Changeset 1095 for trunk/gsdl/macros/english2.dm
- Timestamp:
- 2000-04-14T16:12:05+12:00 (24 years ago)
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- 1 edited
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trunk/gsdl/macros/english2.dm
r1034 r1095 23 23 _colnotbuilt_ {Collection not built.} 24 24 25 _textp eople_ {People}25 _textpagetitle_ {Greenstone Digital Library} 26 26 _textfb_ {Feedback} 27 _textpub_ {Publications}28 _texttec_ {Technology}29 _textrw_ {Related Work}30 27 _textinfosheet_ {Info Sheet} 31 _textscreenshots_ {Screen Shots} 32 _textnpepainfosheet_ {Niupepa Info Sheet} 33 _textpagetitle_ {Greenstone Digital Library} 34 _textprojhead_ {The New Zealand Digital Library Project} 35 28 29 _textprojhead_ {The Greenstone software and <br>The New Zealand Digital Library Project} 36 30 _textprojinfo_ { 37 <h4>The NZDL system</h4> 38 39 <p> The New Zealand Digital Library system comprises several demonstration 40 collections -- computer science technical reports and bibliographies, 41 literary works, humanitarian and development information, magazines -- and 42 makes them available over the Web through full-text interfaces. Behind the 43 query interface lies a huge collection providing gigabytes of information. 44 We hope you find what you want, or at least something intriguing! 45 46 <h4>The Greenstone software</h4> 47 48 <p> The Greenstone Digital Library software provides a new way of 49 organizing information and making it available over the Internet. A 50 <i>collection</i> of information comprises several (typically several 51 thousand, or even several million) <i>documents</i>, which share a uniform 52 searching and browsing interface. The collections in a library are 53 organized in a different way--though they share a strong family 54 resemblance. Although primarily designed for access over the Web, 55 Greenstone collections can be made available, in precisely the same form, 56 on CD-ROM for standalone PCs. Greenstone is open-source software, 57 available under the terms of the Gnu public license. 58 <p>The following websites are among those currently using Greenstone. <i>Note that these 59 sites are under development.</i> 60 <ul> 61 <li><a href="http://moby.cisti.nrc.ca/~nzdl/cgi-bin/library">CISTI</a> 62 <li><a href="http://gene.rutgers.edu/cgi-bin/library">Rutgers University</a> 63 <li><a href="http://csdl1.mdx.ac.uk/">Middlesex University</a> 64 <li><a href="http://laraine.unidata.ucar.edu/projects/coohl/htdig/cgi-bin/library">Unidata</a> 65 </ul> 66 <h4>The research</h4> 67 68 <p> The goal of our research program is to explore the potential of 69 internet-based digital libraries. Our vision is to develop systems that 70 automatically impose structure on anarchic, uncatalogued, distributed 71 repositories of information, thereby providing information consumers with 72 effective tools to locate what they need and to peruse it conveniently and 73 comfortably. Our research objectives are to 74 75 <ul> 76 <li> develop technology for creating and automatically 77 maintaining collections; 78 <li> monitor usage to study library users' needs; 79 <li> look at novel interfaces that cater to a wide spectrum of users; 80 <li> find ways to abstract layout and bibliographic information 81 from document files; 82 <li> use this information to enhance presentation and for 83 bibliometric research; 84 <li> assess potential subject areas for public-domain collections; 85 <li> survey and critique other digital library projects. 86 </ul> 87 } 88 89 _textotherinfo_ { 90 <table border=0 cellpadding=5><tr valign=top> 91 <td width=50%> 92 <h4>Global Help Projects vzw</h4> 93 94 <a href="http://www.globalprojects.org">Global Help Projects</a> is a 95 registered charity responsible for the Humanity Libraries Project that 96 provides universal low-cost information access through co-operation between 97 UN Agencies, universities and NGOs. Global Help Projects collaborate 98 extensively with the NZDL project, and use the Greenstone software. 99 </td><td width=50%> 100 101 <h4>DigiLib Systems Limited</h4> 102 103 <p><a href="http://www.digilibs.com/">DigiLib Systems Limited</a> is an 104 innovative software company that creates international digital libraries. 105 As a major contributor to the Greenstone Digital Library Software they are 106 able to build, customize, and extend digital libraries to meet exacting 107 needs. Please <a href="mailto:[email protected]">contact</a> them for 108 an obligation free quote. </td></tr></table>} 31 <p> 32 The Greenstone Digital Library software provides a new way of 33 organizing information and making it available over the Internet or on 34 CD-ROM. It is open-source software, available under the terms of the 35 GNU General Public License. 36 <p> 37 A digital library is made up of a set of collections. Each collection of 38 information comprises several (typically several thousand, or even 39 several million) documents, which share a uniform searching and 40 browsing interface. Collections can be organized in many different 41 ways while retaining a strong family resemblance. 42 <p> 43 The 44 <a href="http://www.nzdl.org">New Zealand Digital Library Project</a> 45 is a research programme at The University of Waikato whose aim is to 46 develop the underlying technology for digital libraries and make it 47 available publicly so that others can use it to create their own 48 collections. 49 Greenstone was created to further this objective. 50 Further details are available from 51 <a href="http://www.nzdl.org">http://www.nzdl.org</a> 52 } 109 53 110 54 _textpoem_ { 111 <br><h2 align=left>Kia papapounamu te moana</h2> 112 113 <p>kia hora te marino, 114 <br>kia tere te karohirohi, 115 <br>kia papapounamu te moana 116 117 <p>may peace and calmness surround you, 118 <br>may you reside in the warmth of a summer's haze, 119 <br>may the ocean of your travels be as smooth as the polished greenstone. 120 } 121 122 _textgreenstone_ { <p><br> Greenstone is a semi-precious stone that (like 123 this software) is sourced in New Zealand. In traditional Maori society it 124 was the most highly prized and sought after of all substances. It can 125 absorb and hold <i>wairua</i>, which is a spirit or life force, and is 126 endowed with traditional virtues that make it an appropriate emblem for a 55 <br><h2>Kia papapounamu te moana</h2> 56 57 <p>kia hora te marino, 58 <br>kia tere te karohirohi, 59 <br>kia papapounamu te moana 60 61 <p>may peace and calmness surround you, 62 <br>may you reside in the warmth of a summer's haze, 63 <br>may the ocean of your travels be as smooth as the polished greenstone. 64 } 65 66 _textgreenstone_ { 67 <p>Greenstone is a semi-precious stone that (like this software) is sourced in New Zealand. In traditional Maori society it was the most highly prized and sought after of all substances. It can absorb and hold <i>wairua</i>, which is a spirit or life force, and is endowed with traditional virtues that make it an appropriate emblem for a 127 68 public-domain digital library project. Its lustre shows charity; its 128 69 translucence, honesty; its toughness, courage; and the sharp edge it can … … 134 75 symbolizing the leading edge of technology. 135 76 136 <p><a href="mailto:[email protected]">Greenstone Digital Library Software</a>137 <br><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs">Computer Science Department</a>,138 <a href="http://www.waikato.ac.nz">University of Waikato</a>, New Zealand139 140 <br>October 1999141 77 } 142 78 … … 155 91 _widthselcolgr_ {537} 156 92 _heightselcolgr_ {17} 157 158 159 160 ###################################################################### 161 # 'people' page 162 package people 163 ###################################################################### 164 165 166 #------------------------------------------------------------ 167 # text macros 168 #------------------------------------------------------------ 169 170 _textpagetitle_ {NZDL: People} 171 172 _textsmallrs_ {Related Staff} 173 174 _textsawnzdl_ {Staff associated with the New Zealand Digital Library 175 project are:} 176 _texttrsaawp_ {These research students and software support people are associated with the project:} 177 178 _textstafftable_ { 179 <table> 180 <tr> 181 <td align=right valign=top width=100><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~ihw">Ian Witten</a></td> 182 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Project leader; co-author of <a href="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/mg/"><i>Managing Gigabytes</i></a></td> 183 </tr> 184 <tr> 185 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/mark-d.-apperley-.html">Mark Apperley</a></td> 186 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>User interfaces for readers</td> 187 </tr> 188 <tr> 189 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/david-bainbridge.html">David Bainbridge</a></td> 190 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Musical and Web-based collections; optical music recognition</td> 191 </tr> 192 <tr> 193 <td align=right valign=top><a 194 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/sally-jo-cunningham.html">Sally Jo Cunningham</a></td> 195 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Collections and usage studies</td> 196 </tr> 197 <tr> 198 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/steve-jones.html">Steve Jones</a></td> 199 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Phrase-based interfaces, collaborative browsing, usage analysis</td> 200 </tr> 201 <tr> 202 <td align=right valign=top><a 203 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/te-taka-keegan.html">Te Taka Keegan 204 </a></td> 205 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Maori language systems</td> 206 </tr> 207 <td align=right valign=top><a 208 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/Staff/malika-mahoui.html">Malika 209 Mahoui</a></td> 210 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Text mining, Arabic interfaces</td> 211 </tr> 212 </table> 213 } 214 215 _textgstable_ { 216 <table> 217 <tr> 218 <td align=right valign=top>George Buchanan</a></td> 219 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Systems support</td> 220 </tr> 221 <tr> 222 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~sjboddie">Stefan Boddie</a></td> 223 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Systems support</td> 224 </tr> 225 <tr> 226 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~rjmcnab">Rodger McNab</a></td> 227 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Systems support</td> 228 </tr> 229 <tr> 230 <td align=right valign=top>YingYing Wen</a></td> 231 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Text mining, Chinese libraries</td> 232 </tr> 233 <tr> 234 <td align=right valign=top>Stuart Yeates</a></td> 235 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Text mining, acronym extraction</td> 236 </tr> 237 </table> 238 } 239 240 _textsmallcont_ {Other Contributors} 241 _texttpcsp_ {These people have contributed strongly to the project:} 242 243 _textconttable_ { 244 <table> 245 <tr> 246 <td align=right valign=top width=100>Mark Abrahams</td> 247 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Client-side browsing interfaces using Java</td> 248 </tr> 249 <tr> 250 <td align=right valign=top width=100><a href="http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~tim">Tim Bell</a></td> 251 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Co-author of <a href="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/mg/"><i>Managing Gigabytes</i></a></td> 252 </tr> 253 <tr> 254 <td align=right valign=top>Matt Humphrey</td> 255 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Information visualization in the digital library</td> 256 </tr> 257 <tr> 258 <td align=right valign=top><a 259 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~singlis">Stuart Inglis</a></td> 260 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Document image analysis and optical character recognition</td> 261 </tr> 262 <tr> 263 <td align=right valign=top>Trent Mankelow</a></td> 264 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>School Journal prototype</td> 265 </tr> 266 <tr> 267 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/~bruce">Bruce McKenzie</a></td> 268 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Original interface to MG</td> 269 </tr> 270 <tr> 271 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/~alistair">Alistair Moffat</a></td> 272 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Co-author of <a href="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/mg/"><i>Managing Gigabytes</i></a>, 273 created the MG software</td> 274 </tr> 275 <tr> 276 <td align=right valign=top>Todd Reed</td> 277 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>PostScript to text conversion, user interface, WWW server, index building, FTP</td> 278 </tr> 279 <tr> 280 <td align=right valign=top><a 281 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/don-a.-smith.html">Don Smith</a></td> 282 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Special needs of libraries for mathematical and theoretical materials</td> 283 </tr> 284 <tr> 285 <td align=right valign=top>Che Tamahori</td> 286 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Designer of New Zealand Digital Library Web 287 pages</td> 288 </tr> 289 <tr> 290 <td align=right valign=top><a 291 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~wjt">Bill Teahan</a></td> 292 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Language modeling</td> 293 </tr> 294 <tr> 295 <td align=right valign=top>Mahendra Vallabh</td> 296 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Original FTP script</td> 297 </tr> 298 <tr> 299 <td align=right valign=top><a 300 href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/cs/Staff/lloyd-a.-smith.html">Lloyd Smith</a></td> 301 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Music collections and music retrieval</td> 302 </tr> 303 <tr> 304 <td align=right valign=top>John Venable</td> 305 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Requirements for digital libraries, and collections for information systems</td> 306 </tr> 307 </table> 308 } 309 310 _textaffiliates_ {There are several affiliates at other universities:} 311 312 _textaffiliatetable_ { 313 <table> 314 <tr> 315 <td align=right valign=top>Elke Duenker</td> 316 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Cross-cultural issues</td> 317 </tr> 318 <tr> 319 <td align=right valign=top><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~cgn/ 320 ">Craig Nevill-Manning</a></td> 321 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>PostScript to text conversion, user 322 interface, WWW server, index 323 building, FTP</td> 324 </tr> 325 <tr> 326 <td align=right valign=top>Nina Reeves</td> 327 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Librarians and library users</td> 328 </tr> 329 <tr> 330 <td align=right valign=top>Yin Leng Theng</td> 331 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>Digital libraries for schools</td> 332 </tr> 333 <tr> 334 <td align=right valign=top>Harold Thimbleby</td> 335 <td _1_ align=left valign=top>User interfaces for digital 336 libraries</td> 337 </tr> 338 </table> 339 } 340 341 342 #------------------------------------------------------------ 343 # icons 344 #------------------------------------------------------------ 345 346 ## "people" ## green_title ## h_people ## 347 _httpiconhpeople_ {_httpimg_/h\_people.gif} 348 _widthhpeople_ {200} 349 _heighthpeople_ {57} 350 351 352 353 ###################################################################### 354 # 'technology' page 355 package technology 356 ###################################################################### 357 358 359 #------------------------------------------------------------ 360 # text macros 361 #------------------------------------------------------------ 362 363 _textpagetitle_ {NZDL: Technology} 364 365 _content_ { 366 _iconblankbar_ 367 <p>There are several freely available technologies underlying the New Zealand 368 Digital Library: 369 <ul> 370 <li><a href="_httppagex_(gsdlsoft)"><i>Greenstone</i></a>, the digital 371 library system that generates each and every page of this website.<p> 372 373 <li><a href="_httppagex_(prescript)"><i>PreScript</i></a>, a system 374 that converts PostScript to plain ASCII or HTML, detects paragraph boundaries, 375 removes hyphenation, and interprets many ligatures.<p> 376 377 <li><a href="_httppagex_(mg)"><i>MG</i></a>, an enhancement of the <a 378 href="http://www.cs.mu.oz.au/mg"><i>Managing Gigabytes</i></a> full-text 379 retrieval system, that provides flexible stemming methods, weighting terms, 380 term frequencies, merged indexes, machine independent indexes, and a port to 381 MSDOS.<p> 382 383 <li><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/sequitur"><i>Sequitur</i></a>, a 384 method for inferring compositional hierarchies from strings by detecting 385 repetition and factoring it out of the string by forming rules in a 386 grammar. The rules can be composed of non-terminals, giving rise to a 387 hierarchy. Sequitur is useful for recognizing lexical structure in strings, 388 and excels at very long sequences.<p> 389 390 <li><a href="http://www.nzdl.org/Kea"><i>Kea</i></a>, a program for 391 automatically extracting keyphrases from the full text of documents. Candidate 392 keyphrases are identified using rudimentary lexical processing, features are 393 computed for each candidate, and machine learning is used to generate a 394 classifier that determines which candidates should be assigned as 395 keyphrases. <p> 396 397 <li><a href="http://www.cs.waikato.ac.nz/~stevej/Research/Phrasier/"><i>Phrasier</i></a>, a 398 tool to support information seeking activities in a digital library. Its novel design 399 reflects the fact that reading, writing, browsing and searching activities are rarely 400 carried out independently of each other. They overlap and interleave in ways which have 401 not been effectively supported by conventional information retrieval interfaces. Consequenly 402 Phrasier blurs the distinction between writing a document and finding material related to it; 403 between reading a document and finding others on the same or similar topics; between keyword 404 searching and subject browsing. <p> 405 406 </ul> 407 408 <br> 409 } 410 411 412 #------------------------------------------------------------ 413 # icons 414 #------------------------------------------------------------ 415 416 ## "technology" ## green_title ## h_tech ## 417 _httpiconhtech_ {_httpimg_/h\_tech.gif} 418 _widthhtech_ {200} 419 _heighthtech_ {57} 420 93 _altselcolgr_ {"Select a collection"} 421 94 422 95
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