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http://www.todosconsoftwarelegal.es/frontend/100por100/Las-100-Aplicaciones-De-Software-Libre-Para-El-Comunicador-Actual-vn2814-vst410

100 aplicaciones software libre para el comunicador actual

Red.es es la entidad pública del Ministerio de Industria, Energía y Turismo (MINETUR) encargada de consolidar el desarrollo de la Sociedad de la Información en España. Nuestra misión es ejecutar proyectos TIC de acuerdo a las prioridades estratégicas de la Secretaría de Estado de Telecomunicaciones y para la Sociedad de la Información (SETSI) y en colaboración con las comunidades autónomas, diputaciones y cabildos, entidades locales y el sector privado. Desde Justicia en red participamos en el proceso de modernización de los servicios de la Administración de Justicia con el objetivo de contribuir, mediante un uso efectivo de las Tecnologías de la Información y las Comunicaciones (TIC), a la prestación de un servicio público de calidad, orientado a las personas y a la creación de una Justicia tecnológicamente avanzada, profesional y altamente cualificada.
http://chnm.gmu.edu/digitalhistory/links/ This page lists the links cited in this book. Clicking on the “Link #.#” will take you back the footnote in the book where that link is cited. You can view three versions of the sites: The “Live Site,” which takes you to the current online site, the “Cached” version, which is a saved HTML version of the site on our server, or the “PDF” version. Introduction

Muchos enlaces

http://www.istl.org/01-winter/review3.html

The Social Life of Information

Lea Wade Science Librarian and Chair of Reference University of New Orleans lwade@uno.edu The Social Life of Information. John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 2000. 320 pp. ISBN 0-87584-762-5. $25.95 cloth. Futurists have been foretelling the demise of print materials and the inevitable dissolution of libraries for years.

El libro

http://chnm.gmu.edu/digitalhistory/ This book provides a plainspoken and thorough introduction to the web for historians—teachers and students, archivists and museum curators, professors as well as amateur enthusiasts—who wish to produce online historical work, or to build upon and improve the projects they have already started in this important new medium. It begins with an overview of the different genres of history websites, surveying a range of digital history work that has been created since the beginning of the web. The book then takes the reader step-by-step through planning a project, understanding the technologies involved and how to choose the appropriate ones, designing a site that is both easy-to-use and scholarly, digitizing materials in a way that makes them web-friendly while preserving their historical integrity, and how to reach and respond to an intended audience effectively.