Search (45 results, page 1 of 3)

  • × theme_ss:"Information Gateway"
  1. Online-Enzyklopädie zur Wirtschaftsinformatik frei im Web (2009) 0.04
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    Content
    "Mit der "Enzyklopädie zur Wirtschaftsinformatik" steht Wissenschaftlern, Studenten und Praktikern eine Online-Plattform mit fundierten, geprüften und zitierfähigen Inhalten gratis zur Verfügung. Unter Leitung der Wirtschaftsinformatik-Professoren Karl Kurbel, Jörg Becker, Norbert Gronau, Elmar Sinz und Lena Stuhl wurde das Online-Lexikon als Open-Access-Publikation entwickelt und in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Oldenbourg Wissenschaftsverlag veröffentlicht. Über 170 Autoren haben bisher zu fast 1000 Stichworten mehr als 400 Einträge verfasst. Die Autoren sind Professoren, Habilitanden und Nachwuchswissenschaftler aus dem Umfeld der Wirtschaftsinformation sowie Experten aus der Praxis. Die Inhalte der Enzyklopädie werden ständig erweitert, so dass im Zuge von user generated content nach und nach ein umfassendes Nachschlagewerk entstehen wird, das den jeweils aktuellen, auch kontrovers diskutierten Forschungsstand spiegelt."
  2. Simon-Ritz, F.: Kulturelles Erbe im digitalen Zeitalter : der Weg der Bibliotheken. Wichtige Digitalisierungsprojekte weltweit - Kooperation mit Google - Perspektiven für DDB und Europeana (2012) 0.04
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    Abstract
    Die Visionen von einer »Weltbibliothek« sind so alt wie die Institution der Bibliothek selbst. So lag beispielsweise der Gründung der Bibliothek im ägyptischen Alexandria im 3. Jahrhundert vor Christus das Konzept einer »Universalbibliothek« zugrunde. In dieser Bibliothek standen nach Angaben antiker Autoren zwischen 400 000 und 700 000 Papyrus-Rollen zur Verfügung. Der Auftrag der Bibliothek bestand ausdrücklich in der Sammlung »aller Bücher des gesamten Erdkreises«. Es ging also darum, das »Wissen der Welt« an einem Ort verfügbar zu machen. Die Möglichkeit, Bücher in Bits und Bytes zu überführen und sie in dieser digitalen Form dann über das Internet zugänglich zu machen, hat dieser Utopie eine neue Richtung gegeben. Die »digitale Weltbibliothek« wird nicht an einem Ort errichtet, sondern ist potenziell von jedem Ort aus - und zu jeder Zeit - zugänglich.
  3. Johannsen, J.: InetBib 2004 in Bonn : Tagungsbericht: (2005) 0.03
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    Content
    "Mittlerweile schon zum achten Mal fand vom 3. bis 5. November 2004 in Bonn die Tagung der InetBib-Mailingliste statte. Zehn Jahre nach Gründung der Liste "Internet in Bibliotheken" an der Universitätsbibliothek Dortmund haben sich die Tagungen gleichen Namens als eine der bundesweit bedeutendsten Veranstaltungsreihen zum Themenkomplex Bibliotheken und neue Medien in der Informationsgesellschaft etabliert - ein Ruf, dem auch diese Tagung gerecht wurde. Als Veranstalter fungierten im Jubiläumsjahr neben der Dortmunder UB die Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn, die Firma ImageWare Components GmbH sowie die Bibliothek der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES), in deren Räumen die Tagung stattfand. Die Wahl des Veranstaltungsortes kann als äußerst geglückt gelten, und zwar nicht nur, weil sich die Räumlichkeiten als sehr gut für eine Tagung dieser Größenordnung (über 400 Teilnehiner, mehr als 40 Vorträge in zum Teil parallelen Sektionen) geeignet erwiesen, sondern auch, weil die Bibliothek der FES als Beispiel dafür gelten kann, wie sehr sich wissenschaftliche Bibliotheken auch außerhalb der Hochschulen durch die Einführung neuer Informationstechniken und Kommunikationsmedien im vergangenen Jahrzehnt verändert haben. Bibliothekshomepage, Online-Katalog, Retrokonversion, elektronischer Volltext, Digitalisierung historischer Quellen, Archivierung von lnternetseiten, bibliothekarische Kooperation in virtuellen Fachbibliothek - dies sind Aspekte, die das Gesicht dieser international bedeutenden Spezialbibliothek zur Geschichte und Gegenwart der Arbeiterbewegung seit Mitte der 1990er Jahre in immer stärkerem Maße prägen. Die Bilanz kann sich sehen lassen kann, was auch durch die beiden von Bibliothek und Archiv der FES gestalteten Sektionen zu Fragen der digitalen Archivierung eindrucksvoll illustriert wurde.
    Date
    22. 1.2005 19:05:37
  4. Gerland, F.: Mehr Wissen. Mit Sicherheit. : Das Portal »bibnetz« und andere Dienstleistungen des BSZ für Öffentliche Bibliotheken (2006) 0.03
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    Abstract
    »Ich weiß, dass ich nichts weiß«, sagte der griechische Philosoph Sokrates. Heute, über 2 400 Jahre später, ist das Wissen der Menschheit fast grenzenlos, und täglich kommen unzählige neue Daten und Fakten hinzu. Das Fischen in dieser Informationsflut ist deshalb meist mühsam und zeitintensiv, die Qualität des Fangs oft unsicher. Dies gilt besonders für das Internet. »bibnetz« (www.bibnetz.de) ist die Lösung.
  5. Borgman, C.L.: Multi-media, multi-cultural, and multi-lingual digital libraries : or how do we exchange data In 400 languages? (1997) 0.03
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    Abstract
    The Internet would not be very useful if communication were limited to textual exchanges between speakers of English located in the United States. Rather, its value lies in its ability to enable people from multiple nations, speaking multiple languages, to employ multiple media in interacting with each other. While computer networks broke through national boundaries long ago, they remain much more effective for textual communication than for exchanges of sound, images, or mixed media -- and more effective for communication in English than for exchanges in most other languages, much less interactions involving multiple languages. Supporting searching and display in multiple languages is an increasingly important issue for all digital libraries accessible on the Internet. Even if a digital library contains materials in only one language, the content needs to be searchable and displayable on computers in countries speaking other languages. We need to exchange data between digital libraries, whether in a single language or in multiple languages. Data exchanges may be large batch updates or interactive hyperlinks. In any of these cases, character sets must be represented in a consistent manner if exchanges are to succeed. Issues of interoperability, portability, and data exchange related to multi-lingual character sets have received surprisingly little attention in the digital library community or in discussions of standards for information infrastructure, except in Europe. The landmark collection of papers on Standards Policy for Information Infrastructure, for example, contains no discussion of multi-lingual issues except for a passing reference to the Unicode standard. The goal of this short essay is to draw attention to the multi-lingual issues involved in designing digital libraries accessible on the Internet. Many of the multi-lingual design issues parallel those of multi-media digital libraries, a topic more familiar to most readers of D-Lib Magazine. This essay draws examples from multi-media DLs to illustrate some of the urgent design challenges in creating a globally distributed network serving people who speak many languages other than English. First we introduce some general issues of medium, culture, and language, then discuss the design challenges in the transition from local to global systems, lastly addressing technical matters. The technical issues involve the choice of character sets to represent languages, similar to the choices made in representing images or sound. However, the scale of the language problem is far greater. Standards for multi-media representation are being adopted fairly rapidly, in parallel with the availability of multi-media content in electronic form. By contrast, we have hundreds (and sometimes thousands) of years worth of textual materials in hundreds of languages, created long before data encoding standards existed. Textual content from past and present is being encoded in language and application-specific representations that are difficult to exchange without losing data -- if they exchange at all. We illustrate the multi-language DL challenge with examples drawn from the research library community, which typically handles collections of materials in 400 or so languages. These are problems faced not only by developers of digital libraries, but by those who develop and manage any communication technology that crosses national or linguistic boundaries.
  6. MacLeod, R.: Promoting a subject gateway : a case study from EEVL (Edinburgh Engineering Virtual Library) (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:40:22
  7. Bayer, M.: Wikipedia - kein Einzelfall (2005) 0.02
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    Content
    ""Das Ehrenamt", schreibt Wikipedia, "bezeichnet ein öffentliches unbezahltes Amt, das durch soziale Anerkennung vergolten wird." Später heißt es weiter in eigener Sache: "Wikipedia wird zum größten Teil ehrenamtlich geleistet und stellt so eine neue Form von bürgerschaftlichem Engagement dar." Neu und unerwartet klingt das zunächst in der Tat: Das erfolgreichste Onlineprojekt seiner Art lebt nicht von den Millionen eines internationalen Konzerns, sondern dank der unentgeltlichen Arbeit seiner Nutzer. Steht das Internet doch in den Augen vieler vor allem für Kommerz und windige Geschäfte. Doch Wikipedia ist kein Einzelfall. Es gibt weitere Projekte im Internet, die in ihrer Qualität rein kommerziell kaum realisierbar sein dürften. Da ist etwa das "Open Directory" - nicht weniger als der Versuch, dem Internet ein Inhaltsverzeichnis zu geben. Ähnliche Kataloge professioneller Anbieter sind oft veraltet; zunehmend nehmen sie Adressen gegen Bezahlung vorrangig auf - was die Listen-Unabhängigkeit in Frage stellt. Beim "Open Directory" fließt kein Geld. Um die Einträge kümmern sich etwa 68.000 ehrenamtliche Editoren - eine Redaktionsstärke, die sich selbst finanzstarke Unternehmen kaum werden leisten wollen. Mehr als 400 Webseiten übernehmen den Katalog - unter anderem die bekannteste aller Web-Suchmaschinen in der Rubrik "Google Verzeichnis". Gegenseitiger Austausch und Hilfe - das macht entgegen mancher Wahrnehmung schon immer den Reiz des internets aus. Denn das Medium bringt Interessierte selbst für ungewöhnliche Vorlieben zusammen. Das geschieht oft abseits des bunten World Wide Web, etwa in Mail-Verteilerlisten oder den kaum bekannten Foren des Usenet. Sie leben von Debatten, Fragen und Antworten. Und sammeln erstaunliches Fachwissen - mal auf nationaler, mal auf internationaler Ebene. Google bietet einen Einblick in diese Welt unter groups.google.de. Freiwillig zusammen an einer gemeinsamen Sache arbeiten - das ist auch das Prinzip von Open-Source-Software, als deren prominenteste Vertreterin das Betriebssystem Linux gilt. Derartige Programme stehen unter bestimmten Bedingungen frei zur Verfügung. Den Aktiven ist die soziale Anerkennung sicher, von der Wikipedia spricht. Und manchmal nicht nur die. Hier und da wird aus dem Ehrenamt ein bezahlter Job - beispielsweise wenn es darum geht, Computersysteme zu betreuen, die mit der freien Software laufen."
  8. Park, J.-r.; Li, G.; Burger, A.: Opening and closing rituals of the virtual reference service of the Internet Public Library (2010) 0.02
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    Abstract
    Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to explore the communicative rituals of opening and closing manifested in e-mail-based Internet Public Library's (IPL's) online reference interaction. Design/methodology/approach - A total of 400 transcripts comprising user queries and responses by IPL librarians are examined. The opening and closing elements are identified to examine the way in which IPL librarians and users construct social space; that is, communicate their interpersonal and affective stances during the course of seeking and offering information. Findings - The results of data analysis show regular patterns of verbal and structural politeness indicators of opening and closing e-mail discourse. Linguistic elements such as greetings and acknowledgement are included in all the sampled transcripts; i.e. a 100 percent occurrence. Closing rituals have a 95 percent occurrence of linguistic features such as acknowledgement and invitation for follow-up. In contrast, there is a low occurrence of personalized openings through greeting by user name (26 percent). This lack of personalization also occurs in closings: personalized farewell through use of librarian name appears in only 8 percent of closings. Research limitations/implications - The employment of the various politeness tactics in opening and closing reflects the librarian's attention and concern to user's information needs, interests and wants. Such communicative competence narrows social distance and brings forth close socio-interpersonal space for interaction; this may, in turn, improve the overall quality of reference service. Research findings also indicate that more use of personal names may decrease the social distance between the librarian and user, resulting in increased solidarity and proximity. Originality/value - The study provides new insights into linguistic politeness and the functions of address forms such as personal names with a view toward developing effective opening and closing rituals that contribute to the enhancement of virtual reference services.
  9. Subject gateways (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:43:01
  10. Milanesi, C.: Möglichkeiten der Kooperation im Rahmen von Subject Gateways : das Euler-Projekt im Vergleich mit weiteren europäischen Projekten (2001) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:41:59
  11. Lim, E.: Southeast Asian subject gateways : an examination of their classification practices (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:42:47
  12. Price, A.: Five new Danish subject gateways under development (2000) 0.02
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:41:31
  13. Gardner, T.; Iannella, R.: Architecture and software solutions (2000) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:38:24
  14. Peereboom, M.: DutchESS : Dutch Electronic Subject Service - a Dutch national collaborative effort (2000) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:39:23
  15. Campbell, D.: Australian subject gateways : political and strategic issues (2000) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 6.2002 19:41:16
  16. Dempsey, L.: ¬The subject gateway : experiences and issues based on the emergence of the Resource Discovery Network (2000) 0.01
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  17. Kaizik, A.; Gödert, W.; Milanesi, C.: Erfahrungen und Ergebnisse aus der Evaluierung des EU-Projektes EULER im Rahmen des an der FH Köln angesiedelten Projektes EJECT (Evaluation von Subject Gateways des World Wide Web (2001) 0.01
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  18. Heery, R.: Information gateways : collaboration and content (2000) 0.01
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  19. Price, A.: NOVAGate : a Nordic gateway to electronic resources in the forestry, veterinary and agricultural sciences (2000) 0.01
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  20. Koch, T.: Quality-controlled subject gateways : definitions, typologies, empirical overview (2000) 0.01
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