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Creator | Title | Description | Subject | Date |
176 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): not even wrong: Gorman on Google | This article critiques Michael Gorman's critique of the Google Book Project. | Google Book Project; Digitization; Information | 2005 |
177 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): on knowing the value of everything and the price of nothing | Are libraries ever guilty of wasting time and money (neither of which is ours to waste) on practices simply because they're "valuable" without considering whether there's a reasonable balance between what they're worth and what they cost? | Evaluation; Task management; Value; Cost | 2006 |
178 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (in my humble but correct opinion): Preservation, yes - but what shall we preserve? | Our work as librarians has always been the work of making difficult choices, but sometimes it seems like the choices we have to make are getting harder and harder. In this column, I'd like to talk about one that's so tough we don't even talk about it: how do we decide what information is not worth t... | | 2008 |
179 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): reference services, scalability, and the starfish problem | The problem with traditional reference service is that it isn?t scalable, and the solution to that problem does not lie in improving or expanding reference service, but rather in making traditional reference service less necessary. If only it didn?t feel so good to provide traditional reference serv... | Patron service (Libraries); Library catalogs; Library classification systems | 2007 |
180 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): the journal issue and the record album: two fundamentally irrational information products | Over the past few years I've become more and more convinced that the scholarly information world has a lot to learn from the music industry. Not so much from what the latter is doing either right or wrong, but from what has happened to it over the past 100 years, how it has happened, and why. From ... | | 2009 |
181 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): thinking about the value of staff time | When it comes to deciding how we and our staff should spend our time at work, it's becoming increasingly important that we look in a very hardheaded way at the value of our time and the value of our tasks. Our time is becoming increasingly expensive. Are we still spending time on processes that a... | Staff time; Salary budget; Collections budget | 2006 |
182 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): three kinds of research and two kinds of researcher | Our libraries should be places (virtual and physical) where as little searching as possible has to take place. Making libraries easier to use doesn't undermine intellectual development -- on the contrary, it makes more intellectual development possible because it lets our patrons spend more time... | Researchers; Libraries; Information | 2005 |
183 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (In my humble but correct opinion): three reason I?m a librarian | Why am I a librarian? I?m sure all of us have asked ourselves that question at one time or another, and I imagine that for some of us the answer is simple and for others it?s complex or even ineffable. For me, I think it boils down to three memories from my childhood and young adulthood, all of ... | Library profession; Materials access | 2008 |
184 |
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Anderson, Richard Bryan | IMHBCO (in my humble but correct opinon): What's your problem? (and what's mine?) | Academic libraries are in a tough situation, there's no question about it. We're beset on two sides, and it's almost as if the two sides had coordinated their attacks. From one side, attacking us with a gentle smile and a two-edged sword, is Google, which wasn't satisfied with being the single easi... | | 2009 |
185 |
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Ogburn, Joyce L. | The imperative for data curation | The processes of creation and expression of our scientific, social, and humanistic inspirations are culminating in a vast corpus of stunning and even life-changing documents, films, recordings, Web sites, and other media, including software. Advances in technology have enabled new kinds of scholarsh... | | 2010 |
186 |
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Silverman, Randall H. | Importance of permanence | Color, opacity, weight, texture, printability, and permanence - the choice of paper is critical to any successful printing job and can spell the difference between a satisfied customer and one you'll never see again. Paper is an organic material and as such begins breaking down from the moment of i... | Paper; Acid free; Alkaline paper | 1992 |
187 |
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Silverman, Randall H. | Inconvenient legacy | The role of research libraries is to preserve the long-term memory of humankind. Straddling competing interests, they strive to provide unimpeded access to scholarly books while maintaining those same volumes in perpetuity. In practice, these ?Ç£bastions of knowledge?Ç¥ lean toward pragmatic mai... | Research libraries; Preservation; Book repair | 2007 |
188 |
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Dennis, Sharon E.; Candler, Chris S.; Uijtdehaage, Sebastian; McIntyre, Sandra A.; Dippie, Shona R. | Indexing standard for sharing health education multimedia resources: the Health Education Assets Library (HEAL) metadata schema | Health sciences educators are increasingly incorporating multimedia (including images, animations, and videos) into educational materials , such as PowerPoint lectures, web sites, and interactive quizzes and cases. Educators continue to "reinvent the wheel" and develop costly duplicates of multimedi... | Health Education Assets Library; HEAL | 2004-01-05 |
189 |
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| Industrial revolutions: from canal systems to computer networks | Today's so-called "Information Revolution" is often compared to past industrial revolutions, especially a British Industrial Revolution which took place between 1750 and 1830 and a Second Industrial Revolution which is believed to have occurred in the United States between 1880 and 1940. The compari... | Information technology; Information Age | 2000 |
190 |
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Kraus, Peter L. | Information literacy for German language & literature at the graduate level: new approaches and models | At the University of Utah the recent hiring of several new faculty members in the German Language and Literature Section of the Modern Languages department has resulted in an increased demand for library services in the area of instruction and technical support. Areas explored will include approache... | Germanic languages; Higher Education; Librarianship | 2007 |
191 |
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Morrison, David L. | Innovation scholars: patents and advanced research in technology | | | 2013-01 |
192 |
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Mower, Allyson; Gregory, Joan M.; Youngkin, Mary E. | Institutional Repository: the bridge that connects | This presentation shows how the development of an institutional repository is possible by coordinating across departments and by using a work flow system. | Institutional Repositories; Technical Services; Public Services. Workflow Management | 2008-05-20 |
193 |
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Le Ber, Jeanne M. | Integrating palm devices into the School of Medicine curriculum | Built on existing relationship with course master to integrate PDAs into the School of Medicine curriculum. | Palm Devices; Medicine Curriculum; Personal Digital Assistant; PDA | 2006-03-31 |
194 |
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Morrison, David L. | Intro to IP and patent searching for new engineers | | | 2013-09 |
195 |
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Peay, Wayne J.; Rockoff, Maxine L. | Introduction to the JMLA supplement: the NLM 2004 symposium on community-based health information outreach | This paper introduces the Special Supplement to the Journal of the Medical Library Association that documents the proceedings of the Symposium on Community-Based Health Information Outreach held on December 2 and 3, 2004, at the National Library of Medicine (NLM). The goal of the Symposium was to ex... | National Library of Medicine (U.S.); NN/LM; RML; National Network of Libraries of Medicine; Regional Medical Libraries; Consumer Health Information; Outreach; Community-based Organziations | 2005-04 |
196 |
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Arlitsch, Kenning; Morrow, Anne | IR workflow software: extending the power of CONTENTdm for Institutional Repositories | A PowerPoint presentation given as part of "OCLC CONTENTdm User Showcase: Digital Collections Delivered" at ALA Midwinter, January 13, 2008 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. | Digital technology; Digital holdings, libraries; Institutional archiving | 2008-01-13 |
197 |
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Silverman, Randall H. | J. J. Audubon & 19th century color printing | In 1826, the first hand-colored proofs of John James Audubon's double elephant folio edition of The Birds of America were pulled in Edinburgh, Scotland. His life-sized Wild Turkey was among them, transforming the 41 year old naturalist's "innate desire to acquire a thorough knowledge of the birds o... | John James Audubon; Copperplate; Lithograph | 1994 |
198 |
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Silverman, Randall H. | Jackets recommended: the case for preserving dust jackets in research libraries | This paper will provide a historical overview of dust jackets and present a cost-effective mass approach to their treatment. Research libraries generally treat dust jackets as extraneous to the physical integrity of new acquisitions and consequently discard them as part of the shelf preparation p... | | 2000 |
199 |
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Kraus, Peter L. | John Steele Gordon, Thread across the ocean: the historic story of the transatlantic cable | A Thread across the Ocean is a tale of historic and heroic proportions which the author fails to do justice to. The topic is the historic laying of the first telegraph cables across the Atlantic; however, though it is an enjoyable read, it is not a scholarly work. The depth of this work could have ... | | 2003 |
200 |
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Sorensen, Justin Bruce; Williams, Donald Glade; Chaufty, Lisa Marie | Just digitize it! : The J. Willard Marriott Library's endeavor to bring geological scholarship to the world (Abstract) | The need to organize, preserve, and share the geoscience materials available at the University of Utah motivated the J. Willard Marriott Library's Geospatial Information Committee to begin a project of digitizing the University of Utah's geological theses and their associated maps. This presentation... | Thesis and dissertation georeferencing project; digitization; Utah; Abstract | 2011-10-12 |