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HTTP Extensions for Searching and Locating: DASL
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Jim Davis
Research Scientist
XEROX PARC
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"The truth is out there". The Web makes it easy for
people to put information online, but does little to
help you find it. You can browse or surf, but
searching is harder. The best currently available
solution is to index the entire Web (as in Excite,
Lycos, Google, etc) but this approach can't keep up
with the volume and velocity of change of the web,
nor can it provide searches plural tailored to
individual web site or end user. This is because such
searches are executed on central servers that are
isolated from the servers holding the actual content
you want. An alternative solution is to make search
part of the Web protocol itself. An IETF (Internet
Engineering Task Force) working group is working
on this solution by designing DASL, an extension to
HTTP for searching and locating. With DASL, a client
may send a search query to a server and receive a list
of the URLs that match the query. This talk will
describe the design of the DASL protocol, present
examples of how it could be used, and tell you how
you can influence the design, which is still underway.
For further information, see the DASL web site:
<http://www.ics.uci.edu/pub/ietf/dasl/>
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Online Intellectual Property: When Do You Know if It's Safe to Use?
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David Green
Executive Director
National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage
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Kenneth Crews
Associate Professor
Indiana University School of Law and School of Library and Inforamtion Science
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Mary Levering
Associate Register for National Copyright Programs
U.S. Copyright Office
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Although commercial publication of web material
without permission is illegal, what about linking to
sites that may contain illicitly reproduced material?
Does Fair Use play into this scenario? And, inevitably,
how will the provisions of the newly passed Digital
Millennium Copyright Act affect our use of online
materials?
From Edupage, 27 September 1998:
CAN LINKING MAKE YOU LIABLE?
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Power Point Presentation
Download Kenneth Crews' PPT File
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The Emergence of Internet 2---What is the Library Role?
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Internet 2 Committee of the Association of Research Libraries
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The ARL Internet 2 Committee will stimulate a discussion with participants
regarding how libraries will be involved in the evolution of Internet2 as a new
high performance network environment. Questions will be posed and explored
such as:
- What is the content we will need in the I2 world?
- What beyond text do libraries and their users need to access in this
environment? How do we envision images, data, video, multi-media integration
in such an environment?
- What are libraries doing or should they do to partner with the IT
efforts on their campuses?
- What applications will be critical for use of these resources?
Ted Hanss, Internet 2 Director of Applications will join the discussion as a
follow-on to his earlier presentation on I2 Applications.
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Information Systems Manager
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Charles Dye
Information Systems Administrator
Indiana University/Purdue University, Indianapolis
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By deploying a Citrix Winframe Terminal Server,
IUPUI has developed a service that allows patrons of
our library to access CD-ROMs and a variety of
applications via the Internet. Initially laptop users in
the building could access the system, followed by
access to users throughout the campus and via the
dial-in modem pools. Soon we will offer unlimited
access across the Internet after user authentication.
This is probably the only way currently available to
allow full access to CD-ROM database searches and
application usage via the Internet without making
substantial changes to a desktop device. The
accessing system can be Windows, Mac, DOS, or Unix
based, on a platform that can be much less powerful
than the platform actually needed to run the
application. The program has been successful and has
also been a technical challenge.
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handout
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Digital Registry
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William Jordan
Head, Distributed Computing Systems
University of Washington
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Alex Wade
Systems Librarian
University of Washington
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Steven Shadle
Serials Cataloger
University of Washington
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As part of its WWW-based Information Gateway, the
University of Washington Libraries has developed a
Digital Registry. The Digital Registry is a data store
containing metadata for licensed electronic resources
purchased by the Libraries and for other electronic
resources selected by Libraries' subject selectors.
Records are maintained in the Libraries INNOPAC
system and exported to the Registry, using USMARC
as a record transfer syntax. In its current production
implementation, the Registry is searchable directly by
the end user and is used to drive HTML writers that
generate subject pages from multiple classification
schemes and from customized resource lists.
Additionally, Registry data is used in the "My
Gateway" customized profiles that users can create.
A prototype extension of the Registry that includes
additional data elements to facilitate linking to local
holdings information and to full text is under
development.
This project briefing will cover the design rationale
and initial implementation of the Digital Registry and
our experience with database-generated HTML
pages. We will also present an overview of the
prototype extensions and the experimental linking
architecture they are designed to support.
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handout
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