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  • × theme_ss:"Elektronisches Publizieren"
  1. Kemp, A. de: DOI (Digital Object Identifier) ermöglicht Online-Veröffentlichungen vor Drucklegung (1998) 0.05
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    Abstract
    Schon seit über 12 Jahren setzt sich die wissenschaftliche Verlagsgruppe Springer mit den sich ständig weiterentwickelnden und effektiveren Wegen und Möglichkeiten der elektronische Informationsverarbeitung auseinander - zunächst primär mit Offline-Produkten, dann auch immer stärker im Online-bereich. 1995 erschien die erste von zwischenzeitlich 10 rein elektronischen Zeitschriften. Seit Anfang 1997 gibt es LINK - den Springer Online Informationsservice, in dem derzeit bereits mehr als 290 der mehr als 400 Springer-Zeitschriften als Volltext online verfügbar sind. LINK bietet gezielte Recherchen in den aufgelegten Informationen: Blättern in den Inhaltsverzeichnissen, differenzierte Suchfunktionalitäten, FAQ-Seiten, Testabos und vieles andere mehr runden das LINK-Servicepaket ab. Neu in LINK ist 'Online First' zur Publikation freigegebene Artikel werden lange noch vor ihrem Erscheinen in der gedruckten Zeitschrift online publiziert. Der LINK-Vorabservice LINK alert bietet allen LINK-Nutzern kostenlos die Möglichkeit, sich per Mailingliste die bibliographischen Angaben und Hyperlinks zu den Abstracts der Artikel zuschicken zu lassen, wenn von einer Zeitschrift z.B. ein neues Heft erschienen ist. Schließlich eröffnen sich mit dem LINK Alliance-Konzept auch verlagsfremden Informationsanbietern vielfältige Publikationsmöglichkeiten von Zeitschriften, elektronischen Büchern etc. in LINK als Online-Publikationsplattform in einem wissenschaftlichen Umfeld
  2. Springer-Verlag shows LINK (1997) 0.05
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    Abstract
    In addition to already exisiting electronic periodicals, Springer-Verlag's LINK information service offers electronic versions of most printed periodicals and an increasing number of books from the Springer Group of companies on the WWW
  3. Somers, J.: Torching the modern-day library of Alexandria : somewhere at Google there is a database containing 25 million books and nobody is allowed to read them. (2017) 0.04
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    Abstract
    You were going to get one-click access to the full text of nearly every book that's ever been published. Books still in print you'd have to pay for, but everything else-a collection slated to grow larger than the holdings at the Library of Congress, Harvard, the University of Michigan, at any of the great national libraries of Europe-would have been available for free at terminals that were going to be placed in every local library that wanted one. At the terminal you were going to be able to search tens of millions of books and read every page of any book you found. You'd be able to highlight passages and make annotations and share them; for the first time, you'd be able to pinpoint an idea somewhere inside the vastness of the printed record, and send somebody straight to it with a link. Books would become as instantly available, searchable, copy-pasteable-as alive in the digital world-as web pages. It was to be the realization of a long-held dream. "The universal library has been talked about for millennia," Richard Ovenden, the head of Oxford's Bodleian Libraries, has said. "It was possible to think in the Renaissance that you might be able to amass the whole of published knowledge in a single room or a single institution." In the spring of 2011, it seemed we'd amassed it in a terminal small enough to fit on a desk. "This is a watershed event and can serve as a catalyst for the reinvention of education, research, and intellectual life," one eager observer wrote at the time. On March 22 of that year, however, the legal agreement that would have unlocked a century's worth of books and peppered the country with access terminals to a universal library was rejected under Rule 23(e)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. When the library at Alexandria burned it was said to be an "international catastrophe." When the most significant humanities project of our time was dismantled in court, the scholars, archivists, and librarians who'd had a hand in its undoing breathed a sigh of relief, for they believed, at the time, that they had narrowly averted disaster.
  4. Rada, R.: Hypertext writing and document reuse : the role of a semantic net (1990.) 0.04
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    Abstract
    When document components are classified and then recombined during document re-use, a semantic net may serve as the classification language. A theory of analogical inheritance, applied to this semantic net, guides the reorganisation of document components. Authors index paragraphs from various sources with node-link-node triples from a semantic net and then use programs to transverse the semantic net and generate various outlines. The program examines node and link names in deciding which path to take. Describes how these techniques helped in the re-use: parts of an existing book to write a new one
  5. Veittes, M.: Electronic Book (1995) 0.03
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    Source
    RRZK-Kompass. 1995, Nr.65, S.21-22
  6. Kommers, P.A.M.; Ferreira, A.; Kwak, A.K.: Document management for hypermedia design (1997) 0.03
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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
  7. Sommer, D.; Schöning-Walter, C.; Heiligenhaus, K.: URN Granular : persistente Identifizierung und Adressierung von Einzelseiten digitalisierter Drucke (2008) 0.03
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    Content
    Aufschlussreich kann womöglich auch der Abschlussbericht aus dem IANUS-Projekt bezüglich "Persistent Identifiers" sein. In diesem Bericht wird u.a. auf die Problematik der "Datenansammlung" eingegangen, die entstehen kann bei der Vergabe zuvieler einzelner URNs (siehe S. 10, S. 42 ff.). Martina Trognitz: Abschlussbericht Testbed "Persistent Identifiers". [Version 1.0] Hrsg. IANUS. 2013 http://www.ianus-fdz.de/projects/ergebnisse/wiki (direkter Link: http://www.ianus-fdz.de/attachments/download/560/Testbed-Persistent%20Identifiers.pdf)
  8. Zschunke, P.; Svensson, P.: Bücherbrett für alle Fälle : Geräte-Speicher fassen Tausende von Seiten (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    3. 5.1997 8:44:22
    18. 6.2000 9:11:22
  9. Lingner, M.: Gutenberg 2.0 oder die Neuerfindung des Buches (2009) 0.02
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    Content
    Dass die Revolution des digitalen Buches dennoch auf sich warten lässt, liegt unter anderem am Preis: Ungefähr 300 Euro müssen Bücherwürmer auf den virtuellen Ladentisch von buch.de, Libri, Thalia oder Weltbild legen, um das smarte Lesegerät zu erwerben. Dafür stellt sich der echte Vielleser locker 30 Taschenbücher ins Regal und macht sie auf Wunsch über den Marktplatz eines Online-Buchhändlers wieder zu Geld. Bibliothek aufstocken Für 300 Euro steht aber noch kein einziges Buch in der elektronischen Bibliothek des EBook-Besitzers. Um sie aufzustocken, muss die E-Leseratte recht tief in die Tasche greifen. Auf jeden Fall dann, wenn er bei den ausgewiesenen E-Book-Händlern Lesestoff erwerben möchte. Ein E-Book kostet bei buch.de, Weltbild oder einem der anderen Online-Buchhändler ungefähr so viel wie die gebundene Ausgabe. In den USA, wo Amazon recht erfolgreich E-Bücherfür den Kindle 2 verkauft, ist dies durchaus anders. Selbst Bestseller kosten dort nicht einmal halb so viel wie das gedruckte Buch. Verantwortlich für die hohen Preise für E-Books in deutschen Online-Buchläden sind der höhere Mehrwertsteuersatz - bei Büchern liegt er bei 7 Prozent, während auf E-Books 19 Prozent entfallen und die Buchpreisbindung. Dadurch kosten Bücher, ganz gleich wo sie gekauft werden, gleichviel. Da ein elektronisches Buch im Wesentlichen der gedruckten Variante entspricht, gilt die Buchpreisbindung auch dafür. Dass die Verlage den Preis eines E-Books recht hoch ansetzen, liegt wiederum an der (noch) niedrigen Nachfrage. Sonys Reader ist erst seit März verfügbar; bei Weltbild steht das Cybook erst seit Mai im virtuellen Regal. Amazons Erfolgsprodukt Kindle ist auf dem europäischen Markt noch nicht vertreten. Deutschland ist somit noch Entwicklungsland. Dass die E-Book-Revolution noch auf sich warten lässt, hat möglicherweise auch was mit dem Angebot an elektronisch verfügbaren Büchern zu tun. Bei buch.de gibt es zurzeit 20.000 Werke, während bei Weltbild 30.000 angepriesen werden. Das hört sich nach viel an; bei genauerem Hinsehen wird aber schnell klar, dass nicht für jeden Geschmack genügend Lesefutter zu finden ist. Anders ausgedrückt heißt das, dass von den jährlich 100.000 neu erscheinenden Büchern, lediglich 3.000 als E-Book verfügbar sind. Ein Glück, dass es im Internet alternativen Lesestoff gibt, der allerdings stark auf englischsprachige Lektüre fokusiert ist (s. Short-link am Ende des Artikels). Und was in den USA mit Amazons Kindle 2 längst möglich ist, nämlich Zeitungen und Zeitschriften auf dem Reader zu lesen, ist in Deuschland noch Zukunftsmusik. Im Unterschied zu den hier verfügbaren Readern, lädt Amazons Kindle Lesestoff direkt via Modem aus dem Internet. Bei aktuellen Inhalten wieTageszeitungen ist das unerlässlich.
    Date
    20. 6.2009 15:13:22
  10. Carr, L.; Davis, H.; Hall, W.: Experimenting with HyTime architectural forms for hypertext interchange (1993) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Describes Microcosm an open hypermedia system developed at the Univ. of Southampton. In Microcosm no information concerning links is held in documents; all link information is held in external linkbases which contain details about the source and destination anchors of the links. Microcosm is also composed of independent components which communicate by passing messages. As working in such an open environment reduces system response work is being carried out in to the use of Microcosm as a hypertext onto other delivery systems. As an intermediate stage HyTime based document structures which describe Microcosm hypertext, especially linkbases are currently being produced. A process which will convert a Microcosm dataset into this representation and then further translation programs to convert the representation to run on other hypermedia delivery systems is being defined
  11. Leuser, P.: SGML-Einsatz bei Duden und Brockhaus : ein Verlag auf neuem Weg (1993) 0.02
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    Source
    Infodoc. 19(1993) H.3, S.20-22
  12. Polatscheck, K.: Elektronische Versuchung : Test des Sony Data Discman: eine digitale Konkurrenz für Taschenbücher? (1992) 0.02
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    Source
    Zeit. Nr.xx vom ???, S.22
  13. Desmarais, N.: Data preparation for electronic publications (1998) 0.02
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    Source
    Advances in librarianship. 22(1998), S.59-75
  14. Wolchover, N.: Wie ein Aufsehen erregender Beweis kaum Beachtung fand (2017) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 4.2017 10:42:05
    22. 4.2017 10:48:38
  15. Dechsling, R.: Softwaretypen : Datenbank, Hypertext oder linearer Text? (1994) 0.02
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    Source
    Börsenblatt. Nr.50 vom 24.6.1994, S.19-22
  16. Electronic publishing and electronic information communication (1996) 0.02
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    Source
    IFLA journal. 22(1996) no.3, S.181-247
  17. Schmitz, H.: Lese- und Lernstoff allerwege : NuvoMedia bietet 'RocketBook' an, Bertelsmann ist dabei (1998) 0.02
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    Date
    12. 2.1996 22:34:46
  18. Heine, M.H.: ¬A provisional notation for describing the information structure of document (1995) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Presents a simple notation for describing the internal structure of a document and contrasts it with other more conventional notations in particular those related to subject classification systems, and those for bibliographic purposes, codes such as those of SGML. Such a notation should assist the science of human messaging through: permitting hypotheses to be more readily expressed and/or tested concerning document structure, and facilitating the formation of taxonomies of documents based on their structures. Such a notation should also be of practical value in contributing to document specification, building and testing, and possibly also contribute to new generations of information retrieval systems which link retrieval against record databases to the search systems internal to specific documents. The notation is at present limited to linear documents, but extensions to it to accomodate documents in non linear form (e.g. hypertext documents) and/or existing in physically distributed form, could usefully be constructed. Provides examples of the application of the notation
  19. Carrick, C.; Watters, C.: Automatic association of news items (1997) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Examines the problem of the association of related times of different media type, specifically photos and stories involved in the automatic generation of electronic editions. Determines to what degree any 2 news items refer to the same news event. This metric can be used: to link multimedia items that can be shown together, such as a video, photo, and text story related to a shipwreck or state visit; and to form clusters of very similar items from a variety of sources so that 1 or 2 can be chosen to represent that event in an edition. Discusses the specific assocoation of text and photo news items, although the approach applies to a larger domain of news including scripted news video clips and sripted radio broadcasts
  20. Wolf, C.: Open Access Helper : neue Funktionen kurz vorgestellt (2021) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Open Access Helper <https://www.oahelper.org> ist eine Browser-Erweiterung, die es Ihren Nutzern leichter machen soll, Open Access Kopien für wissenschaftliche Literatur zu finden. Dabei prüft Open Access Helper im Hintergrund anhand der ausgezeichneten APIs von unpaywall.org and core.ac.uk. Neben der Möglichkeit Open Access Kopien zu finden, hat Open Access Helper <https://www.oahelper.org> nun einen wichtigen Schritt gemacht, Ihre Nutzer noch besser zu unterstützen. Dank der Zusammenarbeit mit einer Bibliothek in Irland, kann die Erweiterung Ihre Nutzer nun besser unterstützen. Als Bibliothek können Sie für Open Access Helper Ihren* EZProxy* und/oder ein *Anfrageformular* bzw. *Link Resolver* hinterlegen. Es entstehen Ihnen und Ihren Nutzerinnen und Nutzern hierbei keine Kosten. Open Access Helper gibt es für Chrome, Firefox, Safari (macOS) und auch für iPad & iPhone. Download Links finden Sie unter https://www.oahelper.org oder über eine Such im App / Extension Store Ihrer Wahl. Weitere Informationen finden Sie unter https://www.oahelper.org.

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