1000 resultados para Internet Archive
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Later ed. has title: The science of facial expression.
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In verse.
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"References" at end of some of the chapters.
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Reprinted, in part, from various periodicals.
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Includes bibliographical references.
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London edition, 1856, published in 2 vols.
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The plates and portraits are printed on both sides.
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This poster presentation from the May 2015 Florida Library Association Conference, along with the Everglades Explorer discovery portal at http://ee.fiu.edu, demonstrates how traditional bibliographic and curatorial principles can be applied to: 1) selection, cross-walking and aggregation of metadata linking end-users to wide-spread digital resources from multiple silos; 2) harvesting of select PDFs, HTML and media for web archiving and access; 3) selection of CMS domains, sub-domains and folders for targeted searching using an API. Choosing content for this discovery portal is comparable to past scholarly practice of creating and publishing subject bibliographies, except metadata and data are housed in relational databases. This new and yet traditional capacity coincides with: Growth of bibliographic utilities (MarcEdit); Evolution of open-source discovery systems (eXtensible Catalog); Development of target-capable web crawling and archiving systems (Archive-it); and specialized search APIs (Google). At the same time, historical and technical changes – specifically the increasing fluidity and re-purposing of syndicated metadata – make this possible. It equally stems from the expansion of freely accessible digitized legacy and born-digital resources. Innovation principles helped frame the process by which the thematic Everglades discovery portal was created at Florida International University. The path -- to providing for more effective searching and co-location of digital scientific, educational and historical material related to the Everglades -- is contextualized through five concepts found within Dyer and Christensen’s “The Innovator’s DNA: Mastering the five skills of disruptive innovators (2011). The project also aligns with Ranganathan’s Laws of Library Science, especially the 4th Law -- to "save the time of the user.”
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In November 2015-March 2016, I assigned my Graduate Assistant, David Durden, a project to compile usage statistics and trends for digitized collections between 2013-2015 from UMD Digital Collections and our contributions to the Internet Archive between 2008-2015. The original intent of the project was to provide usage metrics to assist the Digitization Initiatives Committee in prioritizing projects or content areas. The project also uncovered trends that should impact how we think about making digital collections discoverable and accessible. For example, if 50-60% of traffic into UMD Digital Collections comes from outside the University or College Park, MD, how will this impact the potential usage of content when access is restricted to campus due to licensing, copyright, or ownership restrictions? With a growing population using mobile browsers, how will a flash-based viewer restrict users’ access to content? How might we develop content or its discoverability for a growing social media user base? In this talk, I will briefly discuss the usage trends for the represented collections, how we may use these in prioritizing future projects, and issues I will discuss with collection managers as we develop project plans and the Manager of Digital Programs and Initiatives as we develop the digital collections repository.
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Nous sommes fascinés par le train et le cinéma, fascination provoquée parce que tous les deux donnent l’impression du mouvement réel, un mouvement technique qu’on est capable de gérer : lorsqu’on regarde un film, on peut toujours faire un arrêt sur image. L’approche philosophique nous permet aussi de relier Internet dans ce mouvement qui va du train au cinéma. Le Web est un flux de données, ses contenus ne sont jamais stables à l’opposé des contenus des autres médias. Et ce qui nous passionne dans le numérique et fait la force d’Internet, c’est qu’il nous donne l’illusion du réel et que nous pouvons facilement le gérer. Cela pose le problème de la mission de créer des archives du Web, qui peut sembler irréaliste tant le matériel concerné est vaste et non structuré : ne serait-ce pas trahir ce mouvement perpétuel ? Ou alors, on peut considérer que le Web est une trahison du continu du réel et les archives la structure la plus appropriée pour appréhender ce nouveau média…
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In recent years, education authorities worldwide, including the German Federal Government, have invested heavily in the development of e-learning and multimedia materials for institutions of higher learning. While for some subject matters the benefits of e-learning seem obvious, there are subjects, often consisting of a number of tenuously connected topics or requiring a balance of learning and training, for which it is a valid question whether appropriate learning materials can be presented via the Internet. Software Engineering belongs to this second group, both for its broad collection of topics and, particularly, for the required emphasis on teamwork and communication training.