Do you (or your institution) archive the web? If so, how do you get training on
the skills, tools and knowledge needed to do so effectively? What kind of
training would you most like to have?
The goal of this effort is to give people the critical “how to” information and
skills they need for
Dear Colleagues:
Please feel free to share this to your networks that might include
librarians interested in being trained on how to be privacy advocates
within libraries and communities.
The project is sponsored by a grant from IMLS and is being directed by New
York University and the Library
Come join us for the 11th annual Library Technology Conference! There are a
handful of spots still open. Register today at:
http://libtechconf.org/registration/
Keynote Speakers
We are thrilled to announce Sarah T. Roberts and Bergis Jules as this
year’s keynote speakers. Learn more at
*2018* *Acquisitions Institute at Timberline Lodge*
Saturday, May 19 through Tuesday, May 22, 2018
Timberline Lodge
One hour east of Portland, Oregon on the slope of Mt. Hood
www.acquisitionsinstitute.org
Ohh, that's an awesome list. Thanks a lot for sharing that.
On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 10:11 AM, Hardy Pottinger wrote:
> Cool, thanks for that, Brad. I was just yesterday digging around on GitHub
> and discovered this list:
>
>
Cool, thanks for that, Brad. I was just yesterday digging around on GitHub
and discovered this list:
https://github.com/abhishekbanthia/Public-APIs
By "digging around on GitHub" I mean I was exploring the "Discover"
dashboard, which is a kind of recommendation engine for repositories based
on
Happy to hear it! If I can help at all, feel free to email me directly.
Brad
On Thu, Dec 14, 2017 at 2:03 AM, Patricia Farnan
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> This looks like a great resource for someone like me who isn't a developer
> but wants to learn more about making use of