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Jack Park

Kudesia - 0 views

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    This paper not only shares the designing and implementation challenges faced by the KnowGenesis team, but also presents the approach used to match the user requirements with the Library design. Based on the lessons learned during the process, the paper also presents specific set of guidelines and recommends methodologies that can provide critical assistance for developing and managing medium and large-scale repositories.
Jack Park

del.icio.us libraries - September 27, 2008 « mélange - 1 views

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    Libraries using del.icio.us
Jack Park

LibraryCrunch - Service for the Next Generation Library - A Library 2.0 Perspective by ... - 0 views

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    Service for the Next Generation Library - A Library 2.0 Perspective by Michael Casey
Jack Park

Open Library API (Open Library) - 0 views

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    The Open Library is a project of the Internet Archive. Its goal is to create an online catalog that contains one web page for every book ever published. To do this, it accepts data from a variety of sources: libraries, publishers, book-sellers, and individuals.
Jack Park

Simon - 0 views

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    This paper surveys information architecture in the context of digital libraries. Key concepts are defined as well as common attributes of information architectures in general. Communications standards - including hybrid TCP/IP-OSI, CORBA, and Web services - are explored, as well as the history of information architecture and related models. A number of digital library projects are analyzed with a focus on their distinct architectures. The key role of information architecture in the design and development of the twenty-first century digital library is detailed throughout.
Jack Park

Library 2.0 Theory: Web 2.0 and Its Implications for Libraries - 1 views

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    This article posits a definition and theory for "Library 2.0". It suggests that recent thinking describing the changing Web as "Web 2.0" will have substantial implications for libraries, and recognizes that while these implications keep very close to the history and mission of libraries, they still necessitate a new paradigm for librarianship. The paper applies the theory and definition to the practice of librarianship, specifically addressing how Web 2.0 technologies such as synchronous messaging and streaming media, blogs, wikis, social networks, tagging, RSS feeds, and mashups might intimate changes in how libraries provide access to their collections and user support for that access.
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