University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
School of Information and Library Science
INLS 102: Information Tools
Resource Links
Table of Contents
HTML Authoring and Validation
- The HTML Validator at
w3.org. This will check your code for HTML compliance.
- Webmonkey, by Wired, has
many tutorials on HTML authoring and related topics.
Local resources
- ATN's Help Pages offer
comprehensive documentation for campus computing, policies and other
computer-related activities. ATN has extensive online support, training
documents, and in-person training classes.
- Information about the Microsoft site license is available in two
locations:
Browsers and HTML editors
- Netscape, one of the
main Web browsers. You can use FTP to go directly to their
FTP download site for product
updates. HTML editors are included with Netscape.
- Microsoft's Internet
Explorer, another of the main Web browsers. If you upgrade
Internet Explorer, you should also seek the product updates and
downloads at the Windows
update site. Beware of very large downloads, though -- these
updates can take awhile.
- Microsoft's FrontPage
is a capable HTML editor, but tends to product HTML code that is not
valid. UNC has a campus site license for FrontPage and other
software.
- Macromedia's Dreamweaver
is a fully-featured HTML editor. It offers a free 30-day trial.
Mailing Lists
The important thing about mailing lists is to follow the
instructions for subscribing and unsubscribing. You will
generally send email to a special address to subscribe and
unsubscribe, NOT to the same address used to post messages to the
mailing list.
Over 10,000 mailing lists are open to the public, and many others are
closed for private discussion. There are many resources to find out
about mailing lists, but it's still likely that you will need to do
some additional research to find out whether a list still exists.
Some tips:
- Follow directions to subscribe/unsubscribe
- Don't post to a list until after you've watched the content for a
few days or weeks. Get a feel for what the discussion is about
- Many lists have very little traffic. If you subscribe to a "dead"
list, consider looking for other lists instead
- Many lists are very active, with dozens of messages per day. Make
sure you check your email frequently after subscribing so your mailbox
doesn't get overwhelmed.
Each listing has its own area of coverage, and none are exhaustive.
You need to check in many different places to be sure whether a list
on a particular subject exists (it probably does!).
- CataList,
the database of over 12,000 mailing lists maintained by LISTSERV
software. You can also search for particular lists by sending the
message list to any LISTSERV program, such as
listserv@postoffice.cso.uiuc.edu. Note: LISTSERV lists only.
- The Directory of
Scholarly and Professional Electronic Conferences, now in its 14th
revision. This is a fully-searchable and indexed listing of mailing
lists and newsgroups of a scholarly or professional nature.
Originated by Diane Kovacs.
Note: Focus on academic/scholarly lists.
- Publicly Accessible Mailing
Lists is very extensive, and includes a searchable index. It is
also posted to the newsgroup
news.answers and so archived via FTP
at rtfm.mit.edu.
Note: More emphasis on non-automated lists (often smaller).
- Tile.Net has
lists of mailing lists, FTP sites, Web pages, and network newsgroups,
but is not as extensive as some other lists. One useful category to
search on is product "vendors."
- Topica (was Liszt), an
extensive Web-based directory of mailing lists of all types.
- Yahoo! has a category for
Mailing Lists which points to several domain-specific
lists-of-lists.
- Want to search archives of mailing lists? Try Yahoo! Groups, which is a
searchable index of many mailing lists. This is somewhat like what Google
Groups does for network newsgroups, but the contents don't
(apparently) expire.
- The Living Internet,
an online book with extensive background, discussion and overview
of the Internet.
Most recently updated:
Sunday, 31-May-2009 00:13:26 PDT