Monday, April 28, 2008

InformaWorld downtime scheduled 9-11 pm Tues. April 29th (PST)

A short period of downtime is scheduled on informaworld on Wednesday 30th April 2008, 04.00 - 06.00 GMT to allow us to complete some essential maintenance. Some users may experience impaired performance for a short time after the downtime has been completed. The informaworld team would like to apologise to our customers for any inconvenience this might cause. We would also like to reassure customers that we are currently working on ongoing plans to improve the site's reliability and efficiency.

Should you need any help during the downtime period, please contact our support team: support@informaworld.com

Friday, April 25, 2008

ProQuest Technical Notice - CSA Illumina Maintenance

On Saturday and Sunday, April 26th and 27th, 2008, some CSA
Illumina services may be affected by maintenance procedures.
During this time, you may experience intermittent slow service
while using the CSA Illumina platform or your federated search
client (Z39.50). My Research and the Administrative Tools may be
unavailable for part of this maintenance window but we will do
our best to minimize the impact to CSA Illumina services.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Scheduled Server Maintenance - Informa

Taylor & Francis Group, LLC will be performing maintenance of the servers. The maintenance will take place beginning Saturday December 1st 2007 at 7:00 A.M. Eastern Time through Sunday December 2nd 2007 at 7:00 P.M. Eastern Time. Access to the journals will be interrupted during this time.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

WilsonWeb Live Online Training for April 2008

WilsonWeb Live Online Training: The April Schedule
Attend a new mini-session and in only 30 minutes be introduced to the next generation of WilsonWeb.
Register at www .hwwilson.com/training


1: Thursday, April 17, 2008 — 2 pm EST

OmniFile & the Current Issues Series

o Examine the new frameless interface.
o Learn how to create scheduled alerts for a productive search.
o Translate your Full Text HTML documents from English into French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Korean, Japanese, or Russian.
o Take a tour of the award-winning Reference Shelf family of products: Current Issues: Reference Shelf Plus and Current Issues in Health.
o Discover our editor s' objectives in compiling the best journalistic content on timely issues.

2: Thursday, April 24, 2008 — 2 pm EST
Enhancing Social Studies & Humanities Lessons with
Art Museum Image Gallery

o Uncover a database with incredible scope that can enhance lesson design.
o Examine the breadth and variety of Art Museum Image Gallery.
o Browse content spanning works from 3000 B.C. to the 20th century.
o See coverage of both fine and decorative art: painting , sculpture, drawings, prints, photographs, textiles, costumes, jewelry, ceramics, furniture, glass, books and manuscripts, archaeological finds, and more.

3: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 — 2 pm EST
Book Review Digest Plus & The Wilson Core Collection Series

o Examine a classic reference, Book Review Digest, and a trusted collection development tool, the Wilson Standard Catalogs, in a one-of-a-kind demonstration.
o See how these two bibliographic staples of the 20th century have been enhanced to meet the needs of the modern researcher.
o Learn how these files complement one another.

All you need to participate is a telephone and a desktop computer.


Individualized WilsonWeb Webex Training Also Available
Register for individual training sessions via Webex.

EBSCOhost and EBSCOadmin Updates

We are pleased to update you with the following information about new and upcoming features:

In Support of EBSCOhost 2.0:

EBSCOhost and EBSCOadmin Updates - Available Now:

EBSCOhost and EBSCOadmin Updates - Coming Soon:

  • Multiple Database Limiters will appear with those limiters common to all databases being searched, even when they do not apply to all of those databases. Any of the five most popular search limiters: Full Text, Published Date, Publication, Peer Reviewed and References Available may be included in the common limiter area, above the database-specific section on the search screen, provided they are supported by at least one of the databases being searched.
  • Enhanced Clustering will provide more cluster types (controlled by the library administrator), including Publication, Company, Geography, NAICS/Industry Codes, etc.
  • SUSHI Web Service Support means that library administrators will be able to generate COUNTER Reports using EBSCOhost's secure SUSHI Web Service. The automated process will begin when a library's electronic records management (ERM) system requests a usage report to be automatically transmitted to EBSCO via the library's SUSHI client, after which a COUNTER report will be prepared and returned to the library.

Online Training Classes:

Please visit EBSCO's Support Site (http://support.ebsco.com) to learn about new features, search among thousands of FAQs, download Flash tutorials, Help Sheets or User Guides, or communicate with Technical Support at any time, using the EBSCO Support Form (http://support.epnet.com/contact/askus.php).

Sincerely,

Marcie Brown
Technical Communications Manager
EBSCO Publishing
10 Estes Street
Ipswich, MA 01938

Monday, April 14, 2008

Access Select Gale Resources throughout National Library Week

National Library Week means free access to select Gale resources!
http://www.uptilt.com/ct.html?rtr=on&s=4rs,yvr9,2e2o,7ko2,crtt,jin0,htrh
That's right. In addition to having free access to our new Books & Authors
database all month, during National Library Week - April 13-19 -your
library has free week-long access to these resources:
Academic OneFile
Biography Resource Center
British Library Newspapers
Gale Directory Library
Gale Virtual Reference Library
General OneFile
Health & Wellness Resource Center
History Resource Center: U.S.
History Resource Center: World
Literature Criticism Online
LitFinder
Literature Resource Center
Nursing Resource Center
Opposing Viewpoints Resource Center: Critical Thinking
Popular Magazines
PowerSearch
Science Resource Center
Small Business Resource Center
Sources in U.S. History Online: The American Revolution
Sources in U.S. History Online: The Civil War
Sources in U.S. History Online: Slavery in America
http://www.uptilt.com/ct.html?rtr=on&s=4rs,yvr9,2e2o,7ko2,crtt,jin0,htrh
Sing Books & Authors' praises and win big!
To help celebrate, we invite you and your patrons to compose an original
song about your favorite book or author. Then record a video of your
performance and submit it to our librareo page. The best entry will
win $5,000 - $2,500 for the songwriter and $2,500 for their favorite library.
Visit www.gale.com/librareo for complete rules.
Enjoy National Library Week!
http://www.uptilt.com/ct.html?rtr=on&s=4rs,yvr9,2e2o,isl5,fdtp,jin0,htrh

Thursday, April 10, 2008

The Guardian (1821-2003) and The Observer (1791-2003)

Recently added: The Guardian (1821-2003) and The Observer (1791-2003) [ProQuest] {available upon release in June 2008}

ProQuest is releasing both The Guardian and its sister paper, The Observer on its historical newspapers platform. As such, they have been digitized from cover to cover, with full-page and article images in easily downloadable PDF format. I believe initial coverage upon release will extend through 1900, with coverage extended through 2003 by the end of 2008. Both papers have reputations for fearless reporting and controversial opinions.

The Guardian was first published in response to the Peterloo Massacre. Originally known as the Manchester Guardian, it was a Saturday-only paper until the newspaper stamp duty was repealed in 1855. Businessmen who hated its progressive opinions would tear the paper in half, throw the commentary out the train window, and only read the portion containing stock prices. The Observer, the world's oldest Sunday paper, was first published in 1791. Thought-provoking writers such as George Orwell, Via Sackville-West, Clive James, Philip Toynbee, and others were contributors, continuing a tradition of freed of the press, as well as serious coverage of politics and literature.

Virginia Company Archives

Recently added: Virginia Company Archives [Adam Mathew Digital]

Nature of Material:

The project is made up of four constituent parts:

  • Previously unpublished transcripts by Dr David Ransome of over 500 documents from the Virginia Company Archives. These will be fully searchable and are linked to the original manuscripts.
  • A fully searchable text of The Records of the Virginia Company of London (4 vols, Washington DC, Government Printing Office, 1906-1933).
  • The complete Ferrar Papers from Magdelene College, Cambridge, together with a fully searchable listing linked directly to the manuscripts.
  • An extensive contextual introduction to the Ferrar papers and a wide range of maps, illustrations and other works.

Scope of Collection:

This is an essential source for the study of the Atlantic World and Early Colonial Period. It documents the founding and economic development of Virginia as seen through the papers of the Virginia Company of London, 1606-1624. It then shows the continuing interest of the Ferrar family in the settlement of North America from Jamestown to the Bermudas.

This collection provides a rich source for the study of trade between Britain and America. There is valuable evidence on the ethnic and gender composition of Virginia and new evidence of tensions amongst the colonists and of early relations with Native Americans. It is also a crucial source for London’s economic history and will be welcomed by religious and social historians of Early Modern England.

The Scope of the Ferrar Papers, 1590-1790:

The collection began as a business archive, consisting of the papers of Nicholas Ferrar (c1544-1620) and those of the Virginia Company of London and its subordinate, the Somer Islands Company. Both Ferrar and his sons held key positions until its demise in 1624. Kingsbury’s Records of the Virginia Company listed 80 documents relating to Virginia, but this was before the discovery of further Ferrar papers at Magdalene College in the late 1970s. Recent work has shown that there are over 500 documents of direct interest.

In addition the archive contains much material for the period after 1624 describing the business and commercial interests of the family, who continued to be interested in the fate of the American colonies.

There is, for instance, a list of women sent to the colony to be wives c1619-20. These have always been characterized as the sweepings of the streets, but the lists in the Ferrar papers indicate that they were selected with as much care as were those who went to the puritan colonies. Every woman was recorded with her pastor's recommendation, her parents' condition, and her own skills.

The papers contain similar lists of men. They also contain a census that may be from 1619 or 1620 that mentions a substantial number of Africans, almost equally split between men and women, living in Virginia - this is independent of the emblematic first arrival of Africans in 1619.

The papers also have a strong social and religious content with family letters, including many from women.

Finally, the collection is rich in prints and all of these have been fully catalogued and reproduced.

The Transcripts:

Originally intended as a book, the new transcripts of Virginia Company Archive material extend to over 350,000 words, including a contextual introduction by David Ransome describing the papers. Scholars have been awaiting the publication of this material eagerly and it is fitting that it will be published in time for the 400th anniversary of the Jamestown settlement.

Perdita Manuscripts: Women Writers, 1500-1700

Recently added: Perdita Manuscripts: Women Writers, 1500-1700 [Adam Mathew Digital]

Nature of the Material:

The collection consists of original manuscripts from 15 major libraries, reproduced as greyscale facsimiles. All of the manuscripts have been subjected to detailed indexing by the Perdita Project, providing access by:
  • Author
  • Title
  • Places
  • Genre within document
  • First lines; poetry
  • First lines; prose

There is also a wealth of information provided concerning the ‘Perdita women’ featured in the texts, as well as details of:

  • Physical description of the document – including information on layout, binding, foliation, provenance.
  • Additional information – including details of the repository that holds the item.
  • Item Description - containing information such as; names responsible, title, genre within document, folio details, overview, first line, last line, summary, bibliographic reference. Where this item information is available the user will be able to jump straight to the relevant portion of the manuscript.

The advanced search options provided in the searching aid enables users to generate complex searches.

Scope of the Collection:

This resource is produced in association with the Perdita Project based at the University of Warwick and Nottingham Trent University. “Perdita” means “lost woman” and the quest of the Perdita Project has been to find early modern women authors who were “lost” because their writing exists only in manuscript form. Thanks to the endeavours of the Perdita Project the valuable work of these “lost” women is being rediscovered. Adam Matthew Digital has now enhanced their path-breaking research by linking their catalogue descriptions with full digital facsimiles of many of the manuscripts in an exciting new resource.

The manuscripts in the site were written or compiled by women in the British Isles during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and they have been sourced from archives and libraries across the United Kingdom and the USA. One of the key attractions of Perdita Manuscripts is that it brings together little known material from widely scattered locations. The provision of a powerful searching facility, biographical and bibliographical resources, and contextual essays by academics working in the field, makes this an indispensable resource for students and researchers.

19th Century British Library Newspapers

Recently added: 19th Century British Library Newspapers [Gale/Cengage]

Gale, a part of Cengage Learning, partners with the British Library to create one of the richest collections of primary source material in the world. Unparalleled in depth and scope, British Library Newspapers consists of two major collections from the British Library which span three hundred years of newspaper publishing in the U.K.—17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers and 19th Century Newspapers. The two collections combined contain nearly 3 million pages and 40 million articles, and can be purchased separately or together depending upon your institution’s needs and requirements.

For decades, even hundreds of years after publication, researchers of all kinds, all over the world, turn to newspapers for information relating to a widest variety of research needs. The rise of newspapers in Britain was a phenomenon which characterized a new age. The newspaper was increasingly a medium for information required by the commercially minded societies of major cities and regional centers. Taken as a whole, the huge production of newspapers in Britain provides an enormous resource for research on all subjects for all of the U.K., both urban and rural. The bulk of advertising, particularly for new books and theatrical performances, has proved especially useful to historians. Cultural trends, political currents and social problems are reflected in the newspapers and give new freshness and immediacy to the historic events.

The 19th Century British Library Newspapers collection contains full runs of 48 newspapers specially selected by the British Library to best represent nineteenth century Britain. This new collection includes national and regional newspapers, as well as those from both established country or university towns and the new industrial powerhouses of the manufacturing Midlands, as well as Scotland, Ireland and Wales. Special attention was paid to include newspapers that helped lead particular political or social movements such as Reform, Chartism, and Home Rule. The penny papers aimed at the working and clerical classes are also present in the collection.

Newspaper images can be magnified for easier reading or reduced for on screen navigation. You can save and print article images, create persistent links and email them to others. When trying to print entire newspaper pages, you will need to tile them to make them legible given the differing paper size between newsprint and common office paper sizes.

17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers

Recently added: 17th and 18th Century Burney Collection Newspapers [Gale/Cengage]

The newspapers, pamphlets, and books gathered by the Reverend Charles Burney (1757-1817) represent the largest and most comprehensive collection of early English news media. The present digital collection, that helps chart the development of the concept of 'news' and 'newspapers' and the "free press", totals almost 1 million pages and contains approximately 1,270 titles. Many of the Burney newspapers are well known, but many pamphlets and broadsides also included have remained largely hidden. Newly digitized, all Burney treasures are now fully text-searchable in Gale Digital Collection.

Newspaper images can be magnified for easier reading or reduced for on screen navigation. You can save and print article images, create persistent links and email them to others. When trying to print entire newspaper pages, you will need to tile them to make them legible given the differing paper size between newsprint and common office paper sizes.

Maintenance Notification

This message is to alert you that the previous interruption of Wiley
InterScience service has been corrected. Access to all online content
and functions should be fully restored.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Credo Reference Content Update - New Titles

Welcome to Content Update -- your monthly email about new and updated Credo Reference titles. A number of titles have been added to Credo Reference in the past month. Below are the latest additions. To see a complete list of available titles, visit http://corp.credoreference.com/titles.


Latest Additions

We're updating many of our titles to the latest available editions. The following updated titles were recently released. Expect more soon!

Forthcoming Titles

More titles are coming soon to Credo Reference. See the complete list.


Featured Titles of the Month

Notable American Women: 1607-1950 and
Notable American Women: The Modern Period from Harvard University Press

Harvard University Press published the first volume of Notable American Women in 1971. This important event in women's history documented women's contributions that were previously overlooked and changed the way historians thought and wrote about American history.

This month Credo has released two titles in the series -- Notable American Women: 1607-1950 and Notable American Women: The Modern Period.

Notable American Women: 1607-1950
This biographical dictionary covers the lives of exceptional women throughout three and a half centuries of American history. Here are artists, lawyers, reformers, educators, entrepreneurs, physicists, writers, pioneers, first ladies, film stars. Here are those known for their deeds and those famed for their looks--the genteel and the disreputable, the highborn and slave-born.

Read a few of the biographies:

Notable American Women: The Modern Period
The life stories of American women, from Edith Abbott to Mary Zimbalist, who have in some way affected contemporary American life are explored in this lauded companion to Notable American Women, 1607-1950. The basics--the crucial dates, ancestry, parents, education, marital status, and children--provide invaluable material for both the researcher and the general reader. Beyond these essentials, a brief essay focuses on each woman's life and personality, and evaluates her career from a historical framework.

Read a few of the biographies:

The final book in the series -- Notable American Women: Completing the Twentieth Century -- will be released soon on Credo.


Get a sneak peak at Credo Reference's new service!

Exciting new features plus a multi-language interface! Focus searches with our new facets; find items faster with entry preview; manage citations; expand searches to your catalog and other resources; visualize your search with our new concept map.

See Credo Reference at any of these upcoming conferences:

Library + information Show 2008
23-24 April 2008
NEC, Birmingham, UK
Stand #429

SOLINET Annual Membership Meeting
8-9 May 2008
Emory Conference Center Hotel, Atlanta, GA

Canadian Library Association Annual Conference
21-24 May 2008
Sheraton Vancouver Wall Centre, Vancouver, Canada
Booth: #54

We look forward to seeing you at one of these events!

Monday, April 07, 2008

Irish University Association Supporting Digital Preservation via Portico

Portico is pleased to announce that the seven universities under the Irish Universities Association (IUA) have begun participation in the Portico archive. Established in 1997, the IUA seeks to formulate and pursue collective policies and actions on behalf of its member libraries:

  • Trinity College Dublin
  • National University of Ireland, Galway
  • University College Cork
  • Dublin City University
  • University College Dublin
  • University of Limerick
  • National University of Ireland, Maynooth

Through its support of the Portico archive the Irish Research Electronic Library (IReL) program - a national initiative under the aegis of the IUA and Science Foundation Ireland designed to provide online access to thousands of quality peer-reviewed research publications across a range of disciplines - incorporates long-term digital preservation and access protection for a growing number of titles.

Robin Adams, Librarian of Trinity College Dublin and Secretary of the IUA Librarians' Group described the decision to participate in Portico as a "cost effective means for the IUA to address digital preservation responsibilities and to protect the substantial investment made in the IReL which provides an internationally competitive research infrastructure to Ireland's universities." Eileen Fenton, Executive Director of Portico noted "We are pleased the IUA has chosen to support Portico's community-based approach to digital preservation. The IUA's decision highlights the benefits of sharing the costs of 'digital preservation insurance' across an international and growing community of libraries and scholarly publishers working cooperatively to accomplish robust digital preservation."

The IUA libraries join more than 400 libraries from 11 countries in supporting Portico and digital preservation. The complete list of participating libraries is available at http://www.portico.org/about/participating_libraries.html. For more information about Portico participation, please send an email to participation@portico.org. More information about the IUA is available at http://www.iua.ie/.

New JSTOR Platform launched

A new JSTOR platform was launched on Friday, April 4.

A document describing features of the new platform is included in the JSTOR Sandbox (sandbox.jstor.org). The Sandbox also has links to tutorials and training materials focused on the new JSTOR interface. In addition, a list of newly scheduled webinars appears at the end of this announcement, with links to online registration.

Webinars

The following training webinars are led by JSTOR User Services staff. A phone and a computer with online access are required. To register, follow a link in the list below.

Highlights of the New JSTOR Interface
Wednesday, April 16, 2008 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/507861435

Using the JSTOR Interface
Thursday, April 17, 2008 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/780793020

Highlights of the New JSTOR Interface
Tuesday, April 22, 2008 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/469266764

Highlights of the New JSTOR Interface
Wednesday, April 23, 2008 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/401053120

Using the JSTOR Interface
Tuesday, April 29, 2008 4:00 PM - 5:00 PM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/680252260

Highlights of the New JSTOR Interface
Wednesday, April 30, 2008 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM EDT
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/958097487

Friday, April 04, 2008

Grove Art Online

The Grove Art Editorial Team is delighted to announce the launch of Oxford Art Online and the redesigned Grove Art Online .Oxford Art Online is the new gateway for online art information, and will be the home for forthcoming art reference products and subscriptions. Grove Art Online was first launched in 1998, and this release represents an exciting and long-anticipated upgrade in site functionality and graphic design. Through Oxford Art Online, you are now able to cross search and browse a suite of valuable art reference publications simultaneously with Grove Art Online: The Oxford Companion to Western Art, Encyclopedia of Aesthetics, and Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art Terms. Oxford Art Online also enhances your capacity to search through a behind-the-scenes thesaurus, a sophisticated fielded bibliography search, as well as an improved advanced search function. The new site further augments your ability to draw upon Grove’s rich content by allowing you to search and browse for Grove images and image links in a single
place. This enhancement permits users to easily discover the more than 5,000 images now available on Grove Art Online from our many new image partners, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Art Images for College Teaching (AICT), and the Artists Rights Society. More images will be made available in future updates. In addition to the thousands of new images we have added over the past year from all areas of art history, we are also happy to announce our new Tools and Resources feature. This includes lesson plans from MoMA, new thematic guides on major topics in art history, and new timelines of world art. We will soon be adding more MoMA lesson plans as well as thematic lesson units developed by the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. and made possible by a generous grant from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation. We hope these new resources will help students and educators explore the wealth of content in Grove Art Online. Finally, this launch includes more than 85 new and updated articles—including the addition of death dates for distinguished contemporary artists such as Sol LeWitt, Elizabeth Murray, and Jules Olitski; expansions of articles about such
important artists, architects, and collectors as Frank Gehry, Zaha Hadid, Artemisia Gentileschi, and William Randolph Hearst, all based on new research; new articles on a range of topics, from Curwen Press and Curwen Studio to Merle Armitage to the Vergara family, plus much more. We also are pleased to publish our interview with Marie-Claude Beaud, Museum Director of the Musée d'art moderne Grand-Duc Jean (MUDAM), who talks about the museum world and how the internet has transformed the art world today. Grove Art Online articles continue to be written, updated, and peer reviewed by nearly 1,000 international scholars. Coming soon are exciting updates with new content from subject areas such as the decorative arts, Classical art and architecture, and fashion. We welcome your feedback on the new site, and look forward to the continued growth of this resource.