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Thursday, October 31, 2002
Resource of the Week
Elections--United States
Resources for Election 2002
Next Tuesday is Election Day here in the U.S. Here's a small set of resources that I hope will be of value to you during the next week and after the election. I've also included a link to a wonderful calendar of election info from most countries that have them.
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Bios, Congressional Candidates and Gubernatorial Candidates (via Leadership Directories)
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Charts, State Election Laws (via ElectionLine and NCSL)
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Database, Candidate Finder (Search by Address, via Capwiz)
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Directory, Election 2002-Candidates and Race Info (via Capwiz)
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Directory, Elections 2002 (via Council of State Governments)
Lists of ballot initiatives by state, numerous chats from the The Book of the States, 2002.
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Directory, Election Statistics 1920-2002 (via Office of the Clerk, U.S. House)
"Since 1920, the Clerk of the House has collected and published the official vote counts for federal elections from the official sources among the various states and territories."
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Directory, Guide to the Governors' Races (via National Governors Association)
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Directory, State Election Offices (via NASED)
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Directory, Secretary Of State Offices (via NASS)
Many of these offices provide live vote counts.
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Directory, StateVote 2002 (Info/Resources on State Elections via NCSL)
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See Also: Calendar, ElectionGuide.Org
From the International Foundation for Election Systems (IFES). A calendar with linked resources for just about every major election held around the globe. Material from 1998 though 2009.

Web Search--Google
Libraries
"Does Search Engine's Power Threaten Web's Independence"
Comments from various people on Google's "power". Earlier this week the News.Com's Stefanie Olson contacted me and I'm happy to report that a sidebar includes a mention of librarians, remotely accessible databases, and some a few links to info pro compiled directories often mentioned on the VAS&ND.

Professional Reading Shelf
Information Credibility
Source: Consumer WebWatch/Stanford University
"How Do People Evaluate a Web Site's Credibility? Results from a Large Study" (Abstract)
From the abstract, "With more than 50 percent of the U.S. population having Internet access, the World Wide Web has become an important channel for providing information and services. As the Web becomes a part of people's everyday lives-booking travel, finding health information, buying products — there is a growing need to help people figure out whether a Web site is credible or not: Can I trust the information on this site? Can I trust in the services this site describes?" Thanks to NFAIS for the tip.
See Also: Direct to Full-Text of the Report


Wednesday, October 30, 2002
Telephone White Pages--United States--SuperPages.Com
Five Points of Info About the White Pages Database at SuperPages.Com
I was spending a few minutes looking at some of the services provided at MyWay.Com. The new portal offers telephone directory info provided via a direct link to Verizon's SuperPages.Com. Since it's always useful to know about several online telephone directory, here's what I learned about SuperPages.Com.
1) The only required field is "last name". Other searches will work for the entire U.S. without specifying city, state, or first name. Caveat, only one thousand records are available per search.
2) The asterisk(*) works as a wildcard. If you use them you will be asked (in most cases) to specify state and city.
3) Clicking the "More Info" link next to each entry will offer a "Find Neighbors" search.
4) Searching on a first name will also return matches on an initial. For example, searching John Doe will also return entries listed as J. Doe.
5) Content in this database is provided by Acxiom.

Web Search--AlltheWeb
AtW Adopts Standards, Will Post New "Skins" Tomorrow
From the announcement, "AtW is the first major search site to fully adopt XHTML (Extensible Hypertext Markup Language) and CSS (Cascading Style Sheets). In doing so, AlltheWeb is now faster to load and can be displayed consistently across a wider range of Web browsers and browser platforms. FAST has also revealed several new “skins” for AlltheWeb, enabling millions of users to personalize the look and feel of AlltheWeb, while still obtaining the same quality, advanced search features of the site. To celebrate FAST’s XHTML and CSS compliance, and in an effort to showcase these new skins, FAST will be posting a special, commemorative Halloween skin on October 31st as AlltheWeb’s default page. Starting on October 31st, users wishing to choose from the new variety of skins available for AlltheWeb can do so by going to AlltheWeb’s skins gallery, located at (http://www.alltheweb.com/gallery)."

Information Industry--Reed Elsevier
Source: Forbes
Profile: Reed Elsevier
From the article, "Amid a media recession, Crispin Davis is coining money at Reed Elsevier. How did he pull that off? " Also from the article, "James Neal, who as head of Columbia University's libraries in New York is a big customer, gives Reed Elsevier top marks for creating user-friendly research products, but he also has a six-point gripe list with the company that includes price-gouging and concerns that scientific journals are increasingly being consolidated under one corporate banner. Britain's Office of Fair Trading calculates that Reed Elsevier's price increases since 1999 compounded at a 22% rate, versus 8% for the U.S. consumer price index."

Information Industry--Reuters
Source: AP/ITWorld.Com
Criminal Complaint Filed Against Reuters
From the article, "Swedish information technology company Intentia International AB has filed a criminal complaint against Reuters Ltd. alleging that the U.K.-based news agency illegally obtained Intentia's third quarter financial results by hacking the company's corporate Web server. Reuters has denied the charge, according to a published report..."We are rejecting (Intentia's) allegations completely. Information was accessed from company's Web site and in the public domain. It wasn't a private site. It wasn't password protected. (The report) was on their public Internet site; it was published, and therefore we reported it," said company spokeswoman Susan Allsop...Allsop confirmed that no link to the report was provided on the Intentia Web site. Citing the legal actions taken against the company, however, she refused to say how the file was located on the site. "The journalist located it on their site, but not using any illegal means. The journalist didn't hack into their system. The report was on their site in an area where you would expect it to be. Anybody looking for it at that site would have found it," Allsop said. The issue may come down to a dispute over what constitutes "private" content on a Web server that is accessible to the public. If the earnings report was posted ahead of time in a location that was accessible to the public and where previous quarterly earnings statements had been posted, a knowledgeable Web user could derive the URL (uniform resource locator) of the file and download it, even if no visible link to the file was provided on Intentia's Web site."
See Also: Intertia News Release #1 ||| #2
See Also: Read the Complete Reuters News Release

Web Search--Google
Source: Internet.Com
Google "Publicly Launches" Google Answers
From the article, "After six months of testing, Google this morning publicly launched a new paid search service to help users who don't have the tech savvy or time to perform Web searches of their own." As of 3:15pm today the site says beta on it.
See Also: "Information for Sale: My Experience With Google Answers" (via Searcher)
See Also: The Original VAS&ND Post About Google Answers
Includes Comments from a Google spokesperson, Scroll to the April 28th Postings.
See Also: Google As A Homework Helper?

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
Energy--United States--Statistics
Source: EIA
Now Available, Annual Energy Review 2001
From the site, "U.S. energy history from 1949-2001 recorded in data tables and figures. Covers all major forms of energy (fossil fuels, nuclear electricity, and renewable energy) and total energy by key activity (e.g., production, consumption, trade, stocks, and prices)."


Tuesday, October 29, 2002
Portals--My Way
A New Portal Launches: Hello to MyWay.Com
MyWay.Com is part of the Excite Network and touts "one the Internet's most protective privacy policies and -- most importantly -- does not contain a single banner or pop-up advertisement throughout the entire site." The search and directory portion of the site features Google content. All formats are available but unlike Google.Com, documents converted to html are listed as cached. Other portal features include free e-mail (5mb inbox), page personalization, toolbar, and more.
See Also: Read the My Way News Release
See Also: NY Times Article About MyWay.Com
Note: If you dive into the MyWay.Com site you might come across a "search glossary" page. The definition of Boolean includes the following sentence, "The Boolean words that will work with My Way search are: AND, NOT, OR, and NEAR." This statement is not accurate. OR works (as it does at Google.Com) but AND, NOT, and NEAR are a no go. The only search engine to offer NEAR (10 words in either direction) is AltaVista. Thanks to Greg Notess for confirming. As I've said many times, Greg's Search Engine Features Chart is THE place to go to find what each engine does and does not offer.

Online Industry--Micromedia ProQuest
Digitization Projects--Canada
New Content Added to Canadian Business and Current Affairs Database
From the announcement, "...33 new full text titles have been added to the production database, with an additional 4 more titles coming as issues are produced. This adds approximately 2,500 new 2002 full text records to the CBCA database."
--
and in Other News From Micromedia...
Now Available: Canada’s Heritage from 1844
From the announcement, "...represents the online digitized full-image version of the complete works of The Globe and Mail newspaper since its inception as The Globe in 1844. It is available on a subscription basis for libraries, businesses and institutions worldwide."

Academic Libraries--United States
Source: LJ
"In Slumping Economy, Academic Libraries Face Crisis"
From the article, "Academic libraries in nearly every state are experiencing fiscal pain. Although legislators across the country profess their earnest desire to shield higher education as best they can, such massive shortfalls mean cuts are inevitable. "This is a budget crisis," declared Helen Spalding, Associate Director of Libraries at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and President of the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL)."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (2 Items)
Health--Canada--Calendars
Source: Health Canada
New, Calendar of Health-Related Days - 2003
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Information Technology--Salary Surveys
Source: Computerworld
Now Available, 16th Annual Computerworld Salary Survey

Monday, October 28, 2002
Web Search--Alexa/Google
New Services from Alexa Search
On April 30th of this year the VAS&ND featured a lengthy review of Alexa's version of the Google database. In recent months Alexa has added several new features. Here's a brief list.
1) After you conduct a search (you're searching the full Google database) a new section and link is provided to see who's linking to the page. In other words, this section contains the same info you'd find by doing a reverse link (link:) search . The sites are listed at the bottom of the info page as "Other sites that link to...". What's useful is that this link: filters out links to itself (not available with Google.Com). However, Alexa will only list other "sites" that link to a specific url, not specific pages.
2) "You can see daily traffic rank history going back one year for every site on the web. The graphs are located on the site detail pages. Just click the link labeled "Trends" in the navigation menu (upper left side of the page.)". These rankings come from Alexa's research. Here's a trends graph for FBI.Gov. The graphs contain info at the site level.
3) Although it's been available for some time, don't forget that every Alexa page (left column) contains a direct link (url specific) to The Wayback Machine. This can save you a few clicks if you need to check if archived material is available.
4) New For the Alexa Toolbar
A "new feature that allows toolbar users to customize the layout of the search results. You can can choose the number of site thumbnails to show [from zero to all], include traffic rankings in the search results, and more. Look for this feature in your Alexa Toolbar Options page."

Fee-Based Content--eLibrary
Source: InfoToday NewsBreaks
"eLibrary Articles Now Included in Inktomi Search Results"
From the article, "Alacritude, LLC, the Chicago-based start-up that purchased eLibrary.com and Encyclopedia.com earlier this year, has announced that documents available from eLibrary will now be indexed by Inktomi and included in search results on portals that use the Inktomi search engine. Sites include MSN, About.com, Overture, LookSmart, HotBot, and others."
See Also: Additional Comments Can Be Found in Last Tuesday's Postings


Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Privacy in the Workplace--United States
Source: GAO
Full-Text Report, Employee Privacy: Computer-Use Monitoring Practices and Policies of Selected Companies
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Crime--United States--Statistics
Source: FBI
New, Full-Text Report, Crime in the United States - 2001
Summary ||| Direct to Full-Text
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Veterans--United States--Fast Facts
Source: U.S. Census
New, Fact Sheet: Veterans Day 2002
Fast facts about veterans in the U.S.
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Education--United Kingdom--Statistics
Source: National Statistics Office
Full-Text, Statistics of Education - Schools in England, 2002
See Also: Full-Text, Higher Education Statistics for the United Kingdom 2000/01

Sunday, October 27, 2002
Information Visualization
Source: The NY Times
Learn About: Groxis
From the article, "...according to the Groxis designers, 84 percent of Web surfers go no further than the first page of document titles in searching for information. While that may be appropriate for some searches, other queries, like one for the phrase "exotic vacations," may leave Web sites of interest deeply buried by search engines. The popular search engine Google uses ranking techniques to sort through thousands of possible Web pages displaying what are often the most desirable pages first. In contrast, Grokker builds a visual map of the general categories into which documents fall by using what computer software designers call metadata, which describes each Web page or document. The program currently works with the Northern Light search engine, the Amazon online catalog and as a tool for scanning a user's own PC file collection.
See Also: Direct to the Groxis Web Site
The Preview Release is a $99.95 Download.
See Also: Antartica
A Canadian Company Doing Info Visualization Work
See Also, Demo: Antartica Visualization Technology Using the PubMed Database
See Also, Demo: SmartMoney's Market Map
Visualize the Stock Market!
See Also, Various Info Visualization Demos (via Inxight)
Includes Best Buy catalog, AllRecipes.Com database.
Visually Browse the Open Directory Project

Saturday, October 26, 2002
Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
Information Retrieval
Source: SearchTools.Com
Full-Text, Faceted Metadata Search and Browse
A new report from Avi R. that, like all of her work, is worthy of your attention.
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Journal Abbreviations
Source: NLM
Fact Sheet, Construction of National Library of Medicine Title Abbreviations
"This fact sheet discusses the rules currently used by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to construct title abbreviations for items cited in NLM's online services. The majority of these items are journals indexed for MEDLINE® in the PubMed® database."

Library and Information Science
Digital Library With Library and Information Science Material Now Online
From the announcement, The School of Information Resources and Library Science and the Arizona Health Sciences Library at the University of Arizona have launched DLIST, the Digital Library of Information Science and Technology. DLIST is available at http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu. The objective of DLIST is to serve as a repository of electronic resources in the domains of Library and Information Science (LIS) and Information Technology (IT). DLIST is running on Open Archives Initiative (OAI) compliant Eprints v.2 software developed at the University of Southampton."
See Also: Direct to the Digital Library of Information Science and Technology
See Also: Direct to the "About" DLIST Page

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (3 Items)
Homeland Security
Documents in the News
Source: Council on Foreign Relations
Task Force Report, America Still Unprepared - America Still in Danger
Summary ||| Direct to Full-Text (HTML) ||| Direct to Full-Text (PDF)
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Individual Wealth--China--List and Rankings
Source: Forbes
2002 China Rich List
"China's 100 Richest". List can be sorted using seven different criteria.
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Health Information
Source: MEDLINEplus
New Health Topic Compilation, Calcium

Friday, October 25, 2002
Web Search--The Wayback Machine
A Bookmarklet For The Wayback Machine
Last week I mentioned a quick-click tool for Google News. It allows you to quick locate material related to the story currently on your screen. Today, word of something similar which will allow you to quickly check for archived material in The Wayback Machine without having to open another browser window and copying the URL.
What You Need to Do
1) Visit the "What's New" page at Bookmarklets.Com
2) Scroll to the May 16th Entries.
3) Drag and Drop the Link Labeled "Go Wayback" To Your Links Toolbar. They'll Work With IE and Netscape.
4) That's It! From Now On, Whenever You Want to Check and see If An Archived Versions are Available, Click the "Go Wayback" Button.
See Also: Many More of these "Bookmarklets" are Available
I've found several Bookmarklets in the "Page Data" Category to be Very Useful

Web Search--Daypop
Daypop to Go Offline for A Few Weeks
The search engine will go offline for "a few weeks" in the next day or so as its founder and sole proprietor Dan Chan makes a move to the Bay Area. Daypop is an excellent tool that searches both news and weblog content.

Online Industry--Dialog
Enhancements Made to DialogPro
DialogPro, a service aimed at the small business market, has made a few enhancements to the service including new flat-fee pricing options. Additionally, four new "content channels" are now available. They are biotech, competitive intelligence, consulting and defense.
See Also: Direct to the DialogPro Web Site

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
Children--Video Games--Fact Sheets
Source: Kaiser Family Foundation
New, Fast Facts, Children and Video Games
From the blurb, "...facts on the amount of time young people spend using video games, how use varies by age, gender and ethnicity, and the best research on the impact of video games on young players."

Thursday, October 24, 2002
Web Resources of the Week
1) Country Information
Country Profiles (via Eldis)
Eldis, a gateway to development information, has several resources that could be of interest to all researchers. Included on the list of tools is the Eldis Country Profile directory. You'll find a one-stop shop that contains links to many country information resources. You'll find profiles with information on 12 topics including agriculture, poverty, gender, trade, and economics. Data comes from sources including The World Bank, Amnesty International, CIA, and UNIDO.
See Also: Country Profiles from BBC Monitoring
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2) U.S. Government--Directories
Federal Toll-Free Phone Numbers (Various Consumer Oriented Services)
Compilation of Various Federal Government Lookup/Locator Tools (Various Consumer Oriented Services)

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (3 Items)
Business--North America--Lists & Rankings
Deloitte Touche Technology Fast 500, North America, 2002
"500 fastest-growing technology companies in North America"
See Also: Search Database of Fast 500 Companies (Includes Material from Past Lists)
See Also: List of "Rising Stars"
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Legal Industry--United States--Lists & Rankings
Source: Law.Com/NLJ
Who Defends Corporate America, 2002
See Also: Overview Article and 2001 List
--
Business--United States
Accounting

Source: GAO
Full-Text, Financial Statement Restatements: Trends, Market Impacts, Regulatory Responses, and Remaining Challenges

Web Search--Google
Source: News.Com
"Google Excluding Controversial Sites"
From the article, "Google, the world's most popular search engine, has quietly deleted more than 100 controversial sites from some search result listings. Absent from Google's French and German listings are Web sites that are anti-Semitic, pro-Nazi, or related to white supremacy, according to a new report from Harvard University's Berkman Center. Also banned is Jesus-is-lord.com, a fundamentalist Christian site that is adamantly opposed to abortion. Google confirmed on Wednesday that the sites had been removed from listings available at Google.fr and Google.de. The removed sites continue to appear in listings on the main Google.com site." "To avoid legal liability, we remove sites from Google.de search results pages that may conflict with German law," said Google spokesman Nate Tyler. He indicated that each of the sites that were delisted came after a specific complaint from a foreign government." It will be interesting to see the complete list of sites and determine if they're still available from other general search engines.
See Also: You Can Find Additional Information and a List of Sites from the Berkman Center Site

Libraries and Librarians
Source: The Washington Post
"Librarian Looks for Clues In Mountains of Old Maps"
Meet R. Lee Hadden. "[He's] a reference librarian at the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), who started indexing USGS's vast catalogue of Afghanistan-related resources soon after the 9/11 attacks. The USGS library, a scientific warehouse in Reston that collects journals and data about national resources, has 12 miles worth of books and 26 tons of maps."

Wednesday, October 23, 2002
Information Industry--Yahoo
Hoover's

Yahoo Introduces "Industry Center"
A new section of Yahoo Finance organizes resources, news, calendars, market info, and additional info by industry. Fee-based research reports are also available. You'll also find lists of the Top 10 Companies in each industry ranked by market cap. Overviews for each industy are provided and feature content from Hoover's. "Centers" are currently available for:
Aerospace & Defense
Automotive
Biotechnology & Drugs
Chemicals
Computer Hardware
Computer Software
Construction
Energy
Financial Services
Healthcare
Internet
Media & Advertising
Retail
Semiconductors
Telecommunications
Transportation
Utilities

Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
ASIST
October/November Issue Now Online, Bulletin of the American Society of Information Science and Technology
Articles Include:
"What Can You Do with XML Today?"
"Automatic Indexing: A Matter of Degree"
"It's Everywhere and Nowhere, Baby!" (Paul Dillon on IA)
--
Librarians--United States
Source: Library Journal
Results from the LJ 2002 Salary Survey Now Available
--
Institutional Respositories
Source: SPARC
SPARC-IR, SPARC's new online discussion list on institutional repositories, by sending an email message to sparc-ir-feed@arl.org. Archives of the postings can be found on this web page.

Online Industry--Emerald
Source: Managing Information
"Emerald Strikes Intelligent Partnership Deal With Economist"
From the article, "International management information publisher Emerald, has struck a content partnership agreement with the Economist Intelligence Unit for its new, web-based Executive Briefing service. Under the terms of the agreement Executive Briefing will include selected articles from Emerald’s management journals, which can be accessed by the service’s subscribers."
See Also: Direct to the EIU Executive Briefing (Fee-Based)

Music
Source: IDG
Learn About: Shazam
From the article, "Let me start off by asking two questions: Have you ever been in a car or bar and heard a great tune but don't know or remember the name of the artist or the title? And have you ever been genuinely ticked off at the broadcaster or DJ for rattling off artists' names like a machine gun or, even worse, saying nothing at all? If so, don't despair. I can recommend a new service that delivers this information -- within seconds -- to the screen of your mobile phone and PC. Not only does the technology work, but it's also reasonably priced. The service, called Shazam, is believed to be the world's first real-time song identification service. Currently available in the U.K., it could be coming soon to a market near you."
See Also: Learn More from the Shazam Web Site

Library Technology--Talking Books
Source: AP
"Library Shows Digital Talking Book"
From the article, "It will be a talking book that even looks like a book, although most of its users will never see it. Instead of a cassette tape, it will have no moving parts but will read a volume digitally from a card smaller than a credit card. The dull silvery cover folds on a hinge to the size of a normal book from a library shelf. The section of the Library of Congress that circulates talking books for the blind exhibited on Monday the winning model among 146 entries from 28 design schools. It came from Lachezar Tsvetanov, a 23-year-old student of industrial design from Sofia, Bulgaria, studying at the University of Bridgeport, Conn. He won a $5,000 (U.S.) first prize."
See Also: Learn More About and View Images of the Digital Talking Book
See Also: LC Online Audio Magazines Offered for Blind, Handicapped (via LJ)

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (2 Items)
Emergency Management--Webliography
Source: College & Research Libraries News
"Crisis, Disaster, and Emergency Management: Web Sites for Researchers"
A new resource by Martin P. Courtois and Claire B. Rubin of The George Washington University.
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Small Business--United States--Statistics
Source: U.S. Census
New, Nonemployer Statistics: 2000
"Businesses with no paid employees grew 2.3 percent between 1999 and 2000 from 16.2 million to 16.5 million, according to the Commerce Department's Census Bureau."
Summary ||| Direct to Full-Text

Awards
Source: Institute of Museum and Library Services
National Award for Museum Service and the National Award for Library Service Winners Announced
2002 National Award for Library Service Recipients:
Boundary County District Library (Idaho)
Hartford Public Library (Connecticut)
Southwest Georgia Regional Public Library System (Georgia)
--
2002 National Award for Museum Service Recipients: Bronx Zoo (New York)
Please Touch Museum (Pennsylvania)
Southern Alleghenies Museum of Art (Pennsylvania)

Tuesday, October 22, 2002
Fee-Based Content--eLibrary
eLibrary Content Now Available Via MSN and Other Portals
Word from Alacritude today that links to full-text content (fee-based) from the eLibrary database of material (about 2 million documents) are now indexed in the Inktomi database and available from MSN Search, Hotbot, and others. Accessing via the primary eLibrary interface provides access to about 13 million documents. Once you find an article of interest in a result set, the link points you to a very brief article summary and sign-up page for the eLibary service. A monthly subscription (unlimited retrieval) to the full database (13 million docs) is available for $14.95. You're also able to subscribe at a yearly rate of $79.95 Documents are not available on a pay-per-article basis. A free 7 day trial is available but you must first register for the service (a credit card number is required) and then contact eLibrary once the trial period is over if you don't want to continue.
*Northern Light's Special Collection is still available to the general public and provides pay-per-article access. You don't need to register to search (the same is true at eLibrary.Com). Additionally, many of the large info vendors also offer pay-per-article options. For example, Factiva allows free searching of about 6000 titles with individual articles priced at $2.95.
*Including some of eLibrary's content in the Inktomi database is an interesting promo idea. However, it could again illustrate the poor job libraries do in marketing the services that they already offer for free! As I've said on this site numerous times, most public libraries in the U.S. and a growing number of libraries in Canada offer, AT NO CHARGE, full-text access to one or many databases (no need to go to the library) using any web browser. These databases contain massive amounts of high quality data that an unknowing patron might be paying for from eLibrary or a similar service. For the "power searcher" they also provide much more robust interfaces and search options. Of course, this also is true for patrons with access to a school, academic or special library. Additionally, many of these library accessible databases provide full-image (.pdf) of the document so graphs, charts, and some images are also viewable.

Web Search
Source: Search Engine Showdown
Notess Releases New Search Engine Freshness Study
Like of all of Greg Notess's work, this new "Freshness Showdown" is interesting and important reading. Greg writes, "All search engines are pictures of the past, but which search engine has taken its picture most recently? This comparison tries to begin to answer that question." I would like to add a comment. While you're be seeing more and more "current" material searchable via web engines, rapid recrawl and refresh doesn't not guarantee that each and every new web page is added to the database as soon as it's discovered. Here's an example. The American Express home page is being recrawled and refreshed in the Google database every 24 to 48 hours. However, new links included on the page and elsewhereon the site (not already in the Google database) might not be searchable for several weeks.
Another Example: A search for "Natural Resources Canada" via Google. The organization's home page was last refreshed about a day ago. However, a news release placed online about 5 days ago and linked from a page "inside the site", is not yet searchable/accessible from Google.

Professional Reading Shelf
Online Information
The November/December Issue of Information Highways is Now Online
Articles Include:
"Public Libraries Lead, Follow and Get Out of Their Users' Way" by Paula MacKinnon
"Getting Around And" by Gwen Harris
"Blogging for Business" by Rod Chapman

National Libraries--The British Library
The British Library Appoints New Head of British Collections
From the announcement, "John Tuck joins the British Library as Head of British Collections this month. In this new post John is responsible for the Library's collections of British material, the largest in the world, which include printed items from the fifteenth century to the present day, Manuscripts covering more than a thousand years, recorded sound and newspapers."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (6 Items)
Atlases--Canada
Redesigned Site, The Atlas of Canada
"Completely redesigned by Natural Resources Canada and now easier than ever to use, The Atlas of Canada lets you discover our country from your computer—all you need is Internet access. Visit the See Our Maps section and you’ll find hundreds of well-organized colour maps on Canada’s climate, economy, history, people, environment, fresh water, and health, all one click away." You'll also find a gazetteer and many other tools.
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Topics in the News--Bali Bombings
Source: Department of the Parliamentary Library, Australia
New, Issue Brief/Full-Text, The Bali Bombing: What It Means for Indonesia
New, E-Brief, Terrorism in Southeast Asia
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Parliament--United Kingdom--Webcasts
Redesigned Site, ParliamentLive.TV
Live coverage of the House of Commons, House of Lords and other events.
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Education--United States
Source: U.S. Department of Education
New/Full-Text, No Child Left Behind: A Desktop Reference
From the site, "This Desktop Reference outlines what is new under the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 for each program supported under the Elementary and Secondary Act of 1965 and other statues."
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Criminal Investigation
Source: National Institute of Justice
Full-Text Report, Using DNA to Solve Cold Cases
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Energy--Iraq
Source: Energy Information Administration
Updated, Iraq Country Analysis Brief

Monday, October 21, 2002
Art Libraries
Source: The Chicago Tribune (Free Registration Required)
Learn About the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries at the Art Institute of Chicago
From the article, "Just how extensive is the Ryerson and Burnham collection? According to Jack Brown, director of the libraries for almost 20 years, there are a quarter-million books, which take up 220,000 inches of shelf space. (Brown knows this for sure because he measured them to prepare a report on the library's need for more storage room.) That doesn't include 70,000 art auction catalogs, 1,500 current periodical subscriptions, 440,000 slides and 35,000 pamphlet files." One of the priceless things about the Ryerson is its ephemera," said Wendy Greenhouse, an independent art historian and former curator at the Chicago Historical Society. "It has these tiny catalog pamphlets and one-of-a-kind manuscripts relating to individual artists. And the Ryerson Index is an incredible resource for articles from periodicals."
See Also: Direct to the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries Web Site
See Also: Search the Ryerson and Burnham Libraries Catalog

Scholarly Publishing
Source: inCite
"E-prints: The Future of Scholarly Communication?"
This article was written by Colin Steele, Director of Scholarly Information Strategies at the Australian National University.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
MBA's
Source: Economist Intelligence Unit
New Web Site, Which MBA Online
"The Economist Intelligence Unit has launched Which MBA online, a new free website that provides prospective MBA students with vital information to help them choose which business school is right for them. The launch of this website at http://mba.eiu.com coincides with publication of the 14th edition of the highly regarded annual guidebook, Which MBA?"
See Also: Direct to EIU 2002 MBA Rankings
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American Indian/Alaska Native--Fast Facts
Source: U.S. Census
New, Fact Sheet: American Indian/Alaska Native Heritage Month
Facts about both the American Indian and Alaska Native populations.
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Housing--United States--Statistics
Source: U.S. Census
Full-Text Report: American Housing Survey for the United States, 2001
Note, this is a very large coverage. Thanks to Paul S. for the alert.
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Philanthropy
Special Issue, Philanthropy News Digest (PND)
A special issue Philanthropy News Digest (PND) focusing on Funding for Children and Youth. In this issue you will find a collection of annotated links to some of the best youth-related resources on the Web.

Professional Reading Shelf
Hypertext Links
Source: First Monday
"Hypertext Links: Whither Thou Goest, and Why"
From the abstract, "The link is the basic element of hypertext, and researchers have long recognized that links provide semantic relationships for users. Yet little work has been done to understand the nature of these relationships, particularly in conjunction with the purposes of organizational/informational Web sites. This paper explores the semantic and rhetorical principles underlying link development and proposes a systematic, comprehensive classification of link types that would be of use to researchers and Web production teams."

Sunday, October 20, 2002
News Search--Google
Source: Rediff.Com
A Conversation With Krishna Bharat, Creator of Google News
From the article, "At the heart of his programme is a clustering algorithm, which functions like a librarian or clipping service, by searching out, matching and collecting articles based on one's reading interest."
and on a related note, See Also: Is the End in Sight for 'Free' News on the Web? (via Reuters)

Research Libraries
Source: The Miami Herald
"Library Chief's Dream Comes to Fruition"
From the article, "The African-American Research Library and Cultural Center is the third public facility in the country to focus on African-American books and culture. The two-story brick, steel and glass structure is a testament to one man's dogged determination: 60,000 square feet, 75,000 books and other materials, 5,000 feet of exhibit space, a 300-seat auditorium, a computer lab and an interactive youth center, among other amenities."

Saturday, October 19, 2002
Specialized Search Databases
Source: Searcher
"Specialized Search Engine FAQs: More Questions, Answers and Issues"
I've written a new article for Searcher that looks at specialized resources from AlltheWeb, AltaVista, and Google.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
Health Information
Source: MEDLINEplus
New Health Topic Compilation, Sleep Apnea
New Health Topic Compilation, Tay-Sachs Disease

Friday, October 18, 2002
Government Documents--United States
Source: AP
"Researchers Stymied by Block on Government Documents"
From the article, "The government has cut Internet links, stripped information from agency Web sites and even required federal librarians to destroy a CD-ROM on public water supplies. Researchers worry that the rush to protect national security will hurt their efforts and the public."

Information Industry--LexisNexis
LN Adds New Sources of Business Content
From the announcement, "LexisNexis has added nearly a dozen financial and investor news and analysis providers including CBS MarketWatch and seven Kiplinger Washington Editors newsletters; a dozen sources of corporate information and statistics on key executives, financials, brands, products and consumer trends; and nearly 50 leading industry trade publications and directories."
See Also: Complete List of New Content

Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
Web-Based Preservation
Source: CLIR
"Council on Library and Information Resources and Cornell Launch Web-Based Preservation Tutorial"
From the news release, ""Preservation is vital to the intellectual heritage of every culture," said Deanna Marcum, president of the Council on Library and Information Resources. "This tutorial provides basic and reliable preservation information, and allows users to develop strategies and responses to preservation challenges that are distinctive to the Southeast Asian culture and climate...The tutorial will be adapted for use in other regions of the world."
News Release ||| Direct to Preservation Tutorials
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Cataloging
Source: Library Journal
"MARC Must Die"
Roy Tennant's latest column. "The very nature of the MARC (machine-readable cataloging) record is, to some degree, an anachronism. It was developed in an age when memory, storage, and processing power were all rare and expensive commodities. Now they are ubiquitous and cheap."
See Also: "Agreement Signed on MARC21 Development and Maintenance"

Libraries
Source: San Jose Mercury News
"Anti-Terror Law Worries Librarians"
From the article, In California, more than a dozen librarians say they are worried that the FBI's expanded surveillance powers will have a chilling effect on how people perceive and use the library, where anonymity is rigorously defended. `"We've discussed the Patriot Act in detail,'' said Karen Rollin Duffy, the city librarian in Santa Clara. "Our stance has always been that we want to protect patron privacy. But we are reviewing our practices. What records do we keep, and are we keeping them for too long?''

Thursday, October 17, 2002
Web Resources of the Week
Web Accessible Databases
The Invisible Web

1) The Virtual Chase's Database Section
Many of you know about Genie Tyburski's site as a place to find material about information quality, legal research and many other topics of interest to the information professional. This week I want to point out another "section" of the site that features an impressive selection of high quality specialty databases. These databases contain material that is sometimes not directly accessible from major web search tools. This is a useful resource to have nearby or to use to develop your own collection. New material is added several times a week.
Sections include:
Company Information
Government Information
Health and Medicine
Law
Science
Miscellaneous Databases
News
See Also: Direct to The Virtual Chase's Search Engine Guide Section of Databases
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News Search--Google News
Cool Tools
Finding Related Articles With Google News
Shortly after Google News "officially launched" I noticed the term "cluster" appearing in the url of related results on the Google News "section" pages. I tried using the term in the search strategy but couldn't get it to work properly and bring back related material. Luckily, Michael Fagan of FaganFinder fame did. O.K., so here's what you can do. When you find a story via Google News take the url, remove the http:// from it, and type, cluster:. If any related material is available, it's returned on the results page. This is very similar to using related: in the main Google database. You're allowing Google's algorithm assist you in finding content. Neat, but with all of the cutting and pasting and query formulation, this sure is a pain in the rear for all but the most devoted searcher. However, Michael has made it even easier. He's created a bookmarklet/button that you can find on his weblog. After you arrive on the site, simply drag and drop onto your "Links" toolbar. Whenever you're reading a news story, and want related material, simply click the "related news" button and IF related material is available, it's ready to go.
Notes: First, this is not an officially sanctioned Google tool. Second, in some cases using the "Related News" button will return numerous versions of the identical story or no content at all.

Libraries
Web-Based Technology v. The Library: What The Faculty Thinks
According to an "independent survey sponsored by McGraw-Hill Ryerson", "web-based technology is considered by higher education faculty to be the most effective institutional resource in encouraging student success, outweighing traditional resources such as the library and tutoring." If this is accurate, perhaps part of the problem is that the faculty who were surveyed had little or no idea of what services/skills the library/librarians can provide.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (2 Items)
Online Content--Newspapers
New, The New York Times Makes All Travel Section Articles (1996-) Free via Web Site Archive
The New York Times now offers free access (full-text) to all articles from the newspaper's Travel section starting in 1996. You can limit your search to only travel content by using the search box at the top of this page. Searching via the main archive page will also provide access to travel articles. Free material will not have the $ next to the headline. You can also find travel articles organized by location (over 250 now available) along with additional content from Fodor's on the Destinations page. Bon Voyage!
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Libraries
Source: American Library Association, Office of Intellectual Freedom
Just Updated, Libraries & the Internet Toolkit
"Tips and Guidance for Managing and Communicating about the Internet"
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Halloween--Fast Facts
Source: U.S. Census
"Halloween 2002"
All sorts of facts about the candy industry, costume industry, and more.

Wednesday, October 16, 2002
National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services
New Brochure from NFAIS Aimed at End Users
Jill O'Neill from NFAIS has informed us of a two-page brochure aimed at library and database users. It promotes the fact that while Google, Yahoo etc. are very useful tools, electronic databases are, "engineered by subject experts to help you get maximum relevancy - not just thousands of hits." The brochure also includes a mention about how librarians can assist in maximizing your research time. The NFAIS membership is made up of many of the largest producers of online content. Kudos to NFAIS for helping libraries and librarians market our services. Let's hope more of this type of material is on the way.
See Also: Direct to the End User Brochure

Weblogs
Information Flow

Major Enhancements Coming To Blogdex
Blogdex is a tool from the MIT Media Lab that highlights and ranks popular postings from thousands of weblogs. Or, as the site points out, "blogdex focuses on the referential information provided by weblogs, or the links that people place on their sites. By amalgamating these pointers, we can get an instantaneous look at internet fashion from democratic means." An announcement on the site alerts us to several new features that will debut very soon. These new features include:
*A New Page Design
*Integrated link statistics, with more emphasis on diffusion (i.e. where a link started, where it went next, and so on)
*A Social Weather Index
*Historical Index of blogdex ("a year ago today...")

Web Search--Google
Source: SiliconValley.Com
A Brief Chat with Google's President, Eric Schmidt
Dan Gillmor chats with Schmidt about Google and the tech industry. From the article, "Many have wondered how long it will take for Google to do what so many other valley companies have done in recent years -- sell shares to the public. Schmidt has bad news for those who want it to be soon: ``We have no plans to go public,'' he says. Is Google even talking with investment banks? ``No.''

The Internet Archive
FYI: The Wayback Machine Has a Mirror Site
If you ever have trouble accessing or get a slow response from The Wayback Machine, the Internet Archive has set up a mirror at the New Library of Alexandria in Egypt.
See Also: Direct to The Wayback Machine (Mirror)
See Also: Learn More About The Internet Archive

Professional Reading Shelf (4 Items)
Source: CLIR
Full-Text, Dimensions and Use of the Scholarly Information Environment: Introduction to a Data Set Assembled by the Digital Library Federation and Outsell, Inc.
From the abstract, "Users' expectations of libraries are changing as they find and obtain more information directly from the Web. To better understand how usage patterns are changing, the Digital Library Federation (DLF) and Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR) commissioned Outsell, Inc., to conduct a large-scale study of undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty members from a wide range of academic institutions."
Direct to Abstract ||| Direct to Full-Text
See Also: Related Materials Can Be Found on this 10/5 VAS&ND Post
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Reference Tools--Reviews
The October Edition of Péter's Digital Reference Shelf is Now Online
This month Péter Jacsó takes a look at Annual Reviews and Worldcat.
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Bibliographic Control
Providing Bibliographic Access to Archived Online Resources: the National Library of Australia’s Approach
"A paper presented by Pam Gatenby, Assistant Director-General, Collections Management Division, National Library of Australia, at the Bibliography and National Libraries Workshop Bibliographic control or chaos, at the 68th IFLA General Conference and Council, Glasgow August 2002."
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National Library of Australia--Strategic Plan
Directions for 2003–2005
"The strategic goals, objectives and key priorities for the National Library 2003-2005"

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Economic Indicators--Australia--Web Guide
Source: Department of the Parliamentary Library, Parliament of Australia
E-Brief, Economic Indicators on the Internet
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Higher Education--Financial Aid--United States--Statistics
Source: U.S. Census
New, Full-Text Report, Financing the Future? Postsecondary Students, Costs and Financial Aid: 1996-97
20 pages .pdf
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United States Department of Energy--Strategic Plans
Source: DOE
Full-Text, E-Government Strategic Action Plan: A Road Map for Delivering Services
58 pages .pdf
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Law Enforcement--United States--Statistics
Source: Bureau of Justices Statistics
New Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, 2000

Tuesday, October 15, 2002
eBooks
Online Industry--netLibrary

Read Material Offline: A New Option from netLibrary and Adobe
This new option, you'll need to purchase a gateway license, is for netLibrary subscribers. It allows patrons to check-out, download titles in .pdf format, and then view them offline using Adobe's Acrobat eBook Reader. According to the announcement, the eBook Reader also has text-to-speech capabilities.

Public Libraries
Source: Arizona Daily Star
"Library Lends a Helping Hand"
This article describes the many services that the Tucson-Pima Public Library offers to small business owners. If you don't live in Tucson, no problem, your public library most likely offers many of the same services. Key quote, "A person can start a business without doing their homework but it puts them at a disadvantage," [Business Librarian Tom] Farmer said. "What's not out there is the recognition that the library has all this information."

Libraries
Source: OCLC
Webcast: Register to View (Live or Archived) OCLC Member Council Meeting
This two hour event is scheduled to take place at 11:30 AM EDST on Monday, October 21st. It will also be available on-demand after 10/21. The meeting will feature a discussion about the "development of libraries worldwide". On the speaker list is Aziz Abi the Director of UNESCO's Intergovernmental Informatics Programme. From his bio, "Abdelaziz Abid is in charge of the "Memory of the World" Programme, which is a successful preservation and access initiative, and he also directs projects relating to libraries and access to information. He co-ordinates joint IFLA/UNESCO library and information work."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
United States--History
Cuban Missile Crisis

New Online Exhibit, The World On the Brink: John F. Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis
The John F. Kennedy Library and Museum recently opened a new exhibit to mark the 40th anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis. The online version of the exhibit contains numerous images, chronology, reading list, audio from White House meetings, and much more.


Monday, October 14, 2002
The Semantic Web
Source: Information Week
"The Next Web"
From the article, "The last seven years, the Web has been very focused on giving value to human eyeballs," says Prabhakar Raghavan, chief technology officer at knowledge-management software company Verity Inc. "Over the next seven years, the interesting eyeballs will belong to computers." An easy to understand overview for those of you with an interest in the topic.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (3 Items)
Business--United States--Lists & Rankings
Source: Forbes
New List, 200 Best Small Companies, 2002
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Journalism
Source: Institute for Policy, Democracy & the Internet/Pew Charitable Trusts
Full-Text Report, The Virtual Trail: Political Journalism on the Internet
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Business Ethics--Webliography
"Business Ethics"
Another excellent compilation put together by Sharon Stoerger at the University of Illinois. The VAS&ND had a link to her compilation of resources about Plagiarism about two weeks ago.

Professional Reading Shelf
This Week Only: Free Full-Text Access to The Journal of Documentation
Material from Vol. 53 No. 1 (1997) through Vol. 58. No. 5 (2002) is available.

Web Search--Google
Source: San Francisco Chronicle
"Google Grows Up"
More on last week's announcement about Yahoo renewing its contract with Google. From the article, "Google's chummy relationship with Yahoo showed signs of fraying this week. After two years of using Google as its one and only search engine, Yahoo said it would consider adding others."

Web Search--Inktomi
Source: TheDeal.Com
On the Future of Inktomi
TheDeal.Com discusses where Inktomi, the provider of results for MSN, Hotbot, and others is heading. From the article, "Inktomi's sinking revenues are partly attributable to the loss of one of its largest customers, AOL Time Warner Inc., which in July announced an alliance with rival search firm Google Inc...Analysts said Inktomi's future could hinge on whether it continues to provide search technology for Microsoft Corp.'s MSN.com portal."

Sunday, October 13, 2002
Electronic Journals--JSTOR
JSTOR Releases a New Collection
From the announcement, "JSTOR has announced the release of its sixth journal collection, Language & Literature, a compendium of 47 titles spanning the literary cultures of many nations, including China, Germany, Africa, and the U.S. The Language & Literature Collection adds 1.4 million new pages to JSTOR's electronic archive of important scholarly journals bringing the total number of pages in the archive to over 11 million."

Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
Collection Development
Source: Library Link/Emerald
"Developing Digital Collections, Do We Know What We Are Doing?"
See Also: Free, Full-Text Access to "Web Information Monitoring: An Analysis of Web Page Updates’" is also provided.
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Library Users
Source: Library Link/Emerald
"Managing Our Users - Analysing and Evaluating the Needs of Library Clients"

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
E-Government--Canada
Source: Crossing Boundaries
Full-Text Report, E-Government: The Message to Politicians
31 pages .pdf

Saturday, October 12, 2002
Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Ready Reference--Factbooks
Source: CIA
Now Available, Updated: The World Factbook 2002
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Ready Reference
Source: The World Almanac
The October Issue of The World Almanac's E-Newsletter is Now Available
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Business Schools--Lists & Rankings
Source: Business Week
New, "The Best B Schools" 2002 Rankings
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The Library of Congress
October Issue of The Loc.Gov Wise Guide is Now Online
From the site, "The "Wise Guide" will be refreshed monthly, much like a magazine, offering links to the best of the Library's online materials."

Friday, October 11, 2002
Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
The October Issue of D-Lib Magazine is Now Available
Article Titles:
"Comparing Library and User Related Costs of Print and Electronic Journal Collections: A First Step Towards a Comprehensive Analysis"
"Open Citation Linking: The Way Forward"
"Toward a Global Digital Library: Generalizing US-Korea Collaboration on Digital Libraries"
"Information Retrieval by Semantic Analysis and Visualization of the Concept Space of D-Lib® Magazine"
Conference Report: "Report on the Sixth European Conference on Digital Libraries"
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The October Issue of Ariadne is Online
Here are the titles of a few articles (much more on the site):
"Utilizing E-books to Enhance Digital Library Offerings" by Shirley Hyatt and Lynn Silipigni Connaway
"Climbing the Scholarly Publishing Mountain with SHERPA" by John MacColl and Stephen Pinfield
"A Speaking Electronic Librarian" by Markos Dendrinos

Online Maps
Source: USA Today
"Online Mapmakers: Popular, Prolific, Not Perfect"
From the article, "For most map sites, the bulk of the underlying information comes from a company called Navigation Technologies, or NavTech. The Chicago-based firm, which also provides data for in-car GPS devices and FedEx truck routes, says it supplements its satellite-based information with 400 staffers who drive across the USA checking data. Geographic Data Technology of New Hampshire is favored by most sites for its rural information."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (2 Items)
Iraq
Four Recently Updated CRS (Congressional Research Service) Reports
1) Iraq: Divergent Views on Military Action
2) Iraq: U.S. Efforts to Change the Regime
3) CRS Issue Brief: Iraq: Compliance, Sanctions, and U.S. Policy
4) Iraq: Oil-For-Food Program, International Sanctions, and Illicit Trade
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CIPA--Children's Internet Protection Act--Webliography
Source: ALA, Office of Intellectual Freedom
New, Schools and the Children's Internet Protection Act

Thursday, October 10, 2002
Web Resource of the Week
News Search
Personalized Search and Recommendation Tools

In Development and Ready to Explore: NewsSeer
NewsSeer, is both a straightforward news search engine and an adaptive tool that's constantly learning your interests so it can provide you with more relevant material. About a week ago, I had the chance to chat with Dr. Steve Lawrence, NewsSeer's creator. Lawrence works at NEC Research and is highly regarded (with very good reason), in information retrieval circles for his research, writing, and the creation of some very useful and important tools like Inquirus and ResearchIndex. Very little documentation is currently available for NewsSeer. Here's a brief overview to get you started.
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The Facts
* NewsSeer has been around for several months. Recently, Lawrence made some major cosmetic changes to the page layout including adding logos to help identify sources.
* Currently crawling about 30 well-known news sources. You can expect this number to increase in the near future.
* Sources are recrawled for new content every 5 minutes. New material is added to the database immediately.
* The crawl is not deep. This means that if an article is not linked directly from one of the pages NewsSeer is crawling, it will not be discovered and added to the database.
* According to Lawrence, urls are archived for about 30 days. However, I did find some older material.
* Every entry includes a time stamp as to when the story was first discovered and placed in the database. Examples: 15M is 15 minutes, 3h is 3 hours, 5d means the article was crawled for the first time 5 days ago.
_
NewsSeer Search
* Searching the database is very straightforward. The interface is located at the top of the page and will automatically return results organized by relevance and date.
* NewsSeer employs automatic phrase detection so using quotation marks is not required.
* Boolean searching is not available at this time.
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NewsSeer: Learning From You, Recommending to You
In addition to it’s search capabilities, NewsSeer, will attempt to learn your interests by using several criteria from the material you select to view. These criteria include article selection, the text of the article, how long you looked at a story, the source of the material, the age of the story, etc. This can be accomplished without any user intervention. HOWEVER, you can also choose to assist NewSeer by rating your interest in the story.
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NewsSeer.Com: The Home Page
Let’s look at the layout of the NewsSeer home page.
* The left side of the page is where you’ll find current news organized by relevancy and by time. You’ll also find options to rank news sources (you can always change them), change the font and point size of the page, view stories in a separate browser window, change your source rankings. To eliminate a story from the list, simply select the x to the left of the story title. After viewing a story (you may need to reload the NewsSeer page), you’ll see four boxes to rate your interest in the story you just read from no interest to high interest. After making your selection, your preferences are sent to the NewsSeer computer. The only personal information stored on your local computer is a cookie enabling your personal page to automatically load. All material appearing in the left column is generated from your NewsSeer profile.
* The right side of the page organizes content via many different criteria. You’ll see recent stories from sources that you’ve given a high interest rating, the most popular stories on NewsSeer, stories related the most recently viewed article, and direct links to the four most recent stories that the crawler has added to the database.
* Headlines that are highlighted in "light blue" are new since your last NewsSeer session ended. "Dark Blue" highlights alert you to articles that are new since your last access.
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Final Comments and Coming Soon
*A box at the bottom of the left column will allow you to have "relevant" news stories emailed directly to you. Like most of NewsSeer's, this additional service is completely optional and available free.
* If you use several computers and want to use the your profile on different, simply go to the bottom of the left column and select, “Access profile on another computer or browser” link. You’ll be provided with a specific url to access your page on other computers. You can also send this link to yourself or others via e-mail.
* Give NewsSeer time to learn and develop a profile.
* Along with more content further enhancements including the ability to view keyword search terms in context are coming soon.
* Because of the Steve Lawrence/NEC Research reputation for turning out interesting and useful tools, this is a project worth keeping an eye on even if you don't use it on a daily basis.
* Finally, be prepared for changes. I’ll do my best to report them on the ResourceShelf.

Online Archives
Canada--History
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Archives
An impressive and interesting project where you can search and listen/view clips of CBC Radio and CBC Television programming beginning in 1936. Material can also be browsed via eight categories and/or via a timeline. New content is added to the site on a regular basis. From the site, "CBC is currently negotiating Internet rights with many different organizations, including trade unions, artists and writers, so that we may include on this site excerpts from Canada's best radio dramas, television serials and specials. For the moment, the CBC Archives Web site focuses primarily on interviews, news and current affairs programs to which we hold or have obtained copyright." A link on the left side of the page provides materials for educators.


The Library of Congress
LC Set To Launch Web-Based Guide to Online Resources
From the announcement, "A "Wise Guide" to the Library of Congress' Web site will launch Oct. 12, in conjunction with the second National Book Festival, to introduce new users to the many fascinating, educational and useful resources available from one of the most extensive and popular Web sites of the federal government. The "Wise Guide" Web magazine can be accessed by clicking on a special icon on the top half of the Library's main home page."
See Also: Direct to Loc.Gov Wise Guide

U.S. Department of Education--Web Site
Source: Education Week
"Ed. Department to Save Files Shorn From Web Site"
From the article, "The Department of Education says it will archive any material removed from its Web site during an ongoing redesign, possibly through an interactive database accessible through the Internet. John P. Bailey, the department's director of educational technology, said last week the department was weighing several options for archiving data from the ed.gov site—including the interactive database as well as a CD-ROM that contains all the information currently on the Web site—and making it available to the public." Thanks to G.T. for the news tip.
See Also: VAS&ND Story from 9/19/2002

Wednesday, October 09, 2002
Web Search--Yahoo
Yahoo Renews with Google as Fall-Through Search Provider
After months of waiting for an answer, we now know that Yahoo is staying with Google as the provider of fall-through results. However, as this AP story notes, "the new contract doesn't prevent Yahoo from using search results from other providers." Also, Yahoo result pages look different. Gone are web page matches, category matches etc. Complete details about the new appearance can be found here. You'll also find new functionality and look to Yahoo's Advanced Search page.
See Also: Search Engine Showdown with More Info and Analysis
I totally agree with Greg's comments about the new result pages. Here's an example of how they might not be what some have come to expect from Yahoo.
* Search in Yahoo for London Underground
* The results page lists 20 "web matches" and contains two links to "directory category matches". This means you need to click twice (or use the advanced interface) to access the hierarchical organization of web pages that Yahoo has always provided. This might be the fuel you need to start showing and using many of the librarian built directories we regularly mention on the site. I compiled a list of several favorites about 3 months ago.
NOTE: I look at the Yahoo sites from Canada, Australia, and the U.K. and it appears that the changes are not available these sites.

Libraries
Source: Duluth News Tribune
The Hibbing Public Library and Bob Dylan
From the article, "Quietly growing in the basement of the library in the town where he grew up is possibly the only public collection of Bob Dylan artifacts in the nation...The Dylan collection is mostly out of public view, although portions are placed in rotating displays. However, virtually everything Dylan that the library owns is available to the public."
See Also: Learn More About the Bob Dylan Collection via Hibbing Public Library Web Site
See Also: Similar Story from the AP

Copyright
Public Domain

Two Articles about The Internet Bookmobile and Eldred v. Ashcroft
1) "An Interview with Internet Law Expert Lauren Gelman" (via Findlaw)
From the Julie Hilden's interview, "Lauren Gelman, an attorney, is the Assistant Director of the Center for Internet and Society at Stanford Law School. Previously, Gelman was Public Policy Director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit civil liberties organization dedicated to protecting individual rights online."
2) "Riding along with the Internet Bookmobile" (via Salon.Com)
On the road with Brewster Kahle.
Updated (7pm EDST): Report from U.S. Supreme Court on Eldred v Ashcroft Oral Arguments
See Also: Eldred v Ashcroft Docket and Related Materials

Web Search--Google
Source: The Register
"Google Explains New Page Rankings"
Some comments from Google's Matt Cutts on why you might be noticing different results on Google. He also comments on duplication with the Google News product. It should be noted that the engines are always tweaking their ranking algorithms. One small problem with the article. The folks at The Register did not spell Matt's last name correctly. If they would have gone used Google (or any other search engine) to verify, (: they would have learned that his name is spelled Cutts not Cutz.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Energy--Glossary
Source: Energy Information Administration
Major Expansion, Energy Glossary
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Aviation--Accidents--United States
NTSB Expands Web Database: Aviation Accident Data Back to 1962 Now Accessible
The new material includes aviation accident synopses and data covering the years from 1962 to the present. From the announcement, "Previously, data issued prior to 1983 were not available on-line. Now, over 90,000 additional data records from air carrier and general aviation accident investigations, conducted from 1962 to 1982, have been added and are accessible through the NTSB web site. These include five years of investigations conducted by the Board’s predecessor agency, the Civil Aeronautics Board, before 1967."
See Also: Direct to NTSB Accident and Synopses Database
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Labor--United States
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
New Issue, Occupational Outlook Quarterly--Fall 2002 Issue
Included in this issue, full-text article, "College at Work: Outlook and Earnings for College Graduates, 2000-10"
See Also: Two New Statistical Fact Sheets from BLS
"Declining Teen Labor Force Participation"
"Twenty-First Century Moonlighters"
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Music--United States--Database
Composers--United States--Database
Source: The American Music Center
Learn About and Use: New Music Jukebox
From the site, "NewMusicJukebox was developed to help conductors, performers, artistic administrators, scholars, choreographers, filmmakers, educators, composers, presenters, music journalists, and other professionals find works by American composers via a custom search. Visitors to the site can search by title of composition, composer name, year of composition, duration of the work, and keywords. These criteria can be used separately or in combination with a search based either on ensemble type or on a specified selection of instruments...Visitors to NewMusicJukebox will find digital scores and streaming audio files for many of the works on the site. Some of the composers and publishers have allowed their score files to be printable; others have opted to only allow on-screen viewing of their works." You can learn much more about the project including details on the many legal issues involved via an article in The New York Times.
See Also: Direct to the NewMusicJukebox

Tuesday, October 08, 2002
Competitive Intelligence
Business Intelligence

Source: Intelligent Enterprise
"Central Intelligence"
A look at the use of Competitive Intelligence and Business Intelligence in the life sciences industry.

Professional Reading Shelf (2 Items)
Library Services
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Information and Technology
New ERIC Digest, Advancing Your Library’s Web-Based Services
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Librarians
The New York Times Announces Winners of 2002 Librarian Awards
From the announcement, "In this, the second year of the awards program, The Times expanded the awards to include not only the five boroughs of New York City but also the following communities in the tri-state area: Fairfield County, Connecticut; Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris and Union counties, New Jersey and Nassau, Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester counties, New York. An award will be given to one librarian from each of the participating areas and will be presented to those who have demonstrated outstanding public service."

Business Research--Conference Calls
Source: The Washington Post
Any More Questions?
Are conference calls very useful? The article also includes a short glossary.
See Also: Sources for Conference Calls
*Corporate Communications Broadcast Network
*BestCalls.Com
*Fair Disclosure Financial Network

National Libraries--National Library of Australia
NLA Selects Voyager (Endeavor Information Systems) for New IMLS
It's scheduled to go live in April, 2003.

Information Industry Updates (3 Items)
Lexis-Nexis
LN Adds "International Content" To Products
From the announcement, "Additions include international market analyses, and business and country reports; more than five dozen business and general news outlets throughout Europe, Canada, Israel, Australia and New Zealand; five services that supply non-U.S. corporate press releases, news and financial information; and nearly 70 international trade publications on a wide range of industries." A complete list of the new content additions on the LN web site.
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Factiva
Factiva Launches "Factiva Fusion"
Fusion is a new categorization tool that, "creates relationships between critical business content sets, according to a taxonomy."
Other Points from the Announcement:
* "...integrate internal content such as research papers, presentations, proposals and customer records with Factiva material and other external content, including public Web sites."
*" Factiva Fusion structures content for accurate retrieval and contextual integration into portals, intranets, and other business applications. Factiva's experts work with customers to tailor Factiva Intelligent Indexing(TM), thus reducing the time needed to create a unique classification scheme."
*The Factiva Fusion content enhancement process is comprised of the following four interconnected components:
-- Discover: Retrieves a company's internal and external, structured and unstructured content, from multiple sources
-- Normalize: Converts that content into a consistent XML format
-- Categorize: Automatically applies a custom taxonomy, based on Factiva Intelligent Indexing across all content
-- Export: Presents content for unified searching or downstream XML integration into enterprise applications
See Also: Additional Factiva Fusion Information
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Gale
Books24x7 Adds Full-Text Content from Two Gale Reference Titles
From the announcement, "Subscribers Can Access Entire Content Or Search For Specific Information From Encyclopedia Of Management And Encyclopedia Of Business."

Academic Libraries--United Kingdom
Source: The Guardian
"Browse But Don't Borrow"
From the article, "Many university libraries either do not allow the public to borrow books or charge them for the privilege, but how does this square with lifelong learning..." "Thirty years ago, so the myth goes, you could don a corduroy jacket, adopt a plausibly academic air, and talk your way into becoming a borrower at any university library in the country. If it was ever true, it certainly isn't now. Borrowing rights for members of the public are up for sale, and, as the league table shows, they can sometimes be very expensive indeed."

Government Printing Office
Source: Library Journal
"GPO a Football Between White House & Congress"
From the article, "While Congress has ordered executive branch agencies to continue to use the Government Printing Office (GPO) for most printing services, the White House said agencies could ignore the order."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (6 Items)
Religious Freedom
Source: United States Department of State
New Report, Full-Text, Fourth Annual Report on International Religious Freedom
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Local Government--United States
Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project
Full-Text Report, Digital Town Hall: How Local Officials use the Internet and the Civic Benefits they Cite from Dealing with Constituents Online
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United States Government--Executive Branch--News
New Publication, The Federal Paper
From the site, "The Federal Paper is the weekly, nonpartisan community newspaper about the people, politics and business of the Executive Branch." According to the site, subscriptions are only available to "qualified government employees." The web site does provide delayed full-text access (pdf) to past editions of the publication.
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Economics--Statistics--United States
Just Released, Bureau of Economic Analysis 2003 Calendar of News Releases
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Cooperative Businesses--United States--Lists & Rankings
Source: National Cooperative Book
The NCB Co-op 100
"The nation's 100 highest revenue-earning cooperative businesses."
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Fine Arts--News and Information
Literature--News and Information
URL Update, Arts & Literature Daily Shuts Down
This well-known compilation of news from the arts and literature world is no longer being updated. The site was part of University Business LLC (also the owner of Lingua Franca). The company filed for bankruptcy earlier in the year. If you visit the site, several suggestions for alternative news sources are provided.

Monday, October 07, 2002
Information Policy Summit
Conference Presentations: SIIA/NFAIS 2002 Information Policy Summit
You can now access selected slide presentations from the summit on the web. The summit took place last week here in D.C. It was sponsored by the National Federation of Abstracting and Information Services and the Software and Information Industry Association.
Here are the Web Accessible Slide Presentations Currently Available
*Objectives and Challenges of Disseminating Government Information, Slides from Walter Finch (NTIS) and Kay H. Melvin (USPTO)
*Expanding the Boundaries: Government and Educational Content, Slides from Lawrence K. Grossman and Lee L. Zia (NSDL)
*Restricting Access: Establishing Policies in the Post-September 11th Environment, Slides from Elliot Christian (USGS), Sean Moulton (OMB Watch), and Carlynn Thompson (DTIC)
*Crystal Ball Session: Assessing the Future of Policy, Slides from Mary Alice Baish (AALL), Linda Koontz (GAO), David LeDuc (SIIA)

Information Industry--Palgrave Macmillan
New Product, Palgrave Macmillan Launching New Global Affairs Database Next Week
From the announcement, "SYBWorld allows subscribers to access detailed socio-economic and political reports on every country in the world. Users can check headline data such as population statistics, gross domestic product figures and world rankings or view information on an array of subjects from profiles of major cities to biographies of key figures." The database is, "researched and developed by the team behind the distinguished Statesman's Yearbook reference programme, now in its 139th year."
See Also: Direct to the SYBWorld Web Site

Information Mining
Clustering Technology

Source: Business 2.0
What Is E-Mail Mining?
Rafe Needleman article writes about the tools and technology that's often used in the legal profession. Companies mentioned include Discovery Mining (a start-formed by a former Alexa Research employee), Legato, and Google.

Information Industry--ebrary
E-Books
Eight New Publishers To Offer Content with ebrary
From the announcement, "AMACOM Books, American Enterprise Institute, Career Press, CMP Books, Dearborn Trade Publishing, Idea Group, No Starch Press, and Syngress Publishing will leverage its online services to securely distribute hundreds of new titles in Business & Economics and Computers & Technology to institutional markets."

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Higher Education--United States--Statistics
Source: National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education
Full-Text Report, Measuring Up 2002
From the site, "Measuring Up 2002 is the second in a series of biennial, state-by-state report cards for higher education. This report grades states on their performance in five categories: preparation, participation, affordability, completion, and benefits." Fact filled profiles for each state are included in the report.
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United States Supreme Court--Various Resources
* U.S. Supreme Court Docket, Case Documents and Additional Background (via Findlaw Supreme Court Center)
* Cases To Be Argued, October Term, 2002
* Daily Call Lists
* Supreme Court Docket Tracking System
* Highlights of the Supreme Court’s 2001-2002 Term (via the Legal Information Institute)
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Business--United States--Webliography
Source: PAIS
New Webliography, Corporate America in Trouble
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Health Information
Source: MEDLINEplus
New "Health Topic" Resource Compilation, Chiropractic

Sunday, October 06, 2002
Specialty Search--Google Catalogs
Milestones: Google Catalogs Passes 5000 Catalog Mark
About 10 months (approx. 12/15/01) after launching, Google Catalogs is now searching material from over 5000 mail-order catalogs. Not only is Google Catalogs an interesting and unique way to locate products but it's also one of the first major online search tools to utilize Optical Character Recognition (OCR). That's right, Google simply scans the catalogs and using OCR technology you're able to identify terms found "inside" of the scanned image files. Google Catalogs can also be browsed by category or via an alphabetical list of all catalogs in the database. The Advanced Interface allows you to limit keyword searches to a specific category. You're also able to search only the "latest" catalog or also include older material. Google does not charge a fee to add a companies catalog to the database. They are working on "some additional elements" to provide vendors with additional information and services.

Digital Asset Management
Source: The Milwaukee Journal
Learn About: NameProtect
From the article, "Manipulation of the Internet has allowed competitors to play all sorts of technological tricks that can lure a company's customers away...NameProtect is in an emerging industry of firms specializing in what is known as "brand protection services."...A simple search engine isn't good enough. The NameProtect system examines both images and text, applying linguistic analysis and other techniques to differentiate illegal use of a trademark from a few disgruntled customers popping off with critical comments in an Internet chat room, [NameProtect CEO Brian] Wiegand said."
See Also: Direct to the NameProtect Web Site
See Also: NameProtect Trademark Search (A Free Service)
Locate info on Federal Trademarks (U.S.), Canadian Trademarks, Domain Names, and European Trademarks.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents
Computer Science
Elsevier Launches Computer Science Portal: ComputerScienceWeb
"An integrated search of journal articles and preprints". You can also think of it as a subject focused "chunk" of selected Scirus content. Journal material comes from about 70 Elsevier publications. In most cases, you will not be able to read full-text, only citations, unless you have access to Science Direct. A small amount of free full-text content is available via sample issues and "Top 10" article lists. You'll also find free access to a preprint server and "Who Cites Who" for articles in the computer science database.

Saturday, October 05, 2002
Professional Reading Shelf
End Users
Source: Outsell
Conference Presentation: The Voice of the User: Where Students and Faculty Go For Information
Leigh Watson Healy's complete presentation from the recent EDUCAUSE conference. It was discussed in this week's edition of The Chronicle of Higher Education. From the article, "An expansive study of the information-gathering habits of students and faculty members has found that they first turn to online materials, although most view print as a more reliable source of information. The study was conducted by Outsell, a research company that analyzes trends in the information-content industry, for the Digital Library Federation."
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You can access the complete presentation, click the link found on the right hand side of this page or go directly to this page. You will need to complete a brief form.
See Also: Full-Text, "Print and Electronic Information: Shedding New Light on Campus Use" (via EDUCAUSE Review)
See Also: "Outsell Study of Academic Information Users Commissioned by Digital Library Federation" (12/10/01)

School Libraries
Source: Sacramento Bee
Two Articles about Librarians and School Libraries
1) "No Longer a Priority in Schools, Librarians Hope to Turn New Page"
From the article, "Teachers share their curriculums so that Arnett can prepare a computer-based lesson. She helps students research projects and write papers in math, science and English. She helps them compose bibliographies for Internet searches. "Some teachers think if you're a librarian, all you do is stamp books," Arnett said. "Not anymore." While an information overload has made library media teachers more necessary than ever before, they are still few and far between in California schools."
2) "Net Has Boosted Need for Librarians"
From the article, "Yes, the Internet is a wonderful, powerful resource but there are millions of pages on the World Wide Web," said Julie Walker, executive director of the American Association of School Librarians. "Even a sophisticated searcher might have trouble finding exactly what they need, much less a a child just starting out in the search process."

Web Search--Google
Source: Wired News
Google Comes Under Fire
Changes in the Google page ranking algorithm has got some people screaming. You'll have to judge for yourself. The article's author also makes the correct observation that much of the "controversy" comes from the search engine optimization community. He writes, "The practice, known as search engine optimization or SEO, can increase a site's traffic -– and hence its moneymaking potential -- several times over. In that light, complaints about PageRank often come from hucksters thwarted by Google's latest refinements." Remember, other good "open web" search engines exist. Many of them are mentioned on the ResourceShelf. Have you tried AlltheWeb lately? What about Vivisimo? What do you think about changes over the past several months at AltaVista? Perhaps a specialized or targeted engine might also be of value to you?
and in other Google News...
Source: The Telegraph
Google VP on Charging for Google News Search
Search Engine Showdown's Greg Notess is correct when he comments, "It sounds like they are just floating the idea with no definite plans to start charging yet, but it is one more reason to be comfortable with the Google alternatives."

Friday, October 04, 2002
Web Directories--INFOMINE
INFOMINE From University of California-Riverside Receives IMLS Grant
Wonderful news about several directories we've featured many times on this site. I hope that you're already making use of them. If not, make sure to add them to your list of online tools. INFOMINE, an essential non-commercial directory of web resources, from the University of California-Riverside has been awarded a $249,581 National Leadership Grant for Libraries from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. The money will, "fund the research and design of free software to improve the functioning and integration of the INFOMINE search engine with other essential non-commercial directories including the Librarians' Index to the Internet, the Internet Public Library, and the Virtual Reference Library from the Toronto Public Library.
See Also: Complete List of National Leadership Grants for Libraries (Research and Demonstration)
See Also: Complete List of National Leadership Grants for Libraries (Preservation/Digitization)
See Also: Complete List of National Leadership Grants for Libraries (Library/Museum Collaboration)

E-Books
Why Gale Publishing "Believes" in E-Books
John Barnes, Gale's senior vice president, business development shares the companies viewpoint on the technology. He writes, "eBooks are proving to be a healthy addition to libraries. Allowing patrons to access online versions of reference and research materials, for example, opens collections to a wider constituency of users. It's helping libraries be the 24/7 institutions that their communities increasingly need. And it's helping libraries better connect with today's younger information consumers, those who are growing up with the Web and couldn't imagine not having ready electronic access to the quality research and reference content they require."

Legal Research--U.S. Patents
USPTO

Now Available On DVD: Complete U.S. Patent Collection, 1790-2000 (With Images)
This might be of interest to those of you in the legal library community. It's expensive (about $20k) and spans 423 DVD's!

Online Information--Privacy
Source: SearchDay
"The Truth About Big Brother Databases"
Genie Tyburski and Lynn Peterson discuss what can and cannot be discovered about you in "big brother" databases.

Online Education
Source: Wired News
" All the World's an MIT Campus"
From the article, "[Web users] can access MIT's curriculum on the Web for free, no tests or admissions essays required. Earlier this week, MIT posted a sampling of 32 classes in 17 departments on its OpenCourseWare (OCW) website, a pilot offering to the public. Over the next decade, the university will post lecture notes, assignments, syllabi, tutorials, video simulations and reading lists from over 2,000 courses on the site. No credit will be offered for online course materials, however. "Our goal is open knowledge," said Jon Paul Potts, OCW communications manager. "We're really trying to buck the trend of commercialization of knowledge and start the trend of sharing knowledge around the world."
See Also: Direct to MIT's OpenCourseWare Site
Example: View the Materials from the MIT class, "Problems of Philosophy"
Included is the course syllabus, reading list, and lecture notes.
(Updated 10/10/02) MIT Tries Free Web Education (via News.Com)

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (5 Items)
Weapons of Mass Destruction--Iraq
Source: CIA
New, Full-Text Briefing, Iraq's Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs
Contains maps, images, and several charts.
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Internet--Security--Lists & Rankings
Source: SANS Institute/National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)/FBI
Updated List, The Twenty Most Critical Internet Security Vulnerabilities
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Satellite Imagery--Natural Hazards
Source: NASA
View Images of Current and Recent Natural Hazards From Around the Globe
Updated regularly as new images and new events warrant. From the Earth Observatory at NASA in Greenbelt, Maryland. All images are freely available to the public. From a GCN article, "Chief editor David Herring said the 8-month-old natural-hazards program daily receives almost 1T of raw data per Earth Observing System satellite. As it travels, “a large satellite sees almost the entire surface of the planet every day,” Herring said. “The data that’s collected every six to eight weeks rivals the Library of Congress collection.” A free weekly email update is also available.
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Health--Canada--Database
Source: Office of Health and the Information Highway (OHIH), Health Canada
New Database, Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) in Health Initiatives Database
From the site, "A searchable database that profiles Canadian telehealth, electronic health records, education and training, and health information infrastructure initiatives and programs." Other databases are also available.
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Mental Health--Canada
Source: Health Canada
New, Full-Text Report, A Report on Mental Illnesses in Canada


Thursday, October 03, 2002
Web Resources of the Week
Media Directories
This week, several directories to help you find many various broadcasters, publications (including trade/business pubs), and more.
1) 100000 Watts
A highly searchable directory of urls and other information about U.S. and Canadian radio and television stations. Thousands of stations (AM, FM, TV, LPTV, DTV) are included. You can search for station information from the home page by entering a stations call letters. However, this is only a small portion of the directory�s search power. Make sure to look at the �Searches Page� where many additional search criteria are available. For example, you can locate stations by frequency, channel, format, and more. Listings can also be browsed by state/province and city. Entries contain a url to the stations home page, format info, frequency/channel, network affiliation, webcast url (if available), and more. The home page also contains info on format changes, new stations. Other daily news updates are also available on the news page. WOW!
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2) The Gebbie All-in-One Press Directory (Web Resources)
The web site for this well-known, fee-based, print publication is also home to several excellent directories of �on the web� media organizations. These directories are available free. Included in the �media links� portion of the page (first column) are links to searchable/browsable directories of television and radio stations, daily newspapers, and state press associations. Anything else? Perhaps the most valuable searchable directories that the site offers are the databases of trade magazines and weekly newspapers web sites. These directories can also be browsed by category or searched. Each entry contains a direct link to the publication home page. These databases media organizations located in the U.S.
Here are direct links to each of these directories:
Magazines
http://www.gebbieinc.com/magurl.htm
Weekly Newspapers
http://www.gebbieinc.com/weekly1.htm
Radio Stations
http://www.gebbieinc.com/presasns.htm
Television Stations
http://www.gebbieinc.com/tvintro.htm
Daily Newspapers
http://www.gebbieinc.com/dailyint.htm
State Press Associations
http://www.gebbieinc.com/presasns.htm
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3) Trade/Business Press Directory from American Business Media's
This is a searchable directory from ABM, an industry trade group. The directory contains contact info/links to 1400 publications. Keyword search or browse by title, publisher, or industry.
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4) More Media Directories
Web Site Directory, Alternative Newsweeklies (U.S. and Canada)
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Canadian Business Press Directory (Canadian Business Press Association)
Organized by industry. Publication links are located along the left side of the page.
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Media UK (Magazines)
Directories of television stations, radio stations, and newspapers are also available.
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Periodical Press Association, Member Publications (U.K.)

Libraries--Canada
The Creation of the Library and Archives of Canada
From the announcement, "Minister of Canadian Heritage Sheila Copps announced today the creation of the Library and Archives of Canada, confirming the intention of the Government as expressed in the Speech from the Throne on Monday. This new agency will see the convergence of the rich collections and recognized expertise of the National Library of Canada and the National Archives of Canada."
See Also: (Updated 1/22) Water Main Burst at NLC

Copyright--Libraries
Source: IFLA (International Federation of Library Associations)
Full-Text, Position Paper:
Limitations and Exceptions to Copyright and Neighbouring Rights in the Digital Environment: An International Library Perspective
Also available as a pdf file.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (3 Items)
Software Industry--Lists & Rankings
Source: Software Magazine
The Software 500, 2002
"The 19th Annual Ranking of the World's Largest Software and Services Suppliers". The version available at this url contains only the top 25 entries. However, after completing a registration form you're given free access to a searchable version of the complete list
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Postal Information--Reference
Source: Universal Postal Union
Country By Country Postal Addressing Guides
Address formatting information for most countries.
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Topics in the News--Iraq
Source: Monterey Institute of International Studies/Center for Nonproliferation Studies
Iraq Special Collection
Included in this collection are many useful articles, charts, and links. These resources include:
* (Organizational Chart) The Iraqi Security Apparatus
* (Article, Bios) "Saddam's Security and Intelligence Network"
* (Chart) Iraq: Weapons of Mass Destruction Capabilities and Programs
* (Chart) Foreign Suppliers to Iraq's Biological Weapons Program
See Also: Research Tools, Country Profiles, and Searchable Databases (via Nuclear Threat Initiative)

Wednesday, October 02, 2002

Web Resource Guides
Internet Training Tools
New Internet Resource Guides from EEVL: The Internet Guide to Engineering, Mathematics and Computing
Three new guides of high quality resources from the EEVL (formerly known as the Edinburgh Engineering Virtual Library). As many of you know the EEVL is one of the best online directories for engineering, mathematics, and computing information. All three booklets are available as pdf files. The EEVL is part of the U.K. based RDN (Resource Discovery Network). It's home to numerous high quality directories of web-based resources.
Internet Resources for Computing (8 pages)
Internet Resources for Engineering (8 pages)
Internet Resources for Mathematics (8 pages)

See Also: The RDN Virtual Training Suite
"Online tutorials designed to help students, lecturers and researchers improve their Internet information literacy and ICT skills." Materials are customized for many disciplines and free for everyone to use.

Web Search--AlltheWeb
AlltheWeb Formally Announces New Advanced Search Options
Exciting News? Absolutely! Absolutely! However, this "formal" announcement discusses many new limiting options that have been mentioned on the ResourceShelf and other sites during the past several weeks. Here's a quick review. Here's a quick review:
*Regional Filtering (Via Pull-Down Menus, Limit to Sites from Various Parts of the World)
*Document Depth Filtering
*Embedded Content Search (Limit to Pages that Contain the Specified Media Types including Flash)
*Personal Home Page Search
*Highlighting of Keywords on Result Pages
Remember, AlltheWeb indexes PDF and Flash content. To limit you search to only this type of content use the file format pull-down in the result restrictions section.
See Also: Direct to AlltheWeb's Advanced Interface
And in other AlltheWeb News, the company has made a privacy policy available. You can get some background about recent AtW privacy concerns via this 9/21/2002 post.

Major Web Search Engines
The End of Keyword Meta Tags (at Least as Search Result Rankings Are Concerned)
An obituary. Danny Sullivan writes, "Now supported by only one major crawler-based search engine -- Inktomi -- the value of adding meta keywords tags to pages seems little worth the time."
See Also: Comments on the ResourceShelf from May 24th About the IRS Adding Meta Tags To Influence Rankings (We Said It Wasn't The Best Idea)
See Also: "An End to Metatags (Enough Already, Part 1)" (By Andrew Goodman via Traffick)

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (6 Items)
Access to Information--European Union
Source: FreedomInfo.Org/National Security Archive
New Full-Text Report, Secrecy and Openness in the European Union: The Ongoing Struggle for Freedom of Information
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Media--United States
Source: FCC
12 New Studies About Media Marketplace Now Available
Reports are available (full-text) in text and Acrobat formats. Some reports also make tables available in Excel format.
--Direct Links To All Reports--
Titles and authors of the reports:
1) A Comparison of Media Outlets and Owners for Ten Selected Markets: 1960, 1980, 2000.
Scott Roberts, Jane Frenette and Dione Stearns, Media Bureau, FCC
2) Viewpoint Diversity in Cross-Owned Newspapers and Television Stations: A Study of News Coverage of the 2000 Presidential Campaign
David Pritchard, Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
3) Consumer Substitution Among Media
Joel Waldfogel, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
4) Consolidation and Advertising Prices in Local Radio Markets
Keith Brown and George Williams, Media Bureau, FCC
5) Program Diversity and the Program Selection Process on Broadcast Network Television
Mara Einstein, Department of Media Studies, Queens College, City University of New York
6) A Theory of Broadcast Media Concentration and Commercial Advertising
Brendan M. Cunningham (Department of Economics, U.S. Naval Academy) and Peter J. Alexander (Media Bureau, FCC)
7) The Measurement of Local Television News and Public Affairs Programs
Thomas Spavins (Enforcement Bureau, FCC) and Loretta Dennison, Jane Frenette, and Scott Roberts (Media Bureau, FCC)
8) Consumer Survey on Media Usage
Nielsen Media Research
9) Radio Market Structure and Music Diversity
George Williams, Keith Brown and Peter Alexander, Media Bureau, FCC
10) On the Substitutability of Local Newspaper, Radio, and Television Advertising in Local Business Sales
C. Anthony Bush, Office of General Counsel, FCC
11) Radio Industry Review 2002: Trends in Ownership, Format, and Finance
George Williams and Scott Roberts, Media Bureau, FCC
12) Broadcast Television: Survivor in a Sea of Competition
(OPP Working Paper) Jonathan Levy, Marcelino Ford-Livene, Anne Levine
Direct Links to All Reports
The official FCC announcement on the release of the reports is also available.
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Artists--Canada--Biographies
Source: The National Library of Canada
New Compilation, Women Artists in Canada
From the site, "The National Library of Canada has prepared biographies highlighting the achievements of 23 women artists in Canada. These artists have worked in a range of media, over the last 150 years. Some are less known, others have national and international reputations."
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History--United Kingdom
Source: Public Records Office, U.K.
New Web Site/Online Exhibit, "Trafalgar to Korea: 5 British Battles, 1805-1951"
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Coral Reefs--United States
Source: NOAA
New Web Site, CoRIS (Coral Reef Information System)
From the site, "NOAA's Coral Reef Information System (CoRIS) is designed to be a single point of access to NOAA coral reef information and data products, especially those derived from NOAA's Coral Reef Initiative Program." The site includes a glossary, a virtual library of documents, and an interactive mapping tool.
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Foreign Born Population--United States--Statistics
Source: U.S. Census
New Full-Text Report, "The Older Foreign-Born Population in the United States: 2000"
Summary ||| Direct to Full-Text Report


Tuesday, October 01, 2002
Web Search--Conference Presentations
Louis Rosenfeld's "Beyond Search Engines: Designing Search Systems for Users" (2.5 Mb PPT file)
You can take a look at the slides from a September presentation by information architecture consultant and author Louis Rosenfeld. In other "Lou news", the second edition of the "classic" Information Architecture for the World Wide Web: Designing Large-Scale Web Sites (Rosenfeld is a co-author) has been published. Finally, it's wonderful to be able to look over a conference presentation or read the book but it's even better to learn and ask questions of the speaker/writer in person. This fall, Rosenfeld will be speaking in New York and London.

Digital Libraries
Educause--Conferences--Webcasts
Live and Archived Webcasts from the EDUCAUSE Conference in Atlanta
You can watch 10 presentations via the web tomorrow (Wednesday) and Thursday. Included on the webcast list is Clifford Lynch's presentation, "What's Become of the Digital Library?". Lynch's presentation is set to begin at 3:50 P.M. on Wednesday. If you can't listen to the presentations live, they will be archived on the EDUCAUSE web site.

Government Databases
Source: Government Executive
"State Department asks Firms to Create Intelligence Database"
Included in the article is this scary quote from Colin Powell. Powell says, "I keep no reference material, no dictionaries, no encyclopedias in my office anymore ...because all you need is a search engine" on the Internet." Thanks to G.T. for the news tip.
More: More of Secretary Powell's Comments
The quote (above) from the Secretary of State comes from remarks he made to the President’s Council of Advisers on Science and Technology on Monday. Here's a bit more including the complete quote direct from the transcript.
SECRETARY POWELL: I told my staff: "I no longer have any encyclopedias, any dictionaries, or any reference materials anywhere in my office, whatsoever, I don't need them. I've stopped using all reference materials because you don't need it. All you need is a search engine. Now, I occasionally get in trouble by making reference to particular proprietary products. I won't do so here. But I have a search engine on my screen all day long so that if I need to know anything about anything or anybody, or whatever, I just throw it in the search engine and it's faster than me reaching for a dictionary or reaching for an encyclopedia, or reaching for a reference book. So I just threw them all out. I'm trying to create an atmosphere that says science and technology has fundamentally changed the way in which we must operate as a Department, as a group of people, and I want you all to get with it. And slowly but surely we're doing it and we are well on our way to having an Internet, Intra-net Capable System on every desk in the State Department over the next several years, which will allow us to do this unclassified and classified, bringing us into the 21st Century World."

e-Books
New E-Book Product for Libraries from Adobe
From the announcement, "Adobe Systems Incorporated...today announced the availability of Adobe® Content Server 3.0, the digital publishing system to manage, distribute and protect Adobe Portable Document Format-based (PDF) eBooks and digital content...To kick-start library eBook collections, the Adobe PDF eBook Library Starter Pack is available at no charge with the purchase of a hosted eBook service — powered by Adobe Content Server 3.0 — from leading solution providers Baker & Taylor and OverDrive. Through the Starter Pack, libraries can immediately offer patrons up to 100 titles from publishers, such as: HarperCollins; Kluwer Academic; Rough Guides; Routledge; University of California Press; ipicturebooks; RosettaBooks; Stonehouse Press; DSI; and ComicsOne. Publishers represented on the Adobe PDF eBook Library Starter Pack will vary between solution providers."

National Archives--United States
Government E-Mail

Source: Government Computing News
"NARA Issues E-Mail Archiving Guide"
From the article, "The National Archives and Records Administration yesterday released a guide detailing how agencies can provide NARA with e-mail and message attachments for archiving as records."
See Also: Read the Full-Text of this New NARA Archiving Guide

Professional Reading Shelf (3 Items)
Web Search--Google Answers
"Information for Sale: My Experience With Google Answers"
Jessamyn West with an excellent article on working as a researcher for Google Answers. One thing Google Answers illustrates is that every question can't be answered accurately and in a timely manner with Google. In some/many cases walking over to a bookshelf, making a phone call, or searching a proprietary database will yield a "better" result in much less time.
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Librarians
Source: Computers in Libraries
"Exploring PlanetPDA: The Librarian as Astronaut, Innovator, and Expert"
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Digital Reference
Source: Library Journal
"An LJ Round Table Live, Digital Reference"
Participants included Karen Schneider (moderator), Bernie Sloan, Susan McGlamery, Steve Coffman, Tracy Strobel, Sara Weissman, Chip Nilges, John Ingraham, and Francine Fialkoff.

Info Industry News Briefs (2 Items)
Infotrieve Signs Content Agreements with 10 Publishers
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ProQuest To Offer Full-Text From 125 Kluwer Business and Economic Journals
The new content is the result of an exclusive limited agreement between ProQuest and Kluwer.

Resources, Tools and Full-Text Documents (4 Items)
Women in Business--Lists & Rankings
Source: Fortune
New List, The 50 Most Powerful Women in Business (U.S.)
New List, The 50 Most Powerful Women in Business (International)
New List, 5 Women to Watch
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Business--United States--Lists & Rankings
New List, "The Business 2.0 100"
The fastest-growing tech companies in the United States.
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Child Labor--United States
Source: GAO
Full-Text Report, Child Labor: Labor Can Strengthen Its Efforts to Protect Children Who Work
Numerous charts and tables with statistics.
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AIDS
Source: National Intelligence Council/CIA
Full-Text Report, The Next Wave of HIV/AIDS: Nigeria, Ethiopia, Russia, India, and China