Contact Us
Subject Guides
Databases
Library Search
Library
Engineering
The University of Auckland Library
Blog Stats
Posts - 972
Articles - 0
Comments - 0
Trackbacks - 0
Home
Archives
Contact
Login
All Library Blogs
Recent Comments
Archives
May, 2013 (16)
April, 2013 (22)
March, 2013 (21)
February, 2013 (19)
January, 2013 (26)
December, 2012 (21)
November, 2012 (22)
October, 2012 (25)
September, 2012 (12)
August, 2012 (25)
July, 2012 (23)
June, 2012 (19)
May, 2012 (25)
April, 2012 (21)
March, 2012 (22)
February, 2012 (17)
January, 2012 (15)
December, 2011 (17)
November, 2011 (22)
October, 2011 (21)
September, 2011 (14)
August, 2011 (25)
July, 2011 (19)
June, 2011 (23)
May, 2011 (24)
April, 2011 (23)
March, 2011 (28)
February, 2011 (17)
January, 2011 (16)
December, 2010 (30)
November, 2010 (22)
October, 2010 (19)
September, 2010 (16)
August, 2010 (22)
July, 2010 (30)
June, 2010 (24)
May, 2010 (25)
April, 2010 (26)
March, 2010 (26)
February, 2010 (16)
January, 2010 (17)
December, 2009 (20)
November, 2009 (18)
October, 2009 (19)
September, 2009 (2)
August, 2009 (4)
July, 2009 (2)
June, 2009 (2)
May, 2009 (4)
April, 2009 (3)
March, 2009 (3)
January, 2009 (2)
December, 2008 (2)
November, 2008 (3)
October, 2008 (1)
September, 2008 (1)
August, 2008 (13)
Post Categories
Christmas 2009
Christmas 2010
Hotsites - New & Notable Sites for Engineering
Feeds
RSS
ATOM
<< The Engineering Library staff are running another session on Endnote X5
|
Home
|
Top Five 'Earth as Art' Winners >>
Communicate with the future
“Digital information comes in myriad forms and formats, so how can we make sure that today's data is not lost forever in inaccessible legacy forms? An EU-funded project has developed a framework that ensures we will always be able to use data, however and wherever it is saved and stored.” Read more at
http://cordis.europa.eu/fetch?CALLER=OFFR_TM_EN&ACTION=D&RCN=8827
Print
posted @ Wednesday, August 29, 2012 8:33 AM
Comments have been closed on this topic.