Comments on: Most reliable search tool could be your librarian
Web search engines may hustle up quick results, but librarians dig up online information you can trust, say experts.
Web search engines may hustle up quick results, but librarians dig up online information you can trust, say experts.
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And even when we do get something, we have no way of comparing, sorting, analysing or saving to a data format.
That is where a company like NetAlter may offer hope to researchers and information seekers. This company claims to be developing an artificial intelligent search engine which will have pre as well as post search operations and incorporate the latest standards such as semantic web.
I have dumped Google long back and now use Vivisimo Search. That is why I said earlier, people get addicted to search engines.
I also have my own online bookmark organizer, www.lookupthis.com where I save my search links so I do not have to search them again.
The left-wing American Library Association is their front organization and often takes the same positions as the liberal ACLU and terrorists.
Students who attend schools with school librarians do better on the tests that we use to measure their success. (http://www.lrs.org/impact.asp)
As you can tell from my log in name, I am a librarian. This is a biased viewpoint, but I wouldn't be in a profession if I didn't feel like I brought a fantastic service to people.
In response to being left-wing and a guardian of privacy. Neither applies to me. I am a guardian of a person have the right to their privacy, definitely right-wing tendacy politically, and the closest to terrorism I get is that I will want to take my computer on the airplane when I travel next.
Enjoy!
Best,
Auri Rahimzadeh
Author, Hacking the PSP (www.hackingpsp.com)
Author, Geek My Ride
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Mark McLaughlin - marknetproductionsentrance.blogspot.com -
Fedora Core User/Mac User/Screenwriter
In Florida, it's Ask a Librarian, in Massachusetts it's MASSAnswers; in Illinois ASKAWAY and so on.
Check your local or college library website to see if they offer a "real" time or virtual reference service.
Preservation 101: An Internet Course on Paper
In eight modules, with self-testing quizzes, this very well designed online tutorial covers archiving...
http://www.nedcc.org/p101cs/p101wel.htm
Yahoo! Phone Numbers and Addresses
A directory of websites providing phone numbers, addresses, and other contact information...
http://dir.yahoo.com/Reference/Phone_Numbers_and_Addresses/
Let's Talk Turkey
View Thanksgiving-themed trademarks and patents, such as turkey-calling devices, an apparatus for cranberry harvesting, mechanisms for turkey...
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/themes/kidtheme11.htm
These pages are totally unrelated to Computer Technology. Librarians should get over the fact that online search engines do a better job than they can and should spend their time helping people better use existing tools.
For example, if you click on 'Technology' under the 'Computers' header, the first three results displayed are:
Preservation 101: An Internet Course on Paper Preservation
In eight modules, with self-testing quizzes, this very well designed online tutorial covers archiving; environmental, biological, and mechanical causes of deterioration; cleaning and tools of the trade...
URL: http://www.nedcc.org/p101cs/p101wel.htm
Yahoo! Phone Numbers and Addresses
A directory of websites providing phone numbers, addresses, and other contact information. Topics include area codes, businesses, celebrities...
http://dir.yahoo.com/Reference/Phone_Numbers_and_Addresses/
Let's Talk Turkey
View Thanksgiving-themed trademarks and patents, such as turkey-calling devices, an apparatus for cranberry harvesting, mechanisms for turkey cooking, and a station for turkey carving...
http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/ac/ahrpa/opa/kids/themes/kidtheme11.htm
What does this have to do with Computers or Technology?
Librarian's have a hard time admitting that their need has been replaced by the search engines. Search engines are designed to be easy to use, so all the librarian training on the hard-to-use databases is irrelevant. As for this new Librarians' Internet Index, it seems silly to put energy into builiding a new search site - instead they should focus on helping people use existing tools - or work with the big popular search sites to better integrate their services with them.
-Dan
Furthermore, the Librarians Internet Index is in effect a search engine. Even though it's a better search engine than most, the purpose of this article was to talk about the quality of help you can get from a librarian (a person, not a search engine).
Please learn to think and write logically before annoying people with your tiresome comments.
an awful lot of money for their expertise and many who organize
websites like lii.org may be doing it as a voluntary service to try to
direct people to good sources. Colleges, many public school
libraries and good public libraries have access to subscription
databases that can access full text journal articles to help with
serious research inquiries....
As for political bent, liberal does not always imply lack of common
sense...and we are not ALL liberals.
The idea isn't to offer a comprehensive look at every site, but rather to index vetted sites. It offers a comprehensive look at different resources and indexes them in a way that the search engines can't. In other words, you are better off googleing if you want a massive amount of info on something like "technology". But you can go to the index (like the index in the back of a book) to find where the specific information you are searching for is located.
Indexing is incredibly painstaking work and the librarians at LII are excellent at finding and categorizing information.
One of the problems that the ease of searching has led to is "the arrogance of ignorance". People become so used to finding things easily that they have no idea what information they are missing.
And I have to say to "rethinking MLK guy". You make an excellent point about looking at all the sides of Dr. King. However, sometimes people represent facts because of their opinions. And it is often people seeking promote an agenda. This is another reason librarians are important in schools. They can train students in informational discernment so that they can recognize bias in the quagemire of information that they find themselves plunged into.
I love the internet and I think it is a miracle, but it is also very difficult to navigate and librarians can be excellent guides.
http://regmedia.co.uk/2006/07/19/huangyangtan_wide.jpg/
http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/484568/
That's the place in the middle of the desert where the Chinese Army has constructed a scale-model replica of the entire region of Aksai Chin (occupied by China since the 1962 war with India). At 1:500, it's still 700 by 900 meters big ( = several football fields). Next to it is a base with dozens of troop transporters seen coming and going. The duplicate shows everything: rivers, lakes, roads and snow-capped mountains. It's basically a landscape within a landscape.
The problem is that nobody has been able to figure out the function of this thing. The world's biggest miniature golf course, perhaps? China's own Area 51? That's why it's the subject of so much discussion in the blogosphere.
Any ideas?
PA Librarian
- Information and Librarian
- by bujar October 8, 2006 10:24 AM PDT
- Where there is light,there are no secrets.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(24 Comments)That's where librarian come in.Most People in my country(albania)spend much time evaluating the source of the material,they think that are replacing librarian
Bujar Kocani