Thursday, July 26, 2007

LISA

LISA: Library and Information Science Abstracts
Database Guide




________________________________________

July 2006














Table of Contents:
LISA Library and Information Science Abstracts 3
What is LISA: Library and Information Science Abstracts? 3
10 Reasons to Use LISA: 3
Selection Policy 4
Sample Record: 5
Searchable field codes: 6
Language: 8
Boolean Operators and Other Search Tools Supported by the CSA Interface 9
QUICK, ADVANCED, OR COMMAND SEARCHING 10
Advanced Search 11
Command Search or Professional Search 12
LIMITS 12
SORTING 13
SHOWING RECORDS 13
PRINTING, SAVING, and E-MAILING RECORDS 14
THESAURUS SEARCH 14
BROWSE INDEXES 16
The Research Process 17
Contact us: 19






LISA Library and Information Science Abstracts

What is LISA: Library and Information Science Abstracts?

LISA is an international abstracting and indexing service designed for library professionals and other information specialists. LISA provides bibliographic information about past and present developments in librarianship, information science, online retrieval, publishing and information technology. This database covers around five hundred periodicals from over sixty countries. It also includes unpublished academic and institutional research from the IRWI - Information Research Watch International database.

10 Reasons to Use LISA:

1. Keep abreast of the literature on Information Science.
2. Access to over 280,000 records
3. Backfile coverage dating to 1969
4. Advanced searching capability of 17 indexed fields
5. Searching via Browsable Indexes
6. Thesaurus Searching capability
7. Ability to cross- search with other CSA Illumina databases using a de-duping feature
8. Lateral searching through Authors and Descriptors
9. Provoked searches of the Recent References and Web Resources Related to the Social Sciences
10. Easy citation formatting via QuikBib





Selection Policy

LISA has an international perspective, and a diverse audience including researchers, students, library staff, and information professionals. Since its inception in 1969 LISA has been interested in a broad range of library and information science (LIS) theory and practice, now taking in developments facilitated by information and communications technology and LIS-related fields such as archives, records management, publishing, information design and technical writing. Consequently, LISA covers a great variety of publications.
In considering candidate journals at the scholarly end, the editor takes account of a range of standard criteria, eg publishing standards, timeliness, editorial content, peer review, international diversity of authorship and citation data. The editor also needs to have an eye for current trends and growth points within the field - at the moment, for example, in developments in Web-based distance education and electronic government.
LISA is also interested in important but more topically-oriented journals and magazines, such as the CILIP "Update" in the UK or "Bibliotecche Oggi" in Italy, and in smaller, more limited publications which deal with specialist areas of interest to the library community (eg "The One Person Library").

There are around 500 titles on CSA Illumina, 26 of which are e-journals.
For most of these journals, all articles are indexed and abstracted, but for a few fringe titles, the editor selects only those relevant to the information community.
Around one third of current journals are published in the UK another third in the USA. The rest come from a variety of countries including 14 titles from Germany, 12 from Japan, 6 from South Africa, 5 from France, 4 from India.
For a complete current serials source list please go to: http://www.csa.com/factsheets/supplements/lisa.php

The subjects covered would include:



Library management
Collection development
Cataloguing and classification
Library technology
Information retrieval
Digital libraries
Evidence based librarianship
E-learning
Knowledge management
Information literacy
Freedom of information
Electronic publishing
E-government

Taxonomies and ontologies
The semantic web
Scholarly communication
Open access
Digital preservation
Search engines
Social inclusion
E-commerce
Copyright
Digital rights management
Consumer health information
Intelligence and national security
Professional development



Sample Record:





Searchable field codes:

• Field Name Label Search Examples Indexing Policy
Abstract AB= AB=library automation 50% of abstracts are written by the indexers.
Author abstracts will be recognised by the following at the end of the abstract (author abstract)or (author abstract-amended) or even (Quotes from original text)
Accession Number AN= AN= 337749 Accession number is the unique number of the record in this particular database
Author AU= AU=Corti, Louise,
AU= Goswami, P R All Authors are indexed as they appear in the journal
Descriptors DE= DE=Library Management Descriptors are terms from the thesaurus enriched by additional non-thesaural terms. (See section on thesaurus below)
Features FE= FE=refs The feature describes extra information that you will find in the fulltext. It may inlcude one or more of the following
il : Illustrations
ports: Portraits
refs: Cited references
maps: Maps
tbls: Tables
music: Music
ISBN IB= IB= 1873671318 This is the ISBN (International Standard Book Number). This is the unique number for a book
ISSN IS= IS= 0306-4573 An ISSN (International Standard Serial Number). This is the unique number of a journal.
Journal volume JV= JV=34 This is the Volume number of a journal.
Journal Issue JI= JI=4 This relates to the issue number of a journal.
Journal Name JN= JN=Information Today This field is word indexed. This information is displayed under the header called Source
Journal Page JP= JP=129 This will retrieve either the start page or the end page of an article.
KeyWords KW= KW=library management The KeyWord field is searching Title, Abstracts and Descriptors fields together. It is the best way to search all the subject fields altogether.
Language LA= LA=French See the section on language to see which languages are covered in LISA
Publication Type PT= PT=Journal Article LISA only contains Journal article,
Publication Year PY= PY=2003 Four digit numeral which describes the year of publication of an item.
Resource Location RL= RL=firstmonday
This contains the URL where the document has been posted.
Shelfmark SH= SH=4496.373700 British Library shelfmark.
Very useful if you want to know where to find an item within the British Library
Source SO= SO=Information today near 21 This field contains the journal name (JN), volume, issue, year and page number. You can search all of the above mentioned information using a proximity operator.
Title TI= TI=fear factors
TI=La Bibliotheque Orientale: histoire, conservation et numerisation. The Bibliotheque Orientale: history, conservation and arrangement The full title is found. If the article is published in another language than English, the original title will be displayed first followed by a translation in British English
Update UD= UD=200412 This is the date when the record was uploaded to CSA Illumina. YYYYMMDD





Language:

Articles in any of the following languages are indexed in LISA


Afrikaans
Arabic
Bulgarian
Catalan
Croatian
Czech
Chinese
Danish
Dutch
English
Finnish
French
Gaelic
German
Hebrew
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian

Italian
Japanese
Malay
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Rumanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swedish
Turkish
Urdu
Yugoslav
Welsh




Boolean Operators and Other Search Tools Supported by the CSA Interface



Boolean operators help define the relationships between words or groups of words.
AND Use to narrow a search and retrieve records containing all of the words it separates
OR Use to broaden a search and retrieve records containing any of the words it separates
NOT Use to narrow a search and retrieve records that do not contain the term following it
( ) Use to group words or phrases when combining Boolean phrases and to show the order in which relationships should be considered
Proximity operators identify the number of words to come between the search terms.
WITHIN "X" Use to narrow a search by specifying a proximity relationship of fewer than “X” words between search terms.
NEAR Use to narrow a search by specifying a proximity relationship of fewer than 10 words between search terms
Special symbols can expand the scope of your search.
* Truncate using the wild card symbol. This expands a search term to include forms of a root word, e.g. catalog* retrieves catalog, catalogue, catalogs, catalogues, cataloguing, etc.
? Find alternative spellings. The ? represents any single character; ?? represents two characters and so on. Use within or at the end of a word, e.g. wom?n finds woman as well as women
Note: Search queries containing several operators search in the following order: ( ), NEAR, NOT, AND, OR


QUICK, ADVANCED, OR COMMAND SEARCHING



On CSA Illumina, search strategies can be applied using one of three approaches.

Quick Search restricts your search to anywhere. An anywhere search looks across all of the available fields in a record. Multiple words entered into the search field, will be treated as a phrase.






Advanced Search
Advanced Search gives you the advantage of being able to select any of the 19 field codes from a pull-down menu. The separate search boxes are formatted to include the Boolean Operators to help guide you in formatting your search.



________________________________________


Command Search or Professional Search

Command Search or Professional Search may be preferred by advanced users who are comfortable with entering search strategies without the aid of a template.




LIMITS
Search strategies may be refined by using the following limits (available in ‘Advanced Search’ and ‘Command Search’):

Latest Update limits your results to include only the most recent records that were added to the database. LISA is updated twice monthly.
Journal Articles Only limits the search to only include the publication type of journal articles
English Only limits retrieval to only records that are available in English.
By Publication Date limits retrieval to a specific date range.

SORTING

The sorting features give you the opportunity to order your results based on the publication date or relevancy.

Most Recent First displays the records in order beginning with the most recent.
Relevance Rank displays records in order based on relevancy. Relevancy is determined through a rating system that weighs the records based on the number of times the term(s) appear in the record and where they appear.

SHOWING RECORDS

Select how to display records from the ‘Show’ pull-down menu. Options include displaying the short format, full format, full format-no references, and custom format.

The ‘de-duplication’ feature automatically removes any duplicate records that appear in your set of results, which is especially useful when you are cross-database searching. You can also use the ‘Show Duplicates’ feature to display the duplicates.

When viewing records on CSA Illumina, both the author and descriptors are hot linked. Clicking on the hot-link will search the database for each occurrence of the selected author or descriptor.


PRINTING, SAVING, and E-MAILING RECORDS

Printing, saving, and e-mailing records can be done by using the ‘Save, Print, E-mail’ function. This function also includes an exporting feature to a number of bibliographic managers such as RefWorks and the use of our output format editor, QuikBib.



Value-Added Features

CSA Illumina offers a number of value-added features to help with the search process and maximize the relevancy of search results.

THESAURUS SEARCH

Using a thesaurus is a more powerful way to identify relevant descriptors, along with related terms.
The Thesaurus is a search aid that helps you select appropriate terms, ensuring the most comprehensive retrieval. In LISA, the thesaurus allows you to browse terms in a hierarchical index and helps you define more accurately what you are looking for.

LISA Thesaurus may be searched directly from the Thesaurus tab, using the Thesaurus Search Feature.

There are 3 ways of searching the thesaurus:

1. The Alphabetical display presents an alphabetical list of thesaurus terms. This can be compared to an Index
2. The Hierarchical display shows a term and its hierarchy. You will find additional information in this view, including its Scope and History Notes, any Use For (UF) or Use directions, and its hierarchical relationships with Broader Terms (BT), Narrower Terms (NT), and Related Terms (RT). (see screenshot below).
3. The Rotated Index displays all thesaurus terms or phrases that contain the search term used. You should only enter one word in the box. For example if you search for the word “libraries” you will display libraries as a descriptor term but also “Academic libraries”, “Digital libraries” etc.

This example illustrates the hierarchical display:



"Online catalogues" may be referred to in English language documents by a number of terms, such as:

- online catalogs
- online public access catalogues
-OPAC
- OPACs

The LISA Thesaurus gives one permitted term or descriptor and that is "Online catalogues". The other synonymous terms are listed in the Thesaurus, with a UF (Used For) reference to the permitted term

Descriptor (DE): Online catalogues
Used For: Online catalogues, Online public access catalogues, OPAC, OPACs
Broader term BT: Catalogues
Narrower Terms NT Online union catalogues
Related Terms RT: Computerized catalogues, Online cataloguing

Marked terms can be searched from any of the displays, applying AND, OR, or Explode operators, and setting limits as defined above.

BROWSE INDEXES
Searches may also be activated through three browsable indexes: Author, Journal Name, and Publication Type.




The Research Process

I) How to begin the electronic research process

A. Determine your goals:
1. State your research question:
"??"
2. Set parameters for your search (eg, technology type, gender, geographical location,)



________________________________________
B. Identify general concepts:
1. Which general terms relate to your search?

C. Choose the appropriate database
1. Are there specific journals that specialize in the your area of research?


II) Build your search strategy:

A. Quick search:
1. Enter phrase or multiple search terms separated by Boolean operators AND to link terms, OR to link similar words or synonyms:

in Quick Search box


B. Advanced Search:
The drop boxes allow you to limit the search by any of the searchable field codes including Keyword (KW), Author (AU), Journal Name (JN), Descriptor (DE), Abstract (AB), or Title (TI). You can also limit your search to specific publication years and choose the record format. The descriptor field (DE) and abstract field (AB) will allow you to narrow down your search even more by locating specific descriptors and key words in the abstract.
Example: If I wanted to limit my search to India.





________________________________________
III) Analyzing Results

A. Good results:
If results are satisfactory, then Save, Print, E-mail citations or download them to a bibliographic manager such as RefWorks or QuikBib.

B. If results are not on target:
1. Check spelling of search terms and use thesauri or browsable indexes to drop unnecessary or misleading terms.
2. Increase precision: for example, if you want to emphasize the gender gap in access to Internet then you may have to search access as a descriptor (DE) or word in the title of the article instead of by keyword (KW). Also, sexual inequality may be more specific than just sex differences
3. You may need to rethink whether the database you selected is appropriate for your search.

C. Too few/too many results:
1. Increase retrieval by using fewer ANDs and more ORs

Example: KW=Internet OR information technology OR computers
Or...
2. Increase precision by using additional ANDs and fewer ORs (NOT can be used to exclude some terms)

Example: KW=(Internet AND information technology AND computers NOT telecommunications)


Contact us:

For Technical support issues: support@csa.com

For training requests: training@csa.com

For sales related questions sales@csa.com

For documentation please visit: http://www.csa.com/support/trainingmaterial.php

For a list of all available databases on CSA Illumina and any other products available from CSA:
http://www.csa.com/e_products/databases-collections.php

Monday, July 23, 2007

DSpace Digital Library Software

www DSpace
ABOUT DSPACE
Introducing DSpace Who's Using DSpace? Getting Started FAQs DSpace Implementors
DSPACE FOUNDATION
About Getting Involved DSpace Federation People Supporters
NEWS
News Events Publications Related Articles
DEVELOPERS
Software Projects Future Contributing Code Documentation
COMMUNITY
Join Mailing Lists




New To DSpace?
What is DSpace
Getting Started
FAQ
Supporters
Service Providers
Getting Started
Download
Current Release
Documentation
Support
Project Wiki
Main page
Who's using DSpace?
Related Projects
Tech FAQ
How do I...?
DSpace Open Source Software
Over 200 academic institutions and cultural organizations around the world have adopted DSpace – as a digital repository for articles, books, courseware, journals, websites, theses and more.



DSpace is freely available so you can customize it and extend it to suit your needs.

News
DSpace Foundation Launches
July 17, 2007 – HP and MIT Libraries today announced the formation of the DSpace Foundation, a non-profit organization that will provide support to the growing community of organizations that use DSpace, an open source software solution for accessing, managing and preserving scholarly works in a digital archive.

See full story





DSpace Chosen for 2008 Olympics Virtual Musuem Project
Beihang University in Beijing, one of China's top universities, will use DSpace to archive the 2008 China Summer Olympics, thus creating a collection of materials about the Beijing games that can be shared over the Internet quickly and easily. It is scheduled to open in March, 2008.

See full story


DSpace 1.4.2 Released
In May 2007, the DSpace Committers released DSpace 1.4.2. You can download the current version of DSpace at SourceForge: http://sourceforge.net/forum/forum.php?forum_id=694666

Read more...


More...
The New DSpace Foundation Website
DSpace How-To Guide Updated

Spotlights
Beihang University and HP labs create the China Digital Museum
The China Digital Museum project includes 18 campus museums, each with 20,000 -- 50,000 objects covering geoscience, biological, anthropological, science and technology. Beihang University led the development of the Digital Museum with the support of HP Labs.

Google Summer of Code 2007
In the Summer of 2007 DSpace is hosting five students to work on DSpace development projects.

Events
10.18.2007 - 10.19.2007 DSpace User Group Meeting in Rome Oct. 2007 - The 2007 DSpace User Group Meeting will be held on 18-19 October 2007 in Rome, Italy. The first day of the conference will feature a technical seminar on DSpace and Manakin. The second day will have user presentations on unique applications and use cases...

10.19.2007 ASIST 2007: Making DSpace Your Own Tutorial - The third Making DSpace Your Own tutorial will be held on Friday morning, October 19, 2007 at ASIST 2007 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.






View Full Calendar



Contact Us. webmaster@dspace.orgThis e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

Green Stone Digital Library Software in Wikipaedia

Your continued donations keep Wikipedia running!
Greenstone (software)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Greenstone Digital Library Software)
Jump to: navigation, search
This article does not cite any references or sources.
Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. (help, get involved!)
Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed.
This article has been tagged since March 2007.
Greenstone is a suite of software for building and distributing digital library collections. It provides a new way of organizing information and publishing it on the Internet or on CD-ROM. Greenstone is produced by the New Zealand Digital Library Project at the University of Waikato, and developed and distributed in cooperation with UNESCO and the Human Info NGO. It is open-source, multilingual software, issued under the terms of the GNU General Public License. The Company DL Consulting provides Greenstone commercial consulting, customization, support, maintenance and hosting services.


[edit] External links
Official page
an application at the New Zealand digital Library
Greenstone Wiki
DL Consulting: A company that specializes in the Greenstone suite
This software-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenstone_%28software%29"
Categories: Articles lacking sources from March 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Institutional repository software | Software stubs

ViewsArticle Discussion Edit this page History Personal toolsSign in / create account Navigation
Main page
Contents
Featured content
Current events
Random article
interaction
About Wikipedia
Community portal
Recent changes
File upload wizard
Contact Wikipedia
Make a donation
Help
Search
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link
Cite this article
In other languages
Polski

This page was last modified 02:49, 28 June 2007. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a US-registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.
Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers

Green Stone Digital Library Software


es
ru
fr
en
Support
Wiki
Examples
Download
Home
Greenstone Blog
Planet Greenstone
Congratulations, Veronica!From Category: Other News
Thursday 5th July, 2007
Greenstone team member wins prize at JCDL for "realistic books"
Upcoming Greenstone workshopsFrom Category: Other News
Thursday 5th July, 2007
... in Kuching, New York, Windhoek, Hanoi
Planet Greenstone LaunchedFrom Category: Other News
Tuesday 19th June, 2007
Planet Greenstone, our Greenstone news aggregator, has been launched and can be found at planet.greenstone.org
Greenstone 2.73 releasedFrom Category: Greenstone2
Friday 15th June, 2007
Greenstone v2.73 released! An unstable release containing new features and bug fixes. See the release notes for more information.
Greenstone in Southern AfricaFrom Category: Other News
Tuesday 22nd May, 2007
A new pilot project to introduce Greenstone in Southern Africa (Namibia, Lesotho, Malawi and Zimbabwe). Waikato and DLConsulting staff are volunteering their time to get this initiative off the ground.
Survey on Greenstone customizationFrom Category: Greenstone2
Tuesday 22nd May, 2007
As part of the work on Greenstone 3 we are running a survey on users' experiences with customizing pages in Greenstone 2 - format statements, macros etc. We welcome your comments on how we can make collection customization easier in Greenstone 3; the brief anonymous survey is here:http://chnm.gmu.edu/tools/surveys/2333/
Greenstone3.02 released!From Category: Greenstone3
Monday 19th February, 2007
See the Greenstone3 home page. Greenstone2 will continue to be supported for a long time yet (years), but ultimately we see Greenstone3 replacing it. This is a beta release: it contains (virtually) all the features needed for Greenstone2 compatibility, and has been extensively tested. We have added a new section to the Wiki on Greenstone3, and in particular a new page entitled Greenstone3 for Greenstone2 users about how to set it up and migrate your collections (with a list of possible problem areas). Greenstone2 is certainly not yet in the past, but Greenstone3 is definitely the future!
New documentationFrom Category: Documentation
Sunday 18th February, 2007
New documentation is available at the documentation section of the Greenstone support for South Asia website. Three new documents have been added entitled Greenstone: A Beginner's Guide, WINISIS to Greenstone: A Guide and Creating Digital Archives with Winisis.
Greenstone HistoryFrom Category: Documentation
Sunday 14th January, 2007
Interested in the history of the Greenstone project? Here is a brief account.
Greenstone v2.72 released!From Category: Greenstone2
Tuesday 26th December, 2006
Greenstone v2.72 released! A stable release containing new features and bug fixes. See the release notes for more information.
FeedPumper('wordpress/wp-rss2.php?cat=14','blog-entries',-1, 'http://www.greenstone.org/blog-entry-format.html');


Greenstone3
Greenstone3 is a complete redesign and reimplementation of the original Greenstone digital library software (Greenstone2). When complete, it will retain all the advantages of Greenstone2 - for example, it will be multilingual, multiplatform, and highly configurable. It incorporates all the features of the existing system, and is backwards compatible: that is, it can build and run existing collections without modification. Written in Java, it is structured as a network of independent modules that communicate using XML: thus it runs in a distributed fashion and can be spread across different servers as necessary. This modular design increases the flexibility and extensibility of Greenstone.
Please note, Greenstone3 is our research version of Greenstone, and is still incomplete, and not stable. For a production digital library we recommend using Greenstone2.
You might like to try Greenstone3 if:
You want increased flexibility with the interface, and like using XSLT.
You have your own library front end, and want to talk to a Greenstone collection server using XML and SOAP.
You want a distributed library
You want to add exciting new features into a Greenstone library, and have difficulty understanding the Greenstone2 C++ source code
You like trying out new software
You are kind and generous and would like to help out by testing the new software (thanks!)
Download
Alpha releases of Greenstone3 can be downloaded from SourceForge.
Windows distribution (112M)
Linux distribution (117M)
Mac OS X distribution (96M) Note: the Mac download is for the previous release of Greenstone (3.01) due to a binary library inconsistency across versions of MacOS X which we have not been able to reliably resolve in the 3.02 release. The newest release of Greenstone3 does run on a Mac but requires you to compile from source.
Mac OS X distribution (96M)
Source distribution (52M)
Or you can get Greenstone3 using Subversion(SVN). See below
Documentation
The design of Greenstone3: An agent based dynamic digital library Initial design document, Dec 2002.
Greenstone3: A modular digital library User and developer manual. Work in progress. (Last updated Aug 2006) The above two documents come as part of the install. Please read Chapter 1 of the manual for installation details, and Chapter 2 for collection building and interface customisation details. The remaining chapters are intended for the Greenstone developer.
Dynamic digital library construction and configuration Bainbridge et al. (2004). Proc European Digital Library Conference ECDL2004, Bath, England.
A new framework for building digital library collections Buchanan et al. (2004)
Demonstration Sites
NZDL Mirror The New Zealand Digital Library site served using Greenstone3. The interface is based around the 'classic' Greenstone3 look and feel. The collections available are the same collections used by the Greenstone2 server: new configuration files have been created for them, but they are otherwise unchanged.
Standard Greenstone3 This library uses the 'standard' Greenstone3 look and feel. It includes several demonstration collections, including Greenstone2 collections, Greenstone3 collections, and other non-standard demos.
Support
These releases are experimental. We would greatly appreciate hearing about any problems (or successes!) you have when using Greenstone3. To report bugs, problems and ask questions, please join the greenstone3 mailing list.
Notes
Read the README for installation notes.
Installing from SVN:
You will need to have Apache Ant and a Subversion client installed to compile and install Greenstone3. Please read the README.txt file in the greenstone3 directory for more information.
Run: svn co http://svn.greenstone.org/greenstone3/trunk greenstone3 cd greenstone3 (edit build.properties as appropriate) ant prepare install
Debian Sarge system: You need to have libgdbm-dev installed, and create a symlink from libgdbm-compat.so.3 → libgdbm.so.2.
Copyright Notice

Monday, July 16, 2007

Radio Frequency Identification

sandhya.avk@gmail.com Web History My Account Sign out

#lgpd{display:none}
Web Images Groups News Scholar more »

Advanced Search Preferences
Search: the web pages from India
.bl{display:inline !important}
New! View and manage your web history
Web
Results 1 - 10 of about 38,200,000 for rfid. (0.15 seconds)



Sponsored Links
Manufacturers RFID ReaderLeader in embedded RFID for ODMs.reader modules, antennas & morewww.skyetek.comSIMATIC IT: ManufacturingProducts. Use The Power ofAutomation to Increase Productivitywww.siemens.com/simatic-itTukevasta Korttitalostajäsen-, asiakas- ja henkilökortitetäluettavin ja kontaktisiruin!www.eskootava.fiExpressCard, PC CardsExpressCard Packaging, PC Cards,RFID, Custom Enclosureswww.duel-systems.comInterested in RFId?Internet store for RFId tagsand hardware. Global delivery.www.toptunniste.fi/topshop/Rfid?Summaries from 100s of top sources,Updated daily by our research staffwww.ITBusinessEdge.comRFID tagging solutionsLong Range RFID solutionsBaby/Personnel/Asset Protectionwww.xtag.net.auRFID Online DemoOnline Demo for Middlewarewith Case SharingSednasys.com
Wikipedia: RFID
Article in this online open encyclopedia on this subject.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RFID - 86k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID Journal - RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) Technology ...
Offers news and information about RFID and its many business applications.www.rfidjournal.com/ - 48k - 15 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID Journal — RFID FAQs - RFID Companies, Equipment, Medical ...
Find information on RFID companies, RFID equipment, and the medical advantages of RFID technology. Learn about RFID equipment produced by the leading RFID ...www.rfidjournal.com/faq - 97k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID Tutorial-Reports.Com
Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a method of remotely storing and retrieving data using devices called RFID tags. Take a closer look at how RFID has ...www.tutorial-reports.com/wireless/rfid/ - 20k - 14 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID learning, RFID training, RFID school and RFID certification ...
RFID learning, RFID training, RFID school and RFID certification at RFID4U. RFID Implementation Training, online RFID e-courses and RFID libraries are ways ...www.rfid4u.com/ - 28k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
What is RFID? - A Word Definition From the Webopedia Computer ...
This page describes the term RFID and lists other pages on the Web where you can find additional information.www.webopedia.com/TERM/R/RFID.html - 49k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID Solutions - Radio Frequency Identification Solutions
RFID Solutions: Ensure compliance, ncrease Visibility and Improve Service.www.manh.com/rfid/index.html - 21k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
The RFID Weblog
Although there are lingering concerns by privacy advocates over the use of RFID, there's no doubt that the use of RFID tags continues to increase. ...rfid.weblogsinc.com/ - 70k - 15 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RFID Gazette
Radio Frequency Identification news and commentary.www.rfidgazette.org/ - 42k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
What Is RFID?
Radio frequency identification (RFID) is a method of remotely storing and retrieving data using devices called RFID tags. An RFID tag is a small object, ...www.palowireless.com/rfid/whatisrfid.asp - 36k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Searches related to: rfid
rfid technology

rfid manufacturers

rfid cost

rfid applications

rfid library

rfid pdf

rfid solutions

radio frequency identification

Result Page:
1

2


3


4


5


6


7


8


9


10


Next

Try Google Desktop: search your computer as easily as you search the Web.

Search within results Language Tools Search Tips Dissatisfied? Help us improve
Google Home - Advertising Programs - About Google©2007 Google
sandhya.avk@gmail.com Web History My Account Sign out

#lgpd{display:none}
Web Images Groups News Scholar more »

Advanced Search Preferences
Search: the web pages from India
.bl{display:inline !important}
New! View and manage your web history
Web
Results 1 - 10 of about 52,700,000 for rdf [definition]. (0.20 seconds)



Sponsored Links
OpenLink VirtuosoStandards Compliant Platform forSemantic Data Web & RDF SPARQLvirtuoso.openlinksw.comSPARQL query languageQuery language for RDFdata model.www.profium.com/?sparql
Resource Description Framework (RDF) / W3C Semantic Web Activity
Official pages from the World Wide Web Consortium, includes the specification, resources and news, and a links collection.www.w3.org/RDF/ - 46k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Resource Description Framework (RDF) Model and Syntax Specification
Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a foundation for processing metadata; it provides interoperability between applications that exchange ...www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-rdf-syntax-19990222/ - 137k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this[ More results from www.w3.org ]
Resource Description Framework - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a family of World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) specifications originally designed as a metadata model but which has ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Description_Framework - 53k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Reality distortion field - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Reality distortion field is a term coined by Bud Tribble at Apple Computer Inc. in 1981, to describe company co-founder Steve Jobs' charisma and its effects ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality_distortion_field - 18k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this[ More results from en.wikipedia.org ]
See results for: rdf media
RDF Media Group RDF MediaRDF Media is one of Britain's leading independent television production companies with an outstanding reputation for producing and distributing high quality ...www.rdfmedia.com/
RDF Media Group About RDF Media GroupThe RDF Media Group is a group of companies that creates, acquires and distributes compelling television content, mainly in the factual, entertainment, ...www.rdfmedia.com/rdfmedia/about/
RDF Media - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaRDF Media Group is a British television production company founded in 1993 by David Frank. It was floated on the Alternative Investment Market in 2005. ...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RDF_Media
XML.com: What Is RDF
A good introduction to RDF (updated version of RDF and Metadata) by Tim Bray.www.xml.com/pub/a/2001/01/24/rdf.html - 26k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RDF Tutorial
The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a W3C standard for describing resources on the ... This chapter describes the OWL language built on top of RDF. ...www.w3schools.com/rdf/default.asp - 21k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
RDF Media Group RDF Media
RDF Media is one of Britain's leading independent television production companies with an outstanding reputation for producing and distributing high quality ...www.rdfmedia.com/ - 17k - 16 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Result Page:
1

2


3


4


5


6


7


8


9


10


Next

Try Google Desktop: search your computer as easily as you search the Web.

Search within results Language Tools Search Tips Dissatisfied? Help us improve
Google Home - Advertising Programs - About Google©2007 Google

LIBRARY WEBSITES

sandhya.avk@gmail.com Web History My Account Sign out

#lgpd{display:none}
Web Images Groups News Scholar more »

Advanced Search Preferences
Search: the web pages from India
.bl{display:inline !important}
New! View and manage your web history
Web
Results 1 - 10 of about 77,500,000 for library websites. (0.25 seconds)
500 ? '100%' : '500px'); PADDING-TOP: 11px">


Sponsored Links
Library Jobs200000+ Jobs, Over 25000 RecruitersGreat Career Prospects. Log On Now!Naukri.com
Sponsored LinkOnline Librarywww.loc.gov A One-Stop Guide to U.S. History. View Exclusive Online Collections.
Libweb - Library WWW Servers
A global directory of library home pages. ... Contents. Keyword Search for location, library type, name or other information. United States ...lists.webjunction.org/libweb/ - 7k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
LibDex - Worldwide index of library catalogues, web sites and ...
Directory of libraries with web pages. Links to each library's home page, and to its catalog if that's on the Web too. Browse by country, or search by name.www.libdex.com/ - 10k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Plainfield Guilford Township Public Library :: The Indiana Room
Either way, you'll find the library's Local and Indiana Information Department has a lot to ... Check dealers' websites for rare and out-of-print books ...www.plainfieldlibrary.net/indiana/in.html - 10k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
National Library of Australia
A free travelling exhibition from Australia's National, State and Territory libraries. Frequently asked questions · National Library websites A-Z . ...www.nla.gov.au/ - 22k - 14 Jul 2007 - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Australian University Libraries
Australian University Web Sites · CAUL Home. Australian University Library Web Sites ... catalogue via WWW or telnet - login as library, if prompted, ...www.caul.edu.au/uni-libs.htm - 23k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
[PPT]
Library Website Development and Maintenance
File Format: Microsoft Powerpoint - View as HTMLIntroduction; Objectives of library websites; Strategies for website development; Development steps; General web page design considerations; Case studies ...www.ncsi.iisc.ernet.in/raja/netlis/iirml/tbr3.ppt - Similar pages - Note this
Library of Congress: State Library Web Listing
http://www.publiclibraries.com/state_library.htm. Library of Congress. Library of Congress Help Desk ( September 5, 2006 )www.loc.gov/global/library/statelib.html - 2k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Indiana Courts > Law Library > Legal Links > Law Library Websites ...
Law Library Websites of the United States and Territories The following links are provided here for your convenience. The inclusion of links from this site ...www.in.gov/judiciary/library/links/library-links.html - 27k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Ohio Public Library Web Sites
Ohio Public Library Web Sites. Information on this table has been supplied to the State Library of Ohio by Ohio public libraries. ...winslo.state.oh.us/publib/libtable.html - 97k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this
Browse Lists of Canadian Library Web Sites and Catalogues ...
Information in the Canadian Library Gateway is maintained by the Interlibrary Loan Division. To report new or changed information about Canadian libraries ...www.collectionscanada.ca/gateway/s22-200-e.html - Similar pages - Note this
Result Page:
1

2


3


4


5


6


7


8


9


10


Next

Try Google Desktop: search your computer as easily as you search the Web.

Search within results Language Tools Search Tips Dissatisfied? Help us improve
Google Home - Advertising Programs - About Google©2007 Google