TWIT #21
Filed under: beleid, Digitale Bibliotheek, geesteswetenschappen, het vak | Tags: AltaVista, Google, Google Book Search, innovatie, monografieƫn, Open Access, zoekmachine |
At #nisobisg7 @rschon points to how scholars are using Google Book Search as alternative to the book index #ala2013 pic.twitter.com/4ozioTBM3V
— Peter Murray (@DataG) June 28, 2013
A hail and farewell to AltaVista http://t.co/3ONP1GepgY via @zite – I remember that one!
— Aaron Tay (@aarontay) June 29, 2013
Just an FYI: The year 1980 is as far in today's past as 1947 was to 1980.
— Neil deGrasse Tyson (@neiltyson) June 30, 2013
Next up on the chopping block: Gmail
— Dan Cohen (@dancohen) July 1, 2013
The British Academy's collection, Debating Open Access, including my piece, is out now http://t.co/BaPFXTnABP
— Martin Paul Eve (@martin_eve) July 1, 2013
"Innovatie is een modewoord voor iets dat vaak mislukt". pic.twitter.com/coaZk8m7uI
— Edwin Mijnsbergen (@emijnsbergen) July 1, 2013
Do academic authors expect to make money?#oabooks
— lorraineestelle (@lorraineestelle) July 1, 2013
Pentz: we're moving from being jnl/book-centric to being contributor-centric; looking at connections btwn ppl, blogs, data etc #OAbooks
— Ellen Collins (@ellenscollins) July 2, 2013
In @volkskrant wordt mijn verhaal (http://t.co/AEKsjTHi22) verhaspeld http://t.co/Id5PQj380U. Met Mart zeg ik: Soit. Toch goed verhaal š
— Frank Huysmans (@fhuysmans) July 3, 2013
Academic e-book related question: anyone know off-hand what proportion of academic books have an e-book version? #librarytalk
— Steph (@AVWoman) July 3, 2013
2013 Dramatic Growth of Open Access http://t.co/JQcqivqrqK #openaccess
— Annemiek vd Kuil (@AnnemiekvdKuil) July 5, 2013
Explaining holdings, items, and catalog statistics to our programmers … next I'll explain the political situation in the Middle East
— Patrick Hochstenbach (@hochstenbach) July 5, 2013
Forget about books to save books? http://t.co/RZoTOB3rMy
— Ben Showers (@benshowers) July 5, 2013
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