| |
ResourceShelf |
|
Resources and News for Information Professionals
ResourceShelf is Compiled & Edited By Gary Price, MLIS Librarian Director of Online Information Resources, Ask.com Editor and Compiler, The ResourceShelf Editor and Compiler, DocuTicker
Looking For More Info? News? Search Help? News Tips?
New Site Suggestions?
Archives 06/01/1990 - 06/30/1990 03/01/2001 - 03/31/2001 04/01/2001 - 04/30/2001 05/01/2001 - 05/31/2001 06/01/2001 - 06/30/2001 07/01/2001 - 07/31/2001 08/01/2001 - 08/31/2001 09/01/2001 - 09/30/2001 10/01/2001 - 10/31/2001 11/01/2001 - 11/30/2001 12/01/2001 - 12/31/2001 01/01/2002 - 01/31/2002 02/01/2002 - 02/28/2002 03/01/2002 - 03/31/2002 04/01/2002 - 04/30/2002 05/01/2002 - 05/31/2002 06/01/2002 - 06/30/2002 07/01/2002 - 07/31/2002 08/01/2002 - 08/31/2002 09/01/2002 - 09/30/2002 10/01/2002 - 10/31/2002 11/01/2002 - 11/30/2002 12/01/2002 - 12/31/2002 01/01/2003 - 01/31/2003 02/01/2003 - 02/28/2003 03/01/2003 - 03/31/2003 04/01/2003 - 04/30/2003 05/01/2003 - 05/31/2003 06/01/2003 - 06/30/2003 07/01/2003 - 07/31/2003 08/01/2003 - 08/31/2003 09/01/2003 - 09/30/2003 10/01/2003 - 10/31/2003 11/01/2003 - 11/30/2003 12/01/2003 - 12/31/2003 01/01/2004 - 01/31/2004 02/01/2004 - 02/29/2004 03/01/2004 - 03/31/2004 04/01/2004 - 04/30/2004 05/01/2004 - 05/31/2004 06/01/2004 - 06/30/2004 07/01/2004 - 07/31/2004 08/01/2004 - 08/31/2004 09/01/2004 - 09/30/2004 10/01/2004 - 10/31/2004 11/01/2004 - 11/30/2004 12/01/2004 - 12/31/2004 01/01/2005 - 01/31/2005 02/01/2005 - 02/28/2005 03/01/2005 - 03/31/2005 04/01/2005 - 04/30/2005 05/01/2005 - 05/31/2005 06/01/2005 - 06/30/2005 07/01/2005 - 07/31/2005 08/01/2005 - 08/31/2005 09/01/2005 - 09/30/2005 10/01/2005 - 10/31/2005 11/01/2005 - 11/30/2005 12/01/2005 - 12/31/2005 01/01/2006 - 01/31/2006 02/01/2006 - 02/28/2006 03/01/2006 - 03/31/2006 04/01/2006 - 04/30/2006 05/01/2006 - 05/31/2006 06/01/2006 - 06/30/2006 Now Available Additional Web Reference Compilations direct search (Invisible Web Resources) Audio/Video Current Awareness Tools WWW Accessible Congressional Research Service Reports
|
Saturday, April 30, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Libraries--Budget Issues Source: Dallas Morning News Libraries smarting from cutbacks " In the last 18 months, the nation's public libraries have seen their budgets cut by $111.2 million -- as much as 50 percent in some states -- the result of struggling economies and reductions in state financing, according to American Library Association figures. The cuts have forced layoffs, reduced operating hours and put many libraries at risk of closing."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Factbooks Source: CIA 2005 CIA World Factbook Released Online From the news release, "Although this reference site provides information as of 1 January 2005, it will be updated biweekly throughout the year to provide wide-ranging and hard-to-locate information about the background, geography, people, government, economy, communications, transportation, military, and transnational issues for countries from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe...The World Factbook 2005 contains six appendices with reference information ranging from abbreviations and descriptions of international organizations and groups to cross-referenced lists of country data codes. The 2005 edition includes 15 reference maps, which are available in both JPEG and PDF formats. Many country maps and flags have been updated to reflect changes and refinements over the past year. Six new entries have been added to The World Factbook 2005. In the people category, a major infectious diseases field has been added for countries deemed to pose a higher degree of risk for travelers. In the economy category, entries have been included for current account balance, investment (gross fixed), public debt, and reserves of foreign exchange and gold. The transnational issues category has a new refugees and internally displaced persons entry. Revision of some individual country maps, first introduced in the 2001 edition, is continued in this edition." You can also download various parts of The World Factbook. Zip files here. Friday, April 29, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Conferences--Canada Metadata Source: Library and Archives Canada Library and Archives Canada Announces Canadian Metadata Forum 2005 The theme of this year's Forum (September 27 and 28, 2005 in Ottawa) is: Metadata: A Reality Check. -- Archives--United Kingdom Digitization Projects--United Kingdom--Audio Source: JISC Interview with Crispin Jewitt, Head of Sound Archive at the British Library -- Libraries--PATRIOT Act Source: Reuters Congress Pressed to Renew Library-Search Powers See Also: Comments from ALA President -- Digital Archives Source: Center for Research Libraries Center for Research Libraries Awarded Mellon Founcation Grant for Certification of Digital Archives "The Center has been awarded a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to develop the processes and activities required to audit and certify digital archives." -- OAIster Federated Searching Open Archives Initiative Metadata Source: Research Information Looking for pearls: An Interview with Kat Hagerdorn from OAIster "It can be hard to find all the relevant material online when there is so much available. The OAIster project of the University of Michigan in the USA provides a solution by harvesting the information that is hidden in over 400 institutions around the world. Katerina Hagerdorn, metadata harvesting librarian for the project, describes what this means." -- Library Organizations Source: American Library Association Recently Released, 2003-2004 ALA Annual Report
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Terrorism--Chronology Source: National Counterterrorism Center (via Federation of American Scientists) A Chronology of Significant International Terrorism for 2004 (PDF; 2.8 MB) "The accompanying chronology should not be viewed as a complete accounting of global terrorist activity. The categorization and selection criteria specified to NCTC for filtering incidences were drawn from statutory language, traditional 'Patterns of Global Terrorism' definitions, and past practices. The methodology used to generate this list of incidents, however, does not accurately capture the totality of terrorist incidents worldwide and could lead to anomalous and potentially inaccurate results. NCTC will therefore adjust and improve this methodology and follow this release with the distribution, in June 2005, of a more comprehensive dataset, with regular updates, to better inform the public." See also: Just Released -- Country Reports on Terrorism 2004 (via DocuTicker) -- Advertising--Statistics Source: IAB/PricewaterhouseCoopers IAB Internet Advertising Revenue Report Just released. 2004 revenue numbers. Summary ||| Direct to Full Text -- IT Contractors--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: INPUT 2005 INPUT Federal IT 150 "...a ranked listing of the top 150 federal IT contractors by fiscal year 2004 (FY04) information technology spending as defined by INPUT." -- Wiretaps--United States--Statistics Source: Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Just Released, 2004 Wiretap Report "A total of 1,710 applications for wiretaps of wire, oral or electronic communications were authorized by federal and state judges in 2004, an increase of 19 percent over 2003." Summary (PDF) ||| Direct to Full Text and Tables Thursday, April 28, 2005
Resource of the Week by Shirl Kennedy, Deputy Editor We know you like content-rich sites because we like content-rich sites. And for the American history researcher, we have something very cool this week. U.S. History Source: Houghton Mifflin Reader's Companion to American History What's here? The full text of several American history books. Containing full-text, signed articles. Available titles are: + Reader's Companion to American History + Reader's Companion to U.S. Women's History + Reader's Companion to Military History + Encyclopedia of North American Indians + Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia + Civil War Battlefield Guide + Great American History Fact-Finder The bad news is...the site is not searchable (although you could formulate a Yahoo or Google query to do it for you by using the site:college.hmco.com advanced search feature). The good news is...the site is eminently browseable. Click on each book title to display a page containing a alphabetical list of entries. Browse till you find what you're looking for (or use your browser's "find" feature) and click to read. There are some hidden gems here; for instance, in the Civil War Battlefield Guide, when you click on the name of a battle to read about it, you'll see estimated Union and Confederate casualties for that battle at the bottom of the entry, as in this piece about the Appomattox Campaign. Ships of the World contains a section on Literary Ships -- e.g., an alphabetical list of ships found in literature. The Encyclopedia of North American Indians offers a small collection of maps (although I had trouble getting some of the images to load). The Great American History Fact-Finder includes a bibliography of Suggested Additional Reading. This website contains a variety of other materials, some of which are password-protected, for instructors and students who are registered to use them. But it's worth clicking around to see what else you can find, such as: + Full-text Primary Sources in Western Civilization, from the Epic Of Gilgamesh to Simone De Beauvoir's The Second Sex: Existential Feminism. + Full-text Primary Sources in American History, from Cotton Mather's The Wonders of the Invisible World to Consumerism, which presents "census figures on annual earnings by industry and occupation from 1890 to 1926." + Recommended web links for American History, Western Civilization (annotated), and World Civilizations (annotated). Publication data for the Reader's Companion to American History shows a copyright date of 1991, so this is obviously not the place to look for recent events, etc., in U.S. history.
Professional Reading Shelf Electronic Records Source: ICA Just Released, Electronic Records: A Workbook for Archivists (ICA Study 16) now available! "This eagerly awaited manual on records in electronic systems, including networked environments, is available free of charge for download from ICA's Web site (Download Center)." -- Controlled Vocabularies Source: NISO Just Released, NISO Z39.19-200x Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual Controlled Vocabularies "The just-released revision of NISO's classic Thesaurus Standard is an essential and useful reference for anyone engaged in building and maintenance taxonomies and thesauri. You are invited to preview the draft of Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual Controlled Vocabularies NISO Z39.19-200x." -- Classification Source: NLM NLM Classification 2005 Edition Now Available "The NLM Classification, available online at http://wwwcf.nlm.nih.gov/class/, has a new look for 2005. The new design includes a customized banner for the NLM Classification and conforms more closely to the overall style of the National Library of Medicine site.
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents London--Web Portals e-Government--United Kingdom Source: Kablenet New, London e-portal emerges "London's e-government agency has set up an "operational" version of its e-services portal ahead of a planned public launch of the system. The long awaited Your London portal is not being publicised, but is available as a "soft launch" version in order to carry out final testing. Presented as the "official online guide" to public and community services across the capital, the system has a range of sections." -- Judges--United States--Federal Courts Souce: US Courts Newly Posted: History of Federal Judgeships "A history of federal judgeships page, which includes the number of appointments made by each president dating back to Franklin D. Roosevelt, is now available." -- U.S. History--Databases Genealogy--Databases Source: NARA New File Added to Access to Archival Databases (AAD) System: List of Ships that Arrived at the Port of New York During the Irish Famine, 1846-1851 "These records contain ship names, ports of embarkation, arrival dates, and the number of passengers on the ship. This file is a companion to the Famine Irish Passenger Record Data File."
Briefly + Get News About Dialog Via New RSS Feed Here's the link to add to your aggregator. + Berkshire Encyclopedia of Human-Computer Interaction Now Available from Xrefer Wednesday, April 27, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Librarianship Source: MLA The April 2005 Issue (Vol.93 No.2) of the Journal of the Medical Library Association is Now Online Articles Include: + Information-seeking behaviors of practitioners in a primary care practice-based research network + Information-seeking behavior of nursing students and clinical nurses: implications for health sciences librarian + Personal digital assistant-based drug information sources: potential to improve medication safety + Book Review: Collaborative Collection Development: A Practical Guide for Your Library -- JSTOR Source: JSTORNEWS A New Search Engine for JSTOR JSTOR is now using Lucene open-source search technology. -- Censorship Source: CBS News Alabama Bill Targets Gay Authors Three words describe what's discussed in this story, Awful, pathetic, and sad. From the article, "Republican Alabama lawmaker Gerald Allen says homosexuality is an unacceptable lifestyle. As CBS News Correspondent Mark Strassmann reports, under his bill, public school libraries could no longer buy new copies of plays or books by gay authors, or about gay characters." -- National Libraries--Europe Digitization Projects Source: Turkish Press European libraries join forces against Google global virtual library "The 19 [Eurepean national] libraries are backing instead a multi-million euro counter-offensive by European nations to put European literature online...The statement was signed by national libraires in Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Spain and Sweden." The more digitization (if done properly) the better. However, instead of disparate projects it would be better if Google, national libraries, and others could work together to avoid duplication, resources, and time. Oh well.
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents OECD Source: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OECD launches sites for each of its member countries on www.oecd.org "From one country site, you can widen your research and compare the results of a specific country with other OECD economies, thus, fully benefiting from the OECD's comparative approach. To satisfy increasing demands, the Country Web sites also feature a statistical profile for each OECD country. Some 100 key statistical indicators are provided and users can compare the figures with those of the other member countries." -- Management--Lectures Source: MIT Sloan School of Management Just Released, Video Lecture, A Conversation with Jack Welch The lecture tool place on Apri l2, 2005. From the blurb, "Jack Welch's appearance before an audience of Sloan students provides the context for a lively and candid discussion about management, compensation, mistakes, and work-life balance. -- eGovernment--United Kingdom--News Source: eGov Monitor eGov monitor Now Available at No Charge This daily update of UK e-government news and info was formerly available via a fee-based subscription. In the past few weeks the subscription fee has been removed. RSS feeds are also available. -- Internet Access--UK--Fast Facts Source: National Statistics Office Internet Access From Home in the UK Graph available. "In the fourth quarter of 2004, 52 per cent of households in the UK (12.6 million) could access the Internet from home, compared with just 9 per cent (2.2 million) in the same quarter of 1998."
Scholarly Publishing--Citation Reports Source: ISI + Science in France, 2000-2004 + Performing Arts: Most Prolific U.S. Universities, 1999-2003 + Microbiology: High-Impact U.S. Universities, 1999-2003
Search Briefs Yahoo Adds New Services to My Yahoo Web Search Chris Sherman has the details in SearchDay. We're very happy to see that Yahoo is now allowing users the option to cache a full text copies of web pages and then allow you to search your personal cache. Another service named Filangy offers something similar. Google launched their personal search history tool last week. Ask Jeeves (MyJeeves) and a9 began providing search history tools last summer.
Briefly Reed Elsevier Reports Q1 2005 Earnings Note: RE also released their 4th Corporate Responsibility Report today. Tuesday, April 26, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Public Libraries--Patriot Act Source: National Review Online (NRO) Murdock: We need to keep an eye on libraries "These dangerously naive or clandestinely seditious librarians are beyond foolish. They potentially jeopardize the lives of American citizens." Opinion column by NRO contributing editor Deroy Murdock. -- Public Libraries--Budget Cuts Two Items + Source: Indianapolis Star 'New and improved' library throws the book at tradition "'Citizens don't know the library service is changing behind the scenes. It is going to affect what is offered. Here we have an award-winning library, and nobody is really making a case to maintain this level of service.'" -- + Source: Berkeley Daily Planet Library Staff Proposes Service Principles "The staff at the Berkeley Public Library recognizes that the library faces budgetary constraints and must make difficult decisions on staffing and services. Unfortunately, library management has made unilateral decisions on what services are important and what should be cutback without consulting either library staff or the users of library services. These arbitrary decisions have eroded staff morale and aggravated relations with the library user community. As long-time library staff, we want to propose a set of principles that could guide decisions about maintenance of library services and the staffing to ensure them...." -- Electronic Journals Scholarly Publishing Source: Learned Publishing HighWire Press: ten years of publisher-driven innovation A new article (12 pages; PDF) by John Sack. Available free via HighWire site. "An account is given of the beginnings and development of HighWire Press at Stanford University and the philosophy that sustains it." -- Preservation Source: RLG DigiNews Automating Preservation: New Developments in the PRONOM A new article by Adrian Brown from The National Archives, UK. "Electronic records pose many challenges for archivists, but these arise from a single underlying issue: access to a digital object is entirely dependent on technology. A file in a given format requires software to decode and display it; that software in turn requires a specific combination of hardware, operating systems, and other software to run." -- U.S. Federal Courts--Databases Source: Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts Growing Number of Courts on New Management System "Implementation of the federal judiciary's Case Management and Electronic Case Files (CM/ECF) system continues in appellate, district and bankruptcy courts across the country." Charts included.
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Business--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: The Washington Post Just Released, The Post 200, 2005 Top 200 companies in the Washington DC region. Several lists, including one offering a breakout by industry. Searchable. Alphabetical list of companies also online. -- Working Women--United States Source: Employment Policy Foundation New, Handbook on 21st Century Working Women Full text online. "PF's Handbook on 21st Century Working Women continues a series of decennial data books on the circumstances of women produced under the auspices of U.S. Department of Labor's Women's Bureau. Since its inception 84 years ago, the Women?s Bureau has recognized that a solid foundation of data about women?s labor force experience and working conditions is essential to inform public policy analysis and workplace decisions. The complete Handbook is available for download in PDF format or for purchase in the EPF Bookstore. Individual chapters are also available for download as PDFs." Thanks to S.B. for the news tip. -- Business--Canada--List & Rankings Source: Canada Business Canada's global leaders "40 Canadians who've become international business power players." -- Consumer Credit--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: MapInfo.com The Top Ten Credit Spending Metro Areas, U.S.
Search Briefs Public Records: Pretrieve Adds New Features Note: Pretrieve is a new database that offers a federated/meta search of many web-accessible and free public record databases that often contain info residing on the Invisible or Deep Web. We're planning for a full review of Pretrieve soon. Today, Pretrieve added access to court records from various jurisdictions. Details about their Firefox plugin and search syntax here. Again, expect a full review soon. Also, Genie Tyburski shares some important comments here. + Mobile Access to Info: See The Traffic Monday, April 25, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Dr. S.R. Ranganathan Source: News Today (India) Father of Library Science "It is a matter for concern and sorrow that most people in India, even the so-called highly educated people, do not know the Father of Library Science -- Dr S R Ranganathan (1892-1972). He was born on 9 August 1892 at Sirkazhi in Thanjavur district of the then Madras Presidency. He was educated at Sabhanaicka Mudaliar's Hindu High School, Sirgazhi, between 1897 and 1908. He graduated from Madras Christian College with a degree in Mathematics in 1916. He took a teaching diploma at the Teachers' College, Saidapet, Madras in 1917." Profile of Dr. Ranganathan. -- Libraries--Management Source: Emerald This Week ONLY: Free Full Text Access to Three Recent Issues of Library Management Articles include: + Outreach programs beyond the immediate university community (Vol.26 No.3) + Telephone survey research for library managers (Vol.26 No.3) + Depositories and repositories: changing models of library storage in the USA (Vol.26 No.1/2) + The economics of repository libraries in the context of the future conventional libraries (Vol.26 No.1/2) + Preserving African digital resources: is there a role for repository libraries? (Vol.26 No.1/2) + Distributed collections and central repository in France: Competition or complementarity? (Vol.26 No.1/2) + Making a statement: reviewing the case for written collection development policies (Vol.25 No.8/9) + Proposals, grants, projects and careers: a strategic view for libraries (Vol.25 No.8/9) -- Council of Europe--Resources Source: GlobalLex History, role and activities of the Council of Europe: Facts, figures and information sources A new article by Sophie Lobey. Ms. Lobey holds a Master of International Trade and Finance (Paris, 1992) from "Institut Supérieur de Gestion" (Advanced Institute of Management). She has worked for eleven years as Sales and Marketing Manager for Council of Europe Publishing, and has been responsible for the commercial website of the Council of Europe since 1997." -- Archives Source: ICA/UNESCO UNESCO Calls for Nominations for "Memory of the World" International Register 2005/2006 "UNESCO is inviting new nomination proposals for inscription on its "Memory of the World" International Register, a list of library collections and archive holdings of world significance, which was established in 1992 to preserve and promote documentary heritage of universal value." -- Libraries and Librarians Source: Information Community News/NFAIS One Person's Commentary Jill O'Neill writes, "This is a truly challenging time for all of us in the information community. We have to serve users, some of whom may be slow in figuring out when and where fee-paid services may be preferable to free services." -- Libraries Source: LJ Meet the Gamers "In the past, librarians have often been perceived as gatekeepers, arbiters of access to information. The digital cultures now emerging (with the help of technologies such as games) suggest that the days for such an institutional role are numbered. Librarians must find creative ways to support people in forming sites of collective intelligence, searching information, working within social networks, and producing knowledge. If not, they run the risk of rendering themselves, for much of the public at least, largely obsolete."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents General Accountability Office--United States Source: GAO Full Text Searching Now Available: GAO Enhances Site Search Options "GAO has introduced a new feature to enhance full text searching and your ability to select the best results to meet your needs. In the past, search results have included titles and your search terms with the text surrounding them, the URL, and other minor information about each item. Now your results will typically include an Overview and Topic as well." -- Terrorism--Research--Databases Source: Federal Research Division, LC Inventory And Assessment Of Databases Relevant For Social Science Research On Terrorism 24 pages; PDF. -- Sensitive But Unclassified Information--United States--Legal Issues Source: Federal Research Division, LC (via DocuTicker) Laws And Regulations Governing The Protection Of Sensitive But Unclassified Information 32 pages; PDF.
Search Briefs + Presentations from the 2005 Search Engine Meeting PLENTY of interesting reading including a presentation by Dr. Carol Tenopir. + A New Search Engine for European Travel Sunday, April 24, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Librarians Source: Ancestry.com Ancestry.com -- In Praise of Library Personnel "My primary business is operating a seminar company whose mission is to provide continuing education to library consortia, professional librarians, and library staff. My work has brought me in contact with many thousands of librarians and...this week, I want to let you in on what the people you see and the people in the background in our public libraries do for us." By George Morgan, president of the International Society of Family History Writers and Editors.
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Business--Lists & Rankings Source: EIU US, Switzerland and Slovakia the biggest gainers in Economist Intelligence Unit's sixth annual e-readiness rankings "Since 2000, the Economist Intelligence Unit has published an annual e-readiness ranking of the world's largest economies. A country's "e-readiness" is a measure of its e-business environment, a collection of factors that indicate how amenable a market is to Internet-based opportunities." The full text of the report is availale here. -- Executive Compensation--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: Forbes CEO Compensation Rankings Sort by Rank, Name, Company, Age, and Total Compensation. -- Mexican Americans--Fast Facts Source: U.S. Census Fast Facts About Mexican Americans A new compilation of facts to celebrate Cinco de Mayo. -- Books--Online Exhibits Source: University of North Texas Libraries Pop-Up and Movable Books: A Tour Through Their History Saturday, April 23, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Military Librarians Source: ARNews Army librarians hone 'virtual library' skills "Army Knowledge Online personnel attended the Army Library Institute and trained attendees on integrating AKO?s functionality into the Army Library Program. A hands-on approach in a computer lab setting featured discussions on AKO capabilities, the new AKO syndicated news channel, creation of 'virtual teams' for librarians, use of various collaboration tools and techniques, and upcoming changes to AKO." -- Copyright--United States Source: ARL Teleconference, Orphan Works: Issues and Legislative Strategies "What do you do if you can't find the copyright holder of a work (say a photograph, article, or film clip) that you want to use in a book or a Web site? The Association of Research Libraries (ARL), the Medical Library Association (MLA) and the American Association of Law Libraries(AALL) are sponsoring an interactive teleconference on Orphan Works, Monday, May 2, 3:00-4:30 p.m. EDT."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Population--Lists & Rankings Source: United Nations Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants A global list. -- Food and Drug Regulation--United States Source: U.S. Food and Drug Administration USDA Enforcement Report Index "The FDA Enforcement Report is published weekly by the Food and Drug Administration. It contains information on actions taken in connection with agency regulatory activities. Inquiries about individual actions should be directed to the companies involved." Includes reports back to February 1990. Searchable. Friday, April 22, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Online Information Source: OCLC OCLC Researchers Hits the Road Links to several PowerPoint presentations from members of OCLC Research. + Mining for Digital Resources: Identifying and Characterizing Digital Materials in WorldCat + A Systemwide View of Library Collections + Information Management in a Knowledge Society + Metadata: Practice and practice -- Legal Research Source: GlobalLex A Guide to the U. S. Federal Legal System Web-based Public Accessible Sources A new guide by Gretchen Feltes, a Faculty Services/Reference Librarian at New York University School of Law Library. -- E-Books Source: Brown and White (Lehigh University) E-books may soon hit market, CEO says A Lehigh alumnus described the future of the publishing age, which he believes will include electronic books, Thursday at Linderman Library." -- Scholarly Publishing Source: APS News Publication and the Internet: Where Next? (PDF; 240 KB) "There are, I believe, two important components to a new publishing model. The first is to rely as much as possible on the authors of scientific papers to take over functions now carried out by scientific journals. Good software tools can facilitate this. The second is to recognize tasks that -- irreducibly -- require professional editors and staff, and to assign the real costs and collect revenues for these tasks. In the following, I will quote costs for these services as a fraction of the present cost for the Physical Review to process a paper (?PR cost?)."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) Source: Stanford University Libraries/World Trade Organization GATT Digital Library "Welcome to the website of the GATT Digital Library. This site provides access to documents and information of and about the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), an organization that promoted international commerce and the reduction of trade barriers among member states from 1947-1994.... Browse, search and view over 30,000 documents and publications of the GATT." -- Thomas Register--Databases ThomasNet.com Adds "Brand" Searching "ThomasNet.com (www.thomasnet.com) added a brand name search feature in response to customer feedback and market demand. Manufacturers can now promote specific brands and support their distributor network while buyers can search by brand, further enhancing the quality of their results." -- Vehicle Accidents--United States--Statistics Source: National Highway Transportation Safety Administration 2004 Projections: Motor Vehicle Traffic Crash Fatalities and Injuries (PDF; 869 KB) From press release: "While the fatality rate dropped and alcohol-related crashes are down from 2003, 42,800 died on the nation?s highways in 2004, up slightly from 42,643 in 2003, according to projected 2004 data compiled by the Department of Transportation's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in a preliminary report." (via DocuTicker) Thursday, April 21, 2005
Resource of the Week by Shirl Kennedy, Deputy Editor Financial literacy is an important subset of information literacy. Our Resource of the Week is a content-rich site from the Federal Reserve Board. If you're a teacher, you'll really appreciate this site. Much of what's here is aimed directly at you. Financial Education Source: Federal Reserve Board Federal Reserve Education The Federal Reserve System has just redesigned its financial education website, consolidating the contents of four different sites, with resources for teachers, high school and college students, and the general public. The four main sections of the site are: + Federal Reserve Education, which offers "links to instructional materials and tools that can increase your understanding of the Federal Reserve, economics and financial education." Some features of note include: Peanuts and Crackerjacks, an "educational unit on the economics of pro sports;" Fed Card Currency Trivia, which gives you an opportunity to "test your currency knowledge;" Ask Dr. Econ, who can enlighten you "on topical and challenging economic quandaries." There's also a collection of links to other economic education websites. + Teachers Resources offers a search engine that helps teachers locate "Federal Reserve System education materials that meet national education standards for incorporation in their lesson plans." There are title and keyword search boxes, and dropdown menus that let you restrict your search to level of material (elementary, middle or high school), type of material (comic books, games, videos, pamphlets, websites, teaching guides and more), and/or relevant National Council on Economic Education standard. + Personal Financial Education includes tutorials, brochures and other information covering consumer banking, consumer protection, homes and mortgages, interest rates, loans, and credit. Very cool: Video (MPEG format) showing The Life of a Dollar Bill "as it moves from printer to shredder." + Fed 101, "an interactive site that provides an overview of the history and organization of the Federal Reserve System, monetary policy and federal regulations, and services provided to depository institutions." Also here: + An extensive glossary of economics and money terminology + A searchable FedFAQ + Links to all the Federal Reserve Bank websites + Biographies of all Federal Reserve Bank presidents The entire site is searchable; there's a keyword search box in the upper righthand corner of the home page and several other pages.
Professional Reading Shelf Libraries--Marketing Source: Chris Olson The April 2005 issue of Chris Olson's Marketing Treasures newsletter is available online. -- Health Information Source: NLM New Compilation, Resources for International Librarians, Health Professionals and Researchers -- National Libraries--Philippines Source: INQ7.net Age-old books in National Library go online "The National Library of the Philippines (NLP), one of the country's oldest government institutions, has finally gone high-tech with the launch of its online version aptly called the Philippine eLib (www.elib.gov.ph). The site features a collection of more than 800,000 bibliographical records from the National Library's archives. There are 29,000 full-text journals [via various vendors] and 150,000 theses and dissertations, many of which are being preserved and cannot be borrowed." -- Medieval Studies--Web Resources Source: C&RL News New, Medieval studies: Gateways, subject guides, and more A new compilation of web resources compiled by John Jaeger, a librarian at Dallas Baptist University and Paul Victor Jr., a librarian at the University of Florida.
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Genetics--Atlas Source: National Geographic Atlas of the Human Journey Part of the NGS Genographic Project. -- Film--Canada Source: Library and Archives Canada New Web Resource: Canadian Women in Film -- U.S. Government--Alert Services Source: CBO New E-Mail Alert Service from the Congressional Budget Office "CBO now offers instant notification of releases (or a next-day summary)." -- Music--Digital Collections Source: Library of Congress The Roger Reynolds Collection at the Library of Congress "This new presentation provides a record--to be updated periodically--of representative materials that composer Roger Reynolds has donated to the Library of Congress. The presence of the Roger Reynolds Collection in the Library's Music Division provides a rare opportunity for future composers and music scholars to study the work of an important composer who has kept extensive, detailed notes and sketches that trace the development of his compositional methods. The 'I Hear America Singing' presentation includes an interview with Reynolds with interactive footnotes, as well as sound and score examples that illustrate Reynolds' work and allow the user to interact with the materials in the collection. Other features of the site include the complete score of Reynolds' "Transfigured Wind III" for solo flute, chamber ensemble and quadraphonic computer processed sound. This is accompanied by a sound recording of a performance of that work and an in-depth interview with the composer, featuring his own technical analysis of the work and its creation."
Search Briefs (via SEW Blog) + Multimap: Wireless Web Access to Maps for More than 50 Countries + Your Web Search History: New Services from Google and Filangy Wednesday, April 20, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Web Directories Source: LII The Librarians' Index to the Internet User Survey One of the great librarian-built resources is asking for your assistance. Karen and the LII team would appreciate if you would complete a short survey (only 15 questions). Thanks! -- Librarians Special Libraries Source: CareerJournal/Wall St. Journal Corporate librarians are abandoning the stacks More postive press about the profession and the skills info pros possess and can offer organizations! Congrats to ResourceShelf contributing editor Steven Cohen on the mention. More congrats to Gary's former boss (during library school) and former president of SLA, Judy Field, on being quoted in the article. -- Electronic Journals--HighWire Press Source: HP Check out a Preview Version of the New HighWire Press Web Site -- Information Science Source: ASIS&T The April/May 2005 Issue of the Bulletin of the American Society for Information Science and Technology is Now Online Articles and Columns Include: + The Historical Development of Information Infrastructures and the Dissemination of Knowledge: A Personal Reflection + Bella and Yakov and Tillie's Panties: What I learned in "Construction and Maintenance of Indexing Languages and Thesauri" Great read! -- MEDLINE Source: NLM Just Published, 2005 List of Journals Indexed for MEDLINE -- Website Accessibility Source: The Museums, Libraries and Archives Council New Report, Accessibility of museum, library and archive websites: the MLA audit -- Conferences--Australia Source: NLA Conference celebrates research using National Library's collections "Join outstanding Australian and international authors, scholars and commentators as they speak about research based on the National Library's collections at the conference An Open Book: Research, Imagination and the Pursuit of Knowledge from Friday 29 April until Sunday 1 May 2005." -- Public Libraries--Censorship Source: American Civil Liberties Union Reader's Block: Internet Censorship in Rhode Island Public Libraries (PDF; 470 KB) From press release: "The American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island today released a report showing that public libraries in the state are impeding patrons' access to information on the Internet through the unnecessarily expansive use of so-called 'blocking software.' Calling the findings 'troubling,' the 18-page report, 'Reader's Block,' urged libraries to reassess the policies and practices they have implemented." (via DocuTicker)
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Emerging Technology Source: Technology Review 10 Emerging Technologies "Of the numerous technologies now in gestation at companies and universities, we have chosen 10 that we think will make particularly big splashes. They range from bacterial factories to silicon photonics to quantum wires--and any one of them could change your world." -- Academia--Salaries Source: American Association of University Professors Inequities Persist for Women and Non-Tenure-Track Faculty: The Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession 2004-05 "Following the pattern of recent years, this annual report first examines the economic situation of full-time faculty at different types of institutions, after which it considers longer-term trends affecting higher education and faculty status. Highlights include a comparison of the salaries of university and college presidents to those of faculty and a discussion of probably the single most significant trend for higher education faculty: the growing predominance of contingent positions. For the first time, this year's report touches on the pay of contingent professors relative to that of tenure-track faculty, an issue on which sufficient data unfortunately do not yet exist. The report concludes with a matter of abiding concern: the question whether women faculty are making progress toward equity with men." (via DocuTicker) Full Report (PDF; 215 KB) -- Nutrition Source: USDA New Web Site, MyPyramid.gov Interactive food guidance system. More info in this news release and this article. -- Business--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: DiversityInc Just Released, The Top 50 Companies for Diversity (reg. req., free trial avail.) Methodology and specialty lists available. -- Earthquakes--History Maps Source: USGS USGS Produces New Map Showing Detailed Ground Shaking in Great San Francisco Old Maps, even Old Cemeteries, Provide New Clues for Modern Intensity Tool "The catastrophic damage resulting from the 1906 earthquake proved to be the springboard for a century of advances in the understanding and science of earthquakes. Now the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) has employed one of its most sophisticated modern tools to visually show in detail for the first time the intensity of shaking in San Francisco and the extraordinarily high intensity of shaking in communities like Santa Rosa from that earthquake. The 1906 damage patterns are displayed graphically as a ShakeMap, posted on the web at http://pubs.usgs.gov/of/2005/1135/ and accompanied by a report analyzing the basis for the recent findings, and lessons for future great California earthquakes that can be inferred from the new data."
Search Briefs + Podscope Beta Now Available, Keyword Search Podcasts + Images from Five More Cities Added To A9's Visual Yellow Pages
Briefly + Used Books: Biblio.com Announces OCLC Linking for Libraries + Springer and Ingenta Make Deal Tuesday, April 19, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Digitization Projects--United States--Newspapers Source: Salt Lake City Tribune Old news is brand new at U. library project "Thanks to new technology, digital pictures are making old newspapers readable from the comfort of your home computer. On Tuesday, the University of Utah's Digital Technology Division began loading onto the Internet digitized copies of 19th century editions of The Salt Lake Tribune." -- Library of Congress Library of Congress Home Page Receives a Makeover Kudos!!! -- On Demand Publishing Source: Information Today Newstex Launches Content On Demand Paula Hane writes, "Newstex (http://www.newstex.com), founded in late 2004 by president Larry Schwartz and CEO Steve Ellis, has announced Content On Demand, which offers full-text newsfeeds to content redistributors and enterprise customers. Content sources include branded newswires, newspapers, magazines, financial and business sources, official government feeds, and Weblogs. The company claims to be unique for its low-cost business model, newly developed technology built on an open source platform that is reliable and fast, flexibility to meet evolving customer requirements, full text plus embedded images in the feeds, and the financial commentary licensed from selected bloggers. Newstex is currently targeting the financial, government, and entertainment markets." -- Public Libraries--Staff Reductions Source: Cincinnati Enquirer Library issues 48 pink slips "The reality of budget cuts at the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County hit home this week in the form of pink slips for 48 employees. The majority of jobs being eliminated are in the main library's government and public documents departments, where all 28 employees got notices that their jobs will disappear June 30, Executive Director Kimber Fender said. About half as many jobs will be re-created in a new, combined department, and the employees can apply for those." -- Archives Source: FCW Center creates archiving model "A New York-based technology research center has developed an approach and methodology designed to help state and territorial archivists and librarians preserve digital information."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Press Freedom Freedom of Expression REDcom -- New Website on Freedom of Expression and the Press "Direct access to more than 100 organizations active in promoting freedom of expression and press freedom, as well as the right of access to information, are now available on REDcom, a new website developed by UNESCO´s Regional Office for Communication and Information for Latin America and the Caribbean, based in Quito." -- Winston Churchill--Audio Source: Churchill Family Churchill Speech Interactive "In 1946 Winston Churchill gave a speech in Fulton, Missouri, where he introduced the term 'Iron Curtain' to the world. Now you can hear that talk from the comfort of your desk. Launch the speech and thrill to Churchill's sonorous voice as small picture and text boxes slide across the screen, synchronized to complement his words. Discover more on Churchill as a young man, read about Germany divided, and meet Truman's entourage. Uncover glimpse after glimpse of Churchill's notes for the speech. All the while you can stop or start the talk, replay parts, skip ahead to intriguing sections, or follow the transcript scrolling along the bottom of the screen." (Blurb via Yahoo Picks of the Week). -- Electronic Music Source: IEEE Virtual Museum New Online Exhibit, "Songs in the Key of E" "The IEEE Virtual Museum has launched its latest exhibit, which explores the numerous ways electronics have been used to create music. With examples such as the singing arc, the theremin and the synthesizer, among others, the exhibit highlights both the inventors of electronic instruments and the instruments themselves, and uses audio clips to demonstrate the various sounds." See Also: Other IEEE Virtual Museum Exhibits -- Healthcare--United States--Fast Facts Source: U.S. Census Fast Facts About Nurses and Hospitals in the United States A new fact sheet (full of numbers and links to full text reports) to celebrate National Nurses Week and National Hospital Week.
Search Briefs + Mobile Search Tools for the Health/Medical Researcher + A New Dynamic Search Term Suggestion Tool from Snap
Web Browsers Opera 8.0 Now Available The new version of Opera is out of beta and now available for Windows and Linux. Monday, April 18, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Academic Libraries Source: EDUCAUSE New From EDUCAUSE, Enterprise Electronic Content Management Constituent Group "Universities are creating electronic content at an ever-accelerating pace; however, little attention has been given to how most of that information is managed. Vast amounts of information can overwhelm users, and inaccurate information can cause inefficiency, propagate misinformation, degrade brand value, and place organizations in the path of regulatory and legal risk." -- National Archives--United States Source: Federal Computer Week The records keeper Comments from Allen Weinstein, the ninth archivist of the United States. -- Public Libraries--Geomapping Source: Sirsi OneSource Mapping Our Service Areas: Huntsville-Madison County Public Library "Find out how the Huntsville-Madison County Public Library's work to map their service area gave them a clearer picture of their political funding and patron activity - as well as shedding light on ways to improve resource allocation. Read on to learn how their efforts can benefit other public libraries too!" -- Libraries Source: MLive Commission hopes to make libraries more relevant to Americans A Q&A interview with new NCLIS Chariman, Beth Fitzsimmons. -- Libraries--Africa Source: AngolaPress South Africans to help build Timbuktu library "A group of South African academics and historians are heading to Timbuktu in Mali to help build a library to house thousands of manuscripts dating back to the 13th century."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Population--United States--Databases Demographics--United States--Databases Source: U.S. Census Improvements to American FactFinder Database from U.S. Census Now Online Several improvements went live late last week. -- Vital Statistics--United States Source: National Center for Health Statstics Just Released, Vital Statistics of the United States, 2000 Volume I, Natality -- Baseball--Prices Sports Marketing Source: Team Marketing Report Just Released, Major League Baseball 2005 Fan Cost Index "TMR's exclusive Fan Cost Index survey, now in its thirteenth year, tracks the cost of attendance for a family of four." -- Folk Music Source: Ibilbio.org New, Folktunes.org -- The Folktunes Archive As folk music is for the people and by the people anyone may contribute to this collection via wiki. There are a few types of recordings available for streaming and download: instructional, jam sessions, albums/demos, and vintage."
Search Briefs + Searching via your Mobile Phone + Shopping Research: More About Become.com + Largest U.S. Corporations: Where Do Google and Yahoo Rank?
Briefly + Organization: WebFolio 2.0 Leaves Beta + Sony Pictures Plans to Build Digital Library (via LA Times) + Visualization: Infotrieve Using Inxight ThingFinder to Identify Drugs, Diseases, Anatomy, Organisms, Genes and Chemicals in Drug Discovery Research Sunday, April 17, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Libraries Source: Carnegie Reporter (Carnegie Corp. of NY) Do Libraries Still Matter? "In the era of the Internet, will we still go to libraries to borrow books and do research? The answer seems to be a resounding yes, because libraries are more than just a place to keep volumes on dusty shelves." -- Virtual Reference Now Available: Presentations from the 2004 Virtual Reference Desk Conference -- Libraries Dictionaries Source: The New York Times Happy 250th Birthday to Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language -- Presidential Libraries Source: AP A Visit to the New Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Baseball Source: Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) The Business of Baseball "The goal of this site is to provide research tools for those wishing to learn more about the business end of professional baseball. The site is broken into several areas, including Data (databases and spreadsheets), Relocation and/or Expansion (documentation by jurisdictions exploring relocation and/or expansion), Documents (various documents, both current and historical, dealing with issues within the business of baseball), Bios (biographies from members of SABR on persons within the business of baseball), Reading Material (suggested reading material from the Business of Baseball Committee of SABR), Interviews (interviews with individuals that have had, or still do impact the business of baseball), History, which chronicles key moments in baseball history as it relates to the business side of things. And, the BizBall Forums, a location where business of baseball articles are Blogged, and where discussion and commentary occur (registration required)." Saturday, April 16, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Federal Depositories--United States Source: FCW Librarians face existential crisis: "Some federal depository librarians are upset about the Government Printing Office's move to significantly cut the distribution of printed government documents. GPO's shift to electronic formats, which will redefine the librarians' role as government information gatekeepers, will be an issue at this weekend's Depository Library Council meeting in Albuquerque, N.M." -- Health Information--Thailand Online Information--Thailand--Quality Source: Bangkok Post Health websites mostly unreliable "Most of the almost 2,000 Thai health websites are unreliable and pose a potential danger to people seeking advice, says a study by the Health Systems Research Institute. HSRI researchers who tracked 1,888 local websites providing health information last year found that 99% could not be relied upon to offer correct advice."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Intelligence--United States Office of the National Intelligence Executive Source: Carroll Publishing Office of the National Intelligence Executive Organization Chart (PDF; 264 KB) "This chart reflects the proposed structure based upon recent public materials as interpreted by our editors. The Office of the National Intelligence Executive is still being developed; adjustments to this chart will be made as they become official." Friday, April 15, 2005
Professional Reading Shelf Encyclopedias Source: AP Microsoft Asks for Help Editing Encarta Encyclopedia Make suggestions, change/update facts. Editors will then (in theory) verify and change the entry..."Encarta is not requiring such novice editors to identify themselves, said Gary Alt, Encarta's editorial director. But it is asking them to reveal the source of their information if possible, and the editorial staff will check for both factual errors and evidence of bias." ResourceShelf likes this model. In fact, MS should ask the library community (perhaps working through ALA, SLA, CILIP and other groups) to get involved. Contributing editor Steven Cohen shares his thoughts here. -- Education--Databases ERIC Source: ERIC ERIC Annouces Beta Version of Open Online Submission System "This system enables individual contributors to submit non-journal materials that will be considered for inclusion in the ERIC database. In order to continue the high quality, education focus of ERIC the submitted materials will be evaluated against the Screening Critera. As part of the Beta system, there is no established selection or processing turnaround time." -- Academic Libraries Source: News.com Way to Go Intel, NOT!!! "A day after Intel said it would offer $10,000 for a copy of a magazine in which Moore's Law was first announced, a University of Illinois engineering library noticed that one of its two copies disappeared." -- Collection Development Source: C&RL News Growing needs and limited budgets: The challenge of supporting print and electronic resources A new article by Joan Gotwals, former vice provost and director of libraries at Emory University. She writes, "As librarians understand and college and university administrators often do not, the role of libraries and librarians is ever more important in assisting users in the hybrid world to navigate the dizzying universe of electronic information and relate these sources to print and archival materials. It also requires greater subject expertise and, I believe, will likely result in a need for more Ph.D.s on the library staff, especially in research universities." -- Digital Libraries Source: D-Lib The April Issue of Digital Libraries is Now Available Articles include: + A Review of Social Bookmarking Tools + Initial Experiences in Developing a Chronologically Organized Digital Library for Continuing Education in Biodefense
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Internet--China--Filtering Source: OpenNet Initiative (via DocuTicker.com) Just Released, Internet Filtering in China in 2004-2005 "The OpenNet Initiative tested China's Internet filtering of web content, blog postings, and e-mail correspondences. Our testing found efforts to prevent access to a wide range of sensitive materials, from pornography to religious material to political dissent. Unlike the filtering systems in many other countries, China's filtering regime appears to be carried out at various control points and also to be changing over time. China operates the most extensive, technologically sophisticated, and broad-reaching system of Internet filtering in the world." -- Business--United States--Lists & Rankings Source: San Jose Mercury News Recently Released, 2004 Silicon Valley 150, 2004 The 150 largest companies in Silicon Valley. -- Rivers--United States--Pollution Source: American Rivers Just Released, Most Endangered Rivers of 2005 announced "Some 860 billion gallons of untreated sewage foul America's rivers with pollution and make millions of Americans sick each year, but the federal government has turned its back on the problem, warned American Rivers with the release of its 2005 America's Most Endangered Rivers report. These problems are particularly apparent and poised to get worse along the Susquehanna River, which tops this year's list of rivers facing uncertain futures and crucial turning points." Thursday, April 14, 2005
Resource of the Week by Shirl Kennedy, Deputy Editor According to the Institute of Medicine (IOM) of the National Academies, the number of deaths from medical errors in U.S. hospitals is estimated to be anywhere from 44,000 to 98,000 per year. The cost of medication errors alone in the U.S. are estimated at somewhere around $2 billion per year. These are not insignificant numbers. This week, we'll take a look at a new website from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) that intends to function as "a national 'one-stop' portal of resources for improving patient safety and preventing medical errors." Patient Safety Source: Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality (AHRQ) AHRQ Patient Safety Network (PSNet) "AHRQ Patient Safety Network (PSNet) is a new national web-based resource featuring the latest news and essential resources on patient safety. The site offers weekly updates of patient safety literature, news, tools, and meetings ('What's New'), and a vast set of carefully annotated links to important research and other information on patient safety ('The Collection'). Supported by a robust patient safety taxonomy and web architecture, AHRQ PSNet provides powerful searching and browsing capability, as well as the ability for diverse users to customize the site around their interests (My PSNet). It also is tightly coupled with AHRQ WebM&M, the popular monthly journal that features user-submitted cases of medical errors, expert commentaries, and perspectives on patient safety." This site is chock full of interesting features and information. The "What's New" section on the left side of the home page offers links to journal, newspaper, and magazine articles; books and reports; audio-visual resources, and more. On the right side of the page, you can "Browse the Collection" in one of two ways -- by resource type or by general subject area: Safety Target, Approaches to Improving Safety, Error Types, Clinical Error, Target Audience, Setting of Care. The entire site is seachable via a text box in the top center of the home page, or you can use the sophisticated advanced search form to restrict your query to various combinations of resource types, topics, etc., via dropdown menus. As you browse through the site, each page offers a search box that limits the results to information in that particular area. Be sure to scroll down and click on the two resources on the bottom right-hand side: + Patient Safety Classics: "The most influential, frequently cited articles, books, and resources, in patient safety," -- keyword searchable. + Did You Know? -- Graphs illustrating particularly relevant statistics. You can browse the entire collection of these on a separate page. If this is a topic of interest to you, you may also want to see: + Medication Errors, from the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research. + The National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention offers a Taxonomy of Medication Errors (PDF; 48 KB) + The Institute for Safe Medication Practices publishes several Medication Safety Alert newsletters. + The National Patient Safety Foundation has an extensive library of resources. + "The MEDERRORS Library contains a unique collection of article summaries on all subjects related to medication errors, including the incidence and cost of medication errors, error reporting, and prevention programs, and the application of industrial quality assurance techniques to the health care industry." Sponsored by Bridge Medical. + Duke University Medical Center Library offers a subject guide on medical errors. + Read the Institute of Medicine's landmark study on medical errors, To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, online at the National Academies Press.
Professional Reading Shelf Law Librarians Source: New York Lawyer An Ode to Librarians Open (reg req, free) Written by two associates from a NY law firm. -- Digitization--Books Source: Technology Review The Infinite Library 5 pages about the digitization of books, Google's library digitization program (pro's and con's) and comments from a number of library luminaries. Key Quotes: + "I chafe at the presumption that once you digitize, there is nothing left to do," says Donald Waters, a former director of the Digital Library Federation who now oversees the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation's extensive philanthropic investments in projects to enhance scholarly communication. "There is an enormous amount to do, and digitizing is just scratching the surface." + "And considering that the flood of new digital material will make the job of classifying, cataloguing, and guiding readers to the right texts even more demanding, librarians could become busier than ever." + Also, no mention of services like NetLibrary, ebrary, Project Gutenberg, Safari, and others. -- Information Industry--LexisNexis Privacy Source: Dow Jones LexisNexis Exec: May Have Been Data Breach Before 2003 "A LexisNexis executive said Wednesday there may have been an earlier breach of consumers' personal data that was never reported to the public." -- Librarians--Jobs Source: CareerJournal.com/Wall St. Journal Librarians Reference These Sites When Seeking Work -- Librarians Source: Zap2it Remember the TV Movie The Librarian From Earlier This Year? Get ready for the sequel!!! -- Censorship Source: The Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression 2005 Jefferson Muzzles "Announced on or near April 13 -- the anniversary of the birth of Thomas Jefferson -- the Jefferson Muzzles are awarded as a means to draw national attention to abridgments of free speech and press and, at the same time, foster an appreciation for those tenets of the First Amendment. Because the importance and value of free expression extend far beyond the First Amendment's limit on government censorship, acts of private censorship are not spared consideration for the dubious honor of receiving a Muzzle. Unfortunately, each year the finalists for the Jefferson Muzzles have emerged from an alarmingly large group of candidates. For each recipient, a dozen could have been substituted. Further, an examination of previous Jefferson Muzzle recipients reveals that the disregard of First Amendment principles is not the byproduct of a particular political outlook but rather that threats to free expression come from all over the political spectrum."
Resources, Reports, Tools, Lists, and Full Text Documents Poetry Source: Gale A New Free Resource from Gale: Poet's Corner "...a free Web site packed with biographies, poems and activities to help families, students and teachers celebrate National Poetry Month. This year, a special day-by-day downloadable calendar highlights important events in poetry." -- Population--United States Source: U.S. Census Just Released, U.S. County Population Estimates Flagler, Fla., is the fastest growing county in the United States. -- Computer Security QuickStudy: Biometric authentication "Biometric authentication is the verification of a user's identity by means of a physical trait or behavioral characteristic that can't easily be changed, such as a fingerprint."
Web Search Briefs (via SEW Blog) + TerraFly: Satellite and Aerial Images Plus Local Info + Real-Time Traffic Reports via Text Messaging (SMS) + Google Launches Video Upload Program But Content Not Searchable, Yet Wednesday, April 13, 2005
|