<< October 2003 | December 2003 >>
- DMCA exemptions boost archivists, disabled [The Register]
- Inmates creating books for the blind [The News Journal]
- World drowning in oceans of data [BBC News]
- Browsing barred at the State Library [Tallahassee Democrat]
- The Information Industry Revolution: Implications for Librarians [Online]
- A New World of Scholarly Communication [The Chronicle of Higher Education]
- Libraries may have to tell parents what kids borrow [Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]
- Library Grant Money on the Web: A Resource Primer [Searcher Magazine]
- Largest Chinese digital library opens [China Daily]
- The GUI OPAC: Approach with Caution [Public-Access Computer Systems Review]
- Borders workers strike for better wages, benefits [The Michigan Daily]
- Too much information [The Age]
- Issues in Scholarly Communication [Cornell University Library]
- Posing in the buff, in the name of books [Concord Monitor]
- But Don't Call 'em Librarians [Library Journal]
- Libraries told 'stop lending' [Daily Yomiuri]
- The Year in Books 2003 [Publishers Weekly]
- Tales of a Librarian [Tori Amos]
- New Ways of Sharing and Using Authority Information [D-Lib Magazine]
- Applying Fair Use in the Development of Electronic Reserves Systems [Association of Research Libraries]
- Stephen King defends popular writers [Portland Press Herald]
- The Right to Read [Richard Stallman]
- When Free Isn't Really Free [The New York Times]
- Study: Tech savvy prefer using mobile phones, Internet [The Mercury News]
- British Library lists rare books on Amazon [ZDNet UK]
- Electronic resources of the biggest Russian libraries for all [Pravda]
- Librarian pens secrets of getting boys to read books [Portsmouth Herald]
- Digital Library Publishes UC Books Online [Daily Nexus]
- The Scholarly Lecture: How to Stand and Deliver [The Chronicle of Higher Education]
- Vegetal and mineral memory: The future of books [Al-Ahram Weekly]
These links are not updated for accuracy; older links may be dead.
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