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www.ala.org
News, issues and resources for the professional librarian. Emphasis on USA but much is applicable to other systems.
Posted by LibraryEnglish and 37 others with 1 comment on Thu May 24 2007 at 04:04 UTC | info | related
www.ariadne.ac.uk
Paul Miller looks at recent attempts to make library resources more appealing, including the Talis competition to build library 'mashups
www.tametheweb.com
by Michael Stephens, opinion-setter in the forefront of the Library 2.0 movement
lu.com
ODLIS is designed to be a hypertext reference resource for library and information science professionals, university students and faculty, and users of all types of libraries. Broad in scope, ODLIS includes not only the terminology of the various specializations within library science and information studies but also the vocabulary of publishing, printing, binding, the book trade, graphic arts, book history, literature, bibliography, telecommunications, and computer science when, in the author's judgment, a definition might prove helpful to librarians and information specialists in their work. Entries are descriptive, with examples provided in boldface when appropriate. The definitions of terms used in Anglo-American Cataloging Rules follow AACR2 closely and are therefore intended to be prescriptive. The dictionary includes some slang terms and idioms, and a few obsolete terms, often as See references to the term in current use.
Posted by LibraryEnglish and 15 others with 1 comment on Thu May 10 2007 at 09:12 UTC | info | related
www.ala.org
Contains a language table of common terms in six languages: English, Chinese, Koreal, Japanese, French, Spanish. Could be printed out as an emergency measure
www.library.mun.ca
Monolingual glossary of common terms; definitions useful for explaining these terms to users. Compiled by the Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada
www.bibliotheks-glossar.de
This glossary, compiled by Birgit Wiegandt, contains about 90,000 technical terms and abbreviations about libraries, books and data processing. It is intended to be a resource for librarians and other users
www.dowling.edu
Dowling College Library was one of the first to start podcasting.It's a good example of how to do it!
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