Sunday, June 29, 2008

Engaging with the environment: finding quality eInformation resources

Venue: CILIP, 7 Ridgmount Street, London, WC1E 7AE
Date: Wednesday 5th November 2008, 9.30-16.30

Course outline

The environment is big news – almost every day there is a story about climate change, waste, a pollution incident or disappearing species. The environment is an emotive issue, and there are many opinions expressed. Where do the facts come from? This workshop will provide you with a starting point – to find authoritative sources of environmental information, help you keep up to date with what’s new and help you work your way through the diverse issues and impacts. It will help sort the wood from the trees!

The objectives of the workshop are to introduce delegates to some of the vast number of sources for environmental information.

The workshop will cover:
  • Government departments and committees
  • Influential groups and bodies
  • News sources
  • Research
This course is aimed at people who need a starting point for finding environmental information. It will also help people who need to be aware of alternative sources for this information.

Please visit www.ukeig.org.uk for more information, to register your interest in this meeting or to reserve a place; or email meetings@ukeig.org.uk

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Thursday, June 19, 2008

UKeiG Workshop: Intranet Governance

Venue: CILIP, 7 Ridgmount Street, London, WC1E 7AE
Date: Thursday 9th October 2008, 9.30-16.30

Course outline

Most organisations have strategies and policies for just about every aspect of operations, but rarely for the intranet. Intranets have now become essential information platforms, and need to be resourced appropriately.

The objective of this workshop is to set out the key elements of an intranet governance strategy. The workshop will cover:
  • Making a business case for an intranet
  • Developing an intranet strategy
  • Turning a strategy into an operational plan
  • Creating and managing the intranet team
  • Supporting the work of content authors
  • Achieving intranet impact
  • Developing and undertaking usability tests
  • Gaining user feedback
As well as copies of the presentations delegates will be provided with a template for an intranet governance strategy. The workshop will include some group work and good opportunities to share ideas and experiences.

Who should attend

Intranet managers who recognise that they need to develop business cases for investment in intranet staff and other resources, or who need to write corporate policy documents for intranet operations.

Course Presenter

The course will be given by Martin White, Intranet Focus Ltd. who has a wide experience of intranet strategy issues based on over 50 intranet projects carried out in the UK, Europe, the USA and the Middle East.

For more information or to book a place on this course, please visit http://www.ukeig.org.uk/training/2008/October/IntranetGovernance.html or email meetings@ukeig.org.uk

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eLucidate Vol 5 No 3 now available

eLucidate Vol. 5 No. 3 is now available at http://www.ukeig.org.uk/elucidate/
Please note: most of the content is available to UKeiG members only

Contents:

Web 2.0 Round-up. Compiled by Karen Blakeman. A regular column summarising postings and news from the UKeiG Web 2.0 blog at http://ukeig.wordpress.com/

Online. This month's column from Joy Cadwallader covers the British Library, Darwin Online, Emerald, Gale, H.W. Wilson, Index to Theses, INTUTE, JISC, JORUM, OCLC, Old Bailey Online, ProQuest and Publishing Technology.

Intranets. Martin White reports on Intracom 2008 in Quebec.

Reference Management and e-Publishing. Tracy Kent looks at what is happening in the reference software world and avoiding plagiarism

Public Sector News. Jane Inman discusses web continuity and local authority web site archiving.

24 Top Business Research Tips from the two UKeiG workshops on business information.

Meeting Report: Practicalities of Web 2.0. Report by Fiona McLean

Meeting Report: Blogs, RSS and Wikis. Report by Matthew Stone.

Current Awareness. Summaries of articles (print and electronic) about information access and retrieval, electronic publishing, preservation and virtual libraries etc.

Press Releases & News: Update on OCLC and Google; Microsoft Book Search winding down; library use of e-books; Sparc and Science Commons; Jewell receives Coutts Award for innovation.

Intranets Forum: dates for you diary

User name and password

Please contact Karen Blakeman if you have lost or forgotten your user name and password.

Corporate/Institutional members

Please contact Karen Blakeman if you are a corporate member of UKeiG and require access to eLucidate by IP address.

Receive PDF via email

Please use our form if you would like to receive a PDF copy of eLucidate by email. If you have previously asked via email to join this list, you do not need to reapply using the form.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Top Search Tips, London June 2008

I ran another advanced search workshop (Google and Beyond) for UKeiG on June 11th, this time in London. Twenty people attended the event and came up with the following list of top search tips at the end of the day.

1. Use the Advanced Search screen. There are lots of goodies to be found on the advanced search screens: options for focussing your search by file format (e.g. xls for data and statistics, ppt for expert presentations, pdf for industry or government reports); site and domain search to limit your search to just one web site or a type of organisation (e.g. UK government, US academic); and in Google there is a numeric range search.

2. Google Custom Search Engines (Google CSE) at http://www.google.com/coop/cse/. This made its first appearance in the Top Tips from the Liverpool workshop earlier this year. Ideal for building collections of sites that you regularly search, to create a searchable subject list, or to offer your users a more focused search option.

3. See what Google does with your search string.

a) If you use the default search box and Google comes back with odd results, click on Advanced Search to see what it has done with your search terms.

b) If you use the Advanced Search screen and fill in the boxes, see how Google formats the search strategy by looking the search box at the top of the results page. By learning the commands and prefixes you can build more specific searches more quickly on the default search page.


4. Cached copies. Look at the search engines cached copy of a web page if you can’t find your search terms in the document or if the page is nothing like the description in the results list. You will see the version of the page that has been used by the search engine for indexing and with your terms highlighted.

5. Use tools such as Intelways and Zuula for quick and easy access to a wide range of search tools covering different types of information. Enter your search once, click on the tab for the type of resource for which you are searching (video, images, reference, news etc.), and then work your way through the list of search engines.

6. Alacrawiki. The Alacra Spotlights section is a good starting point for evaluated sites and information on industry sectors. It is also a good example of what to look for when assessing the quality of a wiki and how easy it is for anyone to edit the pages. In the Spotlights sections there is no edit option , not even if you register for an account and login. Only the Alacra editors can edit the pages.

7. Open access journals. Google Scholar sometimes leads you to copies of journal articles in institutional repositories and open access journals, but there are also directories of open access journals. For example: http://www.doaj.org/ , http://www.wsis-si.org/oa-journals.html, http://www.abc.chemistry.bsu.by/current/fulltext.htm . This is not my area of expertise so comments on other directories are welcome.

8. Social bookmarking sites. Try social bookmarking sites, not only for creating your evaluated lists of sites but for searching other peoples. For example FURL, Del.icio.us, Connotea, 2Collab . Connotea (owned by the Nature Publishing Group) and 2Collab (owned by Elsevier) are aimed at researchers and scientists.

9. Search results visualisation. Try out some of the newer search tools that present results and search options in a different way. For example Cluuz, Kartoo, Kvisu, Quintura. [Some of the participants specifically mentioned Cluuz and Kvisu].

10. The Internet Archive (Wayback Machine) at http://www.archive.org/ for pages, sites and documents that have disappeared. Ideal for tracking down lost documents, seeing how organisations presented themselves on the Web in the past, and for collecting evidence for a legal case (e.g. ‘passing off’, copyright infringement).

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Sunday, June 15, 2008

UKeiG Intranets Forum: Web 2.0 at the British Library and theTUC's application of Google Mini

An informal intranets forum meeting for UKeiG members

Date: Wednesday 25th June 2008 at 10.00 a.m.

Venue: TUC, Congress House, Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3LS

If you are involved in intranets and would like to meet your colleagues, this informal forum is for you.

Caroline Halcrow of the British Library will talk about the development of internal and external communications at the BL, including their use of SharePoint, blogs, wikis, RSS feeds and Facebook.

Ashlee Christoffersen, Intranet/Internet Officer, Trades Union Congress will give a presentation about the TUC intranet’s application of Google Mini.

Pastries and coffee will be provided and the meeting will end at 12.00

Location: 2 minutes walk from Tottenham Court Road tube station.
Map: http://www.tuc.org.uk/the_tuc/about_contact.cfm

If you would like to attend this meeting, please contact: Janet Corcoran, Imperial College London Email: j.m.corcoran@imperial.ac.uk

If you are not a member of UKeiG, and would like to come along to this meeting, visit the UKeiG website: http://www.ukeig.org.uk/join/index.html for joining details.

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ISKOUK - Sharing Vocabularies on the Web via SKOS

Posted on behalf of ISKOUK:

Date: 21 July 2008 from 14:00 - 19:00 (registration starts at 13:30)
Venue: University College London, Engineering Faculty, Roberts Building G06, Sir Ambrose Fleming Lecture Theatre
Cost: 20 GBP (students and ISKO members free!)

We would like to invite you to a half-day event organized by the British Chapter of International Society for Knowledge Organization (ISKO UK) entitled "Sharing Vocabularies on the Web via Simple Knowledge Organization System (SKOS)" in London

Predictions for the Semantic Web are heavily dependent on the ability of computers to reason and communicate using controlled vocabularies. SKOS (Simple Knowledge Organization System) development aims to bring forward these capabilities.

Aware of the growing importance of SKOS, ISKO UK in cooperation with School of Library, Archives and Information Studies at UCL has invited a group of experts to introduce this standard, explain its status, potential and scope. Speakers on this event - Alistair Miles, Antoine Isaac, Stella Dextre Clarke, Leonard Will, Nicolas Cochard, Ceri Binding and Douglas Tudhope - are involved in the development and application of SKOS and related standards and are hoping to provoke some interesting discussion.

This event, the third in ISKO UK's KOnnecting KOmmunities series, promises a fascinating glimpse of the future of controlled vocabularies. No one involved or interested in the development, management or implementation of controlled vocabularies can afford to miss it.

For full details on the venue, programme and to book your place at the event visit http://www.iskouk.org/SKOS_July2008.htm.

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Monday, June 02, 2008

10 Top Tips for Marketing your Intranet

Janet Corcoran, UKeiG's Intranets Forum co-ordinator, has compiled a new UKeiG fact sheet on 10 Top Tips for Marketing your Intranet. I personally like number 10: Have some fun…and cakes! This and other fact sheets are in the member's area of the UKeiG web site.

If you have forgotten your UKeiG user name and password, please contact Karen Blakeman (karen.blakeman@rba.co.uk). If you would like to join UKeiG details are available on the UKeiG web site.

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Additional date for 'Understanding Metadata and Controlled Vocabularies'

Due to popular demand Understanding Metadata and Controlled Vocabularies is being re-run on 29th July

Venue: CILIP, 7 Ridgmount Street, London, WC1E 7AE
Date and time: Tuesday 29th July 2008, 9.30-16.30

For more information or to book a place on this course, please visit the UKeiG web site or email meetings@ukeig.org.uk

Course Outline

Nowadays information comes in from all over the place, in all shapes and sizes. Conversely, the resources we put together need to travel to multiple destinations, perhaps getting repackaged along the way to suit different audiences and contexts. Successful journeys across the networks are achieved by labelling each item and package with metadata.

This one-day workshop will provide an introduction to some widely used metadata schemas (such as Dublin Core, CDWA, e-GMS, IEEE-LOM) and discuss how to adapt and exploit them for our own needs. It will also explore the different types of vocabulary (taxonomies, thesauri, ontologies, etc.) that may be used for labelling the subject content of our resources. We’ll be
looking very practically at how to handle the vocabulary tools, in order to achieve integrated information management. Examples and exercises will be drawn from public and private sector applications.

The course will include a combination of presentations and practical exercises, with participation encouraged and plenty of opportunity for questions and answers.

Who Should Attend

Anyone who is planning efficient ways of managing information flows around the organisation should attend. Likewise webmasters who want to maximise the impact of the resources on their websites, especially by presenting them so that users can find what they want and external portals can harvest the information. Effective implementation of metadata relies on cooperative
working between information professionals and their information technology colleagues, and it is good to have both sides of the house represented.

Course Presenter

A Fellow of CILIP, Stella Dextre Clarke is an independent consultant who specialises in the design and implementation of controlled vocabularies for private and public sector clients. While working with the Cabinet Office, she played a key role in development of the UK’s e-Government Metadata Standard and built the Integrated Public Sector Vocabulary which forms part of it. In 2006 she won the Tony Kent Strix Award (sponsored by UKeiG), for
outstanding contributions to the field of information retrieval.

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