Library partners. Most of them belong to the early joiners in that partnership when Google was still using what John Wilkin calls "the firehose" approach and digitizing every book a library would allow them to digitize. They have grown much more selective with later library partners, according to Wilkin.

Under the new agreement with OCLC, the millions of books and archived documents hosted in a single repository by HathiTrust and made available for reading online will become more visible and accessible with the creation of WorldCat records for content. OCLC will also link to the collections in its Open Web WorldCat.org service as well as its WorldCat Local service. As executive director of the HathiTrust, Wilkin sees "the connection between HathiTrust and WorldCat as a natural. WorldCat and HathiTrust are both built by and for libraries, and their pursuit of comprehensiveness will aid our community in pursuit of more effective collection management, as well as integration of services across our institutions."

Wilkin admits that HathiTrust content comes "overwhelmingly" from Google Book Search. Under early license arrangements, Google agreed to supply its library partners with digital copies of whatever they contributed to Google Book Search. But Wilkin pointed out that university libraries have their own preservation digitization work and special collection digitization in there. "We are working on adding Open Content Alliance material now in an arrangement with the University of California," says Wilkin. "We’re focusing at the outset on monograph and serial literature." Wilkin expects that HathiTrust will take a different slant on the content it handles, aiming to help libraries in making acquisition and retention decisions and building tools for the scholarly community. But to do this, HathiTrust needs good cataloging information. Initially, Wilkin said, "OCLC will adapt WorldCat Local to HathiTrust. When the content moves to WorldCat.org, users will be able to search just HathiTrust content."

Nilges explained OCLC’s role as "making sure the repository’s content is represented in WorldCat and, secondly, working with HathiTrust to build a discovery environment for that collection. WorldCat Local is adapted as a discovery environment, and we’re using the project to understand better what sort of discovery environment would suit this collection." He expects the work to lead to ways to "handle any number of digital collections, to co-locate various versions, and then distinguish versions. We will let users comment and build tools in WorldCat.org and WorldCat Local. It’s an evolving model."

What drives these changes in OCLC policies? Nilges explains, "We need to represent the ‘Collective Collection.’ Special collections have become more important as they are digitized. We have the opportunity to represent those collections with metadata as the demand for access is growing. We’re trying to support HathiTrust in its near- to medium-term needs for discovery by whatever audience. It fits well with who we are."

Nilges and Wilkin both assured me that the controversial record policy was completely separate from this work with the HathiTrust. OCLC has an overall project to catalog or blend catalog information for Google Book Search entries into WorldCat and to supply the "Find in a Library" information to Google and other online book operations. Much of the HathiTrust work will represent a subset of that existing cataloging work.


Barbara Quint is contributing editor for NewsBreaks, editor-in-chief of Searcher, and a columnist for Information Today.

OCLC and Open Access: Riding to the Rescue or Rustling the Herd?

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics is a public voice of mathematics education, providing vision, leadership and professional development to support teachers in ensuring equitable mathematics learning of the highest quality for all students.

National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Law Librarian Blog: Tech Trends and Copyright at ALA

Law Librarian Blog: Tech Trends and Copyright at ALA 

Tech Trends and Copyright at ALA

ALA’s Midwinter meeting featured two programs of particular interest to law librarians. Georgia Harper’s presentation on copyright and open access, “OA, IRs and IP: Open Access, Digital Copyright and Marketplace Competition," [paper | slides] sponsored by ALA ALCTS, makes the case that the social costs of copyright outweigh its benefits in the digital environment.  And in “Top Tech Trends,” [video | follow-up discussion] sponsored by ALA LITA, a group of library technology experts discusses the most recent developments in technology affecting libraries.  The topics include open source software, geographic data, linked data, the OAI-ORE standard for enabling retrieval of digital objects, RFID and automated circulation, automation of ILL presearching, advance shipping notice for acquisitions, the demise of print newspapers, environmental impact of technology, self-publishing services, the need to present evidence-based justifications for technology spending in lean times, decisionmaking for adopting new technology, use of multiple screens, digital preservation, discovery interfaces, and the integration of Web 2.0 tools into library technology.  Hat tip to Roy Tennant. [Robert Richards].

Law Librarian Blog: Tech Trends and Copyright at ALA

BibSonomy

BibSonomy\

 

"not sure if this is better that CiteSeer or Cite U Like -- can never remember which is which -- but its another one" -- HSM

BibSonomy is a system for sharing bookmarks and lists of literature. When discovering a bookmark or a publication on the web, you can store it on our server. You can add tags to your post to retrieve it more easily. This is very similar to the bookmarks/favorites that you store within your browser. The advantage of BibSonomy is that you can access your data from whereever you are. Furthermore, you can discover more bookmarks and publications from your friends and other people.

This page shows you the latest updates of BibSonomy. Why dont you just try it yourself? After a free registration, you can organise your own bookmarks and publications, and discover related entries.

BibSonomy

Zotero: The Next-Generation Research Tool » Blog Archive » Analyze Your Zotero Data with the SEASR analytics plugin

 

« Publish Zotero Collections Online With Zotz

Analyze Your Zotero Data with the SEASR analytics plugin

February 2nd, 2009 by Trevor

Zotero just became an even more useful platform for research management. We are excited to announce Zotero’s first data mining plugin. The initial launch of SEASR Analytics for Zotero allows users to use SEASR’s author centrality analysis, author degree distribution analysis, and author hit analysis on items in their collections. These three functions are just the begining, but they already demonstrate the potential for leveraging SEASR’s data mining capabilities inside Zotero. Download the plugin today, and give it a try.

This entry was posted on Monday, February 2nd, 2009 at 11:40 am and is filed under News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

Zotero: The Next-Generation Research Tool » Blog Archive » Analyze Your Zotero Data with the SEASR analytics plugin