Space Case: Moving From a Physical to a Virtual Journal CollectionNASIG
?
Journal publishing has evolved and changed considerably over the years, leaving many libraries to grapple with analyzing and identifying the purpose and scope of these collections. After numerous discussions and an analysis of how the current print journal collection was being used, Kraemer Family Library at UCCS decided to withdraw over 50% of the library's print journal holdings in order to create a collaborative space for students. Library staff members in charge of this project identified, analyzed and removed from the library over 30,000 volumes in less than six months. Evaluation criteria used to determine what to keep and what to withdraw, along with criteria used to determine whether the electronic version met the library's needs, was negotiated among librarians and used in the creation of Excel spreadsheets sent out to each subject selector. With limited staffing and no specialized tools, librarians and students were able to transform the old journal stacks into a vibrant and creative meeting space. Journal collections that were left became more visible and other collections that had been languishing in the stacks could now be highlighted. This presentation will highlight the steps used to complete this daunting project and communication goals and methods employed to keep library staff members, faculty on campus and other constituents aware of the changes taking place in the library. At the end of the presentation, participants will be given a series of steps that can be replicated by other libraries facing similar projects.
Rhonda Glazier
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Director of Collections Management
Ms. Glazier is the Director of Collections Management at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and has worked in libraries for over twenty-five years. She has worked in both public and academic libraries with the majority of her work focusing on the traditional areas of technical services: acquisitions, collection development, cataloging and serials. Areas of interest include the changing landscape of collections in academic libraries, the impact of electronic resources on academic collections, workflow analysis and the changing role of the technical services librarian, and the future of collection development in academic and public libraries.
Stephanie Spratt
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Electronic Resources Serials Librarian
Ms. Spratt has been the Electronic Resources Serials Librarian at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs Kraemer Family Library since February 2014. Before that, she worked in Acquisitions at Kansas State University and Acquisitions, ILL, and Circulation at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. She earned her Master of Arts in Library Science at the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2010. When not working, Ms. Spratt enjoys researching the assassination of JFK.
1) The document proposes a system to secure e-learning content stored on USB/HDD devices through multi-level authentication, encryption, and copy protection.
2) The system authenticates the content provider, USB device, user, and user's system. It then encrypts the content and stores it on the authenticated USB device.
3) To access the encrypted content, the user must register, login with their password, and authenticate their USB and system. If authenticated, the user receives a license file to decrypt and access the course content through the encrypted USB device.
Proactively identifying and addressing covert/unknown threats
Determining the capabilities and purpose of unknown files or running processes
Identifying and recovering from polymorphic malware (e.g., Conficker)
Signature-based detection tools are insufficient when faced with code that morphs to evade detection
Quickly triaging and containing an identified threat
Locating and rapidly responding to data leakage (PII, IP, etc.)
Compliance with data protection and breach notification laws
Malware attribution
Records management
Elizabeth Windisch is a University of Cincinnati student who enjoys flowers and baseball in her free time. Her goal is to start her career with the company, bringing strengths like attention to detail and adaptability. She has a medical coding and billing certificate and 20 years of customer service experience.
NAVAJO is an integrated marketing communications agency located in the San Francisco Bay Area that has been serving technology clients since 1989. It has a core competency in marketing communications and an in-house staff of writers, designers, and account personnel to ensure quality, quick response times, and the ability to scale its team based on client needs. NAVAJO prides itself on its subject matter expertise, responsiveness, ability to adapt to changing priorities, and worldwide communications management.
This PowerPoint presentation discusses the themes of love, risk-taking, and living according to one's dreams. It provides many quotes and reflections on love as an untamed force that cannot be controlled or understood but gives life meaning. It encourages taking risks and challenges, accepting changes, and not being disappointed by what we encounter along the spiritual path. Overall, it conveys messages about embracing life, love, and following one's dreams despite fears or mistakes.
This short document provides two web links for meeting friends again at authorstream.com and slideboom.com. The links are to presentation sharing websites where one could potentially find and reconnect with friends through shared content.
The author finds it difficult to preserve animation and background music on the new 狠狠撸Share format, so they are leaving for another site called AuthorStream for now but hope to return in the future. They say goodbye to friends and provide a link to their new AuthorStream page while also stating they will be back.
Space Case: Moving From a Physical to a Virtual Journal CollectionNASIG
?
Journal publishing has evolved and changed considerably over the years, leaving many libraries to grapple with analyzing and identifying the purpose and scope of these collections. After numerous discussions and an analysis of how the current print journal collection was being used, Kraemer Family Library at UCCS decided to withdraw over 50% of the library's print journal holdings in order to create a collaborative space for students. Library staff members in charge of this project identified, analyzed and removed from the library over 30,000 volumes in less than six months. Evaluation criteria used to determine what to keep and what to withdraw, along with criteria used to determine whether the electronic version met the library's needs, was negotiated among librarians and used in the creation of Excel spreadsheets sent out to each subject selector. With limited staffing and no specialized tools, librarians and students were able to transform the old journal stacks into a vibrant and creative meeting space. Journal collections that were left became more visible and other collections that had been languishing in the stacks could now be highlighted. This presentation will highlight the steps used to complete this daunting project and communication goals and methods employed to keep library staff members, faculty on campus and other constituents aware of the changes taking place in the library. At the end of the presentation, participants will be given a series of steps that can be replicated by other libraries facing similar projects.
Rhonda Glazier
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Director of Collections Management
Ms. Glazier is the Director of Collections Management at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and has worked in libraries for over twenty-five years. She has worked in both public and academic libraries with the majority of her work focusing on the traditional areas of technical services: acquisitions, collection development, cataloging and serials. Areas of interest include the changing landscape of collections in academic libraries, the impact of electronic resources on academic collections, workflow analysis and the changing role of the technical services librarian, and the future of collection development in academic and public libraries.
Stephanie Spratt
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Electronic Resources Serials Librarian
Ms. Spratt has been the Electronic Resources Serials Librarian at the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs Kraemer Family Library since February 2014. Before that, she worked in Acquisitions at Kansas State University and Acquisitions, ILL, and Circulation at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. She earned her Master of Arts in Library Science at the University of Missouri-Columbia in 2010. When not working, Ms. Spratt enjoys researching the assassination of JFK.
1) The document proposes a system to secure e-learning content stored on USB/HDD devices through multi-level authentication, encryption, and copy protection.
2) The system authenticates the content provider, USB device, user, and user's system. It then encrypts the content and stores it on the authenticated USB device.
3) To access the encrypted content, the user must register, login with their password, and authenticate their USB and system. If authenticated, the user receives a license file to decrypt and access the course content through the encrypted USB device.
Proactively identifying and addressing covert/unknown threats
Determining the capabilities and purpose of unknown files or running processes
Identifying and recovering from polymorphic malware (e.g., Conficker)
Signature-based detection tools are insufficient when faced with code that morphs to evade detection
Quickly triaging and containing an identified threat
Locating and rapidly responding to data leakage (PII, IP, etc.)
Compliance with data protection and breach notification laws
Malware attribution
Records management
Elizabeth Windisch is a University of Cincinnati student who enjoys flowers and baseball in her free time. Her goal is to start her career with the company, bringing strengths like attention to detail and adaptability. She has a medical coding and billing certificate and 20 years of customer service experience.
NAVAJO is an integrated marketing communications agency located in the San Francisco Bay Area that has been serving technology clients since 1989. It has a core competency in marketing communications and an in-house staff of writers, designers, and account personnel to ensure quality, quick response times, and the ability to scale its team based on client needs. NAVAJO prides itself on its subject matter expertise, responsiveness, ability to adapt to changing priorities, and worldwide communications management.
This PowerPoint presentation discusses the themes of love, risk-taking, and living according to one's dreams. It provides many quotes and reflections on love as an untamed force that cannot be controlled or understood but gives life meaning. It encourages taking risks and challenges, accepting changes, and not being disappointed by what we encounter along the spiritual path. Overall, it conveys messages about embracing life, love, and following one's dreams despite fears or mistakes.
This short document provides two web links for meeting friends again at authorstream.com and slideboom.com. The links are to presentation sharing websites where one could potentially find and reconnect with friends through shared content.
The author finds it difficult to preserve animation and background music on the new 狠狠撸Share format, so they are leaving for another site called AuthorStream for now but hope to return in the future. They say goodbye to friends and provide a link to their new AuthorStream page while also stating they will be back.