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Link By Link - In a Google Library, Millions of Books, but No Card Catalog - NYTimes.com
NYT article on Google Books project and its controversies
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Managing the Platform: Higher Education and the Logic of Wikinomics | EDUCAUSE CONNECT
EDUCAUSE Review article that takes a critical look at the missions and organizations of universities in light of the successes of Wikipedia and social software platforms in sometimes more efficiently creating a space for creating and sharing information.
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The real significance of Wikipedia and similar Web 2.0 technologies is the way in which they organize people and activities, not simply the way in which they create and distribute information.
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The question for those of us in higher education is, How might the logic of Web 2.0, the logic of commons-based peer production, and the logic of platform management transform the idea of the university and the very activities—teaching and learning, research, and publishing—that lie at the heart of this enterprise?
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Hathi Trust
Site for an interesting new-ish large-scale project to combine the digitization efforts of major research libraries into a seamless, broad-scale source of research materials and tools.
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The Library Web Site of the Future :: Inside Higher Ed :: Higher Education's Source for News, Views and Jobs
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The first thing librarians must do after ending the pretense that the library Web site succeeds in connecting people to content is understand how and why the institutional homepage has improved and what we can learn from it. Doing so will allow academic libraries to discover answers to that first question; how to create user community awareness about the electronic resources in which the institution heavily invests.
It’s not that academic library Web sites completely ignore marketing. It’s just done badly. News about the library’s programs, events or new resources are often crammed into a corner of the page, are limited to small bits of text or are relegated somewhere out of the F-zone, the area, according to usability experts, to which most web users’ eyes naturally gravitate. Those prime real estate areas are instead dedicated to lists of links to catalogs, database lists and things with names that mean little to anyone other than a librarian. More libraries are moving to a single search box powered by a federated search engine that retrieves information from multiple resources at once. In order to emulate search engines those boxes are relegated to some familiar space at the top of the page.
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At the Temple University Libraries the librarians create customized content packages that contain just the right databases that students need for their assignments. They can even add in custom Google search boxes and non-library links that may be of use to instructors and their students. If faculty desire links to specific articles, those can be added as well. The content package is sent to faculty as an e-mail attachment. Faculty then simply upload it to their course site. The content installs itself as a unique courseware page and even adds a library link to the course menu. It eliminates any faculty excuses for not integrating the library into their course.
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