Remove 2008 Remove Libraries Remove Mining
article thumbnail

Mine, Mine, All Mine

John Battelle's Searchblog

Author’s musical preferences not included… No Longer Mine When I write, I like to listen to music. I Want To Mine This raises much larger issues about how – or whether – we are intelligently architecting the possibilities that define our interaction with knowledge. The original MusicPlasma interface.

Mining 52
article thumbnail

Navigating a job market ?in the eye of the storm?

CILIP

Here he gives his view of changes in the job market for library and information roles in the corporate sector. Sue Wills, who is responsible for Arts, Heritage, Libraries and Registration Services at Surrey County Council, interprets the jobs market in public libraries. Public libraries jobs. ?There Academic Libraries. ?From

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

The Hacker Mind Podcast: Fuzzing Crypto

ForAllSecure

Guido Vranken returns to The Hacker Mind to discuss his CryptoFuzz tool on GitHub, as well as his experience fuzzing and finding vulnerabilities in cryptographic libraries and also within cryptocurrencies such as Ethereum. Nor am I going to wade into the debate about the ecological consequences of mining cryptocurrencies.

article thumbnail

This is the old ChiefTech blog.: The Technologist Perspective and the Business Perspective of Enterprise RSS

ChiefTech

Wednesday, 9 April 2008 The Technologist Perspective and the Business Perspective of Enterprise RSS Scott Niesen at Attensa writes: " Two posts caught my attention last week. We’re basically creating the Library of Congress every day or so, which makes finding a piece of information like finding a needle in a haystack.

Mining 40
article thumbnail

Know your rights: the key to eBook access

CILIP

Maintaining the status quo for public libraries ? Here he speaks to Rob Mackinlay about why not challenging the methods used by publishers to protect their content will damage not only libraries, but also threatens research and innovation. ?Publishers He sees licensing as an existential threat to libraries, saying: ?I?m

Access 52