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  • × theme_ss:"Internet"
  1. Barry, A.; Stanton, D.: Campus wide information system access (1994) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Defines a campus wide information system (CWIS) and discusses the following interpretations of its purpose: as a guide to the campus; as a gateway to the Internet; and as a publishing mechanism. Describes CWIS history, content, management, doftware and likely future developments focusing on the Internet Gopher software developed at the University of Minnesota
  2. Ma, Y.: Internet: the global flow of information (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Colours, icons, graphics, hypertext links and other multimedia elements are variables that affect information search strategies and information seeking behaviour. These variables are culturally constructed and represented and are subject to individual and community interpretation. Hypothesizes that users in different communities (in intercultural or multicultural context) will interpret differently the meanings of the multimedia objects on the Internet. Users' interpretations of multimedia objects may differ from the intentions of the designers. A study in this area is being undertaken
  3. Sugimoto, C.R.; Work, S.; Larivière, V.; Haustein, S.: Scholarly use of social media and altmetrics : A review of the literature (2017) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Social media has become integrated into the fabric of the scholarly communication system in fundamental ways, principally through scholarly use of social media platforms and the promotion of new indicators on the basis of interactions with these platforms. Research and scholarship in this area has accelerated since the coining and subsequent advocacy for altmetrics-that is, research indicators based on social media activity. This review provides an extensive account of the state-of-the art in both scholarly use of social media and altmetrics. The review consists of 2 main parts: the first examines the use of social media in academia, reviewing the various functions these platforms have in the scholarly communication process and the factors that affect this use. The second part reviews empirical studies of altmetrics, discussing the various interpretations of altmetrics, data collection and methodological limitations, and differences according to platform. The review ends with a critical discussion of the implications of this transformation in the scholarly communication system.
  4. Moll, S.: ¬Der Urknall des Internets : 20 Jahre WWW (2011) 0.02
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    Content
    "Alle großen Erfindungen der Menschheitsgeschichte haben einen Entstehungsmythos. Einsteins Trambahnfahrt durch Zürich beispielsweise oder der berühmte Apfel, der Newton angeblich auf den Kopf gefallen ist. Als Tim Berners-Lee, damals Physikstudent in Manchester, Mitte der 70er Jahre mit seinem Vater in einem Stadtpark unter einem Baum saß, unterhielten sich die beiden darüber, dass sie doch in ihrem Garten auch einen solchen Baum gebrauchen könnten. Der Vater, ein Mathematiker, der an einem der ersten kommerziell genutzten Computer der Welt arbeitete, bemerkte, dass die Fähigkeit, die abstrakte Idee eines schattigen Baumes auf einen anderen Ort zu übertragen, doch eine einmalig menschliche sei. Computer könnten so etwas nicht. Das Problem ließ Berners-Lee nicht los. Deshalb suchte er, während er in den 80er Jahren als Berater am europäischen Labor für Quantenphysik (CERN) in der Schweiz arbeitete, noch immer nach einem Weg, seinem Computer beizubringen, Verbindungen zwischen den disparaten Dokumenten und Notizen auf seiner Festplatte herzustellen. Er entwarf deshalb ein System, das heute so alltäglich ist, wie Kleingeld. Lee stellte eine direkte Verknüpfung her zwischen Wörtern und Begriffen in Dokumenten und den gleichen Begriffen in anderen Dokumenten: Der Link war geboren.
  5. Maharana, B.; Nayak, K.; Sahu, N.K.: Scholarly use of web resources in LIS research : a citation analysis (2006) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Purpose - The essential purpose of this paper is to measure the amount of web resources used for scholarly contributions in the area of library and information science (LIS) in India. It further aims to make an analysis of the nature and type of web resources and studies the various standards for web citations. Design/methodology/approach - In this study, the result of analysis of 292 web citations spread over 95 scholarly papers published in the proceedings of the National Conference of the Society for Information Science, India (SIS-2005) has been reported. All the 292 web citations were scanned and data relating to types of web domains, file formats, styles of citations, etc., were collected through a structured check list. The data thus obtained were systematically analyzed, figurative representations were made and appropriate interpretations were drawn. Findings - The study revealed that 292 (34.88 per cent) out of 837 were web citations, proving a significant correlation between the use of Internet resources and research productivity of LIS professionals in India. The highest number of web citations (35.6 per cent) was from .edu/.ac type domains. Most of the web resources (46.9 per cent) cited in the study were hypertext markup language (HTML) files. Originality/value - The paper is the result of an original analysis of web citations undertaken in order to study the dependence of LIS professionals in India on web sources for their scholarly contributions. This carries research value for web content providers, authors and researchers in LIS.
  6. Pereira, D.A.; Ribeiro-Neto, B.; Ziviani, N.; Laender, A.H.F.; Gonçalves, M.A.: ¬A generic Web-based entity resolution framework (2011) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Web data repositories usually contain references to thousands of real-world entities from multiple sources. It is not uncommon that multiple entities share the same label (polysemes) and that distinct label variations are associated with the same entity (synonyms), which frequently leads to ambiguous interpretations. Further, spelling variants, acronyms, abbreviated forms, and misspellings compound to worsen the problem. Solving this problem requires identifying which labels correspond to the same real-world entity, a process known as entity resolution. One approach to solve the entity resolution problem is to associate an authority identifier and a list of variant forms with each entity-a data structure known as an authority file. In this work, we propose a generic framework for implementing a method for generating authority files. Our method uses information from the Web to improve the quality of the authority file and, because of that, is referred to as WER-Web-based Entity Resolution. Our contribution here is threefold: (a) we discuss how to implement the WER framework, which is flexible and easy to adapt to new domains; (b) we run extended experimentation with our WER framework to show that it outperforms selected baselines; and (c) we compare the results of a specialized solution for author name resolution with those produced by the generic WER framework, and show that the WER results remain competitive.
  7. Schweibenz, W.; Thissen, F.: Qualität im Web : Benutzerfreundliche Webseiten durch Usability Evaluation (2003) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Für Webseiten ist, wie für alle interaktiven Anwendungen vom einfachen Automaten bis zur komplexen Software, die Benutzerfreundlichkeit von zentraler Bedeutung. Allerdings wird eine sinnvolle Benutzung von Informationsangeboten im World Wide Web häufig durch "cooles Design" unnötig erschwert, weil zentrale Punkte der Benutzerfreundlichkeit (Usability) vernachlässigt werden. Durch Usability Evaluation kann die Benutzerfreundlichkeit von Webseiten und damit auch die Akzeptanz bei den Benutzern verbessert werden. Ziel ist die Gestaltung von ansprechenden benutzerfreundlichen Webangeboten, die den Benutzern einen effektiven und effizienten Dialog ermöglichen. Das Buch bietet eine praxisorientierte Einführung in die Web Usability Evaluation und beschreibt die Anwendung ihrer verschiedenen Methoden.
    Date
    22. 3.2008 14:24:08
  8. Rüping, U.: Anwendung und Nutzung von Internet in ausgewählten Hochschulbibliotheken der Bundesrepublik Deutschland (1994) 0.01
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  9. Umstätter, W.: Anwendung von Internet : eine Einführung (1995) 0.01
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  10. Abbate, J.: Democracy and new media (2003) 0.01
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: JASIST 55(2004) no.6, S.561-562 (J.P. Renaud): "While definitions of democracy are topics of debate, political activists and potentates, respectively, hope or fear that a relationship exists between expanded access to information and expanded public interest in shaping policy. The current U.S. presidential election cycle has brought dramatic attention to this, with primary candidates using the Internet both to reach out to disaffected potential voters and to quite effectively raise funds for their campaigns. In short, this "new media" is no longer a novelty in the political arena, but a force that commands respect. In Democracy and New Media, the editors have assembled contributions from the social sciences, humanities, information science, and communication studies that attempt to address the relationship between democracy and evolving technology, using empirical and theoretical analysis. In addition, policy makers and shapers are represented in this volume, sharing interpretations of the impact of Internet technology upon democratic processes and structures. In keeping with the deliberative stance of the work, Clinton advisor Ira Magaziner's essay appears next to that of The Heritage Foundation's David Winton. The book's strength is that it is balanced in a way that reflects intellectual conceptions of both the Internet and democracy, and thus avoids the tendency of some other collections of essays to become either stridently one-sided or, worse, a point/ counterpoint collection along the lines of the basic Taking Sides series. This volume is the second in the Media in Transition Series, standing between New Media, 1740-1915, edited by Lisa Gitelman and Geoffrey Pingree, and Rethinking Media Change: The Aesthetics of Transition, edited by Jenkins and Thorburn. Democracy and the Internet: Some Considerations might have been a more accurate title for the volume under consideration here, because this tome poses questions and attempts to frame discussion, rather than provide concrete answers or definitive arguments. Andrew Feenberg's work, Questioning Technology (1999) and the essay collection Society an the Line: Information Politics in the Digital Age (1999), edited by William H. Dutton, will definitely be worthwhile reading for scholars interested in these topics. Other books that pursue similar lines of dialogue and are worth examining are the essay collection Virtual Politics: Identity and Community in Cyberspace (1997), edited by David Holmes, and Decomcracy.com? (1999), edited by Elaine Cuilla Kamarck and Joseph S. Nye, Jr. Articles that will complement these essays are Antje Gimmler's work, "Deliberative Democracy, the Public Sphere and the Internet," that appeared in Philosophy and Social Criticism 2 (2001), and a study by Thomas Johnson and Barbara Kaye, "A Boost or Bust for Democracy: How the Web Influenced Political Attitudes and Behaviors in the 1996 and 2000 Presidential Elections," that appeared in Press/Politics 8 (2003). Democracy and New Media is arranged around three themes. The first section, How Democratic Is Cyberspace? contains 11 essays. This is the most far-reaching and theoretical section of the book. The second section, a four-essay piece called Global Developments, raises some interesting questions that serve as micro examples of issues pursued at a more theoretical level in previous and subsequent chapters. The comparative nature of the volume is seen here, with chapters addressing the impact of technology an a nation interspersed with chapters that ultimately describe countries or regions where technology is absent in all but the most rudimentary forms. These contrasts, and the insights of the writers, allow seemingly disparate topics to become an intriguing dialogue. The third chapter, News and Information in the Digital Age, examines the changes created by faster and more accessible media.
  11. Schmidt, M.: WWW - eine Erfindung des "alten Europa" : Vom Elektronengehirn zum world Wide Web - Inzwichen 620 Millionen Internetnutzer weltweit (2003) 0.01
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    Content
    "Das World Wide, Web hat, wen wundert es, eine Vorgeschichte. Und zwar, und da staunt der Laie denn doch, im Internet. World Wide Web, Internet - ist denn das nicht dasselbe? Nein. Ist es nicht. Das WWW ist eine Funktion des Internet. Eine von vielen. So wie Email und Chat. Die Geschichte ist die. In den 40er Jahren des 20. Jahrhunderts wurden die ersten EDV-Anlagen gebaut. In den 60er und 70er Jahren gehörten riesige Computer mit Lochkarten, Magnetbändern und Endlos-Ausdrucken zu den Prestige-Objekten von Unis, , Banken und Firmen, ehrfürchtig "Elektronengehir ne" oder ironisch "Blechtrottel" genannt. 1957 hatte das US-Verteidigungsministerium unter dem Eindruck des Sputnik-Schocks die Forschungsinstitution ARPA gegründet. Zwölf jahre später entstand das ARPAnet - ein Projekt zur Entwicklung eines Forschungsnetzes, das Universitäten und zivile wie militärische US-Einrichtungen verband. Dass die treibende Kraft das Bedürfnis gewesen sein soll, das Netz vor Bomben zu schützen, ist wohl ein Gerücht. Nach Larry Roberts, einem der "Väter" des Internet, kam dieses Argument erst später auf. Es erwies sich als nützlich für das Aquirieren von Forschungsgeldern... Die globale elektronische Kommunikation blieb nicht auf die Welt der Akademiker beschränkt. Das Big Business begann die Lunte zu riechen. Fast überall, wanderten die Handelsmärkte vom Parkett und den Wandtafeln auf die Computerbildschirme: Das Internet war mittlerweile zu einem brauchbaren Datenübermittlungsmedium geworden, hatte aber noch einen Nachteil: Man konnte Informationen nur finden, wenn man wusste, wo man suchen muss. In den Folgejahren kam es zu einer Explosion in der Entwicklung neuer Navigationsprotokolle, es entstand als bedeutendste Entwicklung das WWW -übrigens im "alten Europa", am europäischen Forschungszentrum für Teilchenphysik (CERN) in Genf. Erfunden hat es Tim Berners-Lee. Seine Erfindung war eine doppelte. Zunächst die Anwendung des schon lange bekannten Hypertextprinzipes (Ted Nelson, 1972) auf elektronische Dokumente - in der Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). Und dann eine einfache von Herrn und Frau Jedermann bedienbare grafische Oberfläche, die diese Dokumente, austauscht und zur Anzeige bringt (über das Hypertext Transport Protokoll - HTTP). Die allererste Software hieß "Mosaic" und wird heute Browser genannt. Im April 1993 gab das CERN die World-Wide-Web-Software für. die Öffentlichkeit frei, zur unbeschränkten und kostenlosen Nutzung. Heute umfasst das WWW über 32 Millionen registrierte Domain-Namen, davon 5 Millionen .deDomains, und der weltweite Zugang zum Internet erreichte Ende 2002 über 620 Millionen Nutzer."
    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  12. Lim, E.: Subject Gateways in Südostasien : Anwendung von Klassifikationen (1999) 0.01
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  13. Lutz, H.: Back to business : was CompuServe Unternehmen bietet (1997) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 2.1997 19:50:29
    Source
    Cogito. 1997, H.1, S.22-23
  14. Ceynowa, K.: ¬Die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek im mobilen Internet : innovative Informationsangebote für Smartphone und iPad (2010) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Seit Anfang März 2010 verfügt die Bayerische Staatsbibliothek über eine mobile Version ihres Opacs, den OPACplus mobil. Anstatt einer eigenständigen Anwendung wurde ein Modul entwickelt, das den bestehenden Opac um die für eine mobile Anwendung benötigten Funktionen erweitert.
  15. Krings, N.: Blick in Nachbars Garten : Google Earth - Faszinierende Satelliten-Bilder von allen Teilen der Erde (2006) 0.01
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    Content
    Wenn man die Betrachtungsebene bei Google Earth langsam kippt, wird sogar eine dreidimensionale Ansicht - teilweise echt, zum größten Teil aber vom Computer errechnet und künstlich wirkend - sichtbar. Und das schafft Google Earth mit Aufnahmen von einem einzigen Satelliten. Wer World Wind (den Dienst der US-Weltraumagentur Nasa) bemüht, kann je nach Gebiet auf unterschiedlich hoch auflösende Karten zurückgreifen. Das rund 20 Euro teure, leider sehr aufwändig zu installierende Programm NaSat verwendet Aufnahmen von diversen Nasa-Satelliten. Hiermit lassen sich beispielsweise ein Vulkanausbruch in der Südsee oder eine Feuersbrunst in Kalifornien beobachten. NaSat kann nahezu jeden Quadratkilometer der Erde abbilden und ist zudem mit Klicktel kompatibel, was bedeutet, dass in Klicktel gefundene Adressdaten in NaSat eingelesen und bis auf die Straße genau angezeigt werden können. Für Geographen ist interessant, dass man sich zusätzlich über Temperaturen und die Verteilung von Niederschlägen überall auf der Welt visuell informieren kann. Auch die Entdeckung beeindruckender Touristenziele wie den Kreml in Moskau, die Pyramiden von Gizeh oder die Villa von Bill Gates ist blitzschnell möglich. Google Earth hat als Anwendung, die ständig aktualisiert wird, den Vorteil, dass jeden Tag neue Daten den Blick auf die Erde interessanter machen. Und die Möglichkeiten sind noch lange nicht ausgereizt. So hat sich jetzt eine Initiative gefunden, die unter dem Motto "Deutschland muss schärfer werden" dafür sorgen möchte, dass zur Fußball-WM die Bereiche um die zwölf WM-Arenen höher aufgelöst ins Netz gestellt werden. Für Profis hat Google nachgelegt und bietet mit Earth Plus und Earth Pro zwei kostenpflichtige Versionen an. Unter anderem wurde GPS integriert. Daten des Ortungssystems können an Google übergeben werden."
    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
  16. Veittes, M.: Electronic Book (1995) 0.01
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    Source
    RRZK-Kompass. 1995, Nr.65, S.21-22
  17. Nanfito, N.: ¬The indexed Web : engineering tools for cataloging, storing and delivering Web based documents (1999) 0.01
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    Date
    5. 8.2001 12:22:47
    Source
    Information outlook. 3(1999) no.2, S.18-22
  18. Verkommt das Internet zur reinen Glotze? : Fertige Informationspakete gegen individuelle Suche: das neue 'Push-Prinzip' im Internet ist heftig umstritten (1997) 0.01
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    Date
    18. 1.1997 12:15:22
    Source
    Kölner Stadtanzeiger. Nr.69 vom 22/23.3.1997, S.MZ7
  19. Filk, C.: Online, Internet und Digitalkultur : eine Bibliographie zur jüngsten Diskussion um die Informationsgesellschaft (1996) 0.01
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    Date
    5. 9.1997 19:22:27
    Source
    Rundfunk und Geschichte. 22(1996) H.2/3, S.184-193
  20. Gaethgens, F.; Müller, P.: Wege zur Integration : Internet & Hostanbindungen (1995) 0.01
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    Abstract
    Ist Internet 'nur' ein Modewort oder die Anwendung der Zukunft? Ist Internet nur für Werbezwecke oder auch für Fachinformationen und für die sog. 'Information Professionals' nutzbar? Unser Artikel möchte einige dieser Aspekte näher beleuchten. Dazu sollen einerseits bereits existente Internet-Anwendungen exemplarisch vorgestellt werden, um anschließend einige technische Möglichkeiten der Hostanbindung im Internet darzustellen

Years

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  • a 402
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