A
buy toradol person should also contact their doctor if they have completed
buying drops online treatment for BV or trich and experience a recurrence of
buy generic cafergot their symptoms. Instead, they provide counseling to discourage or limit
cheap cialis without prescription access to abortion services and manipulate through deception to get
viagra pharmacy online people to consider parenting or adoption as better options. CPCs
buy for order promote anti-contraceptive and anti-abortion counseling and do not provide evidence-based
betnovate online sales information and treatment options according to accepted medical guidelines. Because
buying dexamethasone cost CPCs are not licensed medical clinics, the law does not
lumigan for order require them to maintain client confidentiality or adhere to the
zoloft privacy requirements of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)..
“Crunching the Metadata” is an article in the November 13 Boston Globe that describes the need for new - and unique - identifiers that we can use to tag books of the future (and of course the entire contents of the web). Is he thinking of meme IDs?
David says ” we’ll need two things.”
“First, we’ll need what are known as unique identifiers-such as the call letters stamped on the spines of library books. ”
“Second, we’re going to need massive collections of metadata about each book. Some of this metadata will come from the publishers. But much of it will come from users…”
David seems to agree with our theme that “we all are librarians now” when he says “Using metadata to assemble ideas and content from multiple sources, online readers become not passive recipients of bound ideas but active librarians, reviewers, anthologists, editors, commentators, even (re)publishers.”
David Bigwood (on his Catalogablog) says that Weinberger confuses classification with identification. Bigwood realizes multiple meme IDs will be needed to tag content fully.
This entry was posted
on Thursday, November 17th, 2005 at 2:48 pm and is filed under Uncategorized.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Both comments and pings are currently closed.
Edit this entry.
November 17th, 2005 at 7:54 pm e
yes, we’re all librarians. or… we’re all participating in our democracy. either way, times are a changin’