Marjorie M.K. Hlava, President and founder of Access Innovations, Inc. and the Data Harmony suite of indexing software, gives the Miles Conrad Memorial Lecture at the 2014 Annual Conference for the National Federation of Advanced Information Services (NFAIS).
The Miles Conrad Award and accompanying lecture was established in 1965 in commemoration of NFAIS founder, G. Miles Conrad. Hlava earned the Miles Conrad Award this January for her past and continuing services to NFAIS and the Information and Knowledge Management industries.
May 20, 2000: "Issues in the Study of Abstractions". Presented at the Eighth
Interdisciplinary Conference on General Evolutionary Systems, sponsored by the Washington Evolutionary Systems Society.
This presentation was provided by Robert Wolven of Columbia University, Dr. Thomas B. Hickey of OCLC, and Helen L. Henderson of Ringgold, Inc. during the NISO Webinar "Identifiers: New Problems, New Solutions, Part One" held on March 10, 2010.
Legal Research in the Age of Cloud ComputingNeal Axton
This presentation discusses the impact of the mass communication technologies including the Internet and Cloud Computing on the practice of law and legal research. This presentation was given the Advanced Legal Research class at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota of August 23, 2013 by Neal R. Axton, JD, MLIS.
You online: Identity, Privacy, and the SelfAbhay Agarwal
In the current landscape of media and communication, our world is undergoing immense and rapid transformations in the breadth, and format of how we interconnect. At the same time, it is difficult for even the most technically adept to fully comprehend the scope of these projects. This talk is a musing on the ideas behind online identity and mass communication in the 21st century. It intends to partially unravel the mystery behind networked social identity, as well as provide the tools for even the technically-disinclined to understand the possibilities for control, surveillance, freedom, and liberated identity within this new topology.
Some included topics:
* Online surveillance, and how deleting your Facebook isn’t enough
* Big Data analytics: why your data is worth money, and the (im)possibility of privacy
* Theories and Paradoxes in a hyper-connected future
* Alternative internets, (or darkness) and what they represent.
Keynote Address, 4 July 2013, South African Association for Science and Technology Education (SAASTE). Rethinking learning: Learning technologies in a networked society.
Erau webinar 3 9-17 project mangagment slidesERAUWebinars
Slides from an Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Webinar presented on March 9, 2017. The title of the webinar was "Cross-Cultural Project Management," with Dr. Jim Marion, PMP. These slides cover tips and pointers for managing large projects across national, language, and cultural lines.
May 20, 2000: "Issues in the Study of Abstractions". Presented at the Eighth
Interdisciplinary Conference on General Evolutionary Systems, sponsored by the Washington Evolutionary Systems Society.
This presentation was provided by Robert Wolven of Columbia University, Dr. Thomas B. Hickey of OCLC, and Helen L. Henderson of Ringgold, Inc. during the NISO Webinar "Identifiers: New Problems, New Solutions, Part One" held on March 10, 2010.
Legal Research in the Age of Cloud ComputingNeal Axton
This presentation discusses the impact of the mass communication technologies including the Internet and Cloud Computing on the practice of law and legal research. This presentation was given the Advanced Legal Research class at William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul, Minnesota of August 23, 2013 by Neal R. Axton, JD, MLIS.
You online: Identity, Privacy, and the SelfAbhay Agarwal
In the current landscape of media and communication, our world is undergoing immense and rapid transformations in the breadth, and format of how we interconnect. At the same time, it is difficult for even the most technically adept to fully comprehend the scope of these projects. This talk is a musing on the ideas behind online identity and mass communication in the 21st century. It intends to partially unravel the mystery behind networked social identity, as well as provide the tools for even the technically-disinclined to understand the possibilities for control, surveillance, freedom, and liberated identity within this new topology.
Some included topics:
* Online surveillance, and how deleting your Facebook isn’t enough
* Big Data analytics: why your data is worth money, and the (im)possibility of privacy
* Theories and Paradoxes in a hyper-connected future
* Alternative internets, (or darkness) and what they represent.
Keynote Address, 4 July 2013, South African Association for Science and Technology Education (SAASTE). Rethinking learning: Learning technologies in a networked society.
Erau webinar 3 9-17 project mangagment slidesERAUWebinars
Slides from an Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Webinar presented on March 9, 2017. The title of the webinar was "Cross-Cultural Project Management," with Dr. Jim Marion, PMP. These slides cover tips and pointers for managing large projects across national, language, and cultural lines.
Case Study: Integrating Data Harmony Terms and the eJournalPress Peer Review...Access Innovations, Inc.
Anna Jester from eJournalPress presents the integration project between eJournalPress and Access Innovations, Inc. Anna's team used Data Harmony software to index terms in order to correctly identify manuscripts for review.
How to make your content users more productive using Access Innovations, Inc.'s Navtree and Machine Aided Indexer (M.A.I.™), parts of the Data Harmony® software suite.
Presented by Bob Kasenchak of Access Innovations, Inc. at the 2014 Special Libraries Association (SLA) annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia on June 7, 2014.
A presentation by Dr. Jay Ven Eman, CEO of Access Innovations, Inc., on measuring the financial benefits of taxonomies. First presented at the 2009 Data Harmony Users Group meeting.
Case study of the American Institute of Physics thesaurus. Presented by Mark Cassar of the American Institute of Physics and Jack Bruce of Access Innovations, Inc. at the 2012 Data Harmony User Group meeting on February 8, 2012 at the Access Innovations, Inc. offices.
The JTHES as Part of the Intelligence Layer for the Sustainability Collection...Access Innovations, Inc.
Presented at the 2015 Data Harmony User Group Meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico on February 17, 2015 by Ron Snyder and Sharon Garewal of ITHAKA Labs.
The JSTOR Sustainability Collection, which will launch in 2015, is composed of journals, reports, and working papers selected in consultation with scholars, policy researchers, and subject librarians. The collection features journal titles from academic publishers, scholarly societies, and industry groups, as well as a substantial library of indexed reports and working papers from leading research institutes and university centers. It addresses the emerging interdisciplinary discussion about how the environment and human activities and economic gains can be made durable over the long term. Along with this broad set of content, the collection will feature specialized functionality to support research in this emerging field, including a semantic indexing feature that helps researchers locate related terms and concepts that may have varying names across disciplines.
Ron Snyder, ITHAKA Labs Director of Research and Development, and Sharon Garewal, Senior Metadata Librarian, will discuss how the JSTOR Thesaurus (JTHES) was applied as part of the intelligence layer for the Sustainability collection prototype. This includes adding a facet for sustainability within the JTHES to tag terms as part of the collection, working with SME's across disciplines, and applying the curated terms into a live data portal.
On the uses and implementation of taxonomy on the Web, with a particular focus on the taxonomy as part of an enterprise information environment. Presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava during Content Week 2005 in Miami, Florida.
An all-day version of Access Innovations' Taxonomy Fundamentals workshop, presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava and Bob Kasenchak at the 2014 Special Libraries Association (SLA) annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia on June 7, 2014.
This presentation was provided by Marydee Ojala of Information Today during the NISO event "The Impact of the Interface: Traditional and Non Traditional Content," held on November 20, 2019.
Slides for the iDB summer school (Sapporo, Japan) http://db-event.jpn.org/idb2013/
Typically, Web mining approaches have focused on enhancing or learning about user seeking behavior, from query log analysis and click through usage, employing the web graph structure for ranking to detecting spam or web page duplicates. Lately, there's a trend on mining web content semantics and dynamics in order to enhance search capabilities by either providing direct answers to users or allowing for advanced interfaces or capabilities. In this tutorial we will look into different ways of mining textual information from Web archives, with a particular focus on how to extract and disambiguate entities, and how to put them in use in various search scenarios. Further, we will discuss how web dynamics affects information access and how to exploit them in a search context.
Conforming to Destiny or Adapting to Circumstance: The State of Cataloging in...WiLS
Presented by Bobby Bothmann, Minnesota State University, Mankato for Peer Council 2019 on June 3rd at Madison Public Library in Madison, WI
Budgets, personnel, technology, services, and information-seeking behavior are some of the factors that influence today’s libraries. During this session, we will look at some of the historical technologies, processes, and trends in cataloging and examine how they panned out. We will use that information to identify and discuss current technologies, processes, and trends to see where we might be going and how advocacy might help us change fate.
This presentation was given at the CLIR/DLF Postdoctoral Fellowship Summer Seminar at Bryn Mawr college in Pennsylvania on July 29th 2014. The intention was to communicate what we are doing in the fields of text and data mining in the domain of chemistry and specifically around mining the RSC archive publication and chemistry dissertations and theses. How would these experiences map over to the humanities?
Broad introduction to information retrieval and web search, used to teaching at the Yahoo Bangalore Summer School 2013. Slides are a mash-up from my own and other people's presentations.
Joy Mountford at BayCHI: Visualizations of Our Collective LivesBayCHI
The lines between art, design, and information are dissolving as we experience new places and objects. Consider, for example, the organic flow of air traffic over North America at daybreak, the bursts of search query memes spreading around the globe, and the pointillist surge of mobile phone usage on New Year's Eve. Using the new techniques of generative data visualization, a new generation of artist/designers/engineer/scientists are creating gorgeous, dynamic experiences driven by massive sets of data about our own lives. Their work comes to life in architectural spaces, on walls of wood and metal and light and shimmering glass clouds suspended overhead. Of course it must be touched to be appreciated and engaged with, simple gestures launch a thousand images and possibilities. Many of these projects have received international recognition. They are primarily 3D applications that can run in real time, but really can only be appreciated by watching them, as movies. These data movies aim to make information easier to understand while being enjoyable to watch. Surprising insights surface through looking at our 'data life' in new ways, and may compel us to design in different, even better ways.
Using Lucene/Solr to Build CiteSeerX and Friendslucenerevolution
Presented by C. Lee Giles, Pennsylvania State University - See complete conference videos - http://www.lucidimagination.com/devzone/events/conferences/lucene-revolution-2012
Cyberinfrastructure or e-science has become crucial in many areas of science as data access often defines scientific progress. Open source systems have greatly facilitated design and implementation and supporting cyberinfrastructure. However, there exists no open source integrated system for building an integrated search engine and digital library that focuses on all phases of information and knowledge extraction, such as citation extraction, automated indexing and ranking, chemical formulae search, table indexing, etc. We propose the open source SeerSuite architecture which is a modular, extensible system built on successful OS projects such as Lucene/Solr and discuss its uses in building enterprise search and cyberinfrastructure for the sciences and academia. We highlight application domains with examples of specialized search engines that we have built for computer science, CiteSeerX, chemistry, ChemXSeer, archaeology, ArchSeer. acknowledgements, AckSeer, reference recommendation, RefSeer, collaboration recommendation, CollabSeer, and others, all using Solr/Lucene. Because such enterprise systems require unique information extraction approaches, several different machine learning methods, such as conditional random fields, support vector machines, mutual information based feature selection, sequence mining, etc. are critical for performance.
Using Lucene/Solr to Build CiteSeerX and Friendslucenerevolution
Presented by C. Lee Giles, Pennsylvania State University - See conference videos - http://www.lucidimagination.com/devzone/events/conferences/lucene-revolution-2012
Cyberinfrastructure or e-science has become crucial in many areas of science as data access often defines scientific progress. Open source systems have greatly facilitated design and implementation and supporting cyberinfrastructure. However, there exists no open source integrated system for building an integrated search engine and digital library that focuses on all phases of information and knowledge extraction, such as citation extraction, automated indexing and ranking, chemical formulae search, table indexing, etc. We propose the open source SeerSuite architecture which is a modular, extensible system built on successful OS projects such as Lucene/Solr and discuss its uses in building enterprise search and cyberinfrastructure for the sciences and academia. We highlight application domains with examples of specialized search engines that we have built for computer science, CiteSeerX, chemistry, ChemXSeer, archaeology, ArchSeer. acknowledgements, AckSeer, reference recommendation, RefSeer, collaboration recommendation, CollabSeer, and others, all using Solr/Lucene. Because such enterprise systems require unique information extraction approaches, several different machine learning methods, such as conditional random fields, support vector machines, mutual information based feature selection, sequence mining, etc. are critical for performance.
What does it take to create a web of government Linked Data? The UK government is finding out. Our story is one of pioneers. You will hear how we are moving out of existing settlements to the wide plains of government data. How we are starting to build the first railroads across this vast territory to open a new lands of opportunity. All the time, of course, having to avoid both outlaws and the Civil War back east.
Case Study: Integrating Data Harmony Terms and the eJournalPress Peer Review...Access Innovations, Inc.
Anna Jester from eJournalPress presents the integration project between eJournalPress and Access Innovations, Inc. Anna's team used Data Harmony software to index terms in order to correctly identify manuscripts for review.
How to make your content users more productive using Access Innovations, Inc.'s Navtree and Machine Aided Indexer (M.A.I.™), parts of the Data Harmony® software suite.
Presented by Bob Kasenchak of Access Innovations, Inc. at the 2014 Special Libraries Association (SLA) annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia on June 7, 2014.
A presentation by Dr. Jay Ven Eman, CEO of Access Innovations, Inc., on measuring the financial benefits of taxonomies. First presented at the 2009 Data Harmony Users Group meeting.
Case study of the American Institute of Physics thesaurus. Presented by Mark Cassar of the American Institute of Physics and Jack Bruce of Access Innovations, Inc. at the 2012 Data Harmony User Group meeting on February 8, 2012 at the Access Innovations, Inc. offices.
The JTHES as Part of the Intelligence Layer for the Sustainability Collection...Access Innovations, Inc.
Presented at the 2015 Data Harmony User Group Meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico on February 17, 2015 by Ron Snyder and Sharon Garewal of ITHAKA Labs.
The JSTOR Sustainability Collection, which will launch in 2015, is composed of journals, reports, and working papers selected in consultation with scholars, policy researchers, and subject librarians. The collection features journal titles from academic publishers, scholarly societies, and industry groups, as well as a substantial library of indexed reports and working papers from leading research institutes and university centers. It addresses the emerging interdisciplinary discussion about how the environment and human activities and economic gains can be made durable over the long term. Along with this broad set of content, the collection will feature specialized functionality to support research in this emerging field, including a semantic indexing feature that helps researchers locate related terms and concepts that may have varying names across disciplines.
Ron Snyder, ITHAKA Labs Director of Research and Development, and Sharon Garewal, Senior Metadata Librarian, will discuss how the JSTOR Thesaurus (JTHES) was applied as part of the intelligence layer for the Sustainability collection prototype. This includes adding a facet for sustainability within the JTHES to tag terms as part of the collection, working with SME's across disciplines, and applying the curated terms into a live data portal.
On the uses and implementation of taxonomy on the Web, with a particular focus on the taxonomy as part of an enterprise information environment. Presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava during Content Week 2005 in Miami, Florida.
An all-day version of Access Innovations' Taxonomy Fundamentals workshop, presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava and Bob Kasenchak at the 2014 Special Libraries Association (SLA) annual meeting in Vancouver, British Columbia on June 7, 2014.
This presentation was provided by Marydee Ojala of Information Today during the NISO event "The Impact of the Interface: Traditional and Non Traditional Content," held on November 20, 2019.
Slides for the iDB summer school (Sapporo, Japan) http://db-event.jpn.org/idb2013/
Typically, Web mining approaches have focused on enhancing or learning about user seeking behavior, from query log analysis and click through usage, employing the web graph structure for ranking to detecting spam or web page duplicates. Lately, there's a trend on mining web content semantics and dynamics in order to enhance search capabilities by either providing direct answers to users or allowing for advanced interfaces or capabilities. In this tutorial we will look into different ways of mining textual information from Web archives, with a particular focus on how to extract and disambiguate entities, and how to put them in use in various search scenarios. Further, we will discuss how web dynamics affects information access and how to exploit them in a search context.
Conforming to Destiny or Adapting to Circumstance: The State of Cataloging in...WiLS
Presented by Bobby Bothmann, Minnesota State University, Mankato for Peer Council 2019 on June 3rd at Madison Public Library in Madison, WI
Budgets, personnel, technology, services, and information-seeking behavior are some of the factors that influence today’s libraries. During this session, we will look at some of the historical technologies, processes, and trends in cataloging and examine how they panned out. We will use that information to identify and discuss current technologies, processes, and trends to see where we might be going and how advocacy might help us change fate.
This presentation was given at the CLIR/DLF Postdoctoral Fellowship Summer Seminar at Bryn Mawr college in Pennsylvania on July 29th 2014. The intention was to communicate what we are doing in the fields of text and data mining in the domain of chemistry and specifically around mining the RSC archive publication and chemistry dissertations and theses. How would these experiences map over to the humanities?
Broad introduction to information retrieval and web search, used to teaching at the Yahoo Bangalore Summer School 2013. Slides are a mash-up from my own and other people's presentations.
Joy Mountford at BayCHI: Visualizations of Our Collective LivesBayCHI
The lines between art, design, and information are dissolving as we experience new places and objects. Consider, for example, the organic flow of air traffic over North America at daybreak, the bursts of search query memes spreading around the globe, and the pointillist surge of mobile phone usage on New Year's Eve. Using the new techniques of generative data visualization, a new generation of artist/designers/engineer/scientists are creating gorgeous, dynamic experiences driven by massive sets of data about our own lives. Their work comes to life in architectural spaces, on walls of wood and metal and light and shimmering glass clouds suspended overhead. Of course it must be touched to be appreciated and engaged with, simple gestures launch a thousand images and possibilities. Many of these projects have received international recognition. They are primarily 3D applications that can run in real time, but really can only be appreciated by watching them, as movies. These data movies aim to make information easier to understand while being enjoyable to watch. Surprising insights surface through looking at our 'data life' in new ways, and may compel us to design in different, even better ways.
Using Lucene/Solr to Build CiteSeerX and Friendslucenerevolution
Presented by C. Lee Giles, Pennsylvania State University - See complete conference videos - http://www.lucidimagination.com/devzone/events/conferences/lucene-revolution-2012
Cyberinfrastructure or e-science has become crucial in many areas of science as data access often defines scientific progress. Open source systems have greatly facilitated design and implementation and supporting cyberinfrastructure. However, there exists no open source integrated system for building an integrated search engine and digital library that focuses on all phases of information and knowledge extraction, such as citation extraction, automated indexing and ranking, chemical formulae search, table indexing, etc. We propose the open source SeerSuite architecture which is a modular, extensible system built on successful OS projects such as Lucene/Solr and discuss its uses in building enterprise search and cyberinfrastructure for the sciences and academia. We highlight application domains with examples of specialized search engines that we have built for computer science, CiteSeerX, chemistry, ChemXSeer, archaeology, ArchSeer. acknowledgements, AckSeer, reference recommendation, RefSeer, collaboration recommendation, CollabSeer, and others, all using Solr/Lucene. Because such enterprise systems require unique information extraction approaches, several different machine learning methods, such as conditional random fields, support vector machines, mutual information based feature selection, sequence mining, etc. are critical for performance.
Using Lucene/Solr to Build CiteSeerX and Friendslucenerevolution
Presented by C. Lee Giles, Pennsylvania State University - See conference videos - http://www.lucidimagination.com/devzone/events/conferences/lucene-revolution-2012
Cyberinfrastructure or e-science has become crucial in many areas of science as data access often defines scientific progress. Open source systems have greatly facilitated design and implementation and supporting cyberinfrastructure. However, there exists no open source integrated system for building an integrated search engine and digital library that focuses on all phases of information and knowledge extraction, such as citation extraction, automated indexing and ranking, chemical formulae search, table indexing, etc. We propose the open source SeerSuite architecture which is a modular, extensible system built on successful OS projects such as Lucene/Solr and discuss its uses in building enterprise search and cyberinfrastructure for the sciences and academia. We highlight application domains with examples of specialized search engines that we have built for computer science, CiteSeerX, chemistry, ChemXSeer, archaeology, ArchSeer. acknowledgements, AckSeer, reference recommendation, RefSeer, collaboration recommendation, CollabSeer, and others, all using Solr/Lucene. Because such enterprise systems require unique information extraction approaches, several different machine learning methods, such as conditional random fields, support vector machines, mutual information based feature selection, sequence mining, etc. are critical for performance.
What does it take to create a web of government Linked Data? The UK government is finding out. Our story is one of pioneers. You will hear how we are moving out of existing settlements to the wide plains of government data. How we are starting to build the first railroads across this vast territory to open a new lands of opportunity. All the time, of course, having to avoid both outlaws and the Civil War back east.
Workshop presented at the Wisconsin Conference for Local History and Historic Preservation, Wisconsin Rapids, October 11, 2013. Presenters: Sarah Grimm, Electronic Records Archivist, Wisconsin Historical Society and Emily Pfotenhauer, Recollection Wisconsin Program Manager, WiLS.
Designing Structure Part II: Information ArchtectureChristina Wodtke
Part two on Designing Structure for my General Assembly class on User Experience is about Information Architecture. We cover why classification is important, types of classification and trends in IA.
Privacy, Ethics, and Future Uses of the Social WebMatthew Russell
A presentation to the Owen Graduate School of Management (Vanderbilt University) about social media and some of the technology behind the future uses of social media that are likely to shape the future of the Web as we know it.
"The greater promise of Big Data lies not in doing old things in slightly new ways. Instead, it lies in doing new things that were previously not possible. One major class of new things is adding intelligence to large-scale systems. In this session I will present a survey of how machine learning can be applied to real-life situations without having to get a PhD in advanced mathematics. These systems can be built today from open source components to increase business revenues by understanding what customers need and want. I will provide real world examples of best practices and pitfalls in machine learning including practical ways to build maintainable, high performance systems." - Ted Dunning
The Challenge of Digital Sources in the Web Age: Common Tensions Across Three...Digital History
Digital History seminar
29 September 2015
Ian Milligan (University of Waterloo)
http://ihrdighist.blogs.sas.ac.uk/2015/09/01/tuesday-29-september-2015-ian-milligan-the-challenge-of-digital-sources-in-the-web-age-common-tensions-across-three-web-histories-1994-2015/
Similar to NFAIS 2014 Miles Conrad Award Lecture, Presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava (20)
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
Making AI Behave: Using Knowledge Domains to Produce Useful, Trustworthy ResultsAccess Innovations, Inc.
In today's highly charged atmosphere of anxiety and anticipation about AI, and especially LLMs,
one of the biggest concerns is how to ensure that it returns accurate results (meaning both true
and pertinent to its audience). This is particularly important to scholarly, scientific, and other
technical organizations, whose constituents are often in very specific domains, such as
medicine, engineering, history, biology, chemistry, etc. One extremely useful tool to incorporate in an AI-based process in such cases is a comprehensive and well-structured knowledge domain which is based on a controlled vocabulary.
Smart Submit and Client Support
Michael Millar, Junior Software Developer, and Frank Coates, Client Support Manager
Get a peek at the new and improved Smart Submit and learn about new, easier ways to contact the support team at Access Innovations.
How a Good Taxonomy Can Provide Valuable Business Insights
Kristen Monahan, Public Library of Science (PLOS)
Kristen is a business analyst and she won’t be talking about the PLOS taxonomy but rather how she uses that taxonomy to drill down into the massive amount of content, metadata, and usage and process data that is PLOS for deep, detailed analysis and to drive business decisions. Much of this work involves trend analysis. For example, trend analysis of submissions can look at the time it takes from submission to decision by subject (narrow subjects like Covid, broad subjects like biotechnology), or by institution, or by country, etc. to see not just the overall big picture but where in their submission and peer review workflows the bottlenecks might be. A trend analysis of topics over time can prompt them to issue a call for papers for a topic they think needs to be better covered–and then look at both short-term and long-term trends resulting from that call to papers. Their taxonomy doesn’t just make their content smarter–it makes how they publish that content smarter too.
Editor and Peer Reviewer Assignments Using Data Harmony
Andrew Smeall, Hindawi Publishing
Andrew will show how Hindawi, an open access publisher, applies their taxonomy to make editor and reviewer assignments for incoming submissions to their journals.
Cloud Deployment of Data Harmony
Jeffrey Gordon, Lead Developer, Access Innovations, Inc.
Jeffrey will describe the cloud deployment of the Data Harmony software.
Marjorie M. K. Hlava, President, Chair of the Board, and Chief Scientist, Access Innovations, Inc.
During this annual highlight of the DHUG meetings, Margie will discuss the exciting new changes and additions to the Data Harmony software. She will be joined by some members of our software development team to talk about specific initiatives we have worked on over the past year.
Access Innovations and Atypon: Beyond Content Tagging
Hong Zhou and Gerasimos Razis, Atypon
Gerasimos and Hong will discuss the changes to the Atypon platform since DHUG 2020.
Getting to the Point: Using AI and Taxonomies to Craft Meta -Titles
Travis Hicks, American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Looking to better leverage SEO and include key terms in the url construct for research abstracts, ASCO is working with Access Innovations to evaluate how to programmatically create short titles for abstracts. The idea is to index titles against existing taxonomies as a way of producing a short title that succinctly identified what an abstract is about for purposes of constructing a new url configuration. Travis will discuss the need, challenges, and early results of the project.
Expanding the Use of MAIstro at ASCE
Xi Van Fleet, American Society for Civil Engineers
Using MAIstro, ASCE created the subject/topic taxonomies for their publications to enhance content discovery and business insight. After achieving their primary goal, they have been expanding its use for other applications.
Lessons Learned From Building a Taxonomy and Indexing 140 Years of Content
Michael Darr, Project Manager, D33 – American Chemical Society Pubs IT
Michael will talk about the things they would do differently if they were to build a new taxonomy and index a legacy file, and the things they did right the first time.
Bill’s talk is entitled “WHAT’S IN A NAME? How Kew helps drug regulators disambiguate the messy welter of medicinal plant names to shore up regulation and save lives”. It’s really eye-opening to realize how complicated and imprecise names can get, with multiple scientific, pharmaceutical and popular names for the same thing or with one name used for completely different things.
This has real-world consequences. For example, the EU mistakenly banned a useful plant we use every day when intending to ban a poisonous one because of a naming problem. How Kew is using semantic and taxonomic tools and technologies to bring order to this complexity (I almost said chaos) is really fascinating. They’re also helping to disambiguate nomenclature and provide links to authoritative information for botanical terms for use in journal articles, among other things.
Essentials of Automations: Optimizing FME Workflows with ParametersSafe Software
Are you looking to streamline your workflows and boost your projects’ efficiency? Do you find yourself searching for ways to add flexibility and control over your FME workflows? If so, you’re in the right place.
Join us for an insightful dive into the world of FME parameters, a critical element in optimizing workflow efficiency. This webinar marks the beginning of our three-part “Essentials of Automation” series. This first webinar is designed to equip you with the knowledge and skills to utilize parameters effectively: enhancing the flexibility, maintainability, and user control of your FME projects.
Here’s what you’ll gain:
- Essentials of FME Parameters: Understand the pivotal role of parameters, including Reader/Writer, Transformer, User, and FME Flow categories. Discover how they are the key to unlocking automation and optimization within your workflows.
- Practical Applications in FME Form: Delve into key user parameter types including choice, connections, and file URLs. Allow users to control how a workflow runs, making your workflows more reusable. Learn to import values and deliver the best user experience for your workflows while enhancing accuracy.
- Optimization Strategies in FME Flow: Explore the creation and strategic deployment of parameters in FME Flow, including the use of deployment and geometry parameters, to maximize workflow efficiency.
- Pro Tips for Success: Gain insights on parameterizing connections and leveraging new features like Conditional Visibility for clarity and simplicity.
We’ll wrap up with a glimpse into future webinars, followed by a Q&A session to address your specific questions surrounding this topic.
Don’t miss this opportunity to elevate your FME expertise and drive your projects to new heights of efficiency.
LF Energy Webinar: Electrical Grid Modelling and Simulation Through PowSyBl -...DanBrown980551
Do you want to learn how to model and simulate an electrical network from scratch in under an hour?
Then welcome to this PowSyBl workshop, hosted by Rte, the French Transmission System Operator (TSO)!
During the webinar, you will discover the PowSyBl ecosystem as well as handle and study an electrical network through an interactive Python notebook.
PowSyBl is an open source project hosted by LF Energy, which offers a comprehensive set of features for electrical grid modelling and simulation. Among other advanced features, PowSyBl provides:
- A fully editable and extendable library for grid component modelling;
- Visualization tools to display your network;
- Grid simulation tools, such as power flows, security analyses (with or without remedial actions) and sensitivity analyses;
The framework is mostly written in Java, with a Python binding so that Python developers can access PowSyBl functionalities as well.
What you will learn during the webinar:
- For beginners: discover PowSyBl's functionalities through a quick general presentation and the notebook, without needing any expert coding skills;
- For advanced developers: master the skills to efficiently apply PowSyBl functionalities to your real-world scenarios.
Accelerate your Kubernetes clusters with Varnish CachingThijs Feryn
A presentation about the usage and availability of Varnish on Kubernetes. This talk explores the capabilities of Varnish caching and shows how to use the Varnish Helm chart to deploy it to Kubernetes.
This presentation was delivered at K8SUG Singapore. See https://feryn.eu/presentations/accelerate-your-kubernetes-clusters-with-varnish-caching-k8sug-singapore-28-2024 for more details.
Software Delivery At the Speed of AI: Inflectra Invests In AI-Powered QualityInflectra
In this insightful webinar, Inflectra explores how artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming software development and testing. Discover how AI-powered tools are revolutionizing every stage of the software development lifecycle (SDLC), from design and prototyping to testing, deployment, and monitoring.
Learn about:
• The Future of Testing: How AI is shifting testing towards verification, analysis, and higher-level skills, while reducing repetitive tasks.
• Test Automation: How AI-powered test case generation, optimization, and self-healing tests are making testing more efficient and effective.
• Visual Testing: Explore the emerging capabilities of AI in visual testing and how it's set to revolutionize UI verification.
• Inflectra's AI Solutions: See demonstrations of Inflectra's cutting-edge AI tools like the ChatGPT plugin and Azure Open AI platform, designed to streamline your testing process.
Whether you're a developer, tester, or QA professional, this webinar will give you valuable insights into how AI is shaping the future of software delivery.
Dev Dives: Train smarter, not harder – active learning and UiPath LLMs for do...UiPathCommunity
💥 Speed, accuracy, and scaling – discover the superpowers of GenAI in action with UiPath Document Understanding and Communications Mining™:
See how to accelerate model training and optimize model performance with active learning
Learn about the latest enhancements to out-of-the-box document processing – with little to no training required
Get an exclusive demo of the new family of UiPath LLMs – GenAI models specialized for processing different types of documents and messages
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JMeter webinar - integration with InfluxDB and GrafanaRTTS
Watch this recorded webinar about real-time monitoring of application performance. See how to integrate Apache JMeter, the open-source leader in performance testing, with InfluxDB, the open-source time-series database, and Grafana, the open-source analytics and visualization application.
In this webinar, we will review the benefits of leveraging InfluxDB and Grafana when executing load tests and demonstrate how these tools are used to visualize performance metrics.
Length: 30 minutes
Session Overview
-------------------------------------------
During this webinar, we will cover the following topics while demonstrating the integrations of JMeter, InfluxDB and Grafana:
- What out-of-the-box solutions are available for real-time monitoring JMeter tests?
- What are the benefits of integrating InfluxDB and Grafana into the load testing stack?
- Which features are provided by Grafana?
- Demonstration of InfluxDB and Grafana using a practice web application
To view the webinar recording, go to:
https://www.rttsweb.com/jmeter-integration-webinar
Key Trends Shaping the Future of Infrastructure.pdfCheryl Hung
Keynote at DIGIT West Expo, Glasgow on 29 May 2024.
Cheryl Hung, ochery.com
Sr Director, Infrastructure Ecosystem, Arm.
The key trends across hardware, cloud and open-source; exploring how these areas are likely to mature and develop over the short and long-term, and then considering how organisations can position themselves to adapt and thrive.
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Here is something new! In our next Connector Corner webinar, we will demonstrate how you can use a single workflow to:
Create a campaign using Mailchimp with merge tags/fields
Send an interactive Slack channel message (using buttons)
Have the message received by managers and peers along with a test email for review
But there’s more:
In a second workflow supporting the same use case, you’ll see:
Your campaign sent to target colleagues for approval
If the “Approve” button is clicked, a Jira/Zendesk ticket is created for the marketing design team
But—if the “Reject” button is pushed, colleagues will be alerted via Slack message
Join us to learn more about this new, human-in-the-loop capability, brought to you by Integration Service connectors.
And...
Speakers:
Akshay Agnihotri, Product Manager
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In today's fast-changing business world, Companies that adapt and embrace new ideas often need help to keep up with the competition. However, fostering a culture of innovation takes much work. It takes vision, leadership and willingness to take risks in the right proportion. Sachin Dev Duggal, co-founder of Builder.ai, has perfected the art of this balance, creating a company culture where creativity and growth are nurtured at each stage.
Transcript: Selling digital books in 2024: Insights from industry leaders - T...BookNet Canada
The publishing industry has been selling digital audiobooks and ebooks for over a decade and has found its groove. What’s changed? What has stayed the same? Where do we go from here? Join a group of leading sales peers from across the industry for a conversation about the lessons learned since the popularization of digital books, best practices, digital book supply chain management, and more.
Link to video recording: https://bnctechforum.ca/sessions/selling-digital-books-in-2024-insights-from-industry-leaders/
Presented by BookNet Canada on May 28, 2024, with support from the Department of Canadian Heritage.
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Let me take this questions and provide you a short journey through existing deployment models and use cases for AI software. On practical examples, we discuss what cloud/on-premise strategy we may need for applying it to our own infrastructure to get it to work from an enterprise perspective. I want to give an overview about infrastructure requirements and technologies, what could be beneficial or limiting your AI use cases in an enterprise environment. An interactive Demo will give you some insides, what approaches I got already working for real.
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NFAIS 2014 Miles Conrad Award Lecture, Presented by Marjorie M.K. Hlava
1. Tales from the Field:
Our Changing World
Marjorie Hlava, President
Access Innovations, Inc.
www.accessinn.com
2. Miles Conrad Presentation - 2014
• Tales from the field
–The case of the missing abstracts
–Russian information
–USPTO
–Getty adventures
–Vatican bibles
• Where are we now?
• Future directions
3. The Cutting Edge
• Figure out the client needs
• Figure out the specifications
• Get approval on the specifications
• Figure out how to deliver the data following
the specs
• Quality control the data delivery
• …. But then life happens
4. The Case of the Missing Abstracts
• Tests showed that just searching the indexing did
not provide the full answers users wanted.
Searching the titles and abstracts as well would
improve search.
• Enough space could be found on servers if the data
were moved to in-house from Dialog and Orbit.
• New platform going into production
• New format – Messenger
• Specifications written, test file approved
5. Specifications
Need 99.998% accuracy for user acceptance
Left tagged ASCII
Office in Mexico City – Access de Mexico
Triple key - double proof
Two sets of volumes
792,000 abstract tapes destroyed
1970 – 1982 data
9. Beijing China November 1985
• NOTHING HAPPENED
• Finished
• On time
• Under budget
• At promised accuracy level
• Client said “ when I read your contract I
thought you had an unusual level of detail on
the Acts of God clauses….
• But I didn’t expect you to use every one of
them!”
21. Puzzles, Keys, and Digitization
• Photocomposition keys
• Science typographers
• Puzzles – SGML
• Encyclopedia Britannica
• Marquis Who’s Who
• Designing the Chicago research and trading
“desks”
34. All projects use classification
• To organize the job
• To organize the information
• To allow the finding of the items once digital
• Apply term tags
–Thesaurus-based and controlled
• Apply notation
–Not necessarily classification
–Just reflects the content
• The classification is NEVER done
–Needs to reflect the ever-changing data
35. Theoretical Underpinnings
• Outlines of Knowledge
–Thomas Aquinas
–John Knox (Bacon)
–Morton Taube - Encyclopedia Britannica
• Organization of Knowledge
–Cutter – 1896
–COSATI – 1964
• Alvin Weinberg
–Cranfield Institute papers
• Cleverdon, Aitchison, Vickery
36. Theory of knowledge
…. began early
• Plato et al. - BC
–Knowledge of reality is philosophy
• Realism
–St. Augustine 354 - 430 AD
–St. Thomas Aquinas 1225 -1274 AD
–Characteristics common in particulars
–Not the same object without them
36
37. Theory of Knowledge
• William of Occam (or Ockham) –
–c. 1288 – c. 1348
• Nominalism - Universals are represented by
words
• Conceptualism - Universals are general
concepts, mind dependent, formed by
extraction from particular experiences
37
38. Theory of Knowledge
• The Knower (Subject)
• The Known (Object)
• Knowing (a subjective process)
• An act, a process, or a concept
• Facts or perception?
• Yes or no answers
38
39. The Basis of Knowledge
• René Descartes 1596 - 1650
–Separate what is known - philosophy
–From new knowledge - science
–Conditions of reason, suspension of
belief
–Je pense donc je suis
–Cogito, ergo sum (from Socrates)
–I think, therefore I am
–Cartesian 39
40. Conditions for knowledge
• John Locke - 1632 - 1704
–“A sailor needs to know the length of a
line he has available before he goes out
to sound the ocean with it.” - J. Locke
• Acquire knowledge of reality
• Establish the conditions needed to acquire
knowledge
• Establish possible extent and limitations of
knowledge
40
41. John Locke 1632 - 1704
Classification of
kinds of
knowledge
Some Thoughts
Concerning
Education 41
42. Philosophy of knowledge divides
• 20th century thought
–Memory
–Perception and memory
–Religion
–Linguistic analysis
–Classification of knowledge
• Vocabulary control
• Linguistic analysis 42
43. Rise of Classification
• Charles Ammi Cutter 1837 - 1903
–Cutter Classification System
• Melville Dewey 1851 - 1931
–Dewey Decimal Classification
• Vladimir Lenin 1870 – 1924
–Rubricon - Russia
–Rubricator
• S. R. Ranganathan – India,1892 – 1972
–Faceted Classification System
–Colonicity 43
44. Charles Ammi Cutter
• Harvard College,
• index catalog,
–using cards instead of published volumes,
–an author index
–and a “classed catalog” or subject index.
• Expansive Classification System (Cutter)
–seven levels of classification,
–each with increasing specificity
–use lower levels and still be specific 44
45. Thesauri
• Philo of Byblos Herennius Philon; c. 64-141
AD
• Sanskrit, the Amarakosha 4th century verse
• Roget's Thesaurus, 1805
–by Peter Mark Roget, and published in 1852
• COSATI - 1964
–TEST - 1967
45
46. Points of knowledge
• Single point of knowledge
–Eve and the apple
–First organism
–All science
–Examples
• Linnean system
• Rubricator
• Locke system
• Dewey
46
47. Points of knowledge
• Multiple points of origin
–Several fields come together - Top terms
–Should they be captured separately or together?
–Facets or different views?
–Anarchy in the universe
–Examples
• Physical biochemistry
• NICEM
• Engineering
–Supporters = Cutter, COSATI, Ranganathan 47
49. The players are changing
• Standalone publishers
• Aggregators
• Serials and book vendors
• Hosting services
• Cloud
• Disaggregation
• Everyone is an author
• Loss of quality, accuracy, review
50. Funding for clients is changing
• The US Government spends $17 BILLION a day
more than it brings in
• 50% of the Republicans in the house have served 3
years or less (WSJ 9/23/2013)
• Public university funding - Illinois
–State appropriated funds 18.9%
• Decreasing at 9.4% from 4 years previous
–Tuition revenue 24.7 %
–Governmental grants and contracts 17.9 %
–Hospital income 12.4%
– http://www.ibhe.org/Fiscal%20Affairs/PDF/FY12PublicRevExpRpt.pdf
59. Media
• Punch cards
• 9 track tapes
• Mountain tapes
• Removable drives
• Diskettes
–8” –
–5.25 –
–3.5
–Flash drives
–Chips
72% of online Americans use
social networking in 2013, up
from 8% in 2005
Few differences by
Educational attainment
67% are HS Dropouts
72% are college graduates
(Pew Internet & American Life Project)
60. Indexes
• Pre-coordinate
–Back of the book
–Subject headings
• Post-coordinate
• Bayesian
• Co-occurrence
• Neural nets
• Machine learning
• Rules systems
61. Our Cozy World
• Has CHANGED
• The landscape is shifting in profound ways
• Funding models are changing
• Who will pay is changing
• Systems manipulating knowledge
• User needs and wants are changing
62. Challenge old assumptions
• In the olden days
– companies had “industries” that they worked within
– “markets” that they sold into, and
– “business models” that they pursued
– assumptions that drove their decisions
– and associations that represented them in
– a world that moved relatively slowly
• Now…every single assumption needs to be challenged
– rapid change in future trends
– innovation is constant
– we need to find the growth opportunities
63. Doing Business at the
speed of thought
• Communicating in 140 characters
–Twitter
–Text
• Small screens
• Small thoughts
• Always connected
• Social networking
64. Where are we headed?
• An Australian study predicted that 65 percent of
preschoolers would eventually work in jobs and
careers that do not currently exist.
• It’s going to be a move from a bad economy to the
next economy” - Mike Fleming, American Chamber
of Commerce
66. The Landscape is Changing
• New fields driven by technology
–Information architects, KM, KOSs
• New associations, new companies
• Interests and focus - associations merge, fold,
or morph
67. Systems Manipulating Knowledge
• Search domination
–Steering the Bayesian engines
–Tricking the search systems
• Google's personalization algorithms affect
search results.
• Yahoo and Microsoft do the same thing
69. Systems Manipulating Knowledge
• Knowledge is Power
http://www.ted.com/talks/eli_pariser_beware_online_filter_bubbles.html
"The Filter Bubble: What The Internet Is Hiding From You"
– Eli Pariser – Chair of MoveOn.org
70. Demographics
• World Population = 3,031,720,300 – July 1980
• World Population = 6,775,235,300 – July 2009
• World Population = 7,098,978,020 – February 2013
• World Population = 7,214,213,389 – February 2014
• U.S.A. Population = 180,671,000 – July 1960
• U.S.A. Population = 226,542,250 – July 1980
• U.S.A. Population = 317,599,000 – February 2014*
• U.S.A. Population = 321,666,147– February 2014*
• New Mexico Population = 1,303,303 – July 1980
• New Mexico Population = 2,085,287 – 2013 estimate
• *Accounting for births, deaths, and net immigration, the population
is expected to tick up by another person every 15 seconds.
71. Gross Domestic Product - USA
• 25% of global economy
• 20% of global manufacturing
• Government added 14% of USA GDP
• Not-for-profits added 5.5% of the USA GDP
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_the_United_States
72. Public finance - USA
• Public debt $17,322 trillion (2014)
• Revenues $2.5 trillion (2012)
• Expenses $3.54 trillion (2012)
• Economic aid (ODA) $30.7 billion (2011)
• Public and private US debt = 3.5 x GDP
• Public debt is growing at $2.44B each day
76. Who will pay? - Academic
• Demographics are increasingly challenging
• We cannot continue to use eminent domain as a driver
– Build more
– Consume more
– Add more people
– Increase the GDP
– Increase taxes
• Research and universities dependent primarily on tax revenue
– Grant funding
– Government contracts
– Donations
– UNM: 25% from State for 2011-12, 12% for 2013-14
– Funding models facing pressure to change
77. Who will pay? - Associations
• When the company pays for membership
– Most let membership continue indefinitely
– When a member, who first used his boss’s
membership, then decided to pay for his own,
didn’t think the $100 paid was worth it.
• Companies are changing association membership
• from company-paid to personal-paid
• causing problems for some of the biggest trade
groups and membership societies.
79. Landscape forms
• More publisher consolidation
• E-book self-publishing is surging
• Publishers will use metadata in more sophisticated
ways
• Expansion of peer power
• Less peer review more self publishing
81. Landscape Forms - Technology
• Increased content in the cloud
• Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
–iPad Air, iPhone 6
–Widespread adoption of Android
• Increasing demand for mobile apps and websites
• Increase in software-as-a-service (SaaS) options
–Ubiquitous communications
• Increased implementation of cloud computing
• Widespread adoption of 3D technology
82. Landscape Forms - Apps
• Applications being “socialized”
• Enhanced/interactive/portable e-books
• Many options for low-priced standalone e-readers
• More legal disputes and patent wars
• More interest in open and linked data
• Search analytics
• Gradual adoption of HTML5
• Streaming content
• Information prices are rising,
– but content budgets aren’t keeping pace
83. Landscape Forms – Data
• Smartphone adoption
• Blending of offline-online worlds
• Gesture-based computing
• Increased geo-tagging of information
• Voice interfaces
• Interactive Learning
• MOOCs—Massive Open Online Courses
84. Landscape Forms – Data
• Data analytics
• More Big Data
–Underneath, there are compelling applications
to be implemented
–Enterprise search and business insight
technologies
• Intelligent objects—The Internet of Things
• Work anywhere
• More predictive personalization
85. Landscape Forms - Libraries
• Increased engagement with social media
• Growing popularity of e-singles
• Web-scale discovery for library collections
• Facilitation roles for librarians
• Monograph e-platforms ascendant
– Books at JSTOR, University Publishing Online, University Press
Scholarship Online, University Press Content Consortium Book
Collections of Project MUSE
86. Landscape forms - Politics
• WikiLeaks
• Net neutrality battles
• Government tries to regulate the internet (SOPA and
PIPA, ACTA, WCIT)
• Privacy and security concerns dominate policy
discussions
• Developments in discovery tools
• New legal platforms
• Ongoing focus on security/privacy issues—online
• Newspapers and magazines online only
• Information access regulation
87. Giants are moving
• Battling on hardware and search
–Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon
• Battle of the mobile devices
–Apple iOS, Google’s Android, Microsoft Windows
• Growth in open source innovation/problem solving
• More installations of Solr
• Power outages are much more a problem than
data breaches
89. Publishers
• “publishers have behaved a bit like hunter-gatherers of
research” *
• Become information providers
• Invest in search & data management tools
• Make sure relevant articles find their way to researchers
• Open article databases to software developers
• Build community apps on top of their content
• Drive readers to obscure content
• Open Access initiatives
• *(Economist, “One of the best media businesses is also one of the most resented,”
Http://www.economist.com/node/18744177/)
90. “Ask an Expert” Sites
• 2005 – 15 % used such sites
• 2009 – 43% used them
• 2013 – 83% used them
• “librarian” usage is flat
• 83% of those who used librarian perceived value
• Embed ourselves in the expert sites!
• Add a taxonomy to leverage search
• http://www.libraryjournal.com/lj/home/889752-264/stuck_in_the_past_.html.csp
91. New kinds of customers
• Publishers
• Information professionals
• CTO, CIO, Librarian
• Researchers
• Information consultants
• Information architects
• Taxonomists
• Library technical assistants
• Business owners
• Planners
• Work inside libraries
• Researchers
• Information consultants
• Knowledge managers
• Records managers
• User experience
specialists
• Indexers
Where do we find such a diverse set of customers?
92. Thirst for knowledge
• “The reality of the future of meetings is that
learning is what most people will do for a
living in the 21st century. There will be a
requirement to constantly replenish that
knowledge, and a huge focus on knowledge
delivery.” -- Jim Carroll, Futurist
93. What information format?
• Symposia
• Articles
• Databases
• Meet-ups
• Tweet-ups
• Virtual networking
• Short seminars
• Continuing education
• Workshops
• Webinars
• Blogs
• Free vs fee
• 12 x per year 4 x per year
• All day or two hours
94. Need trusted sources
• Semantic enrichment
• Make data findable
• Ensure trustworthy data
• Replicable search results
– Discovery
– Precision
– Recall
• Aiding the human brain
• Automated efficient processing
95. Now
• Changing the way we learn
• Changing the way we find things
• Easier to manipulate what we know
– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8ofWFx525s
• Comprehensive information / invasive
– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNJl9EEcsoE
• People now know what search is.
96. Our Path
• Metadata 2.0
– Taxonomies will lead innovative search
– Publishers will be using metadata in increasingly
sophisticated ways
• Production will shift to web ready data
– Publishers already had big data!
– Accelerated repackaging and combining of existing
resources
– Channeling of data will become more important
– Semantic tagging will leverage product development
– Selling more directly to the consumer
97. Our Path
• Markets
–Publishers and enterprises will embrace the
web for distribution
–Government funded sales will decrease
–Enterprise sales will increase
• Reaching customers
–More personal approach
–Fewer will attend conferences
98. Future
• Information any place, any time
• A great big mess - unless we corral it.
–Tag it,
–Clean it,
–Weed it,
–Curate it.
• Everyone is creating content