- 50Safari,
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- 25web2.0,
Welcome to INFOMINE: Scholarly Internet Resource Collections
A good way to search for a topic on academic sites and receive annotated results.
The Library of Congress Portals Applications Issues Group: Federated Search Portal Products & Vendors
The LOC collected some federated search products.
UCLA Department of Information Studies: Listservs
UCLA now hosts CALIX, a useful place to reach librarians in California or elsewhere.
My List: A Collection on "Ways to Market to Librarians" (blog,librarian,library-related,technology) | Diigo
Sharing my list with the Marketing to Librarians "group"
sjsumlis : SJSU MLIS
Student forum
Library Technology Reports Archive | ALA TechSource
A publication that addresses many of the issues related to federated search. Anywhere this is advertised would be a good place to advertise the contest or the product.
November 2009 | ALA TechSource
Example of a newsletter that goes out to the library community that is concerned with search
Search | ALA TechSource
The writers on this blog (and the commenters) are probably good people in the library IT world to market to.....
How OPACs Suck, Part 3: The Big Picture | ALA TechSource
Karen Schneider - very forward looking and articulate about how library technologies have to change
Information Science Methods
Interesting comment about how research methods change depending on the subfield in LIS. Also a good point about quantitative and qualitative needing each other to succeed.
Op-Ed Columnist - The New Untouchables - NYTimes.com
"As the Harvard University labor expert Lawrence Katz explains it: “If you think about the labor market today, the top half of the college market, those with the high-end analytical and problem-solving skills who can compete on the world market or game the financial system or deal with new government regulations, have done great. But the bottom half of the top, those engineers and programmers working on more routine tasks and not actively engaged in developing new ideas or recombining existing technologies or thinking about what new customers want, have done poorly. They’ve been much more exposed to global competitors that make them easily substitutable.”"
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