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Books > Reference & Interdisciplinary > Library & information sciences > General
This book discusses the combined fields of Intellection Property
and Information Science. At this crossroads of these two
disciplines are lawyers, educators, intellectual property
specialists, searchers, librarians, and consultants, each requiring
a lengthy list of skills necessary for the job. The results of the
work they do is used for business and legal decisions across many
sectors of our society, including industry, academia, government,
and non-profits, to name a few. This book originated from the
American Chemical Society (ACS) Symposium entitled "IP to IP:
Intellection Property for Information Professionals," presented in
Washington DC on August 19th, 2009. It was organized to highlight
the specialty training and education required to work in this
field. The book is targeted towards Information Scientists learning
about Intellectual Property. Traditional education sources such as
universities are represented, and are specialty offerings from the
pharmaceutical sector and the United States Patent and Trademark
Office (USPTO).
The original six sessions from the Symposium are included in this
text as separate chapters: Education and Certification of Patent
Information Professionals in Europe; The PERI Patent Information
Course; Law Librarianship: Exploring current trends in the 21st
century; The USPTO: Education of the Inventor Community; Copyright
Basics; Recent Developments in Patent Reform. Additional chapters
and content have been added to more fully develop this text.
Although this Symposium captured several intellectual property
topics with current information for mid-2009, this content should
still prove to be a valuable resource to the reader in future
years. This book is an resource for students or others looking to
take the next step into intellectual property as a new career
choice.
First hand anecdotal snap shots offer a taste of daily life during
the author's fifteen-year period at the High Down and Woomera
rocket test sites. The preparation of eight Black Knight and four
Black Arrow rockets up to their liftoff are recounted in detail
with relevant diagrams and a few photos. So-called "rocket-science"
jargon is deliberately sidestepped throughout. Delays that dogged
Black Arrow's birth are touched along with a full explanation for
terminating RO's maiden flight. Peripheral issues met during the
final two proving flights are also discussed. The launch team's
bittersweet feelings as R3 was readied and lifted off to deliver
Prospero into earth orbit are chronicled alongside their dismay at
the projects unfitting end. Black Arrow was Britain's only home
grown rocket to stage an orbital insertion and may also be the only
rocket to achieve this using peroxide oxidiser.
Ethnography in the digital age presents new methods for research.
It encourages scientists to think about how we live and study in a
digital, material, and sensory world. Digital ethnography considers
the impact of digital media on the methods and processes by which
we perform ethnography and how the digital, methodological,
practical, and theoretical aspects of ethnographic research are
becoming increasingly interwoven. This planet does not exist in a
static state; as technology grows and shifts, we must learn how to
appropriately analyze these changes. Practices, Challenges, and
Prospects of Digital Ethnography as a Multidisciplinary Method
examines the pervasiveness of digital media in digital
ethnography's setting and practice. It investigates how digital
settings, techniques, and procedures are reshaping ethnographic
practice and explores the ethnographic-theoretical interactions
through which "old" opinions are influenced by digital ethnography
practice, going beyond merely transferring conventional concepts
and techniques into digital research settings. Covering topics such
as data triangulation, indigenous living systems, and digital
technology, this premier reference source is an essential resource
for libraries, students, teachers, sociologists, anthropologists,
social workers, historians, political scientists, geographers,
public health officials, archivists, government officials,
researchers, and academicians.
A fundamental dynamism of the library is its continuous adoption of
trending technologies and innovations for enhanced service
delivery. To meet the needs of library users in the Fourth
Industrial Revolution, an era characterized by digital revolution,
knowledge economy, globalization, and information explosion,
libraries have embraced innovations and novel technologies such as
artificial intelligence, blockchain, social mediation tools, and
the internet of things (IoT). Emerging Trends and Technologies in
Librarianship documents current research findings and theoretical
studies focused on innovations and technologies used in
contemporary libraries. This book provides relevant models,
theoretical frameworks, the latest empirical research findings, and
sound theoretical research regarding the use of novel technologies
in libraries. Covering topics such as digital competitive
advantage, smart governance, and social media, this book is an
excellent resource for librarians, archivists, library associations
and committees, researchers, academicians, students, faculty of
higher education, computer scientists, programmers, and
professionals.
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