Table of contents
The Folk Heritage Collections in Crisis conference
Michael SeadleThe Folk Heritage Collections in Crisis conference pursued three themes: access, preservation, and intellectual property. The 100 invited participants were mainly middle‐aged…
DAISY Consortium: information technology for the world’s blind and print‐disabled population – past, present, and into the future
George KerscherThe DAISY Consortium created the first digital talking book (DTB) and this is now known worldwide as the DAISY format. The DAISY DTB is the application of existing worldwide…
National library service for the blind and physically handicapped: digital plans and progress
John Cookson, Lloyd RasmussenThe National Library Service (NLS) produces about 2,000 talking books and 50 magazines per year on specially formatted cassette tape for free distribution to a readership of about…
Digital talking book standards developed by NLS and partners under NISO auspices
John Cookson, Michael Moodie, Lloyd RasmussenThe functionality, compatibility, and longevity planned for future digital talking books require clear, exact definitions of component format and content. NLS will achieve this by…
Using digital talking books in schools: RFB&D’s top project
Steve NobleRecording for the Blind & Dyslexic (RFB&D) is a national non‐profit organization that provides educational and professional books in accessible media formats to people with print…
Worldwide training and technical support for DAISY
George KerscherHow can a worldwide training and technical support program be implemented to support the DAISY standard? The key to a successful implementation plan lies with building expertise…
DAISY on our desktops? A review of LpPlayer 2.4
B.T. KimbroughAs the first commercially available software for reading DAISY books on a PC, LpPlayer is an inexpensive vehicle for gaining access to the new format. For this review, several…
Web accessibility at university libraries and library schools
Axel SchmetzkeThe Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) mandates that library programs and services must be accessible to people with disabilities. In an era in which much information resides…
Gutterdämmerung (twilight of the gutter margins): e‐books and libraries
Thomas A. PetersSeveral aspects of the e‐book revolution are reviewed, as well as some related issues confronting libraries. Regardless of format, texts and text‐bearing devices have…
The common user interface in academic libraries: myth or reality?
Wendi Arant, Leila PayneAcademic libraries have long desired one‐stop shopping for their customers and, in this electronic age, their customers are demanding it: a way to search from a single point at…
Designing the electronic classroom: applying learning theory and ergonomic design principles
Mark Emmons, Frances C. WilkinsonThis article applies learning theory and ergonomic principles to the design of effective learning environments for library instruction. It discusses features of electronic…
Looking at four UK “hybrid” libraries
Morell D. BooneAs part of my on‐going investigation into the ways library planners are integrating learning technologies into their buildings’ architecture and facilities, I visited the…
The logic of inference
Joseph JanesThis column continues a series on topics in research methodology, statistics and data analysis techniques for the library and information sciences. It discusses the logic implicit…
Copyright in the networked world: copyright status facts
Michael SeadleLibraries tend to make assumptions about copyright. The assumption is that any work published since 1923 has copyright protection. This article is about how to discover key facts…
ISSN:
0737-8831e-ISSN:
2054-166XISSN-L:
0737-8831Online date, start – end:
1983Copyright Holder:
Emerald Publishing LimitedOpen Access:
hybridEditors:
- Dr Dickson K.W. Chiu
- Dr Kevin K.W. Ho