RCUK updated position on access to research outputs
RCUK has announced an updated position on access to research outputs.
There's a press release and the statement itself (a pdf)


JN Jeanneney: Google and the Myth of Universal Knowledge: A View from Europe
Lorna Hardwick: Remaking the Classics: Literature, Genre and Media in Britain 1800-2000
A Companion to Greek Rhetoric (Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World)
Gideon Nisbet: Ancient Greece in Film and Popular Culture (Greece and Rome Live)
Stefan Collini: Common Reading: Critics, Historians, Publics
Don Tapscott: Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything

« May 2006 | Main | July 2006 »
RCUK has announced an updated position on access to research outputs.
There's a press release and the statement itself (a pdf)
Through the jisc-repositories list I see that Lorcan Dempsey is giving a webcast on the digital library landscape and trends in the world of Web 2.0 at 2 pm on 3 July, which may be seen live:
http://webhelp.ucs.ed.ac.uk/services/media/asxfiles/webcasts/wm9vbcast.wvx
Update: it's now been archived at: http://nevis.lib.ed.ac.uk/lorcan_dempsey_archive.asx.
I saw some of it. It was very irritating that in the discussion none of the questioners identified themselves.
235: Amber Valley
310: Youmzain
350: Price Tag
425: Blue Spinnaker
455; Kassiopeia
530: Pearcy King
No selections yesterday as I was away, though I should report a trip to Brighton on Tuesday evening, when I had two winners with Fair 'n Square in the 705 and Piccostar in the 905.
230: Sonny Red
310: Scottish Stage
350 Reefscape
425: Giganticus
455: Invention
530: Paper Talk
Today in Belfast I stood down as chair of the Health Libraries Group. Alan Fricker takes over from me and will bring a lot more to the post than I ever did. I still have some duties to discharge at the annual conference in Eastbourne.
It was liberating to be able to sit through most of the committee meeting and not have to give my mind to procedure, steering the committee towards a decision, making sure everyone could have their say and so on.
Belfast was fun. I had a fry at Maggie May's and some Guinness in a bar.
235: Holy Roman Emperor
310: La Cucaracha
345: Araafa
425: Peeress
455: Escayola
530: Rabatash
The Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association is now on open access from 2004 to the current issue.
The latest issue contains:
Barsky, Eugene
Introducing Web 2.0: weblogs and podcasting for health librarians
JCHLA / JABSC 2006 27: 33–34
Technorati Tags: openaccess
Librarything has just released thingISBN, a service which overcomes the inadequacies of the ISBN. ISBNs identify editions well, but are useless if you want to see what exists at a higher level; see the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR to its friends) which gives a hierarchy of, in descending order, work-expression-manifestation-item.
I'm not quite sure yet how I can use this: I suspect its mostly for the more technically-minded librarything users.
I used to scan the honours lists when I worked at the RCVS to tip the powers-that-be off if any vets, dotty old ladies who ran homes for distressed cats, or anyone else in the animal health world had been given gongs.
Old habits die hard, so after I had despatched a kipper yesterday morning I turned to yesterday's list, now much easier to navigate at http://www.honours.gov.uk/lists/2006birthday.aspx
I ran a search for libraries or librarians which threw up, inter alia, an MBE for Judy Lehmann of Brighton and Sussex Universities NHS Trust Library and Information Services, "for services to NHS Libraries".
York 235: Master of the Race
York 310: Ingleby Arch
Sandown 325: Green park
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