Friday, December 01, 2006

New era of Information Architecture 3.0 prediction by Peter Morville

"Next year, after the bubble bursts, we will enter the era of Information Architecture 3.0. This won’t surprise Tim O’Reilly who slyly positioned the polar bear atop the #1 Google hit for Web 2.0 and commissioned the third edition just in time to clean up the mess.

Defining Information Architecture

Perhaps we should take a moment, before proceeding, to review the definition of information architecture:

  1. The structural design of shared information environments.
  2. The combination of organization, labeling, search, and navigation systems within web sites and intranets.
  3. The art and science of shaping information products and experiences to support usability and findability.
  4. An emerging discipline and community of practice focused on bringing principles of design and architecture to the digital landscape."
Worth reading

Full article :http://semanticstudios.com/publications/semantics/000149.php

Thursday, November 30, 2006

List of Publications by Professor. Veena Saraf

Prof. Veena Saraf


M.LISc. (
Delhi), PGDCA, Ph.D. (NEHU)
Department of Library & Information Science
NEHU, Shillong 793022 (
India)



Member

Member Of The Academic Council - North-Eastern Hill University

Editor for Planner- 2003



Papers:

1. Veena Saraf.Dynamics of the information technology and its implications for library and information science education in the SAARC countries. IN S D Vyas and others, eds.,Readings in Library and Information Science, Jaipur, Raj Publishing, 2000. pp. 27-56.

2. Mapping Technology on Libraries and People - Murthy, T.A.V and Salgar, S.M and Kumbar, T. S and Saraf, Veena and Bavakutty, M and Chand, Prem (2003) Mapping Technology on Libraries and People . Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India

(http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/213/)

3. An Overview of the Subject Gateway: Materials Science

Accanoor, Kalyani (2003) An Overview of the Subject Gateway: Materials Science. In Salgar M, Mr. S and Kumbar S, Dr T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

(http://dlist.sir.arizona.edu/245/)

5. Indian Digital Library in Engineering Science and Technology (INDEST) Consortium: Consortia-Based Subscription to Electronic Resources for Technical Education System in India: A Government of India Initiative -M, Mr. S and Kumbar S, Dr. T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

6 Ambuja, R (2003) Planning a Consortia Among the Campus Libraries of University of Madras. In Salgar M, Mr S and Kumbar S, Dr T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

7.Kembhavi, Ajit and Kumbar S, T (2003) Professional Literature for Indian Universities - A new Initiative by the University Grants Commission. In Salgar M, Mr S and Kumbar S, Dr T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

8.Biswas Ch, Bidhan and Dasgupta K, Swapan (2003) Opportunities for Libraries in Managing and Resource Sharing Through Consortia: A New Challenge for Indian Librarians. In Salgar M, Mr S and Kumbar S, Dr T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

9.Birdie, Christina and B G, Sreeharsha and Pallavi G, T and Kannur B, Mahantesh (2003) Archiving of Electronic Journals in Physics and Astronomy: Role of Consortia. In Salgar M, Mr S and Kumbar S, Dr T and Saraf, Dr Veena and Buvakutty, Dr M and Chand, Mr Prem, Eds. Proceedings Convention for Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Ahmedabad, India.

10. Veena Saraf North Eastern Hill University, India Measuring Effectiveness of University Libraries: A case study of Bangladesh

11. Bibliometric analysis of information seeking behaviour related literature--

Parmar, Arvind Singh and Kumar, Sanghmitra A. and Prakash, Thushara (2004) Bibliometric analysis of information seeking behaviour related literature.

12. Chandel, A.S. and Saraf, Veena. (2002) Studies in information seeking behaviour and use: Need for paradigm change. Journal of Library and Information Science, 27 (2), 152-174.

13. OPAC usability: assessment through verbal protocol

Authors: Guha, Tamal Kumar; Saraf, Veena

Source: The Electronic Library, Volume 23, Number 4, 2005, pp. 463-473(11)

Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Books:

“Plan for Library Resource Sharing " edited by Dr. A.S.Chandel and Veena Saraf. Lucknow: Print House, 1987

Social Science Information: Problems and Prospects


Authors: J.C. Binwal, A.S. Chandel, Veena Saraf (Editor)
Format: Hardcover
Publication Date: July 1990
Publisher: Stosius Inc/Advent Books Division
ISBN: 0706949471
OPAC usability : assessment through verbal protocol

TAMAL KUMAR GUHA (1) ; SARAF Veena (2) ;

(1) Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati, INDE
(2) Department of Library & Information Science, North Eastern Hill University, Shillong, INDE



This is not full list

Tokyo Institute of Technology OpenCourseWare (TOKYO TECH OCW)

Educational Resources on Science and Technology

Graduate School of Science and Engineering 18 courses exhibit notes.



Rank
ing
Course
Title
Lecturer Update Access
Index
1 Guided Wave Circuit Theory MIZUMOTO Tetsuya 2006/9/17
2 Advanced Signal Processing NISHIHARA Akinori 2006/7/10
3 Mixed Signal systems and Integrated Circuits MATSUZAWA Akira 2005/5/10
4 Intelligent Control KURABAYASHI Daisuke 2005/5/10
5 Urban Environmental Engineering URASE Taro 2006/4/1
6 Advanced Electromagnetic Waves ANDO Makoto HIROKAWA Jiro 2006/9/17
7 Mechanics of Structural Concrete NIWA Junichiro 2005/9/23
8 Guided Wave Circuit Theory MIZUMOTO Tetsuya 2005/9/3
9 Guided Wave Circuit Theory MIZUMOTO Tetsuya 2005/5/2
10 Seismic Design of Urban Infrastructures KAWASHIMA Kazuhiko 2005/10/17








































Textbook Revolution :TBR(free textbooks)

Textbook Revolution is the web’s source for free educational materials. This is a student-run, volunteer-operated website started in response to the textbook industry’s constant drive to maximize profits instead of educational value.

students and teachers looking for free textbooks and related materials. Second, it promotes the need for and availability of these resources. Textbook Revolution, you’ll find links to textbooks and select educational resources of all kinds. Some of the books are PDF files, others are viewable only online as e-books. Most books are aimed at undergraduates, but there are at least a few resources at every level, from kindergarten to post-doc. All of the books are offered for free by their respective copyright holders for online viewing. Beyond that, each book is as individual as the author behind it.

Open Educational Resources Finder


The OCW Finder currently shows results from OCW Finder is based on the succulent del.icio.us direc.tor,

DSpace 1.4.1 beta 2 Released

The documentation for this release is bundled within the package.

DSpace 1.4.1 beta 2 can be downloaded from the files area at
http://sourceforge.net/projects/dspace/ or from CVS using the tag
dspace-1_4_1beta2.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Library services in your pocket




"Right information to the right user at the right time in right personal way"

-S.R. Ranganathan

Library users are changing ...., Technology ...,information storage media...changing , changing .................but librarians are not changing ...why?

in this trend
....Megan Fox take one more step ahead ......... Mobile Tools & Applications for Libraries by Megan Fox presented in Internet Librarian 2006


excerpt: (Notes by Kate Carter )

"Megan Fox, Web & Electronic Resources Librarian, Simmons College Fox provides a fast-paced overview of the current hardware available and how new technologies are making hand-held computers not just palatable but preferable for on-the-go users. She highlights the latest developments in applications for mobile and hand-held tools, and how these can and are being utilized by libraries and information seekers of all kinds. Come hear what’s happening with traditional information vendors and mobile interfaces, the mobile optimized Web, point-of-need answers, reference texting, and multimedia (such as podcasting and location-free TV) for your mobile device.

Relevant Notes:

General
- Patrons want answer at moment of need
- Flexibility - don’t want to be limited to what they have and lug around with them
- Gratification anytime anywhere on one’s own device
- Handheld market – 90% of college students have cell phones, 62% of all users use text messaging
- Phones used to be for spoken word communication, but no more
- our stuff is 5-7 years behind Asian market – they have live tv (picture in picture), etc.
– our current mobile network can’t support advanced stuff like video conferencing yet


Latest mobile devices
- Palm Treo;, Nokia N Series: N92 & N93 (can upload and add comments to flickr directly from phone, can plug into tv, can connect wirelessly or with bluetooth to printer)/E70/9300 Communicator; Smartphones (has many more features – integrated, converged, multifunctional), Samsung SPH-B5200/SCH-B470; Sony Ericsson
- Ultra-Mobile PC by Microsoft – full windows XP machines – 7 inch or smaller screen, 2 pounds, $500-$100 dollars, touchpack program – bigger scrollbars etc. so that you don’t need a stylus (battery life too slow – 2 hours), if Microsoft is in on this then libraries need to be too (?)
- Sony Mylo – wifi broadband communication and entertainment device (my life online), yahoo messenger, google talk, skype, 7 hours of websurfing with battery! To stay connected without a laptop

Mobile Optimized Web
- Wifi or other means to connect directly to the internet
- Many websites are intended for large screens, and large screens can’t handle it
- Mobile device optimized – no flash, javascript, no data entry, simpler code, smaller text
- .mobi internet domain
- Stanford – simplified access. Smarter searching. – hours, stack locations, etc.
- Many sites will recognize device and serve that content to you
- Tvguide.com (still has mini ads) – busy v. stripped down verios for mobile devices
- Hoovers, NYT, PubMed, Library Thing, Mobizines
- Requested Re-formatting of Content – skweezer, IYHY, Google mobile optimizer (translates it to mobile content), AOL also – but you might lose content, transcoding - criticism - h(ijacking content by providing generically modified version)
- Mob5
- MoblogsBlogger Mobile, Splashblog, ShoZu
- RSS to mobile: Feedbeep, mobifeeds, hubdog, xfruits
- Mobilizing mashups – frucall, jobster, kmaps, gcalsync, programmableweb.com

Content on the Go
- Library catalog – even have access to circ module for staff
- Handango – ready reference on the go, aol mobile, google, Yahoo! Go: for definitions, sports scores, nearby restaurants movies etc., mobile answer engines NOT search engines – return answers not lists of links - most 411 callers are from cell phones (people want info on the go)
- Answers.com – “pre-search market”, Ask mobile content

Taking ebooks with you

- Mobipocket, Many Books
- Univ. of Alberta – instructions for NetLibrary to pda

Handheld database access
- Ovid, Pubmed (health and medical fields)
- LexisNexis partnership w/ blackberry
- Factiva

Content via SMS/Texting
- Erratic wifi access, only 4% of American households report using phone internet regularly
- Google SMS - text 46645 – answer to movie time, etc.
- Synfonic
- AskMeNow
- HarperCollins Australia – sends bits of new books to phone
- Sites have IM to a friend option or send to phone – “should this be on catalog results pages?”

Communicating with Mobile Users
- Chat & Email - young people prefer textting and IM - sense of control, speed, brevity, more authentic version of self
- “Email is for old people
- Reference by SMS - Altarama.com.au/refxsms.htm – text message sent to librarian email – librarian replies with less than 256 characters which goes to users device again – stays within current workflows of librarians
- Vazu, Teleflip, Joopz – email translated into text message
- Innovative will offer texting in the next releases – overdue notices
- E2campus (Penn State)
- “Cingular & Rave Wireless Provide Innovative Wireless Solutions Tailored for Colleges & Universities” (pdf)
- Sync calendar to turn off phone when in class

Mobile Audio
- 70% of all music downloads occur on mobile devices in Asia
- E-audiobooks
- iPod suffles preloaded with books and just check out entire device
- Every listening device for every class loaded onto 40gb ipods
- Audible.com, fonpods
- LibriVox – audio version of project Gutenberg
- Tours with mobile devices

Mobile multimedia - video
- 20 million users expected by the end of 2007
- Location free tv – mainly Sony devices
- DVR – like TiVo, expected on mobile devices in 2007

What’s next?
- Effective use is still hampered by uncomfortable entering of letters
- Camera feature to start a query with an image – picture of movie poster returns movie listings (mobile visual search, photo to search)
- Promptu for Mobile – spoken words prompted search (could you say catalog to your phone and get the catalog?)
- Point and Click - stand in front of building, point device at it and get info about it, geotagging/GeoVector, could devices senses where you are and automatically open the library catalog?, Semapedia.org
- Use camera for face recognition instead of passwords
- Amida simputer – turn page of the ebook with a motion

one more good article "E-mail: A Tool for Exchange of Information in Libraries -"

by R. P. Upadhye, Minati MandaI, Tara Ashok and Vijay Kumar

excerpt "The basic objective of a library is to acquire, process and disseminate right information to the right user at the right time. In order to achieve these objectives, librarians have been adopting various tools and techniques offered by information technology from time to time. For communication purposes, libraries have been using telephone, telex, facsimile, etc. But now computers and telecommunication technologies have brought revolutionary changes in the communication process by providing E-mail which is quicker, convenient and more cost effective than most of the other modes of communication. Applic~tion of E-mail in library communication would enable the library and information professionals to meet the information needs of the information seekers by providing timely and qualitative services. There have been proposals to have round the clock librarianship [I] and extended library hours [2]. The aim of present libraries will not only be up-to-date but up-to-the-minute information [3]. The Five Laws of Library Science propounded by Dr. S.R. Ranganathan are profound and most relevant to the current context of advancements in the frontiers of information technology........................"

Full Article: http://eprints.rclis.org/archive/00003075/01/pdf.pdf