LibData Screenshots


Partial view of the main authoring menu. Authors see only RQS and CLPS pages for which they have authorization. In addition to page maintenance, authors may manage resources.

Partial view of an additional menu available to managers. Managers (and DBA's) can maintain virtually all system tables for controlled volcabulary, manage and distribute authoring tasks, the information structure on RQS pages, etc.

Resource entry form (partial top portion). Additional fields are not captured in this (or the next) screenshot. They relate to description, location, and other metadata.

Resource entry form (partial bottom portion and additional forms). Directional arrows allow multiple picks in both directions. Resources may be given locations, features or default master/broad subjects. Features are descriptive groups (e.g. Full Text, Restricted, CD-ROM, etc.).

Administrative resource search screen (partial). Resources may be searched by a variety of permutations.

CourseLib and PageScribe Pages (CLPS) start menu. New pages may be created, previously saved pages loaded, and existing pages may be cloned as templates for new pages.

CourseLib authoring mode (partial). Many characteristics about page layout and content may be edited here. PageScribe authoring is similar, but lacks the top portion of course-related fields.

CourseLib authoring mode (partial, mid-page). Page elements (and their descendants) may be moved up or down, deleted, copied and pasted, tweaked for style, etc. New elements of a variety of types may be added at the desired insertion point.

Research QuickStart authoring mode (partial). RQS subject pages may be associated with one another, as well as with all-purpose PageScribe pages. The main tool here is the resource adding module.

Research QuickStart authoring mode (partial, mid-page). Resources added to a page move immediately to their default information type position, and the table of contents is built dynamically. The resource instance may be tweaked separately from the source record, so that descriptions and even position in the information hierarchy, may be customized individually.