Jabes 2009 - Conférence inaugurale "Un avenir sans livres pour les bibliothèques ?" Stefano Mazzocchi, Metaweb Technologies dans le cadre des Journées Abes 2009
Planning and Managing Digital Library & Archive Projectsac2182
The document provides an overview of a workshop on developing and managing digital library and archive projects. It includes the workshop schedule, introductions from attendees, strategies for success, managing born-digital assets and digitized content, infrastructure requirements, and considerations for digital preservation over the long-term.
No more BITS - Blind Insignificant Technologies ands Systems by Roger Roberts...ACTUONDA
No more BITS - Blind Insignificant Technologies ands Systems by Roger Roberts of RTBF TITAN
Primer encuentro BIG MEDIA
Conectando Media, Audiencia y Publicidad con Datos
24 de junio 2014, Madrid
• Sponsor Platinum : Perfect Memory
• Sponsor Gold : Stratio, Paradigma
• Con el apoyo de : Big Data Spain, Medios On
• Socio tecnológico : Agora News
• Organizadores : Actuonda y Cátedra Big Data UAM-IBM
• Contacto : Nicolas Moulard (Actuonda) moulard@actuonda.com @Radio_20
www.bigmediaconnect.es
The document discusses emerging trends in library networks in the new millennium, including the growth of digital resources and collections, developments in digital library technologies, and the future of networked digital resources. Some key points discussed are the exponential growth of information, transition from physical to digital media, consortium approaches for accessing content, developing digital collections and repositories, and emerging technologies like semantic retrieval and knowledge sharing platforms. The future of library networks is envisioned to include fluid and transient multimedia resources, free and flexible virtual information spaces, global and personalized access, and more emphasis on informal knowledge exchange and social relationships.
The document discusses the need for a national policy to preserve digital books and cultural heritage as formats and technologies change. It notes that currently no single organization is responsible for digital book preservation. Portico has had some success in preserving academic ebooks, but has been unable to expand to trade publishers without a national policy. A coordinated effort is needed between libraries, publishers, and government to develop standards and infrastructure to ensure long-term preservation of digital content as the nature of publishing continues to evolve in the digital age.
Du Literary and linguistic computing aux Digital Humanities : retour sur 40 a...OpenEdition
The document discusses the evolution of digital humanities from literary and linguistic computing to humanities computing to digital humanities. Key points include:
1) Digital technologies have transformed humanities scholarship by making objects of study digital and changing research methods.
2) Early work in literary and linguistic computing in the 1960s-1980s used computers to analyze texts but was only accessible to technical experts.
3) Humanities computing from the 1980s-1990s saw institutionalization and standardization through projects like the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI).
4) Digital humanities from the 1990s onward has been shaped by increased digitization, collaboration, and development of new infrastructures and approaches like linking and analyzing
"Objective fiction: the semantic construction of web reality" talks about current challenges for semantic technologies, and the Semantic Web in particular, focusing on cognitive and social dimensions of human semantics.
Planning and Managing Digital Library & Archive Projectsac2182
The document provides an overview of a workshop on developing and managing digital library and archive projects. It includes the workshop schedule, introductions from attendees, strategies for success, managing born-digital assets and digitized content, infrastructure requirements, and considerations for digital preservation over the long-term.
No more BITS - Blind Insignificant Technologies ands Systems by Roger Roberts...ACTUONDA
No more BITS - Blind Insignificant Technologies ands Systems by Roger Roberts of RTBF TITAN
Primer encuentro BIG MEDIA
Conectando Media, Audiencia y Publicidad con Datos
24 de junio 2014, Madrid
• Sponsor Platinum : Perfect Memory
• Sponsor Gold : Stratio, Paradigma
• Con el apoyo de : Big Data Spain, Medios On
• Socio tecnológico : Agora News
• Organizadores : Actuonda y Cátedra Big Data UAM-IBM
• Contacto : Nicolas Moulard (Actuonda) moulard@actuonda.com @Radio_20
www.bigmediaconnect.es
The document discusses emerging trends in library networks in the new millennium, including the growth of digital resources and collections, developments in digital library technologies, and the future of networked digital resources. Some key points discussed are the exponential growth of information, transition from physical to digital media, consortium approaches for accessing content, developing digital collections and repositories, and emerging technologies like semantic retrieval and knowledge sharing platforms. The future of library networks is envisioned to include fluid and transient multimedia resources, free and flexible virtual information spaces, global and personalized access, and more emphasis on informal knowledge exchange and social relationships.
The document discusses the need for a national policy to preserve digital books and cultural heritage as formats and technologies change. It notes that currently no single organization is responsible for digital book preservation. Portico has had some success in preserving academic ebooks, but has been unable to expand to trade publishers without a national policy. A coordinated effort is needed between libraries, publishers, and government to develop standards and infrastructure to ensure long-term preservation of digital content as the nature of publishing continues to evolve in the digital age.
Du Literary and linguistic computing aux Digital Humanities : retour sur 40 a...OpenEdition
The document discusses the evolution of digital humanities from literary and linguistic computing to humanities computing to digital humanities. Key points include:
1) Digital technologies have transformed humanities scholarship by making objects of study digital and changing research methods.
2) Early work in literary and linguistic computing in the 1960s-1980s used computers to analyze texts but was only accessible to technical experts.
3) Humanities computing from the 1980s-1990s saw institutionalization and standardization through projects like the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI).
4) Digital humanities from the 1990s onward has been shaped by increased digitization, collaboration, and development of new infrastructures and approaches like linking and analyzing
"Objective fiction: the semantic construction of web reality" talks about current challenges for semantic technologies, and the Semantic Web in particular, focusing on cognitive and social dimensions of human semantics.
Sustainability and Longevity: Two sides of the same quality? Christoph Becker
This document discusses sustainability and longevity in information systems design. It argues that sustainability and longevity are two sides of the same quality concern. The document outlines an agenda to discuss digital preservation, curation, and how requirements engineering can help address sustainability as a shared concern. It proposes several research questions around quality models and tradeoffs, cultural and practice barriers, and how to systematically consider sustainability in the requirements process.
The Venice Time Machine aims to digitally preserve and provide access to historical documents from Venice through various projects. These include digitizing documents using tomography, developing tools to extract text from images, modeling the information and relationships within documents, building an information system to allow searching across documents, linking documents to related scholarship to enrich the content, and creating digital experiences to promote research and teaching. The goal is to make the historical record of Venice available while ensuring long-term preservation, and to demonstrate the value of digital humanities approaches and tools.
The Recurated Museum: IV. Collections Management & SustainabilityChristopher Morse
Slides from the fourth session of the course "The Recurated Museum" by Sytze Van Herck & Christopher Morse at the University of Luxembourg (Summer Semester, 2020).
Course slides typically begin with a brief summary of the online discussions that occurred before the session.
Brainframes, digital technologies and connected intelligence -Derrick de Kerc...thiteu
The document discusses several key ideas around the transition to a digital economy and networked society:
1) Technology is decentralizing jobs and shifting from hardware to software. Information is becoming digitized and accessible online.
2) The internet allows for "swarm creativity" where many individuals collectively contribute to innovation in an uncoordinated way. Companies must share power and information with online communities.
3) Tagging and connecting information online allows for more personalized search and recommendations, as well as new forms of collaboration and knowledge sharing between individuals and groups.
4) The emerging digital economy is driven by user-generated content and empowerment online, with opportunities for individuals and communities to create value in new ways.
Dealing with Data Diversity in a Smart City Data HubMathieu d'Aquin
This document discusses the issue of data diversity in smart city data hubs. It argues that data can be diverse in many ways, not just content but also in attributes like licensing and policies. This diversity needs to be managed carefully. The document presents an example of WiFi sensors generating diverse data for a smart city project in Milton Keynes. It proposes that semantic representations of data flows and relationships can help manage diversity at the metadata level and enable reasoning about how attributes propagate across linked data. Formal ontologies are needed to clearly describe diverse data artifacts and their relationships in smart city applications.
The document discusses digital libraries, defining them as collections of digitized materials including books, articles, and other documents that are accessible online through computer networks. It notes key benefits of digital libraries like increased access for users anytime from anywhere, lower costs compared to physical libraries, and preservation of fragile materials by allowing multiple simultaneous users. However, the document also outlines several challenges in creating effective digital libraries, such as developing technologies for digitizing analog materials, addressing copyright and licensing issues, and establishing standards and protocols to facilitate assembling distributed digital library collections from various sources.
Guenther Krumpak: The Book and The Internet - the Antithesis between Paper an...KISK FF MU
This document discusses information management and the roles of books and the internet.
It begins by introducing the speaker and their background. It then defines information and discusses how information becomes knowledge when it is processed, structured, and used. Large amounts of new information are constantly being created through various media.
The document argues that while information management is important for organizations, there are also concerns about data accuracy, privacy, and who benefits. It also argues that books will not disappear because literacy and limited electronic storage lifespan require the persistence of physical books. The document closes by suggesting the audience may one day work in information management and should consider these issues.
Semantic Libraries: the Container, the Content and the ContendersStefan Gradmann
The document discusses the transition from traditional libraries to semantic libraries, where information is organized and linked semantically rather than through physical containers and linear documents. It explores how libraries can generate knowledge through automated reasoning on semantically enriched content. Several tools and projects are presented that aim to publish content as structured, interconnected data in order to realize the vision of semantic libraries.
This document provides an introduction to digital preservation. It discusses challenges such as hardware and software obsolescence, storage media decay, and loss of information over time. Standards like the UNESCO Charter on Digital Preservation are mentioned, which emphasize the importance of preserving digital heritage. The heterogeneity of digital materials, formats, and metadata are issues that must be addressed. Approaches to preservation like migration, emulation, and normalization are outlined. The importance of preservation policies, metadata, tools, legal issues, and trusted repositories are also summarized.
This document discusses online communication and the internet. It defines online communication as reading, writing and communicating via networked computers, which originated in the 1960s. It then discusses key features of online communication like interactivity, virtuality and hypertextuality. It also covers strengths like facilitating networking and collaboration, and weaknesses like technical issues and information overload. The document also provides details on internet networks, components like clients, servers, nodes and transmission lines, as well as protocols that allow communication between devices.
Chapter 4: Paradigms
from
Dix, Finlay, Abowd and Beale (2004).
Human-Computer Interaction, third edition.
Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-239864-8.
http://www.hcibook.com/e3/
The document discusses the history and evolution of paradigms in human-computer interaction (HCI). It describes several paradigm shifts in interactive technologies including: batch processing, time-sharing, interactive computing, graphical displays, personal computing, the World Wide Web, ubiquitous computing. Each new paradigm created a new perception of the human-computer relationship.
This document provides an overview and introduction to creating and managing digital collections, including:
- Defining digital libraries and their components
- The importance of selection criteria, intellectual property rights, and other legal considerations for digitization
- Cost factors and examples for digitizing different types of materials
- Standards for image processing, file formats, and quality control
- The role and types of metadata, content standards, and ensuring interoperability
- Database software options and technical considerations for storage, access, and user interfaces
LIS Game Changer Trends and Profession Motivation by Muhammad Shafiq RanaAta Rehman
Makerspaces, digital scholarship centers, and flexible design are trends transforming libraries. Makerspaces allow patrons to create with tools like 3D printers. Digital scholarship centers provide resources for research using technologies like data visualization. Libraries are adopting flexible, modular furniture and bright colors to create welcoming community spaces. Collection assessment also focuses more on continuous review in response to curricular needs rather than one-time projects.
Institutional knowledge and information ecology in a Free Software ecosystemDerek Keats
Institutional knowledge and information ecology in a Free Software ecosystem: The early days of KIM was presented at the International conference on knowledge economy 2009. It documents some of the things we are thinking and doing at Wits only 9 months into the establishment of the Knowledge and Information Management Portfolio.
The two map slides are from http://www.worldmapper.org/
I believe used under fair use, but will gladly remove them if this is not the case.
The Navigation Layer - Making Sense Of It AllJim Kalbach
As we accumulate more and more information online, we’re inclined to add more and more metadata—so we can order it, manage it, and re-find it. This growing belt of metadata is referred to as the “navigation layer.“ It‘s the series of filters, categories, tags, and other devices that let us to interact with information so we can sift out the noise.
What’s more, the navigation layer isn’t just about finding information—it can also help us make sense of the stuff we find. Sentiment analysis and entity extraction, for example, provide new insights into the information we come across. Ultimately, the navigation layer can point to high-order patterns that increase understanding.
Sustainability and Longevity: Two sides of the same quality? Christoph Becker
This document discusses sustainability and longevity in information systems design. It argues that sustainability and longevity are two sides of the same quality concern. The document outlines an agenda to discuss digital preservation, curation, and how requirements engineering can help address sustainability as a shared concern. It proposes several research questions around quality models and tradeoffs, cultural and practice barriers, and how to systematically consider sustainability in the requirements process.
The Venice Time Machine aims to digitally preserve and provide access to historical documents from Venice through various projects. These include digitizing documents using tomography, developing tools to extract text from images, modeling the information and relationships within documents, building an information system to allow searching across documents, linking documents to related scholarship to enrich the content, and creating digital experiences to promote research and teaching. The goal is to make the historical record of Venice available while ensuring long-term preservation, and to demonstrate the value of digital humanities approaches and tools.
The Recurated Museum: IV. Collections Management & SustainabilityChristopher Morse
Slides from the fourth session of the course "The Recurated Museum" by Sytze Van Herck & Christopher Morse at the University of Luxembourg (Summer Semester, 2020).
Course slides typically begin with a brief summary of the online discussions that occurred before the session.
Brainframes, digital technologies and connected intelligence -Derrick de Kerc...thiteu
The document discusses several key ideas around the transition to a digital economy and networked society:
1) Technology is decentralizing jobs and shifting from hardware to software. Information is becoming digitized and accessible online.
2) The internet allows for "swarm creativity" where many individuals collectively contribute to innovation in an uncoordinated way. Companies must share power and information with online communities.
3) Tagging and connecting information online allows for more personalized search and recommendations, as well as new forms of collaboration and knowledge sharing between individuals and groups.
4) The emerging digital economy is driven by user-generated content and empowerment online, with opportunities for individuals and communities to create value in new ways.
Dealing with Data Diversity in a Smart City Data HubMathieu d'Aquin
This document discusses the issue of data diversity in smart city data hubs. It argues that data can be diverse in many ways, not just content but also in attributes like licensing and policies. This diversity needs to be managed carefully. The document presents an example of WiFi sensors generating diverse data for a smart city project in Milton Keynes. It proposes that semantic representations of data flows and relationships can help manage diversity at the metadata level and enable reasoning about how attributes propagate across linked data. Formal ontologies are needed to clearly describe diverse data artifacts and their relationships in smart city applications.
The document discusses digital libraries, defining them as collections of digitized materials including books, articles, and other documents that are accessible online through computer networks. It notes key benefits of digital libraries like increased access for users anytime from anywhere, lower costs compared to physical libraries, and preservation of fragile materials by allowing multiple simultaneous users. However, the document also outlines several challenges in creating effective digital libraries, such as developing technologies for digitizing analog materials, addressing copyright and licensing issues, and establishing standards and protocols to facilitate assembling distributed digital library collections from various sources.
Guenther Krumpak: The Book and The Internet - the Antithesis between Paper an...KISK FF MU
This document discusses information management and the roles of books and the internet.
It begins by introducing the speaker and their background. It then defines information and discusses how information becomes knowledge when it is processed, structured, and used. Large amounts of new information are constantly being created through various media.
The document argues that while information management is important for organizations, there are also concerns about data accuracy, privacy, and who benefits. It also argues that books will not disappear because literacy and limited electronic storage lifespan require the persistence of physical books. The document closes by suggesting the audience may one day work in information management and should consider these issues.
Semantic Libraries: the Container, the Content and the ContendersStefan Gradmann
The document discusses the transition from traditional libraries to semantic libraries, where information is organized and linked semantically rather than through physical containers and linear documents. It explores how libraries can generate knowledge through automated reasoning on semantically enriched content. Several tools and projects are presented that aim to publish content as structured, interconnected data in order to realize the vision of semantic libraries.
This document provides an introduction to digital preservation. It discusses challenges such as hardware and software obsolescence, storage media decay, and loss of information over time. Standards like the UNESCO Charter on Digital Preservation are mentioned, which emphasize the importance of preserving digital heritage. The heterogeneity of digital materials, formats, and metadata are issues that must be addressed. Approaches to preservation like migration, emulation, and normalization are outlined. The importance of preservation policies, metadata, tools, legal issues, and trusted repositories are also summarized.
This document discusses online communication and the internet. It defines online communication as reading, writing and communicating via networked computers, which originated in the 1960s. It then discusses key features of online communication like interactivity, virtuality and hypertextuality. It also covers strengths like facilitating networking and collaboration, and weaknesses like technical issues and information overload. The document also provides details on internet networks, components like clients, servers, nodes and transmission lines, as well as protocols that allow communication between devices.
Chapter 4: Paradigms
from
Dix, Finlay, Abowd and Beale (2004).
Human-Computer Interaction, third edition.
Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-239864-8.
http://www.hcibook.com/e3/
The document discusses the history and evolution of paradigms in human-computer interaction (HCI). It describes several paradigm shifts in interactive technologies including: batch processing, time-sharing, interactive computing, graphical displays, personal computing, the World Wide Web, ubiquitous computing. Each new paradigm created a new perception of the human-computer relationship.
This document provides an overview and introduction to creating and managing digital collections, including:
- Defining digital libraries and their components
- The importance of selection criteria, intellectual property rights, and other legal considerations for digitization
- Cost factors and examples for digitizing different types of materials
- Standards for image processing, file formats, and quality control
- The role and types of metadata, content standards, and ensuring interoperability
- Database software options and technical considerations for storage, access, and user interfaces
LIS Game Changer Trends and Profession Motivation by Muhammad Shafiq RanaAta Rehman
Makerspaces, digital scholarship centers, and flexible design are trends transforming libraries. Makerspaces allow patrons to create with tools like 3D printers. Digital scholarship centers provide resources for research using technologies like data visualization. Libraries are adopting flexible, modular furniture and bright colors to create welcoming community spaces. Collection assessment also focuses more on continuous review in response to curricular needs rather than one-time projects.
Institutional knowledge and information ecology in a Free Software ecosystemDerek Keats
Institutional knowledge and information ecology in a Free Software ecosystem: The early days of KIM was presented at the International conference on knowledge economy 2009. It documents some of the things we are thinking and doing at Wits only 9 months into the establishment of the Knowledge and Information Management Portfolio.
The two map slides are from http://www.worldmapper.org/
I believe used under fair use, but will gladly remove them if this is not the case.
The Navigation Layer - Making Sense Of It AllJim Kalbach
As we accumulate more and more information online, we’re inclined to add more and more metadata—so we can order it, manage it, and re-find it. This growing belt of metadata is referred to as the “navigation layer.“ It‘s the series of filters, categories, tags, and other devices that let us to interact with information so we can sift out the noise.
What’s more, the navigation layer isn’t just about finding information—it can also help us make sense of the stuff we find. Sentiment analysis and entity extraction, for example, provide new insights into the information we come across. Ultimately, the navigation layer can point to high-order patterns that increase understanding.
Similar to Jabes 2009 - Conférence inaugurale "Un avenir sans livres pour les bibliothèques ?" (20)
Jabes 2021 - Poster "Initiation aux études historiques"ABES
MANUEL NUMÉRIQUE EN ACCÈS LIBRE
POUR L’ENSEIGNEMENT SUPÉRIEUR EN HISTOIRE
• Favorise l’apprentissage des modes
de réflexion propres à l’historien
• Familiarise l’étudiant à la maîtrise
des sources et outils de l’historien
• Ouvre l’étudiant aux disciplines qui
environnent et nourrissent la science
historique
• Donne à l’étudiant les repères
historiographiques
Poster présenté par COUPERIN
JCR 2021 - Présentation "Les demandes Cidemis, c'est vraiment termine !"ABES
This document discusses the status of requests in Cidemis, the French ISSN database. It provides statistics on the percentage of requests (corrections, creations, numeration) that were completed in 2015-2020 for ISSN France and other centers. Completion rates were higher for ISSN France than other centers. It also discusses how to track numeration requests that were accepted in the Sudoc database to then close the corresponding requests in Cidemis.
This document provides an overview of the Cidemis application and circuit for requesting ISSN numbers. It begins with a brief introduction to Cidemis and the upstream Sudoc networks. It then discusses the digitization of the request circuit and how technology illuminates the complexity of communication. The rest of the document provides reminders and best practices for users of the application, including the importance of clear communication and documentation. It also references additional resources for learning about and using Cidemis.
Jabes 2021 - Session "Repenser le SI de l'Abes en période de transition(s)"ABES
Session coordonnée par Marianne Giloux (Abes).
Cette session aborde les points suivants :
- Un renouvellement conceptuel international
- Un renouvellement technologique nécessaire
- La transition bibliographique de l’Abes : l’expérimentation SudocFRBR, le FNE, le projet Sudoc21 et lme projet "Vers la LRMisation des données"
Jabes 2021 - 26 ans après la création de l'AbesABES
Présentation de David Aymonin, directeur de l'Abes
Intervention qui brosse un tableau synthétique de ce que fait l’Abes aujourd’hui : à quoi sert-elle ? dans quel contexte ? pour qui travaille-t-elle ? de quelle manière et avec qui ?
Présentation des Actus de l'Abes 2021, partie 1.
Cette partie est consacré aux actions de l'Abes au service de l'IST, de la Science Ouverte et des grands projets nationaux.
Poster présenté par l'Abes (hors concours).
Depuis 2019, l’Abes teste un nouvel algorithme développé par OCLC pour créer automatiquement des pré-notices d’œuvres, à partir de regroupements de notices bibliographiques. Ce premier pas dans la FRBRisation (aujourd'hui on parle de LRMisation) des données du catalogue Sudoc s’est accompagné d’un contrôle très strict des performances et des résultats de ce "robot". L’expérimentation aujourd’hui terminée, il est temps d’en dresser le bilan, pour vérifier dans quelle mesure, à l’avenir, les algorithmes et l’intelligence artificielle seront d’un précieux recours pour modéliser des millions de données.
Jabes 2021 - Poster "Les données de la recherche à l'Université de Toulouse J...ABES
Poster présenté par le SCD de l'Université de Toulouse 2 Jean Jaurès.
Le Service Commun de la Documentation de l’Université Toulouse - Jean Jaurès a mis en place un service d'accompagnement à la gestion des données qui s'articule autour :
- d'une offre de formation à destination des doctorants
- d'un accompagnement des chercheurs
La mise en œuvre de cet appui en collaboration avec l'ensemble des acteurs impliqués au niveau de l'établissement a permis un reconnaissance du SCD comme un acteur primordial sur ces questions. Ainsi, dans le cadre de la formalisation des acteurs de la Science Ouverte au sein de l’établissement, la vice-présidence recherche a chargé le SCD d'assurer les fonctions d'administrateur.rice des données, des algorithmes et des codes sources de la recherche et de co-piloter le comité opérationnel des données de la recherche.
Jabes 2021 - Poster "Utiliser des plugins pour améliorer la qualité de votre ...ABES
Poster présenté par l'association KohaLa.
Ce poster présente le plugin Koha qui permet d’insérer des identifiants pérennes trouvés par Bibliostratus dans des notices bibliographiques (ark ou PPN) et autorités (ark, isni, Idref).
Jabes 2021 - Poster "Projet d'exposition documentaire et participative pour u...ABES
Poster présenté par le SCD de l'Université Toulouse 2 Jean Jaurès.
L’objet de ce poster est de présenter la démarche qui a conduit à un projet d’expositions participatives autour de la collection cartographique patrimoniale de l’Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, conservée au Centre de Ressources Olympe de Gouges. Après avoir découvert en 2007 cette collection sans usages, alors que j'étais responsable de la bibliothèque de Géographie, j'ai décidé de mener à partir de 2010 des recherches en Sciences de l’Information et de la Communication sur le document carte. Après l'obtention de mon doctorat en 2015, j'ai poursuivi des travaux scientifiques sur une méthode favorisant l’appropriation des valeurs informatives de ce document singulier dans l'idée de développer des médiations. Depuis deux ans, j'expérimente ainsi des ateliers avec des usagers placés en situation d’enquêter sur des cartes, en vue de réaliser des posters documentaires. Les objectifs de l'application professionnelle de mes réflexions sont multiples : créer du lien entre des documents patrimoniaux sans usages et des potentiels récepteurs, les inviter à découvrir et à utiliser des documents dans une démarche de réactivation, les inciter à avoir des lectures plurielles d'un même document, et enfin proposer un autre modèle d’expositions afin de vivifier des collections en dormance documentaire.
Jabes 2021 - Poster "CorHAL, une voie pour les chercheurs : simplifier le dép...ABES
Poster présenté par l'INISTCNRS et le CCSD.
Lancé au printemps 2021 et soutenu par le MESRI, corHAL proposera ses services à la fin de l’année. Porté par l’Inist et le CCSD, ce projet permet de collecter des métadonnées de publications scientifiques françaises issues de plusieurs réservoirs. Ces données sont homogénéisées et enrichies à l’aide d’alignements. Un repérage de doublons assure la création de notices unifiées combinant les informations des différentes sources. Grâce à un système d’alertes (mode push ou pull), le service propose au chercheur ses publications absentes de HAL. Ce dernier choisit d’importer automatiquement aucun, un, plusieurs ou tous les textes intégraux de ses publications dans l’archive ouverte nationale.
CorHAL, un outil au service du chercheur et de la science ouverte.
How to Manage Reception Report in Odoo 17Celine George
A business may deal with both sales and purchases occasionally. They buy things from vendors and then sell them to their customers. Such dealings can be confusing at times. Because multiple clients may inquire about the same product at the same time, after purchasing those products, customers must be assigned to them. Odoo has a tool called Reception Report that can be used to complete this assignment. By enabling this, a reception report comes automatically after confirming a receipt, from which we can assign products to orders.
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
(𝐓𝐋𝐄 𝟏𝟎𝟎) (𝐋𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐨𝐧 𝟏)-𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐥𝐢𝐦𝐬
𝐃𝐢𝐬𝐜𝐮𝐬𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐄𝐏𝐏 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐏𝐡𝐢𝐥𝐢𝐩𝐩𝐢𝐧𝐞𝐬:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
𝐄𝐱𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐢𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐍𝐚𝐭𝐮𝐫𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐒𝐜𝐨𝐩𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐚𝐧 𝐄𝐧𝐭𝐫𝐞𝐩𝐫𝐞𝐧𝐞𝐮𝐫:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
إضغ بين إيديكم من أقوى الملازم التي صممتها
ملزمة تشريح الجهاز الهيكلي (نظري 3)
💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
تتميز هذهِ الملزمة بعِدة مُميزات :
1- مُترجمة ترجمة تُناسب جميع المستويات
2- تحتوي على 78 رسم توضيحي لكل كلمة موجودة بالملزمة (لكل كلمة !!!!)
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3- دقة الكتابة والصور عالية جداً جداً جداً
4- هُنالك بعض المعلومات تم توضيحها بشكل تفصيلي جداً (تُعتبر لدى الطالب أو الطالبة بإنها معلومات مُبهمة ومع ذلك تم توضيح هذهِ المعلومات المُبهمة بشكل تفصيلي جداً
5- الملزمة تشرح نفسها ب نفسها بس تكلك تعال اقراني
6- تحتوي الملزمة في اول سلايد على خارطة تتضمن جميع تفرُعات معلومات الجهاز الهيكلي المذكورة في هذهِ الملزمة
واخيراً هذهِ الملزمة حلالٌ عليكم وإتمنى منكم إن تدعولي بالخير والصحة والعافية فقط
كل التوفيق زملائي وزميلاتي ، زميلكم محمد الذهبي 💊💊
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42. indices created from full text
Is metadata still needed?
Does metadata have to be a human production
or can it be emerged by computers
thru statistical analysis?
or a mix of the two?
43. fragmenting information
unit of information goes from book of pages,
to journals of articles,
to webs of hyperlinked pages,
to networks of relational assertions
Can library technologies and
skill set still be useful across all such
granularity spectrum?
44. networks of relational assertions
(a.k.a. a web of data)
small pieces of information
uniquely identified
related to one another
can be mixed and queried symbolically
53. ~ Act III ~
where we save the day by applying the
wisdom of the past to an uncertain future
54. despite the obvious advantages, and
immediate shortcomings, electronic
publishing retains many long term
uncertainties
55. Digital Preservation
storing bits is not the same
as preserving information
format/system obsolescence
lossy format conversions
Librarians have unique skills
and affinity for such problems.
56. Digital Divide
Low marginal cost is not the same as low cost
Accessibility is not the same as access
Libraries, by definition, remain
a key institution in bridging these gaps
57. Data Modeling
Library metadata is just another form of
low granular relational data.
Librarians naturally understand
the value of modeling data.
Statistical emergence of metadata can
only go so far without human common sense,
help will be needed.
58. Data Integration
Different data models for similar data
will emerge and will evolve.
Integration between different schemas
requires specific skills and abilities, very close
to the current set of librarians skills.
59. Data Pollution
Vandalism, defacing, spamming or general abuse
are all negative sides of the low marginal
cost ecology of information.
Fighting the degradation of signal/noise
ratio in such ecology is another area where
librarians’ expertise will be highly valued.
60. Data Quality
How do we distinguish between
high quality data vs. low quality data?
How do we increase quality without
reducing diversity of opinion or
capacity of adaptation?
61. Dissent
How do we distinguish truth
from opinion and from deception?
How do we construct the new information
ecology so that people are allowed to disagree
yet without exploding in another tower of Babel?