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    1. ScienceOnline and copyright anxiety - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Post navigation Previous Post An amusing chance to review some key ideas Next Post Can we stream digital video?

    2. A collaborative approach to developing a new Duke Libraries catalog - Bitstreams: The Digital Collec

      While many things are changing, one key feature will remain the same: The catalog will continue to allow users to locate and access (...)

    3. Duke Libraries Support for Open Access in Scholarly Journal Publishing – Duke ScholarWorks

      Global scope. Publishes key contributions by both established and up-and-coming anthropologists.

    4. Duke Libraries Center for Data and Visualization Sciences - Page 3 of 12 -

      This leads to some of the key business sources that the Duke Libraries provide access to.

    5. The UMW Blogs Story: Guest blog with UMW's Jim Groom - Duke Learning Innovation & Lifetime Education

      Keep in mind that making blogs public or not is determined on a case-by-case basis by the user.

    6. Getting off the copyright merry-go-round - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Another example of this futility may be found in the recently concluded work of the Section 108 Study Group: although the Study Group’s report (...)

    7. Select Business Databases A-Z - Ford Library

      Select “InfoGroup” after connecting to WRDS. Infrastructure fka Global Public Finance - via SDC Platinum in LSEG (...)

    8. Bitstreams: The Digital Collections Blog - Page 12 of 36 - Notes from the Duke University Libraries

      Besides new patron-facing hardware, we’ve made even larger changes behind the scenes — the majority of our public computing “computers” (...)

    9. https://sites.fuqua.duke.edu/fordlibrary/page/40/

      Charlotte Beers, former CEO of Ogilvy & Mather and Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs from 2001 (...)

    10. How do you recognize a catastrophe? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Yet it seems to me that that is the key for survival for traditional publishers if they are to weather the transition to open access.

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