Results 261 to 270 of about 61,947 (299)
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THE COMING OF THE ELECTRONIC BOOK
Online and CD-Rom Review, 19981. Beyond the All in One. Suppose you had a machine that enabled you to wash your clothes, watch television programmes, listen to the radio, play CDs, and cook the dinner: would you give it house‐room for long? There seems to be emerging a view among IT pundits that the era of the all‐in‐one Personal Computer is passing, to give way to a the use of a ...
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Off the Shelf: Trends in the Purchase and Use of Electronic Reference Books [PDF]
What is the future direction of reference books? What types of policies are libraries implementing regarding the purchase of electronic reference books? Are libraries still buying hard copy reference items when an electronic equivalent is available? This
Eric Elmore
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International Journal of Man-Machine Studies, 1989
The electronic book is a project which examines the possibilities offered by computers for animating scientific texts. With the advent of the micro-computer, access to the text (textual base), need no longer be sequential. The user of the electronic book can now “jump”, to the table of contents, the index, the bibliography or to links placed in the ...
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The electronic book is a project which examines the possibilities offered by computers for animating scientific texts. With the advent of the micro-computer, access to the text (textual base), need no longer be sequential. The user of the electronic book can now “jump”, to the table of contents, the index, the bibliography or to links placed in the ...
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HYPER‐BOOK: A FORMAL MODEL FOR ELECTRONIC BOOKS
Journal of Documentation, 1994This paper presents a model for an electronic book (hyper‐book). Hyper‐books are electronic books defined on the basis of the paper book metaphor. This metaphor guarantees ease of use and understanding, as the paper counterpart is a well known concept.
Nadia Catenazzi, Lorenzo Sommaruga
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Library Hi Tech, 1988
The Smart Book involves the direct application of computer technology to the book marketplace. It employs speacial‐purpose equipment to simplify the user's access to information that would normally be found in a printed book. The concept invovles two distinct components: a reader unit and a book pack.
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The Smart Book involves the direct application of computer technology to the book marketplace. It employs speacial‐purpose equipment to simplify the user's access to information that would normally be found in a printed book. The concept invovles two distinct components: a reader unit and a book pack.
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Annotating 3D electronic books
CHI '05 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2005The importance of annotations, as a by-product of the reading activity, cannot be overstated. Annotations help users in the process of analyzing, re-reading, and recalling detailed facts such as prior analyses and relations to other works. As elec-tronic reading become pervasive, digital annotations will become part of the essential records of the ...
Lichan Hong +2 more
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Personalising Electronic Books.
J. Digit. Inf., 2003The paper addresses how hyperdocuments, accessible via electronic books (e-books) which are read using the World Wide Web, can be endowed with features that personalise the interaction process that takes place between the reader and the e-book. A novel, abstract approach to modelling the personalisation of hyperdocuments is introduced.
Ohene-Djan, James +1 more
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Electronic books in digital libraries
Proceedings IEEE Advances in Digital Libraries 2000, 2002An electronic book is an application with a multimedia database of instructional resources, which include hyperlinked text, instructor's audio/video clips, slides, animation, still images, etc. As well as content-based information about these data, and metadata such as annotations, tags, and cross-referencing information.
Gultekin Özsoyoglu +3 more
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Work Study, 1991
Examines the progress being made in the search for electronic books and the relevant criteria to make the concept work. States that the book has faults ‐the static nature of the text and the passive nature of the material – which the electronic book format can overcome, citing developments in pocket Pcs, CD‐ROM, databases, hypertext, text retrieval ...
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Examines the progress being made in the search for electronic books and the relevant criteria to make the concept work. States that the book has faults ‐the static nature of the text and the passive nature of the material – which the electronic book format can overcome, citing developments in pocket Pcs, CD‐ROM, databases, hypertext, text retrieval ...
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1998
Abstract THE ELECTRONIC BOOK production system, although it also came into being in the last quarter of the twentieth century, has nothing in common with the three late-century printing systems, offset printing, flexography, and electrostatic printing, discussed in the previous chapter.
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Abstract THE ELECTRONIC BOOK production system, although it also came into being in the last quarter of the twentieth century, has nothing in common with the three late-century printing systems, offset printing, flexography, and electrostatic printing, discussed in the previous chapter.
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