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This work offers guidance on Mosaic, the Internet's Killer app, which allows Internet users to move between documents joined by hypertext links among computers that make up the Internet's WorldWide Web. The text provides hands-on instructions for locating, downloading, installing and using the software to explore. It also explains how to create your own customized Web site in order to store audio and video information. Basic guidance on using Mosaic features is provided, including FTP Newsgroup reading and Gopher searches.
In this work, over 30 librarians (such as James V. Carmichael, Jr., Sanford Berman, Martha E. Stone, Gerald Perry, Barbara Gomez and Martha Cornog) address gay and lesbian issues facing the profession, and in some cases offer their own stories of understanding their sexuality and its implications on their professional lives. Some of the issues addressed are the need to uphold intellectual freedom, challenging the censorship of gay materials in libraries, AIDS material in the library, the information needs of gay and lesbian patrons, collection development, and confronting homophobia.
Providing a quick, economical introduction to accessing and using the Internet, this textbook combines large visuals and easy-to- follow steps to learning the basics, such as E-mail, Telnet, FTP and accessing Newsgroups.
InfoWorld is targeted to Senior IT professionals. Content is segmented into Channels and Topic Centers. InfoWorld also celebrates people, companies, and projects.
System requirements for accompanying optical laser disc: Macintosh; Windows; beginner to advanced user levels.
If your library wants to be a player in the local information community, linking patrons to Internet services, these eighteen readable, up-to-date reports will show you what is actually being done elsewhere. Here are libraries that have become community gateways to the world of Internet. Gathered in spring 1995, the reports detail Internet services in all sizes of libraries, from one-telephone outposts in rural New York State to Stanford University's immense electronic matrix. Included are state educational agencies and public, academic, and special libraries.
Computing and communications in colleges and universities.