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    May 2002


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May 2002

Table of Contents

LinkSeeker improves access to electronic journal articles

As you use the Library’s databases (such as SciSearch at LANL), you will notice an icon with a red and white S to the left of each citation on your search results. This is the LinkSeeker icon, and clicking on it will open a window that presents an array of links connecting you to full-text electronic content and other options designed to enhance your original search.

What will LinkSeeker do for you?

  • tell you if the full-text is available
  • connect you to an order process if the full-text is not available, such as requesting a copy of an article
  • run a citation search on the paper or authors
  • locate other articles by the author (via FlashPoint)
  • find the author’s e-mail address
  • do a web search -- with your choice of search engine
  • do a search in other libraries to find additional source materials (Library of Congress, MELVYL/University of California, or the LANL catalog
  • do a search in DOE’s InfoBridge for full-text reports
  • get live help from reference librarians

For some months the Library-provided databases have shown both the LinkSeeker icon and, for some citations, a PDF (or HTML) icon. As of April 18, 2002, there are no PDF or HTML icons - use the LinkSeeker icon instead.

The PDF icons were based on old technology, and the switch offers several benefits:

  • Article-level links to full-text are available as soon as new content is put online (significant time lags used to occur).
  • Article-level links are possible to more e-journals -- JSTOR historic backfiles, such as Science 1880-1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1915-1998, Mathematics of Computation 1960-1995.
  • Links to American Physical Society titles work correctly, accommodating the publisher's change from page number to article identifiers.

LinkSeeker was developed by the LANL Library Without Walls and Research Library.

Comments: linkseeker@lanl.gov

American Chemical Society (ACS) Journal Archives trial

Older chemistry journals are now available to LANL staff during a 2 month trial of the American Chemical Society's Journal Archives. This new online archive lets you search the full text of every title published by ACS from the year of first issue (some beginning 1879!) through 1997.

You will have access to more than 11,000 ACS journal issues containing 500,000 articles and 2.5 million pages. Some of the titles available are Analytical Chemistry, Biochemistry, Chemical Reviews, Journal of the American Chemical Society, Journal of Physical Chemistry, and Macromolecules.

Simply go to each journal's home page as before. Click on the "back issues" or the "Articles ASAP(r)" button, which will take you to a Table of Contents page. There you are offered the choice via pull down tabs to access the volume and issue desired.

An easy way to get to the ACS journals is via the Research Library's American Chemical Society (ACS) page.

The trial period for the ACS Journal Archives will run from May 1, 2002 through June 30, 2002. Take advantage of this trial and send us feedback.

Comments: Eteam@lanl.gov

Thermodynamic tables - A question for our customers


The Thermodynamics Research Center/NIST now has the NIST Standard Reference Database 85 available through the Web.

TRC/NIST describes it as follows:

It is designed to retrieve and display recommended property values of pure compounds and is essentially the electronic version of TRC Thermodynamic Tables-Hydrocarbons and TRC Thermodynamic Tables-Non-Hydrocarbons which have been compiled by the Thermodynamics Research Center (TRC) for more than 50 years. At present, the database includes more than 474,800 property data points and 2,737 sets of equation coefficients for 7,468 compounds and 33 properties.

Outstanding characteristics of the database are that it contains the best available values of physical and thermodynamic properties of chemical compounds from the hard copy (critically evaluated data on the physical and thermodynamic properties of hydrocarbons and related sulfur derivatives of hydrocarbons present in petroleum and coal related substances as well as simple inorganic substances and organic compounds containing heteroatoms).

You may view sample screens of this database at the following URL: http://trc.nist.gov/database/Table/samplescreen.htm

The Research Library is considering making this database available to our customers. We need your input in order to make a smart decision. Would you use this product if we were to make it available electronically? Please send an e-mail to the following address and let us know your thoughts. Thanks.

Comments to: Stbrl-chemobj@lanl.gov

Shared libraries in MyLibrary: How are they being used?

How are LANL researchers using the Shared Library feature in MyLibrary @ LANL? We asked some customers and here are some of the replies:

"I use the Shared Library feature in MyLibrary to work with my students - I'm hoping to use it with project teams in the future. I teach a course in Bioinformatics at an institute in Portugal during the summer. I'm able to pull together all the papers and sites I'll be using as part of the course using MyLibrary - to access as I need. Rather than having to lug paper copies with me on the plane, I can just access them remotely with MyLibrary. You do need to use VPN software when you are using it remotely.

I use the Shared Library feature with some of my students at LANL by adding links to papers I think would be useful for them to read - a shared reading file - libraries of papers and links on different topics.

Even when I'm on extended travel, using Shared Libraries is a way to keep in contact with my students when I or they find some paper that might be of use."      

- Luis Rocha, CCS-3

"I've been using MyLibrary's Shared Library feature for 3 months. Currently my Shared Library has a group of three researchers sharing it. I post papers of interest to the group - mostly papers, but also some other web links. You can have a place where you can organize important resources and they are accessible at anytime to the whole group.

The Bookmarklet function is great for easily adding links. I have not yet tried accessing MyLibrary remotely but feel it is very important to make this process as easy as possible! ... I hope the MyLibrary project will stay around, I find it a very good resource!"

- Andreas Rechtsteiner, CCS-3

Comments to: stbrl-mylib@lanl.gov

Library orientations for new hires and summer students

New to the Lab or know some students who are and who might benefit from an overview of research resources? Come to the LANL Research Library any Wednesday at 1 p.m. this summer for a 30-45 minute tour of the library facility and an introduction to library products and services. Remember you can get a free ride to see us by calling 7-TAXI. No tour reservations are necessary but we can schedule tours at other times by appointment, just e-mail us at library@lanl.gov or call 7-5809.

Not able to make it over? No problem—take the virtual tour or send it to someone in need. We also are happy to arrange tours for large groups of students or come to your site to do a presentation highlighting library resources.

Lou Pray

Family Day at the Library

  Family Day at the Library on April 13th was a success. Over 170 visitors came through—the kids LOVED the candy, pencils, post-its and pins—the public terminals were well used—some children actually used the Internet to look up information for school projects. The adults seemed to enjoy the handouts on Internet safety and took the opportunity to sign up for the Library Newsletter and New Book List. The Family Day page of family friendly websites will continue to be available on the Library web site for a while, in case you missed the event in person.

Helen Boorman

Upcoming intellectual property problems for deep linking

A deep link allows a user access to part of a website without first visiting the site's home page. Often the web creator has designed a user experience that is based on entering via the home page. It is predicted that a recent Danish court case that brought up intellectual property issues concerning deep links to specific newspaper articles will soon be reflected in similar issues in the U.S. The Internet operates with a freedom that jumps past the print model—but the intellectual property lawyers are not operating on "web-time". The Electronic Frontier Foundation is helping fight this idea and was recently involved in a case that tried to make all linking a copyright infringement.

Donna Berg

New electronic journals from the Research Library

The following new electronic journals have been added to the library collection and are available from your desktop:

Biology
DNA Sequence
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=103357

Chemistry
Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering
http://www.cjche.ca/journal/published.html
Chemical Engineering Progress
http://www.cepmagazine.org/
Israel Journal of Chemistry
http://www.sciencefromisrael.com/link.asp?id=300168

Earth Sciences
Mineralogical Magazine
http://www.catchword.com/rpsv/cw/minsoc/0026461x/contp1.htm
European Journal of Mineralogy
http://www.catchword.com/rpsv/cw/schweiz/09351221/contp1.htm

Engineering
International Journal of Robotics Research
http://www.ingenta.com/journals/browse/sage/j357

General
Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences
http://www.catchword.com/rpsv/cw/ucp/08909997/contp1.htm

Mathematics/Computers
Proceedings of the Edinburgh Mathematical Society
http://www.journals.cambridge.org/
journal_ProceedingsoftheEdinburghMathematicalSociety

SIAM Journal on Applied Dynamical Systems
http://epubs.siam.org/sam-bin/dbq/toclist/SIADS

Physics
Nuclear Fusion
http://www.iop.org/EJ/S/3/39/Dq60Df01,4GwG5U32hsTig/journal/NuclFus
Virtual Journal of Applications of Superconductivity
http://ojps.aip.org/journal_cgi/dbt?KEY=VIRT03

Eteam@lanl.gov

 

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Newsletter Editorial Team: Donna Berg, Helen Boorman, Jack Carter, Lou Pray, and Kathy Varjabedian.

The name and e-mail address of the Library member who contributed an article appears at the end of the article. If you have comments or further questions, please contact that person. If you have general questions or comments about the Newsletter itself, please contact the Newsletter Editor, Kathy Varjabedian.

 

 


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