From Carnegie to Internet2 : forging the serials future : proceedings of the North American Serials Interest Group, Inc. : 14th annual conference, June 10-13, 1999, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
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Bibliographic Information
From Carnegie to Internet2 : forging the serials future : proceedings of the North American Serials Interest Group, Inc. : 14th annual conference, June 10-13, 1999, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Haworth Information Press, c2000
- Other Title
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NASIG : from Carnegie to Internet2 : forging the serials future
From Carnegie to Internet 2
From Carnegie to Internet two
Available at / 2 libraries
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University of Tsukuba Library, Library on Library and Information Science
014.75-N96-1410003307256
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Note
Co-published simultaneously as The serials librarian, v. 38, no. 1/2 and 3/4, 2000
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Couldn't attend the conference? Pick up the book!The Internet has been called a revolution, and it is; both in the ways that people and institutions communicate with each other, and in the ways that resources can now be shared. Professionals in the information field share a mandate to enable current and future generations to make use of this technology. From Carnegie to Internet2: Forging the Serial's Future is derived from proceedings of NASIG's 14th Annual Conference, held in June 1999 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This comprehensive guide to the conference proceedings discusses the powerful impact that the current explosion of information technology has had on librarianship and shares information to help you understand and benefit from these new tools.From Carnegie to Internet2 begins with a discussion of metadata--how it is created, how it is used and misused, and how to access it through search engines, including current and future access to electronic serials. Next, you'll encounter a proactive process for looking at what's to come for your library in "Scenario Building: Creating Your Library's Future."As you proceed through From Carnegie to Internet2 you will find fascinating discussions of:
full-text databases
electronic serials
reliable and unreliable Web sources
the history of librarianship
scholarly publishing by librarians
the evolution of distance education . . . and much more!
The current information and practical insight in From Carnegie to Internet2 will help you improve your technical skills and prepare you and your library for the 21st century!
Table of Contents
Contents
Introduction
Preconference Programs
Metadata Preconference
Scenario Building: Creating Your Library's Future
Plenary Sessions
Moving the Network Revolution in Knowledge Management Beyond Random Acts of Progress
Information Ecologies
Shift Happens: Ten Key Trends in Our Profession and Ten Strategies for Success
Issues Sessions
Academic Librarianship and the Redefining Scholarship Project
Elements of Style for Next Generation Serials Electronic Data Interchange
Initial Articles (Peak Project)
PEAK Project Overview
Project PEAK: Vanderbilt's Experience with Articles on Demand
E-Business for E-Journals: Article Pay-Per-View
UNIFIED SEARCHING OF LOCALLY MOUNTED AND DISTRIBUTED WEB JOURNALS
The American Physical Society and the TORPEDO Ultra Project
The U. S. Naval Research Laboratory and the TORPEDO Ultra Project
The Evolution of Distance Learning Environments: Shift Happens
The Evolution of Distance Learning Environments: Shift Happens
Looking Back
Looking Back
One Hundred Percent Communication
One Hundred Percent Communication
. . . And I'll Have That Order with a License on the Side, Please
Vendors and Licenses: Adding Value for Customers
Licensing: A Publisher's Perspective
Subscription Agent and Publisher Initiatives
Breaking the Database Barrier
Searching and Access to Full Content on the Web, or, We've Got Documents and Publications, Now What?
Developing a Web Collection: Selection and Evaluation
Developing a Web Collection: Selection and Evaluation
Academic Issues in E-Journal Selection and Evaluation
Reducing Journal Costs Through Advertising: Exploring the Possibilities
Additive Change: Unobtrusive Advertising for Academic Journals
Exploring the Possibilities in the Print and Electronic Worlds
Redefining the Serial: Issues for the New Millennium
The Journal as a Provider of Community Services
Workshops
Impact of Bundled Databases on Serials Acquisitions in Academic Libraries
The Pricing Implications of Site and Consortia Licensing into the Next Millennium
Managing Multiple Media and Extraordinary Expectations
Push Technology: Applications for Scholarly Communications and Information Management
Printed Back Volumes and Issues: A Thing of the Past?
The Elsevier-WebLUIS Connection: A Florida Venture and Adventure
AACR2 and You: Revising AACR2 to Accommodate Seriality
Dear Abby/Dear Abbott
Hybrid Methods of Desktop Journal Article Delivery
Deacidification of Journals: Saving the Past and Present for the Future--You Mean Publisher's Aren't Using Alkaline Paper?
Organizing Web-Based Resources
Provocative Public Services: Ways That Serials Public Service is Changing in the Electronic Era
Toward Better Access to Full-Text Aggregator Collections
If It's Legal, It's Probably a Serial
Looking a Gift Horse in the Mouth: Collection Management Following a Statewide Purchase of Electronic Resources
Supporting E-Journal Integration Through Standards: The OCLC Reference Services Experience and Experiences from the Field
Forging the Future for Archival Concerns and Resource Sharing
The Convergence of User Needs, Collection Building, and the Electronic Publishing Market Place
Putting it All Together: The Involvement of Technical Services, Public Services, and System to Create a Web-Based Resource Collection
From Catalog Card to MARC: USMARC Bibliographic Self Defense
Realistic Licensing or Licensing Realities: Practical Advice on Licensing Agreements
Taming the Octopus: Getting a Grip on Electronic Resources
14th Annual NASIG Conference Registrants
Index
Reference Notes Included
by "Nielsen BookData"