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  • × theme_ss:"Internet"
  1. Ask me[@sk.me]: your global information guide : der Wegweiser durch die Informationswelten (1996) 0.33
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    Date
    30.11.1996 13:22:37
  2. Fluckinger, F.: From World-Wide Web to information superhighway (1996) 0.07
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    Abstract
    Reviews the origin of the information superhighway paradigm and the many resulting national initiatives, including the US National Information Infrastructure and the world wide global information infrastructure. Quotes the guiding principles, and presents a list of possible future services, together with an overview of the major technological avenues. Discusses the current prototype of the future universal information infrastructure. i.e. the Internet and the WWW. Discusses which requirements are currently satisfied by the Internet plus WWW combination, and which capabilities are not yet provided. Presents a possible scenario of evolution
    Date
    1. 8.1996 22:08:06
  3. Heess, J.: Internet-Computer erleichtern Blinden, den Alltag zu bewältigen. Sehende können ihre Augen ausleihen : Surfen mit Fingerspitzengefühl (2002) 0.06
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    Content
    Während Blinde das Leben im Cyberspace mit diesen Hilfsmitteln nahezu mühelos bewältigen können, bietet der Alltag nach wie vor Hürden, die sie nur mit der Unterstützung von Sehenden überwinden. Halte ich gerade die Dose mit den Erbsen oder das Hundefutter in der Hand? Habe ich zwei verschiedenfarbige Socken an? Auch eine handgeschriebene Postkarte müssen sich gehbehinderte immer noch vorlesen lassen-was voraussetzt, dass gerade jemand da ist. Um die Abhängigkeit der Blinden von ihrem Umfeld zu lockern, hat sich Joachim Frank "Klickblick" ausgedacht. Die Erfindung erinnert in ihrer Kreativität ein wenig an die verrückten Schöpfzungen von Walt Disneys Daniel Düsentrieb. Im Gegensatz zu den Einfällen der Erfinder-Ente funktioniert Franks Entwicklung aber tatsächlich. Was Marita Kessler beweist. Mit Hilfe einer Webcam, die sie an ihrem PC angebracht hat, und der nötigen Software ist sie in der Lage, ein Bild der Postkarte ins Internet zu übermitteln. Daraufhin kann ihr ein so genannter Blicker, der auch online ist, die Postkarte vorlesen - entweder über eine TelefonInternet-Verbindung oder in Form eines getippten Textes. "Somit können Blinde jederzeit auf die Unterstützung Sehender zurückgreifen - auch wenn gerade keiner in der Nähe ist", erklärt Joachim Frank. Damit Klickblick funktioniert, muss sich der Blicker lediglich die entsprechende kostenlose Software herunterladen und ein Mikrofon fier die Sprachverbindung anschaffen. Der blinde Frager benötigt zusätzlich die Webcam und muss - je nach Benutzungsfrequenz - einen kleinen Be-trag bezahlen. Natürlich brauchen beide einen Internet-Zugang oder zumindest einen Zugriff zu einem lokalen Netzwerk. Derzeit ist die aktive Klickblick-Gemeinschaft überschaubar. An der Testphase des Projekts, das im vergangenen Jahr mit dem "Start Social, einem Sozialpreis der Bundesregierung, ausgezeichnet wurde, beteiligen sich seit Januar 20 Blinde und 50 Blicker. Die Gefahr ist noch groß, dass in dem Moment, in dem der Blinde sich das Auge eines anderen Users leihen möchte, keiner online ist. Deshalb will Joachim Frank mehr sehende Menschen für seine Idee begeistern. Unterstützung von den deutschen Blinden-Selbsthilfeverbänden hat er bereits: Mit ihnen hat Frank den gemeinnützigen Verein "Klickblick Plus" gegründet. Wir haben uns hauptsächlich die' Förderung von Klickblick und die internationale Verbreitung der Erfindung zum Ziel gesetzt", erklärt Frank. Gerade hat er Klickblick auf einer Messe in Los Angeles vorgestellt. "Wir, wollen keine verschiedensprachigen Netzwerke, sondern eine einzige Community einrichten, beschreibt er. Dort könne man sich mit seiner Muttersprache und seinen Zweitsprache registrieren. "Das wird dann zu einer transnationalen Brücke führen°, hofft Frank. Die Namen für Klickblick, die sind allerdings noch unterschiedlich: Auf Spanisch heißt die Entwicklung "Los ojos", die Augen Und das Englische kommt der eigentlichen: Bedeutung, nämlich der Idee des ausgeliehenen Auges, vielleiht am nächsten: Hier heißt Klickblick schlicht "See for me"."
  4. Nieuwenhuysen, P.; Vanouplines, P.: Document plus program hybrids on the Internet and their impact on information transfer (1998) 0.05
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    Source
    Online and CD-ROM review. 22(1998) no.2, S.55-72
  5. Krug, S.: Don't make me think : Web Usability: Das intuitive Web 0.05
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: Online-Mitteilungen 2006, H.88 [=Mitteilungen VÖB 59(2006) H.4], S.15-16 (M. Buzinkay): "Schon mal vorweg - dieses Buch ist von der Sorte, in welchem ich immer wieder gerne nachschlagen will. Auch wenn es sich sehr einfach lesen lässt, es bietet eine derartige Informationsfülle, dass es am besten direkt neben dem Bildschirm liegen bleibt. Aber zunächst ganz zum Anfang: Dieses Buch liefert Wissenswertes zum Thema Gebrauchsfähigkeit von Webseiten. Usability ist seit rund 10 Jahren ein Dauerbrenner in der Web-Entwicklung, und die Erkenntnisse erweitern sich fortwährend. Auch wenn neue Konzepte in der Nutzer- und Webseitenforschung mit dem der Usability wetteifern, so werden die Grundaussagen dieses Buches auch noch in 10 Jahren ihre Geltung haben. Der Autor, alt-gedienter Usability-Profi Steve Krug, präsentiert in der 2. und überarbeiteten Auflage eine Unmenge an Beispielen an "Do' s and' Dont's aus der Welt des Web. Die rund 200 Seiten sind vollbepackt mit praktischen Tips, Beispielen und Illustrationen aus der Praxis und der notwendigen Hintergrundinformation. Das Buch ist recht einfach aufgebaut. Zunächst erklärt Steve Krug seine Prinzipien des Usability, die er in seiner jahrelangen Arbeit entwickelt hat. Ein Prinzip gebe ich gerne weiter, und weil es schon auf dem Cover steht: Don't make me think! Will heißen: Eine Webseite soll so intuitiv gestaltet sein, dass Nutzer nicht ins Grübeln kommen, was sich hinter einem Link versteckt oder was überhaupt auf einer Seite zu finden ist. Aber nicht nur bei Webseiten, die im Eigenbau entstanden sind, fehlt es oft am notwendigsten was die Usability betrifft. Bevor Sie eine Webseite neu entwerfen oder neu gestalten möchten, lesen Sie dieses Buch. Es lohnt sich."
  6. Jaffe, L.D.: Introducing the Internet : a trainer's workshop (1994) 0.04
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    Issue
    Plus edition.
  7. Humphreys, L.: ¬The qualified self : social media and the accounting of everyday life (2018) 0.04
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    Abstract
    How sharing the mundane details of daily life did not start with Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube but with pocket diaries, photo albums, and baby books. Social critiques argue that social media have made us narcissistic, that Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube are all vehicles for me-promotion. In The Qualified Self, Lee Humphreys offers a different view. She shows that sharing the mundane details of our lives?what we ate for lunch, where we went on vacation, who dropped in for a visit?didn't begin with mobile devices and social media. People have used media to catalog and share their lives for several centuries. Pocket diaries, photo albums, and baby books are the predigital precursors of today's digital and mobile platforms for posting text and images. The ability to take selfies has not turned us into needy narcissists; it's part of a longer story about how people account for everyday life. Humphreys refers to diaries in which eighteenth-century daily life is documented with the brevity and precision of a tweet, and cites a nineteenth-century travel diary in which a young woman complains that her breakfast didn't agree with her. Diaries, Humphreys explains, were often written to be shared with family and friends. Pocket diaries were as mobile as smartphones, allowing the diarist to record life in real time. Humphreys calls this chronicling, in both digital and nondigital forms, media accounting. The sense of self that emerges from media accounting is not the purely statistics-driven ?quantified self,? but the more well-rounded qualified self. We come to understand ourselves in a new way through the representations of ourselves that we create to be consumed.
  8. Gates, R.: Exploring the nets : ftp revisited (1993) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Discusses File Transfer Protocol on the Internet. Explains how the Archie browsing tool, created by McGill Univ., Canada, functions. Offers guidance on using Archie with illustrations produced through Procomm Plus for Windows. Discusses Gopher access, where to find Archie files and gives examples of Internet search questions
  9. Motton, J.C.: Top ten list of good gophers (1994) 0.03
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    Abstract
    An annotated list of 10 gophers in the USA which are considered to be of great interest and extremely useful, plus 5 others which are considered 'honourable mentions'. Notes the more interesting features of each, specifying in each case its subject specializations
  10. Kling, B.: Wer will Web-TV wirklich? : Internet plus Fernsehen (1998) 0.03
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  11. Ding, J.: Can data die? : why one of the Internet's oldest images lives on wirhout its subjects's consent (2021) 0.03
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    Abstract
    In the 21st century, the image has remained a common sight in classrooms and on TV, including a feature on Silicon Valley in 2014. Pushback towards the use of the image also grew in the 2010s leading up to 2019, when the Losing Lena documentary was released. Forsén shares her side of the story and asks for her image to be retired: "I retired from modelling a long time ago. It's time I retired from tech, too. We can make a simple change today that creates a lasting change for tomorrow. Let's commit to losing me." After the film's release, many of my female colleagues shared stories about their own encounters with the image throughout their careers. When one of the only women this well referenced, respected, and remembered in your field is known for a nude photo that was taken of her and is now used without her consent, it inevitably shapes the perception of the position of women in tech and the value of our contributions. The film called on the engineering community to stop their spread of the image and use alternatives instead. This led to efforts to remove the image from textbooks and production code and a slow, but noticeable decline in the image's use for research.
    Content
    "Having known Lenna for almost a decade, I have struggled to understand what the story of the image means for what tech culture is and what it is becoming. To me, the crux of the Lenna story is how little power we have over our data and how it is used and abused. This threat seems disproportionately higher for women who are often overrepresented in internet content, but underrepresented in internet company leadership and decision making. Given this reality, engineering and product decisions will continue to consciously (and unconsciously) exclude our needs and concerns. While social norms are changing towards non-consensual data collection and data exploitation, digital norms seem to be moving in the opposite direction. Advancements in machine learning algorithms and data storage capabilities are only making data misuse easier. Whether the outcome is revenge porn or targeted ads, surveillance or discriminatory AI, if we want a world where our data can retire when it's outlived its time, or when it's directly harming our lives, we must create the tools and policies that empower data subjects to have a say in what happens to their data. including allowing their data to die."
  12. Krings, N.: Blick in Nachbars Garten : Google Earth - Faszinierende Satelliten-Bilder von allen Teilen der Erde (2006) 0.03
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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
  13. Machovec, G.S.: World Wide Web : accessing the Internet (1993) 0.03
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    Abstract
    The World Wide Web (WWW) is one of the newest tools available to assist in the navigation of the Internet. As with other client/server network tools such as Gopher and WAIS, developments with the Web are in a dynamic state of change. Basically, WWW is an effort to organize information on the Internet plus local information into a set of hypertext documents; a person navigates the network by moving from one document to another via a set of hypertext links
  14. Achatz, H.: Wirtschaftstitel schwören aufs Netz : Print und TV goes online - com! vergleicht die Angebote (1997) 0.03
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    Content
    Vorgestellte Titel: Handelsblatt, Wirtschaftswoche, DM, Börse Online, Capital, Impulse, Manager Magazin, Finanzen, Das Wertpapier, Plus, Wiso, Wirtschaft Online, Business Week, Wall Street Journal, Financial times
  15. Grolier introduces Encyclopedia Americana Online (1997) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Grolier Educational's Encyclopedia Americana Online contains the full text of all 30 volumes of the printed edition of EAO, plus all the tables, charts and illustrations found in the CD-ROM encyclopedia and additional text and graphics unique to the online edition. The online database is mounted on the WWW and contains hypertext links from 30.000 of the 45.000 articles to associated Web sites
  16. Schaefer, M.T.: Project Aristotle & Cyberstacks : automating the virtual Internet library (1998) 0.03
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    Abstract
    Project Aristotle is a Web site clearinghouse for projects and products dealing with the automated location, categorisation, classification and organization of Web resources. Describes projects of interest to librarians and that illustrate current success in automating the cyberspace library: PHOAKS (People Helping One Anothe Know Staff; http://phoaks.com/index.html); WISE (World Wide Web Index and Search Engine; http://www.cs.ust.hk/IndexServer); WebSEEk; ET-Space (Entertainment Space; http://ai.bpa.arizona.edu/et); the Bookmark Organizer; Webmap; HyPursuit; HotPage Plus; Netscape Catalog Server; and CyberStacks
  17. Lutz, H.: Back to business : was CompuServe Unternehmen bietet (1997) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 2.1997 19:50:29
    Source
    Cogito. 1997, H.1, S.22-23
  18. O'Leary, M.: DIALOG Select : DIALOG for knowledge worker-on the Web (1997) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Reviews DIALOG Select: DIALOG's latest end user service which is delivered via the WWW and targeted at knowledge workers in business and sci-tech professions. It covers 250 of DIALOG's databases. Database selection and initial searching is through a classified set of menus. Formatted screens are then used to develop search queries. Initial results are displayed in short form and arrangement is by date. Pricing is by record charges plus connect time for search operation. Although it is a highly effective search tool, the service is lacking many of the facilities Web users expect
  19. Pitkow, J.E.; Jones, R.K.Fuhr, N.: Towards an intelligent publishing environment (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Presents an environment for publishing information on the WWW. Previous work has pointed out that the explosive growth of the WWW is in part due to the ease with which information can be made available to Web users. Yet this property can have negative impacts on the ability to find appropriate information as well as on the integrity of the in published. Presents a prototype environment that facilitates the publishing of documents on the Web by automatically generating meta information about the document, communication its to a local scalable architecture, eg WHOIS plus, verifying the document's HTML compliance, maintaining referenial integrity within the local database, and placing the document in a Web accessible area. Additionally, maintenance and versioning environment, then describes the implementation, followed by a discussion of salient issues and future research areas
  20. Klassen, T.: Usenet as a reference tool (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Usenet is one of the most widely used services on the Internet. Recently, a handful of articles dealing with the mechanisms and personal use of Usenet have appeared in the library literature, but little attention has focused on Usenet as a reference tool. This is unfortunate since with Usenet we have the ability to query the knowledge of a large well educated population on just about any subject and receive responeses often within hours. provides a brief introduction to Usenet and how it can be used for reference work, plus a guide to some of the issues involved with posting reference questions to Usenet. Offers examples of reference questions answered using Usenet as a source

Years

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