120 · Representative Documents: Instruction/Training Materials
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
FAQ UCSD Libraries Digital Collections Website
https://libraries.ucsd.edu/digital/#faq
The items I'm interested in aren't available online. Why aren't all the items digitized?
Not all of the contents in all of the UCSD Libraries collections have been digitized. The Libraries decide what items to digitize and make available online based on a
number of considerations (including the need to support teaching and research, available funding and resources for digitization, copyright restrictions that may prevent
the item from being distributed online, and the scholarly significance of the item). To learn more about a particular item, or to learn how you can see it in its original form,
or to find out if particular item can be digitized and made available online, please email us using the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page.
I see the item I'm interested in online, but for my research I need to see the physical object. How can I find out more about it?
To learn more about a particular item, or to learn how you can see it in its original form, or to find out if particular item can be digitized and made available online, please
email us using the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page
I'm conducting research. Can you help me find more information about a particular topic?
If you have any questions about your research, or need help finding information on a particular topic (including help on primary sources), please call, email, to chat us
using the Ask a Librarian service at http://libraries.ucsd.edu/help/ask-a-librarian/index.html.
How do I report a mistake in the Digital Collections Website?
To report mistakes or errors you see on the Digital Collections Website, please use the "Send Us Your Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page.
Copyright Attribution
If you are the copyright holder and believe our website has not properly attributed your work to you or has used it without the requisite permission, please let us know.
Please use the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page with your contact information and identify the content at issue, including a link to the relevant content
if possible.
What am I permitted to do with the digitized items find on the Digital Collections Website? May I use the digitized items in a publication or on a web site?
These collections are available from the UCSD Libraries and the digital copies of the work are intended to support research, teaching and private study. All items may
be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Usage of some items may also be subject to additional restrictions imposed by the copyright owner and/or the
institution. Use the "Send Us Your Feedback" link to be directed to the originating UCSD Library to request permission to publish or obtain a reproduction of a particular
digitized item.
If you are the copyright holder and believe our website has not properly attributed your work to you or has used it without the requisite permission, please let us know.
Please use the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page with your contact information and identify the content at issue, including a link to the relevant content
if possible.
What is the technical architecture of the Digital Collections Website?
The Digital Collections Website is an expression of the UCSD Libraries XDRE (eXtensible Digital Resource Environment) framework which is built on the following
components: RDF (Resource Descriptive Framework), Solr (search server based on Lucene), JSON (Java Script Object Notation data exchange format), SRB (storage
resource broker), ARK (Archival Resource Key) and a Java based development platform. For the Digital Collections Website XDRE produces XML as a web service and
uses XSLT, CSS and AJAX to produce the HTML output displayed in the browser.
What is the Digital Object URL and metadata link displayed in the descriptive metadata?
The Digital Object URL and metadata view provides the user with a citable persistent universal resource locator (URL) the technical information about how the digitized
item was scanned and additional descriptive metadata associated with the item that is indexed and searched including alternative titles, abstracts and translations
where appropriate.
Searching Tips
The Search (keyword) option is available from the home page and every results page.
About Search:
For an exact phrase search, enter words and/or phrases surrounded by quotes (").
The default search will look for these words and phrases in titles, names, dates, topics and identifiers.
To exclude a word or phrase, put a minus sign (-)before it.
8/7/13 5:49 PM
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO
FAQ UCSD Libraries Digital Collections Website
https://libraries.ucsd.edu/digital/#faq
The items I'm interested in aren't available online. Why aren't all the items digitized?
Not all of the contents in all of the UCSD Libraries collections have been digitized. The Libraries decide what items to digitize and make available online based on a
number of considerations (including the need to support teaching and research, available funding and resources for digitization, copyright restrictions that may prevent
the item from being distributed online, and the scholarly significance of the item). To learn more about a particular item, or to learn how you can see it in its original form,
or to find out if particular item can be digitized and made available online, please email us using the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page.
I see the item I'm interested in online, but for my research I need to see the physical object. How can I find out more about it?
To learn more about a particular item, or to learn how you can see it in its original form, or to find out if particular item can be digitized and made available online, please
email us using the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page
I'm conducting research. Can you help me find more information about a particular topic?
If you have any questions about your research, or need help finding information on a particular topic (including help on primary sources), please call, email, to chat us
using the Ask a Librarian service at http://libraries.ucsd.edu/help/ask-a-librarian/index.html.
How do I report a mistake in the Digital Collections Website?
To report mistakes or errors you see on the Digital Collections Website, please use the "Send Us Your Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page.
Copyright Attribution
If you are the copyright holder and believe our website has not properly attributed your work to you or has used it without the requisite permission, please let us know.
Please use the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page with your contact information and identify the content at issue, including a link to the relevant content
if possible.
What am I permitted to do with the digitized items find on the Digital Collections Website? May I use the digitized items in a publication or on a web site?
These collections are available from the UCSD Libraries and the digital copies of the work are intended to support research, teaching and private study. All items may
be protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Usage of some items may also be subject to additional restrictions imposed by the copyright owner and/or the
institution. Use the "Send Us Your Feedback" link to be directed to the originating UCSD Library to request permission to publish or obtain a reproduction of a particular
digitized item.
If you are the copyright holder and believe our website has not properly attributed your work to you or has used it without the requisite permission, please let us know.
Please use the "Feedback" link found at the bottom of every page with your contact information and identify the content at issue, including a link to the relevant content
if possible.
What is the technical architecture of the Digital Collections Website?
The Digital Collections Website is an expression of the UCSD Libraries XDRE (eXtensible Digital Resource Environment) framework which is built on the following
components: RDF (Resource Descriptive Framework), Solr (search server based on Lucene), JSON (Java Script Object Notation data exchange format), SRB (storage
resource broker), ARK (Archival Resource Key) and a Java based development platform. For the Digital Collections Website XDRE produces XML as a web service and
uses XSLT, CSS and AJAX to produce the HTML output displayed in the browser.
What is the Digital Object URL and metadata link displayed in the descriptive metadata?
The Digital Object URL and metadata view provides the user with a citable persistent universal resource locator (URL) the technical information about how the digitized
item was scanned and additional descriptive metadata associated with the item that is indexed and searched including alternative titles, abstracts and translations
where appropriate.
Searching Tips
The Search (keyword) option is available from the home page and every results page.
About Search:
For an exact phrase search, enter words and/or phrases surrounded by quotes (").
The default search will look for these words and phrases in titles, names, dates, topics and identifiers.
To exclude a word or phrase, put a minus sign (-)before it.
8/7/13 5:49 PM