Relevant links
Clifford Lynch's opening talk
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He's mentioned OpenAccessMovement
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increased use of scholarly data mining
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rise of personal libraries (PersonalDigitalLibrary)
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data are important as the literature (CL mentions
Slashdot | Weather Data Available in XML)
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scholarly societies can do much better on opening up the content for reuse in certain contexts
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the crosshatching of disciplinary and institutional repositories is a big challenge.
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copyright is a big issues for humanities/social sciences cyberinfrastructure (CyberInfrastructure/HumanitiesAndSocialSciences)
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"the humble blog"
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how to widely deploy and employ existing technology
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he'd really like to see CreativeCommons-type licenses specifically adoptable by scholarly societies.
There was a question about
Open Access Conference - Berlin Declaration
OCLC
Project Briefing-Fall 2004 Task Force Meeting
Lorcan Dempsey and Chip Nilges from OclcOrg talking about OpenWorldCat
"Amazoogle" user environment -- four perceived user attributes?
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comprehensive
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accessible
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immediate gratification (but not necessarily GoogleScholar)
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'followability' of data
creating network application platforms
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massive data and computational hubs in a loosely coupled world
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e-bay, google, amazon
"leading libraries onto the web..."
Sakai update
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not a coure management system but a collaborative learning environment
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want to bring everything under Sakai -- if the tool is built to the Sakai framework.
Suzanne E. Thorin talking about "integration of content and services: still more than one click away"
