Search (13 results, page 1 of 1)

  • × language_ss:"e"
  • × theme_ss:"Elektronisches Publizieren"
  • × type_ss:"m"
  1. Bates, C.: Web programming : building Internet applications (2000) 0.02
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    Abstract
    This book introduces the most important Web technologies and shows how they can be used on today's Websites. From client development using HTML and Javascript, through to full server-side applications written in ASP and Perl, the complete web system is shown. Concentrating on immediately useful code, rather than theory, this is a how-to book Im programmers who need quick answers
    LCSH
    Web site development
    Subject
    Web site development
  2. Internet publishing and beyond : the economics of digital information and intellectual property ; a publication of the Harvard Information Infrastructure Project in collab. with the School of Information Management and Systems at the Univ. of California at Berkeley (2000) 0.02
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    RSWK
    Internet / Elektronisches Publizieren / Urheberrecht / Preispolitik / Aufsatzsammlung
    Subject
    Internet / Elektronisches Publizieren / Urheberrecht / Preispolitik / Aufsatzsammlung
  3. Travis, B.E.; Waldt, D.C.: ¬The SGML implementation guide : a blueprint for SGML migration (1995) 0.00
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    Abstract
    This is the book the authors wish they had when they did their first SGML implementation. The SGML implementation guide gives you the tools you need to get your implementation started and provides help in every step of the process, from the business case, through data migration, to application development and training. There is also a technical appendix covering the SGML standard and what is necessary to write SGML applications. This book contains years of practical experience by the authors. The reader will get up-to-speed very quickly, and will be able to build the business case and implement an SGML system in his organization
    Content
    "The philosophy behind this book is to provide a pragmatic working knowledge of SGML and related disciplines and techniques needed to actually achieve a successful implementation. . .The book is not a review of products, but it does contain mention of some products as an example of what is available. It is not an executive briefing offering a high-level view of the advangates of implementing a structured approcah to data, nor is it a nuts-and-bolts description of how to write SGML applications. Rather, it strikes a ground between those two extremes, offering to the people who must make the decision to implement, then the implementors, enough information to get well down the road to SGML."
  4. Stankus, T.: Electronic expectations : science journals on the Web (1999) 0.00
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  5. Merz, T.: PostScript & Acrobat/PDF : applications, troubleshooting, and cross-platform publishing (1997) 0.00
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    Abstract
    This handbook achieves the seemingly impossible: it covers this tricky and technical field in an entertaining manner without getting bogged down in PostScript programming. It explains how several components work together and how to deal with real-world application and operating system problems
  6. Willinsky, J.: ¬The access principle : the case for open access to research and scholarship (2006) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: JASIST 58(2007) no.9, S.1386 (L.A. Ennis): "Written by John Willinsky. Pacific Press Professor of Literacy and Technology at the University of British Columbia and Open Journals Systems Software des eloper. the eighth hook in the Digital Libraries and Electronic Publishing series (edited by William Y. Arms) provides a compelling and convincing argument in favor of open access. At the core of this work is Willinsky's "access principle." a commitment that "research carries with it a responsibility to extend circulation of such work as far as possible and ideally to all who are interested in it and all who might profit from it" (p.xii). One by one Willinsky tackles the obstacles. both real and perceived, to open access. succeeding in his goal to "inform and inspire a larger debate over the political and moral economy of knowledge" (p.xiv). The author does note the irony of publishing a hook while advocating for open access, but points out that he does so to reach a larger audience. Willinsky also points out that most of the chapters' earlier versions can be found in open-access journals and on his Web site (http://www.11ed.educubc.ca/faculty/willinsky.html). The Access Principle is organized topically into thirteen chapters covering a broad range of practical and theoretical issues. Taken together. these chapters provide the reader with an excellent introduction to the open-access debate as well as all the potential benefits and possible impacts of the open-access movement. The author also includes six appendices. with information on metadata and indexing. os er twenty pages of references, and an index. ... All of Willinsky's arguments arc convincing and heartfelt. It is apparent throughout the hook that the author deeply believes in the principles behind open access. and his passion and conviction come through in the work. making the hook a thought-provoking and very interesting read. While he offers numerous examples to illustrate his points throughout the work. he does not. however. offer solutions or state that he has all the answers. In that, he succeeds in his goal to craft a hook that "informs and inspires. As a result, The Access Principle is an important read for information professionals, researchers, and academics of all kinds, whether or not the reader agrees with Willinsky."
  7. Dillon, A.: Designing usable electronic text : ergonomic aspects of human information usage (1994) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Journal of librarianship and information science 27(1995) no.1, S.51-52 (S. James)
  8. Brown, D.J.; Boulderstone, R.: ¬The impact of electronic publishing : the future for publishers and librarians 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Mitt VÖB 63(2010) H.1/2, S.149-155 (B. Bauer): "Wie schon die erste Auflage thematisiert auch die neue, deutlich erweitere Ausgabe den Wandel vom traditionellen Publikationsmodell (print-only) zu einem hybriden (print and digital) bzw. zu einem ausschließlich elektronischen Publikationsmodell. Aufgrund der rasanten Entwicklung des elektronischen Publikationssektors in den letzten zehn Jahren wurde eine Überarbeitung erforderlich. So war etwa in der ersten Auflage die Bedeutung der CD-ROM-Technologie übertrieben dargestellt worden, während die Auswirkungen des Internet und des Web unterschätzt worden waren. Brown & Boulderstone beschreiben in ihrem Buch, wie das Thema "elektronisches Publizieren" Verlage und Bibliotheken in den letzten Jahren in mehreren Phasen beeinflusst hat: In Phase 1 - von den frühen 1990er Jahren bis zum Erscheinen der ersten Auflage 1996 - gab es zwar schon elektronische Medien, aber noch dominierten gedruckte Medien. Phase 2 - von Mitte der 1990er Jahre bis zu den frühen 2000er Jahren - war eine Periode der Konfusion, die durch das Erscheinen des Internet und durch die damit einhergehenden neuen Möglichkeiten verursacht wurde. Phase 3 - seit den frühen 2000er Jahren - ist gekennzeichnet von einem starken Aufschwung des elektronischen Publizierens; der Stellenwert der digitalen hat gegenüber den entsprechenden analogen Versionen deutlich zugenommen. In diesem Abschnitt werden, gegliedert in drei Kategorien, 14 Einflussfaktoren, die die Entwicklung hin zum elektronischen Publizieren beschleunigen, vorgestellt.
  9. Eisenhart, D.M.: Publishing in the information age : a new management framework for the digital era (1994) 0.00
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  10. Avedon, D.M.: Introduction to electronic imaging : 3rd ed (1996) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Information management and technology 29(1996) no.5, S.217 (B. Williams)
  11. Hars, A.: From publishing to knowledge networks : reinventing online knowledge infrastructures (2003) 0.00
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    LCSH
    Information technology
    RSWK
    Information Engineering / Wissensmanagement (BVB)
    Subject
    Information Engineering / Wissensmanagement (BVB)
    Information technology
    Theme
    Information Resources Management
  12. Kommers, P.A.M.; Ferreira, A.; Kwak, A.K.: Document management for hypermedia design (1997) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Electronic texts offer new ways to store, retrieve, update, and cross-link information. Hypermedia documents require new levels of organization and strict discipline from authors, editors, and managers. This book provides a step-by step guide to all aspects of hypermedia development, from strategic decision-making to editing formats and production methods
  13. Herwijnen, E. van: Practical SGML (1994) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Shows how, by using SGML, documents can be interchanged and processed on many different systems in many different ways. The book is an extended revision and update of the 1st ed. with greater emphasis and focus on helping novices work their way through the vast amounts of information required to become proficient in DGML