Title | : | Archiving Websites: A Practical Guide for Information Management Professionals |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.96 (719 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1856045536 |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 238 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2006-09-01 |
Genre | : |
The world wide web is arguably the most important, and certainly the largest and most ubiquitous, cultural and commercial information resource in existence. The requirements to actively preserve selected parts of it, and the attendant problems of archiving such a vast and ephemeral entity, are only now beginning to be fully appreciated. This important book is the first to offer practical guidance to information-management professionals seeking to implement web archiving programmes of their own. It is essential reading for those who need to collect and preserve specific elements of the web - from national domains or individual subject areas to an organization's own website. Drawing on the author's experience of managing The National Archives' web-archiving programme, together with lessons learned from other international initiatives, this book provides a comprehensive overview of current best practice, together with practical guidance for anyone seeking to establish a web-archiving prog
Editorial : User-friendly resource. An utterly invaluable manual for libraries in the modern information age. --Midwest Book Review, June 2008
Extremely richwill be an important part of collections around the world that support archival work. --Public Libraries, May/June 2008
There are no AI 'recipes,' but it does demonstrate the concept well so further implementation should not be too much trouble.
Being written in Visual Basic was a great plus. Not a complete waste of time, but not something I'll remember past next week. Absolutely beautiful! I read many a page with tears of emotion. Princeton Review was also fabulous for coverage and extra problems.. But, advanced readers may find some topics (especially, formal methods) missing in this book.. This is a great book and idea. After running the gamut of different rudiment books throughout the years, I came across this book at my last teaching job. Discussing anti-virus instead of what the chapter Title promises "Malware", it really was let down on possible interest. I really liked this little world and fell right into it. As we grow older, our body changes as does the nutrition it needs. I took and passed the CISSP exam without this book. I was little nervous, thinking, "What if I hate it, or can
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