OLCOct2012GBrowneGrants
Library and information fellowships, sponsorship, awards and grants
First published in Online Currents October 2012 vol. 26 pp. 243-50.
Jon Jermey and Glenda Browne — Indexing professionals
Book, journal, website and database indexing and consultancy
Library and information fellowships, sponsorship, awards and grants
First published in Online Currents October 2012 vol. 26 pp. 243-50.
First published in Online Currents – Vol. 21 Issue 5, Jan/Feb 2006
First published in Online Currents, v.25/4, 2011, pp.188-194
This article describes green websites that provide information that may help librarians and other information professionals manage their work in a more sustainable and environmentally friendly way.
Ebooks, their indexes, and the work of the IDPF EPUB Indexes Working Group.
Online Currents June 2012, pp 127-130
Three conferences for information professionals.
First published Online Currents February 2012
This article begins with a discussion of meteorology Web sites, followed by sites on natural disasters.
The Glossary from the American Meteorological Society (http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary ) contains 12,000 terms and is an excellent starting point for research into meteorology. It defines meteorology as the study of the physics, chemistry, and dynamics of the earth’s atmosphere, including the related effects at the airearth boundary over both land and the oceans or, in popular usage, as the underlying science of weather and weather forecasting.
First published in Online Currents – 20(5) June 2005
This is the third article in a series investigating Web search engines, following others about Google (Online Currents October 2004, pp.13-16) and Yahoo! (Online Currents March 2005, pp. 21-24).
MSN launched its new search engine on 2 February 2005. In addition to the search function, the home page (http://www.msn.com ) provides links to news, reference sources, shopping, entertainment and technology, and services such as Hotmail and Messenger. The Australian site, ninemsn, is discussed later.
Discusses shared indexing projects and their possible application today.
Considers the importance of human understanding of words and their meanings for reliable information access.
Examines a variety of approaches for helping users find information efficiently on websites.
Theres just no pleasing anybody we all complain that we have too much information, but then keep seeking more. David Skyrme (http://www.skyrme.com/updates/u10.htm#push ) explains this information paradox by pointing out that while we want less junk, we long for more relevant information. Push technology in which information is automatically sent to users according to pre-defined profiles claims to be the ideal way of providing the relevant information.
The earliest use of push technology was for sending updates of new bibliographic references on specified topics to library users. Push technology is now used to offer the following types of information:
The Indexer, vol. 22, no. 3 April 2001, pp. 119-122
The 2007 Ig Nobel Literature Prize was awarded to Glenda Browne of Blaxland, Blue Mountains, Australia, for her study of the word “the” – and of the many ways it causes problems for anyone who tries to put things into alphabetical order.
The Ig Nobel prizes are awarded for research that makes people LAUGH then THINK. What they think is up to them.
Australian Author December 2001 pp.26-27, 29-31