Archive for March, 2004

Robin Good on sorting the RSS wheat from the chaff

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

I like especially when he says: “Search specialist and librarians who will craft with time
investments appropriate queries to get at the information they were
looking for, will be generously rewarded with eternal fountains of
relevant info for the time to come.”

You bet!

On the rising nanotechnology book business

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

An article titled “the Small Print” examines how publishers such as
Wiley are rushing to avail themselves of a nascent demand for nanotech
books. 

Dan Gillmor on future news

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

A recent issue of the ACM journal interaction
focuses on human-computer interaction. One piece that caught my eye was
Dan Gillmor’s column “Imaging Tomorrow’s News.”  But there’s a lot
to look at.  the above link will work for Harvard
affiliates.  (Source; Confessions of a Science Librarian)

Boston Globe gets RSS

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

The Globe has 11 RSS feeds, from front page to world to metro to sports
to ideas, among others. Pick and drop ’em in your aggregator. (Sources:
Scripting News, Library Stuff)

Lawrence Lessig on the diminishing of the public domain

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

Lessig reflects on the Eldred vs. Ashcroft case, in which Eldred was
thwarted in his attempts to digitize public domain literature by the
Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act. (Source: Open Access News)

Amazon an open book

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

An interesting discussion of how researchers value full-text access to
book contents and how Amazon has enabled and even seen sales rise as a
result.  (Source: Open Access News)

Committee for economic development questions entertainment industry tactics

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004

A report advocates a balance between user’s rights and commercial interests in the digital environment. (Source: beSpacific)

Searching alternative file formats

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2004

Greg Notess’ column discusses what engines and syntax to employ when
trying to track down formats other than html, such as pdfs, word
documents, spreadsheets and other digitized phenomena from the
quotidian to the obscure. (Source: The Virtual Chase)

MIT administrator on changing role of universities vis a vis tech transfer

Monday, March 1st, 2004

Smallest mass detection reported (a virus)

Monday, March 1st, 2004