« wiki wiki: snapshot etymology | Main | google maps with u.s. census data »

weaving libraries into the web Post date  06.23.2005, 5:07 PM

posted by ben vershbow

A great feature of the Firefox web browser is the little search window built right into the toolbar next to the address field. It's set to Google as a default, but you can add other common search engines or knowledge bases like Yahoo, IMDB, Amazon, eBay, Wikipedia, dictionaries and others - a customized reference suite right in your browser. What if you could put a card catalogue in there too? John Wohlers, of the Todd Library at Waubonsee Community College in Sugar Grove, Illinois has built a searchlet that effectively does this. It's not like Google Print, where you can actually browse scanned copies of the book, but it takes a step toward integrating libraries with the web - an important move if they are to remain relevant in a world where browsers and search engines are the primary research tools.

Wohlers is also working on building library search into desktop tools. Windows users can find instructions here for putting the Todd Library catalogue into your Microsoft Office 2003 Research Pane.

(via The Shifted Librarian)

Posted by ben vershbow on June 23, 2005 5:07 PM
tags: Libraries, Search and the Web

comments (0):

(Because of spam troubles, first-time comments from unfamiliar addresses or containing multiple links might be held for moderation. If your comment isn't spam, we'll publish it very soon. Thanks in advance for your patience.)




Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)