The roles of participants in the information system are changing, and this is reflected in their business groupings and motivation. IT brings greater flexibility to the record, but without a coherent framework, cyberspace becomes a chaotic sludge of trivial ephemera. Cataloging and indexing, peer review by editorial boards and the disciplined approach of information communities can impose the necessary order and standards. Metadata and data models can help to maintain a clear structure for geoscience. Business aspects link the objectives of the investigator to the framework of the science, defining the logic of reorganization and providing incentives to drive the system
Familiarization with IT proceeds best by first learning the basic skills, using them, and considerin...
Consideration of an explicit systems framework for geological survey information is timely, to assis...
The British Geological Survey has a bold new strategy to instrument the earth. What does that mean i...
Coherent development depends on following widely used standards that respect our vast legacy of exis...
We need a strategy to cope with fundamental changes in our ways of working, based on a clear view of...
Information technology can lead to more efficient, versatile and less costly ways of supplying and u...
The information system must deal with the diversity of ideas in geoscience and their changes through...
Information technology deals with tools for handling information, notably computers and networks. It...
The geoscience record is constrained by the limitations of human thought and of the technology for h...
The developing cyberinfrastructure affects the knowledge system by which geological surveys collect,...
Once geoscientists have acquired basic computing skills, the next step in IT familiarization is gene...
The geoscientist who wishes to move beyond basic techniques and day-to-day IT applications must know...
As the Internet develops into a more powerful cyberinfrastructure (the Grid), Geological Survey know...
Cumulated references for papers in Geoscience after IT: A view of the present and future impact of I...
Table of Contents, with links to full-text of articles in NORA that were published as a Special Issu...
Familiarization with IT proceeds best by first learning the basic skills, using them, and considerin...
Consideration of an explicit systems framework for geological survey information is timely, to assis...
The British Geological Survey has a bold new strategy to instrument the earth. What does that mean i...
Coherent development depends on following widely used standards that respect our vast legacy of exis...
We need a strategy to cope with fundamental changes in our ways of working, based on a clear view of...
Information technology can lead to more efficient, versatile and less costly ways of supplying and u...
The information system must deal with the diversity of ideas in geoscience and their changes through...
Information technology deals with tools for handling information, notably computers and networks. It...
The geoscience record is constrained by the limitations of human thought and of the technology for h...
The developing cyberinfrastructure affects the knowledge system by which geological surveys collect,...
Once geoscientists have acquired basic computing skills, the next step in IT familiarization is gene...
The geoscientist who wishes to move beyond basic techniques and day-to-day IT applications must know...
As the Internet develops into a more powerful cyberinfrastructure (the Grid), Geological Survey know...
Cumulated references for papers in Geoscience after IT: A view of the present and future impact of I...
Table of Contents, with links to full-text of articles in NORA that were published as a Special Issu...
Familiarization with IT proceeds best by first learning the basic skills, using them, and considerin...
Consideration of an explicit systems framework for geological survey information is timely, to assis...
The British Geological Survey has a bold new strategy to instrument the earth. What does that mean i...