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Blog | Information Literacy, Research, Dayton History

How SEO Turned Social and Why Social Search is Big News

August 2, 2011 by Andrew Walsh 2 Comments

Search engine optimization has traditionally had few, if any, social components. It was a world where mediocre content coupled with masses of backlinks was a surefire path to the top of the search engines. Webmasters who cleverly interlinked their content and made hundreds of directory submissions, forum signatures and reciprocal or three way link exchanges […]

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Google, Search Engines

Personal Cloud Computing Services: the Future of the Web?

August 1, 2011 by Andrew Walsh 5 Comments

Update 2024: This article is more relevant than ever today, with even major word processing, spreadsheet, and presentation software (like Microsoft Office) has moved to the cloud to join competitors like Google Drive. These once were the foundational traditional software programs installed on just about every individual computer. Just about everyone in the industry is […]

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Amazon, Cloud Computing, Google

Kindle eTextbook Rentals and the Future of Textbook Publishing

July 20, 2011 by Andrew Walsh Leave a Comment

Amazon’s recent unveiling of a Kindle Textbook Rental Service, which allows students to rent electronic versions of “tens of thousands of textbooks,” is the latest news in the radically changing textbook publishing market. Amazon boasts savings up to 80% of the print cover price, offers very flexible rental periods, and enables students to access their […]

Filed Under: Writing Tagged With: Amazon, eBooks, Kindle, Publishing, Textbooks

How Do You Evaluate the Blogs and Websites You Visit?

July 13, 2011 by Andrew Walsh 11 Comments

If you’ve been in school in the last decade or so, you were probably given a handout at some point explaining how to evaluate internet sources. These documents usually give a list of criteria to inspect on a website so you can determine whether it is authoritative and reliable. I remember being told to investigate […]

Filed Under: Evaluating Sources Tagged With: Blogging

Harper Collins’ 26 Checkout Policy Challenges Traditional Role of the Library

May 13, 2011 by Andrew Walsh Leave a Comment

Harper Collins recently released a new library ebook policy in which the licenses to its content expire after 26 uses, forcing libraries to purchase them again. This represents a very dangerous trend affecting the very role of the library, and underscores a need for library and information science professionals to take a stand against competing […]

Filed Under: Academic Librarianship Tagged With: eBooks, Publishing

Getting Blog Visitors From Google Maps and the Growing Impact of Local Search

May 8, 2011 by Andrew Walsh 6 Comments

Update: Late in June 2011, Google pulled third-party reviews from its Places pages in order to emphasize reviews from Google users. They did keep a small link to other sites around the web with reviews, however, so traffic generation is still possible. As I was checking the analytics for my sites the other day, I […]

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: Blogging, Google, Search Engines

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