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D-Lib Magazine
 

EDITORIAL
Preserving Information, Not Formats
by Bonita Wilson
doi:10.1045/september2006-editorial

Letters
doi:10.1045/september2006-letters


OPINION
Handle Records, Rights and Long Tail Economies
John Erickson, Hewlett Packard Laboratories
doi:10.1045/september2006-erickson

ARTICLES
Repository Librarian and the Next Crusade: The Search for a Common Standard for Digital Repository Metadata
Beth Goldsmith and Frances Knudson, Los Alamos National Laboratory Research Library
doi:10.1045/september2006-goldsmith

Perspectives on Teachers as Digital Library Users: Consumers, Contributors, and Designers
Mimi Recker, Utah State University
doi:10.1045/september2006-recker

What Is Needed to Educate Future Digital Librarians: A Study of Current Practice and Staffing Patterns in Academic and Research Libraries
Youngok Choi, The Catholic University of America; and Edie Rasmussen, The University of British Columbia
doi:10.1045/september2006-choi

Computational Science Educational Reference Desk: A Digital Library for Students, Educators, and Scientists
Diana Tanase and Jonathan Stuart-Moore, Shodor Education Foundation; and David A. Joiner, Kean University
doi:10.1045/september2006-tanase

hearing aid device
The Flower Vase, manufactured by F.C. Rein, London, about 1800, is an early model of a multiple sound receptor hearing device and was designed to be used as an ornate centerpiece for flowers or fruit. Each of the six openings "receptors" acted as sound collectors with the sound conveyed by a tube hidden under a table runner or napkin to the user's ear. This hearing device is from the Central Institute for the Deaf - Max A. Goldstein Historic Devices for Hearing Collection at Washington University Bernard Becker Medical Library in St. Louis, Missouri.
Copyright © Bernard Becker Medical Library. Used with permission.


This month, D-Lib's featured collection is Deafness in Disguise: 19th and 20th Century Concealed Hearing Devices.

 

FEATURED COLLECTION GIF
Deafness in Disguise: 19th and 20th Century Concealed Hearing Devices
Cathy Sarli, Washington University Bernard Becker Medical Library
doi:10.1045/september2006-featured.collection


IN BRIEF
Project StORe
Graham Pryor, University of Edinburgh
doi:10.1045/september2006-inbrief

The REHASH Project
Chara Balasubramaniam and Terry Poulton, University of London
doi:10.1045/september2006-inbrief

TAPESTREA: A New Way to Design Sound
Ananya Misra, Perry R. Cook, and Ge Wang, Princeton University
doi:10.1045/september2006-inbrief

A Technology Analysis of Repositories and Services
G. Sayeed Choudhury, The Johns Hopkins University
doi:10.1045/september2006-inbrief

In the News: Recent Press Releases and Announcements

   

CLIPS & 
POINTERS
In Print

Point to Point

Calls for Participation

Goings On

Deadline Reminders

 

   

Sites for D-Lib Magazine:

Corporation for National Research Initiatives, Reston, Virginia, U.S.A. (originating site)

UKOLN, University of Bath, Bath, England (mirror site)

The Australian National University, Canberra, Australia (mirror site)

State Library of Lower Saxony and the University Library of Goettingen, Goettingen, Germany
(mirror site)

Universidad de Belgrano, Buenos Aires, Argentina (mirror site)

Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan (mirror site)

BN - National Library of Portugal, Portugal (mirror site)


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D-Lib Magazine is produced by the Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI). The magazine has been sponsored by the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA)
on behalf of the Digital Libraries Initiative under Grant No. N66001-98-1-8908,
and by the National Science Foundation (NSF)
under Grant No. IIS-0243042.

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Copyright© 2006 Corporation for National Research Initiatives

D-Lib is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

doi:10.1045/september2006-contents


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