Who owns a personal home page?

2003 ◽  
Vol 62 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Astrid Schütz ◽  
Franz Machilek

Research on personal home pages is still rare. Many studies to date are exploratory, and the problem of drawing a sample that reflects the variety of existing home pages has not yet been solved. The present paper discusses sampling strategies and suggests a strategy based on the results retrieved by a search engine. This approach is used to draw a sample of 229 personal home pages that portray private identities. Findings on age and sex of the owners and elements characterizing the sites are reported.

2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmad Firas Khalid ◽  
John N. Lavis ◽  
Fadi El-Jardali ◽  
Meredith Vanstone

Abstract Background Humanitarian action in crisis zones is fraught with many challenges, including lack of timely and accessible research evidence to inform decision-making about humanitarian interventions. Evidence websites have the potential to address this challenge. Evidence Aid is the only evidence website designed for crisis zones that focuses on providing research evidence in the form of systematic reviews. The objective of this study is to explore stakeholders’ views of Evidence Aid, contributing further to our understanding of the use of research evidence in decision-making in crisis zones. Methods We designed a qualitative user-testing study to collect interview data from stakeholders about their impressions of Evidence Aid. Eligible stakeholders included those with and without previous experience of Evidence Aid. All participants were either currently working or have worked within the last year in a crisis zone. Participants were asked to perform the same user experience-related tasks and answer questions about this experience and their knowledge needs. Data were analysed using a deductive framework analysis approach drawing on Morville’s seven facets of the user experience — findability, usability, usefulness, desirability, accessibility, credibility and value. Results A total of 31 interviews were completed with senior decision-makers (n = 8), advisors (n = 7), field managers (n = 7), analysts/researchers (n = 5) and healthcare providers (n = 4). Participant self-reported knowledge needs varied depending on their role. Overall, participants did not identify any ‘major’ problems (highest order) and identified only two ‘big’ problems (second highest order) with using the Evidence Aid website, namely the lack of a search engine on the home page and that some full-text articles linked to/from the site require a payment. Participants identified seven specific suggestions about how to improve Evidence Aid, many of which can also be applied to other evidence websites. Conclusions Stakeholders in crisis zones found Evidence Aid to be useful, accessible and credible. However, they experienced some problems with the lack of a search engine on the home page and the requirement for payment for some full-text articles linked to/from the site.


Robotica ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-239

Two more IFR member associations have established home pages on the World Wide Web. BRA (formerly the British Robot Association) can be found at http://www.bra-automation.co.uk, and the Danish Industrial Robot Association (DIRA) has its home page at http://inet.uni-c.dk/~i29876.


1998 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 457-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. King

The author examined the home pages of all 120 libraries in the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) in order to compare design similarities and differences. This was accomplished by first filling out a questionnaire on each home page and then tabulating the findings using simple averages and medians. Areas examined were: backgrounds, document headers, document footers, document body, page length, number of steps to library home page from parent institution Web site, and domain name servers. A typical home page is discussed using the averages of these results.


ALCEU ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (36) ◽  
pp. 122-141
Author(s):  
Adriana Barsotti ◽  
Leonel Azevedo de Aguiar
Keyword(s):  

O artigo apresenta os resultados parciais de uma pesquisa que investiga como as mudanças nos modos de leitura das notícias na internet estão provocando mais uma transformação contemporânea no jornalismo: a invisibilidade das home pages dos sites jornalísticos. Analisa como os acessos ao noticiário, por meio de links distribuídos em redes sociais, em ferramentas de busca e nos portais acarretam perda de sentido em um valor fundamental da cultura profissional. Após levantamento de dados sobre novos hábitos de leitura, empreende revisão bibliográfica sobre a home page e utiliza entrevistas em profundidade com jornalistas para compreender o impacto do silêncio da primeira página on-line nas rotinas produtivas. Conclui que, à medida que as notícias se desprendem do contexto original da edição, os profissionais sentem-se desafiados, mas sustentam que é preciso cumprir com sua responsabilidade social, destacando, em manchetes e chamadas, os temas de interesse público.


2013 ◽  
Vol 711 ◽  
pp. 582-586
Author(s):  
Tong Qiang Li ◽  
Peng Wang

Currently,along with the rapid development of search engine and it towards the direction of the commercialization step by step, special search engine technology arises at the historic moment.In this article, according to the principlemodel and indexers of search engine tool of Lucene, we design a search engine system. In this system, a user can input a text in front of home page of this website, the system will use Ajax technology to match the search content automatically.And then it will show search results in the form list below the drop-down. At the same time we can click search, it will highlight the search content and display in jsp page. Actually,it has absoultely meaning in realistic.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jessica Elizabeth Howie

<p>The online presence of tertiary libraries is becoming increasingly important, however, research (OCLC, 2010) suggests that library websites are being shunned in favour of commercial search engines. Some scholars (Reidsma, 2012; McCann et al., 2010) attribute this to poor website design. Websites are a valid communication concern and what content is displayed, as well as how it is displayed on library home pages has implications for usability, findability and user perception. Tertiary library websites need to be attractive, modern and user focused in nature. Content needs to be arranged in a way that supports smooth navigation so that users are encouraged to engage with the library.</p>


1996 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 263-265
Author(s):  
Gary W. Lightner

As the World Wide Web increases in popularity, it has become easier to create and maintain home pages on the network. How this is accomplished is as varied as those using the web. The possibilities for scientific sites create questions for the research page editor. This paper provides a nontechnical discussion of why and how to create a scientific home page. Universal Resource Locators are given for home pages that may benefit the reader.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document