13.07.2015 Views

Cumulative i-TORQUE Index - Nancy Mulvany

Cumulative i-TORQUE Index - Nancy Mulvany

Cumulative i-TORQUE Index - Nancy Mulvany

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

BPO (business process outsourcing). See offshoringBrackney, Michael, Macrex macros presentation, 22.9TheBrain (graph-based interface), 2.13BrainBoost natural language search engine, 15.11Bray, Tim, information visualization web link, 9.11Britannica's return to printing on paper, 4.11British firms outsourcing to India, 12.4broadband connectionsfirewall hardware (routers), 15.4–5firewall software, 1.7–8, 15.4, 5Brody, William R., on librarians as human search engines, 21.10Brooks, Terrence A., “Web Search: How the Web Has Changed Information Retrieval” article,7.13Browne, Glendaon classified entries (letter), 5.5–6job markets beyond print publishing article, 9.12profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 7.17on push technology (letter), 2.6Website <strong>Index</strong>ing: Enhancing Access to Information within Websites, 2nd Ed., 16.10, 17.6,21.13browsers, 13.12alternatives to Internet Explorer, 13.12Amazon browsers, 2.13, 4.12Firefox, 13.12, 20.11Java-enabled browsers, 13.12logos (favicons), 16.7Metabrowser, 4.5Mozilla, 13.12, 15.10, 18.9on PDAs, 13.12See also visualizers“Browsing for Browsers,” 13.12Bruce Clay, LLC, Search Engine Relationship Chart, 8.12Buckland, Michael, on Otlet (Paul), 14.12Builder.com, article writing offshoring, 14.11Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)employment estimates, 1.1–2wage estimates, 1.1–2, 3, 2.1burnout, in indexers, 16.13, 14“Bush Campaigner's Prozac Solution,” 20.13Bush, Vannevar, “As We May Think” article, 14.12business books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–5, 16.2–6business equipmentcost analysis, 15.3essential peripherals, 15.1–2generators, 10.5I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 8


usiness equipment (continued)hard drive backup systems, 2.9–10, 15.5–6multifunction products, 15.2–3printers, 5.7–8, 10.6, 15.2–4shredders, 15.2telephone line, 12.8, 14.7UPSs, 9.7, 10.5–6, 15.1–2, 7USB ports/hubs, 15.7Wi-Fi networks, 15.7See also answering machines; computers; software; telephonesBusiness Industry Study Group (BISG), small and midsize publishers study, 23.13business process outsourcing (BPO). See offshoringbusiness telephone linecosts, 14.7unlisted address option, 12.8Yellow Page listings, 14.7businessescontact access options, 12.8See also business equipment; indexing businesses; officesbutton maker application, 14.8CThe Cactus Family (Anderson), scientific name index, 2.7–8, 3.5calendarsdesktop organizing software, 17.7–8imports, 20.13paper-based calendars, 17.7Renaissance Library Collection website, 20.10See also to do listsCalifornia Digital Library (CDL), eScholarship Editions, 11.13California Labor Code, and work for hire contracts, 1.13–14Calishain, Tara, 6.13Google Hacks, 5.12Web Search Garage book and website, 18.13Calvert, Jay, computer security resources, 19.14cameras, PBase (photo sharing/hosting) website, 23.9cancer, National Cancer Institute Thesaurus, 13.14“Cancer Ontology,” 13.14cars, embedded operating systems in, 2.11cartoons, Punch website, 6.13Cass, Stephen, on IBM's WebFountain project (article), 12.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 9


cataloging non-western materials website (Bertelsen), 9.13categorizationintroduction to, 19.14See also automatic classification/categorizationcategorization software, 10.10, 19.14category-subcategory relationships, in classified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5–6, 6.9–10CCH Inc., tax return preparation offshoring, 12.4CDL (California Digital Library), eScholarship Editions, 11.13certification of indexers (issue), 9.3change-in-project-scope agreements, 5.13–15charging for indexing. See indexing rates (pay rates)charging for printing PDF files, 5.7–8Chicago Manual of Style, 15th Ed. (CMS-15), 7.1, 6index, 7.5–6indexer ideal (in current vs. previous versions), 7.2–3indexing chapter publication, 7.6indexing software compatibility with, 7.9–10Chicago Manual of Style indexing rules, 7.1–6“continued lines,” 7.5–6cross-reference target main heading–subheading separator, 7.3hyphen sort, 18.7inclusive page number abbreviations, 7.1, 9indented index sub-subheading run-in format, 7.4, 10indexing software compatibility with, 7.9–10numerals sort, 18.8see also reference placement, 7.3sorting rules (alphabetizing rules), 7.4–5, 9, 18.7, 8Chief Ontologist job title, 1.10–11Child, Juliacookbook index formats, 1.4on indexes, 18.15memorial page, 18.15children's book indexes, 20.1–5controlled vocabularies for, 20.2–4Internet resources, 20.5prevalence, 20.1–2review issues, 20.4–5teaching of children how to use, 20.5Chinaoffshoring (BPO) in, 12.3, 20.12, 23.12U.S. book trade deficit with, 23.12Chizen, Bruce, on ebooks, 9.12Christian books, U.S. production trends, 22.4–5I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 10


“CIRCA Technology: Applying Meaning to Information Management” article (AppliedSemantics), 5.11Clarke, Michèle, on Henige's JSP article on indexing (web link), 3.4classificationintroduction to categorization, 19.14See also automatic classification/categorization; classification systems/schemesclassification systems/schemes, 4.8, 5.2–3directory (Taxonomy Warehouse), 5.11indexers and classification system/taxonomy design, 5.2, 6.15for indexing (Weinberg paper), 3.10for law library materials (Moys website), 20.11as ontologies, 1.10–11, 3.9, 5.11political issues involved in designing, 4.1, 4, 5.3resources on, 15.12, 17.10and search (article), 9.11See also automatic classification/categorization; controlled vocabularies; taxonomies; thesauriclassified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5–6, 6.9–10mixing nonclassified entries with, 4.8–9, 5.5cleaning up cluttered offices, 17.14–15“Cleaning Up the Tracks,” 3.7ClearForest (automatic categorization program), 10.10, 19.14clearing short-term memory space, 17.14clientschecking out new clients, 4.13–15negotiating with, 8.5, 9.1–2See also job markets (for indexers)ClinicalTrials.gov, information resources, 23.9clocks, master clocks, 9.9clustering search engines, 11.11cluttered offices (littered offices), 15.15ph, 16.11cleaned up, 17.17phcleaning up, 17.14–15CMS-15. See Chicago Manual of Style, 15th Ed.CMSs. See content management systems“Cognitive Flow,” 22.11cognitive overload, 21.14See also anxiety about undone tasks conditioncolor, in index formats, 1.4Columbia Guide to Digital Publishing, 3.8Columbia University Press (CUP), indexing guidelines for authors, 11.17Communications Workers Union (CWA), on British firms outsourcing to India, 12.4companies involved in offshoring, 12.3–7, 22.13Compensation in the Publishing Field, 1.1“Complexity in <strong>Index</strong>ing Systems: Abandonment and Failure” paper (Weinberg), 3.10I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 11


“Creating a Controlled Vocabulary” article (Fast, Leise, and Steckel), 5.12credit reports on new clients, 4.15Creel, Ramona, “20 Ways to Say 'No'” list, 22.10“Criminal Editing,” 13.13Críticas (Spanish publishing market publication), 4.7cross-referencesgeneral cross-references, 2.7see under and see also under references, 3.6from subheadings, 2.7–8, 3.5–6target main heading–subheading separator, 7.3See also see also references; see referencesCsikszentmihalyi, Mihaly, Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, 22.11cumulative indexes, 1.4CUP (Columbia University Press), indexing guidelines for authors, 11.17CWA (Communications Workers Union), on British firms outsourcing to India, 12.4Czerwinski, Mary, 22.11DD&B credit reports on new clients, 4.15Dabney, Daniel, on automatic classification, 9.11Darcy, M., on librarians as skilled humans (letter), 22.7“Dashed Hopes” (1985), 16.12“Data Disasters, Top Ten,” 10.17data mining. See text miningdata visualization. See visual display of information (information mapping)database indexing jobs offshoring, 12.1database of indexing rates. See indexing rate databasedate website, 9.11de Graaf, John, on work time and the sense of time poverty, 21.15deadlines, indexers and, 16.13, 14death clauses in indexing contracts, 23.8“A Decade of DTDs and SGML in Scholarly Publishing: What Have We Learned?” paper(Rosenblum and Golfman), 8.11dedicated indexing software. See indexing software (dedicated)DeGennaro, Barbara, 20.1interview (on children's book indexes), 20.1–5Degree Confluence Project, 17.9deliverables section (in contracts), 5.13–14for large projects, 5.15Department of Labor. See Bureau of Labor Statisticsdepth of indexingcharging according to, 23.3indexing less in depth without sacrificing quality, 8.6–7I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 14


desktop organizing software, 17.7–8desktop search programs, 21.12Despair.com products, 10.10Deutsches Netzwerk der <strong>Index</strong>er (DNI), organization and website, 17.9“Developing and Creatively Leveraging Hierarchical Metadata and Taxonomy” article (Ricci),17.10developing nationscountries involved in offshoring, 12.2, 3, 6–7, 20.12, 23.12and technology, 20.12See also IndiaDEXter plug-in (for Microsoft Word), 20.9dictionariesLegal Dictionary (Nolo.com), 2.16medical dictionaries, 10.11See also encyclopedias; glossaries; thesauri“Digging for Nuggets of Wisdom” article (Guernsey), 10.10digital libraries, building (presentation), 6.15digital publishing guide, 3.8digitizing (scanning) of booksat Amazon, 7.14–15, 9.13, 10.12, 13CDL eScholarship Editions, 11.13Google's project, 21.11at Stanford University Press, 13.13“Digitizing Books,” 13.13“Dishonorable Mentions,” 16.16dissociative fugue, 21.14distractions, 22.11minimizing, 17.15, 22.11DNI (Deutsches Netzwerk der <strong>Index</strong>er), organization and website, 17.9document retrieval, STAIRS system, 16.12Dornfest, Rael, Google Hacks, 5.12download times at various connection speeds, 5.7Drive Image (Powerquest), 2.9–10DTDs (Document Type Definitions)digital publishing resource, 3.8in scholarly publishing (paper), 8.11Dublin Core Metadata Element Set (ISO 15836:2003), 5.2Duden (German style guide), 6.7–8EEarth satellite images websites (NASA), 5.11, 22.10Ebadi, Shirin, suit against the Treasury Department OFAC, 20.10I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 15


“eBook Hype,” 22.12ebook indexes, 8.12, 10.4, 17.12–13creating, 11.8“Ebook Operation Folds,” 6.14ebooksin 2003, 10.1–4business operation closures, 6.14, 9.12CDL eScholarship Editions, 11.13Chizen on, 9.12community mailing list, 11.8formats and format standards, 8.12, 10.2, 11.8hype, 3.1, 22.12index vs. full-text search usability study, 17.12–13indexes for, 8.12, 10.4, 11.8, 17.12–13indexing, 11.8market for, 9.12, 10.1–2, 22.12Microsoft campaign, 3.1, 10.1narrative vs. non-narrative books as, 11.8OEBPS (Open eBook Publication Structure), 3.8, 8.12vs. printed books, 3.1–3, 10.1–2reading devices, 10.2, 11.8reading experiences, 10.3–4resources on, 11.8rights case, 2.16sales, 9.12, 10.2, 22.12unresolved issues, 22.12usage of (articles), 18.12“eBooks in, 2003,” 10.1–4Eco, Umberto, future of books speech, 11.15economics books, U.S. production trends, 6.2–5, 16.2–6Edgar website (SEC), checking out new clients on, 4.14editing, U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10editing indexes, structural changes, 19.2The Editorium, 20.9editors (professionals)employment estimates, 1.2salaries, 7.12U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10wage estimates, 1.2, 2.1editors (text editors), 10.9education books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–5, 16.2–5eFax, 1.6Egyptology, Theban Mapping Project, 3.8I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 16


electronic indexesebook indexes, 8.12, 10.4, 11.8, 17.12–13locator-linking issue, 17.12See also website indexingElsevier Science, offshore contract with SPI, 14.4emailalert systems, 22.11filtering, 12.9–10spam resource, 19.14vacation policy, 21.15email aliases, 12.8newsgroup use, 15.10embargoes (U.S.), sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on the publishing industry, 13.13,19.12, 20.10embedded indexing, 19.1–7benefits, 18.6, 19.5Duden on, 6.7for ebooks, 10.4, 17.12–13in FrameMaker, 12.11, 17.13, 18.3–4, 20.9in InDesign, 14.9, 17.13need for, 19.5–6page rates for, 18.5–6, 20.8in Quark, 17.12, 13resource on, 19.7theory, 19.1in Word, 17.13, 18.3–4, 5, 19.2, 6–7, 20.9Wright workshop announcement, 19.8in XML, 6.7See also embedded indexing software; website indexingembedded indexing software, 19.1, 2FrameMaker, 12.11, 17.13, 18.3–4, 20.9HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er program, 11.8, 16.8InDesign, 14.9, 17.13learning to use, 19.3<strong>Mulvany</strong> on, 19.1plug-ins for FrameMaker and Word, 20.9reluctance to change from dedicated indexing software to, 19.3, 5–6Word, 17.13, 18.3–4, 5, 19.2, 6–7, 20.9“Embedded <strong>Index</strong>ing: Users Speak Out” paper (<strong>Mulvany</strong>), 19.1embedded operating systems in appliances and cars, 2.11emDEX plug-in (for FrameMaker), 20.9“Emergency Poster–Virus” flowchart (Calvert), 19.14employmentestimates (BLS), 1.1–2I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 17


employment (continued)writing and professional employment, 21.13See also indexing jobs (projects)encyclopedia indexes, subject entries and boldfaced locators in, 19.10encyclopediasBritannica's return to printing on paper, 4.11Cook's Thesaurus, 8.10Harry Potter Encyclopedia of Spells, 7.13index entries and locators, 19.10Legal Encyclopedia (Nolo.com), 2.16See also dictionariesengineers, cooking website for, 19.13entries. See index entries“Errata,” 8.17errors-and-omissions insurance, in taxonomy design contracts, 5.4errors in the text, reporting, 9.8eScholarship Editions (CDL), 11.13estimating indexing time, 20.14, 21.8, 9ethics (professional ethics), 8.3, 9.2EuropeGerman indexes, 6.7–8German Network of <strong>Index</strong>ers (DNI), 17.9indexing and indexes on the Continent (article), 6.8“An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full-Text Document-Retrieval System” article(Blair and Maron), 16.12executive salaries, 7.12extraterrestrial intelligence search project, 7.11Extreme Markup Languages conference, 8.11FFaceted Classification email list, 5.4“Facing the Text: An Excerpt,” 11.1–7Factivapush product, 2.6WebFountain project test, 12.12Factiva Alerts web link, 2.6Fallows, James, on overwhelm as a modern condition, 16.14Fassbender, Jochen, 5.12DNI organization, 17.9on Duden (German style guide) (letter), 6.7–8Fast, Karl“Controlled Vocabularies: A Glosso-Thesaurus” article, 12.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 18


Fast, Karl (continued)“Creating a Controlled Vocabulary” article, 5.12“Synonym Rings and Authority Files” article, 8.12“What Is a Controlled Vocabulary?” article, 3.10, 4.3favicons (browser logos), 16.7fax accounts, eFax, 1.6FBI (Justice Dept.)Freedom to Read Protection Act and, 4.15Patriot Act and, 3.11, 12, 9.6Fedora (Red Hat Linux), 18.9Feldman, Susan“The High Cost of Not Finding Information” study, 14.11“Why Categorize?” article, 19.14Feria Internacional de Libros (FIL), 2.12Fetters, Linda, on see under and see also under references, 3.6FIL (Feria Internacional de Libros), 2.12File Download Time Calculator, 5.7filestemporary file removal software, 3.7See also authority files; PDF filesfiling rules. See sorting rulesfiling systemsreorganizing, 17.15storage system (Microsoft), 13.14tickler file system, 20.14filtering email, with MailWasher, 12.9–10findability, 15.12article on (Morville), 3.10website on (Morville), 15.12finding informationfindability article and website, 3.10, 15.12forthcoming book titles on Amazon, 8.9“The High Cost of Not Finding Information” study, 14.11personal information management, 13.14See also full-text searches; information retrieval; Search Inside the Book; Web searches“Finding Stuff,” 13.14Firefox (browser), 13.12, 20.11firewallshardware (routers), 15.4–5software, 1.7–8, 15.4, 5Fisher, Barbara, on Amazon's Search Inside the Book, 11.15Fishman, Stephen, on work for hire contracts in California, 1.13–14flow (cognitive engagement), 22.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 19


flowering plant taxonomy changes (article), 4.11For Fun linksAstronomy Picture of the Day, 1.9“Cooking for Engineers,” 19.13Degree Confluence Project, 17.9Despair.com products, 10.10Earth satellite images websites (NASA), 5.11, 22.10embedded operating systems in appliances and cars, 2.11extraterrestrial intelligence search project, 7.11geocaching, 4.11GooCookin (Google hack), 5.12Google holiday logos, 13.13holiday shopping websites, 20.10How Everyday Things Are Made, 8.10Internet Time, 9.11museum websites, 18.11PBase (photo sharing/hosting) website, 23.9Pixar animation shorts, 11.13Places Online website, 12.11Punch (cartoons), 6.13Signmaker Central, 14.8Snood (game), 21.10Specious Report on Google Print (article), 13.13Strindberg's Inferno multimedia interpretation, 16.10Theban Mapping Project, 3.8typewriter information website, 15.11wastebasket toss game, 12.11World Wind website (NASA), 22.10Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, Freedom to Read Protection Act and, 4.15foreign-owned publishers, 20.13, 23.13“Foreign Printing” article (Mallardi), 20.12–13foreign words in italics in index entries, 23.7forthcoming book titles, finding on Amazon, 8.9“A Fountain of Knowledge” article (Cass), 12.12FrameMakerembedded indexing in, 12.11, 17.13, 18.3–4embedded indexing plug-ins, 20.9Freedom to Read Protection Act, 4.15, 8.13, 15Fremontia article on flowering plant taxonomy changes, 4.11full-text searchesvs. indexes, 10.14, 15, 17.12–13in Search Inside the Book, 10.12–13, 14STAIRS document-retrieval system, 16.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 20


Ggames. See computer gamesGarshol, Lars Marius, “Metadata? Thesauri? Taxonomies? Topic Maps!” paper, 17.10Gassie, Lillian Woon, online presentations, 6.15gateways (routers), 15.4–5gay and lesbian books, U.S. production trends, 18.7geek shopping websites, 20.10Gemstar ebook operation demise, 6.14general cross-references, 2.7generators, and UPSs, 10.5genus-species relationships, in classified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5–6geocaching website, 4.11geographic namesAAG Places Online website, 12.11African language materials, 9.13thesaurus, 6.13German indexes, 6.7–8German Network of <strong>Index</strong>ers (DNI), organization and website, 17.9German style guide (Duden), 6.7–8“Get Caught Reading,” 8.13–15Get Caught Reading campaign, 8.13, 15getting started in indexing, 22.8medical indexing, 23.4–5“Getting There with Maps,” 22.11Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity (Allen), 16.14, 17.14, 20.14Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names (TGN), 6.13Gibson Research ShieldsUP! program, 19.14glossariescontrolled vocabulary terms, 12.11information retrieval terms, 2.11Internet and Web terms, 2.11, 5.12metadata terms, 6.14search engine terms, 2.11software engineering terms, 18.12Spanish Internet Glossary, 5.12See also dictionaries; encyclopedias; thesauriThe Glossary of Information Retrieval, 2.11Glossary of Internet and Web Jargon, 2.11Glossary of Metadata Terms (Lombardi), 6.14“Glosso-Thesaurus,” 12.11GNOME desktop (Linux), 18.9, 10phGod's Politics (Wallis), 22.4, 5Golfman, Irina, “A Decade of DTDs and SGML in Scholarly Publishing: What Have WeLearned?” paper, 8.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 21


GooCookin (Google hack), 5.12Goodwin, Evan, on Ibsen, 16.10Googleand Applied Semantics, 5.11book-information-in-search projects, 11.14–15browser (visualizer), 2.13, 4.12checking out new clients on, 4.14desktop search program, 21.12digitizing project, 21.11holiday logos, 13.13map to address via phone number service, 12.8mapping website, 22.11and metatags, 6.12name verification on, 1.9news website, 1.11out-of-this-world job description, 14.10PageRank tool, 14.8scholarly literature search engine, 21.11–12search engine relationship (usage) chart, 8.12torquing, 15.14WorldCat database access project, 11.14Google Groups (newsgroups connection), 15.10Google hack website, 5.12, 6.13Google Hacks (Calishain and Dornfest), 5.12“Google Jumps In,” 11.14–15Google mania, and librarians, 21.10, 22.7Google Maps, 22.11“Google Me, Google You,” 21.10Google News website, 1.11Google Print project, 11.14–15Specious Report on (article), 13.13Google Scholar (search engine), 21.11–12GoogleBrowser (TouchGraph), 2.13“Got the Time?,” 9.9–10“Gotta Love It!,” 6.15Graaf. See de Graaf, JohnGrabois, Andrewon U.S. book production in 2002, 6.1–2on U.S. book production in 2003, 16.1Grant, Rickford, Linux for Non-Geeks, 18.9, 19.11Graph Based Interfaces, 2.13See also visualizersGravitz, Ina, on hugs for librarians (letter), 22.7I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 22


“The Great Library of Amazonia” article (Wolf), 10.13Green, Adolph, 5.17Green, Roger, 23.11greenwichmeantime.com, 9.10greeting cards, Renaissance Library Collection website, 20.10Grimes, Richard, file storage system article, 13.14Grokker (visualizer), 4.5, 12, 6.11–12version 2, 11.11–12GTD. See Getting Things DoneGTD system, 17.14Guadalajara Book Fair, 2.12Guernsey, Lisa, “Digging for Nuggets of Wisdom” article, 10.10Guide for Authors (CUP), indexing guidelines, 11.17Guide for Publishers (NISO), Metadata Demystified, 8.10Guidelines for Alphabetical Arrangement of Letters and Sorting of Numbers and Other Symbols(NISO TR03)hyphen sort, 18.7review article (<strong>Mulvany</strong>), 8.8symbol sort options, 8.8Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of Monolingual ControlledVocabularies (NISO Z39.19–200x), 23.9Gurudutt. See Kamath, GuruduttGururaj, B. S., 13.1documentation work, 13.1, 4interview, 13.1–8HHabañero Networks security resource, 19.14“Hacking Google,” 5.12Hafner, Katie, on distractions (article), 22.11“Happy Holidays,” 20.16hard drive backup systems, 2.9–10, 15.5–6hardware auditing tool (for PCs), 16.9Harry Potter Lexicon, 7.13Harvard University library, Google's digitizing project, 21.11hats, tinfoil, 21.10, 22.7phHaynes, Mir G., “Information Architecture: You Do It, You Just Don't Know It” article, 5.12health-related bookspublic library buying trend, 22.2U.S. production trends, 16.5–6, 22.2–3See also medical booksHearst, Marti, “What is Text Mining?” article, 10.10Henderson, Earvin, “<strong>Index</strong> vs. Full-text search” usability study, 17.12–13I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 23


Hendler, James, “The Semantic Web” article, 3.9Henige, David, on indexing (JSP article), 3.4Hensher, Philip, on indexes as expressive, 16.16Hepburn, Katherine, Kate Remembered (Berg), 7.13“The High Cost of Not Finding Information” study (Feldman), 14.11“High Hopes” (1961), 16.11history books, U.S. production trends, 6.2–5, 16.2–6holiday logos (from Google), 13.13holiday shopping websites, 20.10Holt, Paton Amazon's Search Inside the Book, 11.15on the Freedom to Read Protection Act, 4.15“Holy Macros,” 22.9home economics books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–5Hood, Al, “<strong>Index</strong> vs. Full-text search” usability study, 17.12–13hourly earnings of indexers, 2.1–5, 4tgetting into The Zone, 2.4–5quality work at low rates, 8.6–7working in The Zone at low rates, 2.4t, 8.6–7, 10.7How Everyday Things Are Made website, 8.10how-to books, public library circulation, 22.2“How to Make Money <strong>Index</strong>ing Books,” 2.1–5“How to Make Money Reading Books,” 1.1–3“How Vulnerable is My Computer?” article (Calvert), 19.14“Hpertext Revisited,” 14.12HTML (Hypertext Markup Language), digital publishing resource, 3.8HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er program, website indexing with, 11.8, 16.8hyphens, sort options, 18.7I“I Love You, Madame Librarian” article (Vonnegut), 18.11i-<strong>TORQUE</strong>Back Page collection suggestion (letter), 22.7canceling subscriptions, 4.7index request letter, 3.4PDF file printing, 5.9, 11.10PDF reader software, 5.9, 6.15publishing schedule change, 21.1Q & A columnist introductions, 11.10, 12.13, 15.14renewing subscriptions, 4.7Subscribers Links webpage, 15.14See also indexing rate database (i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> subscriber rates)I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 24


IA Summit 2004, 14.10IAwiki website, 5.4“IBM's WebFountain,” 12.12Ibsen, Henrik, on Strindberg, 16.10ICD-10 (international disease classification system), 4.8IconForge program, 16.7icons, favicons (browser logos), 16.7ideal indexer (CMS-15 image), 7.2–3identity theft, resource on, 19.14iDrive feature (BMW 745i), 2.11IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers)offshore contract with SPI, 14.4Software Engineering Terms glossary, 18.12Treasury Department OFAC embargo advisories to, 13.13imports of books and calendars, 20.13inclusive page number abbreviations, 7.1, 9income. See indexing rates; salaries; wagesinconsistent wordings, reflecting the text, 19.9–10indented indexesindention of see also references under main headings, 11.9sub-subheading run-in format, 7.4, 10Independent Book Publishers Association (PMA), 23.13independent contractors, tax withholding for (proposal), 14.13–14InDesign (Adobe), embedded indexing in, 14.9, 17.13“<strong>Index</strong>” (poem) (Violi), author comments on, 19.16<strong>Index</strong> (VA), 4.17ph<strong>Index</strong> (WA), 3.14–15phindex cards technology, 14.12transition to indexing software from, 19.3–5index entriesacronym spellouts, 1.5bold type in, 23.7charging by the entry, 23.3classified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5–6, 6.9–10in encyclopedia indexes, 19.10italic type in, 23.7parallel topics, 15.8–9passing mentions, 7.7–8shortening titles, 21.6wording inconsistencies, 19.9–10See also cross-references; locators; personal names; sub-subheadings; subheadingsindex length, projecting, 21.9I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 25


index qualityAACR2 index excellence, 17.1bad indexes (poor quality) problem, 9.2, 10.15, 16.12educational needs, 9.2–3full-text search checks on, 10.15indexing rates and, 8.5turnaround times and, 8.3, 9.1working in The Zone at low rates without sacrificing, 8.6–7workshops on, 9.3“<strong>Index</strong> vs. Full-text search” usability study (Barnum, Henderson, Hood, Jordan), 17.12–13indexable pagescontract agreements on additional deliverables, 5.13–15See also text (in indexable documents)The <strong>Index</strong>erBell articles (web links), 3.9Henige's treatment of, 3.4Vonnegut letter on indexers, 18.11“<strong>Index</strong>er” license plates, 14.16ph“<strong>Index</strong>er” sticker, 6.17indexersASI's focus on new vs. established indexers, 9.5burnout in, 16.13, 14certification issue, 9.3and classification system/taxonomy design, 5.2, 6.15and deadlines, 16.13, 14Duden on, 6.7Henige's treatment of, 3.4hiring practice at Microsoft Learning, 18.2ideal indexer (CMS-15 image), 7.2–3in <strong>Index</strong> (VA), 4.17phvs. information architects, 17.10misperception of in the publishing world, 9.4, 5office assistants (pets), 21.17ph, 22.15ph“Offices of Two <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 15.15ph, 17.17phOpen eBook Forum as without, 8.12profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.16–17, 7.17–18“Taxes & <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 14.13–14Vonnegut on, 18.11websites for, 12.8, 14.8, 15.14See also indexing businesses; indexing jobs; indexing profession; indexing rates; interviews;job markets; societies of indexers“<strong>Index</strong>ers Find <strong>Index</strong> in Rural Virginia,” 4.17ph“<strong>Index</strong>er's Nightmare,” 9.17“<strong>Index</strong>ers' Office Assistants,” 21.17ph, 22.15phI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 26


<strong>Index</strong>ers' Rest Homelocation, 3.15popular posters, 2.18popular video, 23.15“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves” (profile data), 1.16–17, 7.18indexesAACR2 index, 17.1, 2–5in Amazon's Look Inside the Book, 7.14, 15bad indexes (poor quality) problem, 9.2, 10.15, 16.12as book content search tools (article), 7.15Child on, 18.15children's book indexes, 20.1–5CMS-15 index, 7.5–6“on the Continent” (article), 6.8cumulative indexes, 1.4ebook indexes, 8.12, 10.4, 11.8, 17.12–13editing, 19.2encyclopedia indexes, 19.10as expressive (Hensher), 16.16vs. full-text searches, 10.14, 15, 17.12–13German indexes, 6.7–8Harry Potter Universe index, 7.13as hypertext, 14.12on looking oneself up in, 5.17missing indexes, 7.13, 17.11, 21.14, 22.4–5multi-volume indexes, 1.4name indexes (author indexes), 15.9single-source indexes, 4.2visual representations of, 4.12See also cookbook indexes; electronic indexes; scientific name indexes; specific index-relatedtopics“<strong>Index</strong>icon: The Only Fully Automatic <strong>Index</strong>er: A Review” article (<strong>Mulvany</strong> and Milstead), 1.11indexingclassification systems for (Weinberg paper), 3.10“on the Continent” (article), 6.8ebooks, 11.8experience of (<strong>Mulvany</strong>), 3.3getting started in, 22.8, 23.4–5Henige's article on (in JSP), 3.4“How to Make Money <strong>Index</strong>ing Books,” 2.1–5in India, 13.3, 5–6information science resource, 10.11journal indexing, 8.2misperception of in the publishing world, 9.4, 5I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 27


indexing (continued)text mining as like, 10.10writing on (by indexers), 9.3See also automatic indexing; embedded indexing; medical indexing; single-source indexing;specific indexing-related topics; website indexingindexing agreements. See contracts<strong>Index</strong>ing and Abstracting in Theory and Practice (Lancaster), 10.11“<strong>Index</strong>ing and Access for Digital Libraries and the Internet” article (Bates), 2.6indexing businessescontact access options, 12.8“Keeping Your <strong>Index</strong>ing Business Onshore,” 14.1–5office assistants (pets), 21.17ph, 22.15phoutsourceability attributes, 14.1–3, 5in rural areas, 23.5–6“Taxes & <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 14.13–14See also business equipment; indexing jobs; indexing profession; offices; Taking Care ofBusiness & Yourself columnindexing conferences, 2005 schedule, 22.12indexing coursesUC Berkeley Extension course, 21.5–6UC Berkeley Extension Online course, 21.5“<strong>Index</strong>ing FrameMaker Documents” paper (Rao), 12.11indexing guidelines. See indexing style guidesindexing jobs (projects)landing that first job, 22.8last minute jobs, 23.8medical indexing project parameters, 23.3outsourceability, 14.3–4, 5, 20.13outsourcing (offshoring) of, 21.4, 23.4outsourcing (offshoring) of database indexing jobs, 12.1refusing, 9.1–2sickness and, 23.8See also contracts; job markets (for indexers); marketing (for indexing jobs)indexing professionASI's promotional failure, 9.4ASI's promotional responsibility, 9.5certification issue, 9.3challenges to, 9.4changes in, 8.3, 9.4indexing rate database (i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> subscriber rates), 10.8instructions for contributing to, 22.6, 23.6job market impacts (letters), 20.6–8, 21.2–4status request (letter), 17.6indexing rates (pay rates)charging by the entry, 23.3I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 28


indexing rates (pay rates) (continued)for embedded indexing, 18.5–6, 20.8hourly earnings, 2.1–5, 4tand index quality, 8.5negotiating, 8.5, 9.2as not keeping pace, 8.4, 10.7, 20.8, 21.3–4offshoring and, 14.6page rates, 8.4–7sharing information about, 10.7–8specialty area rates, 8.4tiered rates, 8.5wage estimates, 1.2–3, 2.1–2See also indexing rate database; low pay ratesindexing societies. See societies of indexersindexing software (dedicated)CMS-15 compatibility, 7.9–10HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er program, 11.8, 16.8Macrex macros presentation, 22.9reluctance to change to embedded indexing software from, 19.3, 5–6transition from index cards technology to, 19.3–5See also embedded indexing softwareindexing style guidesDuden (German style guide), 6.7–8Guide for Authors (CUP), 11.17See also Chicago Manual of Style, 15th Ed.indexing systems (for classification), Weinberg on, 3.10Indiabooks in, 13.1–4Builder.com's article writing offshoring to, 14.11companies outsourcing to, 12.3–4documentation software used in, 13.5indexing in, 13.3, 5–6offshoring (BPO) in, 12.1–5, 13, 13.7, 14.11, 20.12offshoring (BPO) in the U.S. from (letter), 17.6publishing industry in, 13.1–8technical writing in, 13.6–8“India Report: Books, Publishing, Technical Writing, & <strong>Index</strong>ing,” 13.1–8i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> readers on (letters), 14.6“The Inevitable Crash,” 2.9–10Inferno (Strindberg), multimedia interpretation, 16.10information anxietyresource on, 15.12See also anxiety about undone tasks conditionI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 29


information architects, 3.10vs. indexers, 17.10information architecture, 17.10IA Summit 2004, 14.10Otlet on organizing information, 14.12resources on, 3.10, 5.4, 12, 6.15, 13.8, 15.12, 17.10See also classification systems/schemes; taxonomies; thesauriInformation Architecture for the World Wide Web (Rosenfeld and Morville), 5.4“Information Architecture: You Do It, You Just Don't Know It” article (Haynes), 5.12information management. See managing informationinformation mapping. See visual display of informationInformation Research electronic journal, 7.13information retrievalBates on, 1.10–11, 2.6breakthroughs in, 22.10companies involved in (pre-1990s), 1.10findability article and website, 3.10, 15.12glossaries of terms related to, 2.11push technology, 1.10, 2.6resources on, 3.9, 5.11, 7.13, 10.11, 15.12, 22.10Semantic Web project, 3.9, 13.14, 15.12taxonomy/classification and, 9.11and the Web, 1.10–11, 7.13See also automatic classification/categorization; finding information; full-text searches;search engines; Search Inside the Book; visual display of information; Web searchesinformation scienceresources on, 3.9, 5.11, 7.13, 10.11, 15.12See also information architecture; information retrieval“Information Storage and Retrieval” article (Lipetz), 22.10infra, use of, 3.5–6ink cartridges, 15.4inkjet printersall-in-one products, 15.2–3printing costs, 5.8InMagic (automatic categorization program), 19.14Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. See IEEEinsurance, in taxonomy design contracts, 5.4integrity, personal, 9.2intellectual property rightsAmazon's book-scanning operation and, 7.15, 9.13, 10.12, 13assignment of rights contracts, 1.14e-book rights case, 2.16“Internationalized Back-of-the-Book <strong>Index</strong>es for XSL Formatting Objects” paper (Kimber andReynolds), 8.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 30


Internetglossaries of terms related to, 2.11, 5.12information analysis project (IBM), 12.12Spanish glossary, 5.12usefulness vs. book usefulness, 3.2Internet security. See computer security“Internet Security Resource,” 19.14Internet Time, 9.11interviewsBell (web link), 3.9DeGennaro, 20.1–5Gururaj (B. S.) and Gurudutt Kamath, 13.1–8Perlman, 8.1–7, 9.1–5Pitkoff, 23.1–6Rhoades, 15.1–7Wall, 18.1–6, 19.6–7Wright, 4.1–5, 5.1–4invoices, 9.14–15as PDFs, 5.10purchase order numbers for, 4.13–14sample invoice, 9.15Sarbanes-Oxley impacts, 22.13Timekeep for Windows feature, 21.7, 9“Invoices,” 9.14–15InXight (graph-based interface), 2.13IR. See information retrievalIranian author's suit against the Treasury Department OFAC, 20.10Ireland, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.3IRS, 2003 Annual Report to Congress, 14.13–14IRS Form W-9, 4.13ISO 15836:2003 (Dublin Core Metadata Element Set), 5.2Israel, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.3“Issues in Cataloging Non-Western Materials: Special Problems with African LanguageMaterials” website (Bertelsen), 9.13IT jobs, offshoring of, 12.3–7, 13, 13.7, 14.11italic type in indexes, 23.7IXgen utility (for FrameMaker), 20.9JJasco, Peter, Polysearch (search engine), 21.12Java-enabled browsers, 13.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 31


Jermey, Jonon ebooks (letter), 11.8Website <strong>Index</strong>ing: Enhancing Access to Information within Websites, 2nd Ed., 16.10, 17.6,21.13job markets (for indexers), 20.7alternatives beyond print publishing (article), 9.12bottom-feeder market, 20.7–8changes in work sources, 8.3identifying your market, 22.8indexing rate database impacts on (letters), 20.6–8, 21.2–4large publishers (big six), 23.13niches (segments) outside mainstream publishing, 6.6September 11 aftermath, 6.1–2small and midsize publishers market, 23.13Spanish indexing market, 4.6–7, 8.2, 22.5U.S. book category production trends, 6.2–5, 16.2–6, 18.7, 22.2–5See also marketing (for indexing jobs)jobs in indexing. See indexing jobs (projects)John Paul II, Pope, Rise, Let Us Be on Our Way, 22.4John Wiley (publisher), 21.4, 22.13John's Hopkins University librarians, 21.10Johnson, Steven, “The Best Search Idea Since Google” article, 10.12Jones, William, personal information management article, 13.14Jordan, Rodney, “<strong>Index</strong> vs. Full-text search” usability study, 17.12–13journal indexing, 8.2Journal of Scholarly Publishing (JSP), indexing article (Henige), 3.4journalshigh cost of academic and research journals, 14.4–5indexing of, 8.2indexing of (article) (Bell), 3.9public resource for scientific and medical literature, 14.5publishing industry offshoring focus on, 12.7, 14.4Joy of Cooking, classified index entries, 6.9–10Julia and Jacques Cooking at Home (Child and Pépin), index format, 1.4KKamath, Gurudutt, 13.1documentation work, 13.1, 4–5interview, 13.1–8Kartoo (visualizer) website, 4.12Kate Remembered (Berg), 7.13“Keeper Finders” article (Boutin), 21.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 32


Keeping Found Things Found project, 13.14“Keeping Your <strong>Index</strong>ing Business Onshore,” 14.1–5Keller, Michael, on digitizing of books at Stanford University Press, 13.13Kennedy, Shirl, on Google Scholar, 21.11–12Kimber, W. Eliot, “Internationalized Back-of-the-Book <strong>Index</strong>es for XSL Formatting Objects”paper, 8.11Kirkpatrick, David D., Amazon's book-scanning plan story, 7.14–15KLEZ virus, 1.8Knight, G. Norman, on long strings of locators, 7.7Kremer, John, Top 101 Independent Book Publishers list, 23.13LLabor, Department of. See Bureau of Labor StatisticsLaHaye, Tim, Left Behind series sales, 22.4Lancaster, F. W., <strong>Index</strong>ing and Abstracting in Theory and Practice, 10.11landing that first indexing job, 22.8large projects, contracts for, 5.14–15laser printers, printing costs, 5.7–8Laserwords (Chennai, India), UK and USA customers, 12.5Lassila, Ora, “The Semantic Web” article, 3.9last minute indexing jobs, 23.8Lathrop, Lori, profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 7.18Latin America, offshoring (BPO) in, 20.12lawcopyright law work for hire contracts, 1.12–14“Taxonomies Mandated by Law,” 12.12See also intellectual property rights; Legal Beagle columnlaw library materialsclassification scheme (Moys website), 20.11See also lawbookslawbookslaw library spending cuts, 21.13U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–6See also law library materials“Lawbooks and Libraries,” 21.13lawsuits against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12, 20.10Lazarus, David, on CCH Inc.'s tax return preparation offshoring (article), 12.4LCSH (Library of Congress Headings), 4.8“Learning to Read,” 23.12Left Behind series (LaHaye), sales, 22.4Legal Beagle columnchange-in-project-scope agreements, 5.13–15I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 33


Legal Beagle column (continued)checking out new clients, 4.13–15e-book rights case, 2.16invoices, 9.14–15Patriot Act and opposition to, 3.11–12, 8.13–15publishers' and authors' suit against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12“Taxes & <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 14.13–14work for hire contracts, 1.12–14work quality clauses, 2.14–16See also contractsLegal Dictionary (Nolo.com), 2.16Legal Encyclopedia (Nolo.com), 2.16legal publishing industryoffshoring in, 12.1See also lawbookslegal rights. See intellectual property rightsLeise, Fred“Controlled Vocabularies: A Glosso-Thesaurus” article, 12.11“Creating a Controlled Vocabulary” article, 5.12“Synonym Rings and Authority Files” article, 8.12“What Is a Controlled Vocabulary?” article, 3.10, 4.3length of index, projecting, 21.9Leno, Jay, on giving our Constitution to Iraq, 9.6“Let's Get Organized,” 17.7–8letter-by-letter sortsCMS-15 rules, 7.4–5, 9, 18.7hyphens, 18.7numerals, 18.8LettersBack Page collection suggestion (Jonathan S.), 22.7on browser logos (favicons) (James W.), 16.7on classified entries (Browne, Stauber), 5.5–6on Duden (German style guide) (Fassbender), 6.7–8on ebooks (Jermey), 11.8on generators (Milstead), 10.5on Henige's JSP article on indexing (Veverka), 3.4i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> index request (Linzer), 3.4on indexing rate database job market impacts (Shawvan, anonymous), 20.6–8, 21.2–4indexing rate database status request (anonymous), 17.6on “India Report” (snippets), 14.6on librarians and Google mania (Gravitz and Darcy), 22.7on outsourcing (offshoring) (snippets), 14.6on outsourcing in the U.S. from India (Mertes), 17.6I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 34


Letters (continued)on the Patriot Act (anonymous), 9.6on power outages (Milstead, Rhoades), 10.5–6on Publishers Weekly (Russell), 19.8on push technology (Browne), 2.6on the Spanish indexing market (Perlman), 4.6–7on UPSs (Rhoades), 10.5–6Website <strong>Index</strong>ing enquiry, purchasing, and price information (Browne and Jermey), 17.6Levy, Davidon multitasking and cognitive overload, 21.14Scrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in a Digital Age, 21.14Leximation, Inc., 20.9librarianson Amazon's Search Inside the Book, 11.15and Google mania, 21.10, 22.7“I Love You, Madame Librarian” article (Vonnegut), 18.11librariesdigital library–building resource, 6.15full-text searches throughout, 10.12–13Google's digitizing project, 21.11law library book spending cuts, 21.13law library materials classification scheme (Moys website), 20.11listing service for stockings of specific books, 11.14Patriot Act and, 3.11–12, 4.15, 9.6See also public librariesLibrary Journal, public library book buying survey (for 2004), 22.1Library of Congress Headings (LCSH), 4.8license plates (“<strong>Index</strong>er”), 14.16phlicenses, Open Publication License, 3.2“Life Interrupted: Plugged into It All We're Stressed to Distraction” article, 21.14Lindstrom, Martin, on website indexing, 2.12linking of locators in electronic indexes issue, 17.12Linux (operating system), 18.9–10office suite, 18.9, 19.11resources on, 18.9, 10word processor, 19.11Linux for Non-Geeks (Grant), 18.9, 19.11Linzer, Naomi, i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> index request (letter), 3.4Lipetz, Ben Ami, “Information Storage and Retrieval” article, 22.10LIT format (Microsoft Reader Format), 11.8littered offices. See cluttered officeslocators (reference locators) (page numbers)after main headings modified by subheadings, 7.7I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 35


locators (reference locators) (page numbers) (continued)boldfaced locators in encyclopedia indexes, 19.10color formats, 1.4inclusive page number abbreviations, 7.1, 9linking issue in electronic indexes, 17.12long strings, 7.7–8Logik (terminology-gathering software), 4.5, 10Logo Generator, 14.8logosbrowser favicons, 16.7creation software, 14.8Lohr, Steve, Open Publication License story, 3.2Lombardi, VictorGlossary of Metadata Terms, 6.14IA Summit 2004 handout, 14.10long strings of locators, 7.7–8Look Inside the Book (Amazon.com), 7.14, 15, 10.14See also Search Inside the Book (Look Inside the Book II)low pay rates, 8.4, 10.7, 20.8, 21.3–4charges by new and non-self-supporting indexers problem, 20.6, 8for embedded indexing, 20.8quality work at, 8.6–7working in The Zone at, 2.4t, 8.6–7, 10.7See also indexing ratesMmachine learning. See automatic classification/categorizationMachine Translation project (Microsoft), 14.11Macrex macros presentation, 22.9macrosMacrex macros presentation, 22.9QuicKeys program, 20.9Maddocks, Jane, in <strong>Index</strong> (VA), 4.17phMailWasher (Bolton), 12.9–10“Making Cents of Copy and Print Management” article (Monk), 5.8Malaysia, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.2, 3Mallardi, Vincent, “Foreign Printing” article, 20.12–13managing informationcleaning up cluttered offices, 17.14–15clearing short-term memory space, 17.14desktop organizing software, 17.7–8I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 36


managing information (continued)personal information management, 13.14See also filing systems; PDAsmanufacturing processes, How Everyday Things Are Made website, 8.10mapping websites, Google Maps vs. Mapquest, 22.11Mapquest, 22.11maps. See atlases; mapping websites; topic mapsmarketing (for indexing jobs)book-by-book targeting, 8.9See also job markets (for indexers); websitesmarketsfor ebooks, 9.12, 10.1–2, 22.12for reference books, 3.1–2for taxonomy design, 5.3See also job markets (for indexers); Spanish publishing marketMaron, M. E.“Automatic <strong>Index</strong>ing: An Experimental Inquiry” article, 16.11“An Evaluation of Retrieval Effectiveness for a Full-Text Document-Retrieval System”article, 16.12Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), START natural language search engine, 15.11master clocks, 9.9Mastering the Art of French Cooking (Child), index format, 1.4McAfee VirusScan, 1.8McFeely, W. Drake, on The 9/11 Commission Report, 17.11McIlroy, Thad, “The New World of Offshoring and Automation” article, 20.12medical bookspublic library buying trend, 22.2U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–6See also health-related books; medical journals; medical publishingmedical dictionaries, 10.11medical indexing, 23.2–5charging by the entry, 23.3getting started in, 23.4–5project parameters, 23.3subject areas, 23.2medical information resources, 23.9medical journals (literature), public resource for, 14.5medical publishingbusiness consolidation in, 23.2offshoring of, 23.4See also medical booksMediLexicon, 10.11Medline database, 10.10MegaClock, 9.10I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 37


mentions (passing mentions in indexes), 7.7–8meridians, Biel Meridian, 9.11Mertes, Kate, on outsourcing in the U.S. from India (letter), 17.6MeSH vocabulary, information resources, 23.9Metabrowser, 4.5metadata, 5.1–2browser, 4.5Glossary of Metadata Terms, 6.14Google and metatags, 6.12NISO Guide for Publishers, 8.10resources on, 3.8, 6.15, 8.10, 17.10types, 5.1–2Metadata Demystified: A Guide for Publishers (NISO), 8.10“Metadata? Thesauri? Taxonomies? Topic Maps!” paper (Garshol), 17.10“Metastuff,” 17.10metatopics, 11.1–7as implied in all headings, 11.4invisibility in some indexes, 11.3–4subheadings under, 11.2–3, 4–7, 13.10–11Mexico, offshoring (BPO) in, 20.12Meyer, David, on multitasking, 21.14Microsoft (corporation)ebooks campaign, 3.1, 10.1ebooks format, 11.8file storage system, 13.14Machine Translation project, 14.11Microsoft Learning, 18.1embedded indexing benefits, 18.6embedded indexing page rates, 18.5–6embedded indexing process, 18.3–4, 5, 19.2, 6–7embedded indexing tools required, 18.4–5indexer hiring practice, 18.2indexers' impressions of the embedding process, 18.5number of books with indexes published by, 18.1Microsoft Network (MSN), search engine relationship (usage) chart, 8.12Microsoft Reader Format (for ebooks), 11.8Microsoft Windows CE, BMW 745i iDrive feature, 2.11Microsoft Wordembedded indexing in, 17.13, 18.3–4, 5, 19.2, 6–7embedded indexing plug-in, 20.9Milstead, Jessicaon generators (letter), 10.5<strong>Index</strong>icon review web link, 1.11selected papers archive, 7.13I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 38


minimizing distractions, 17.15, 22.11minor mentions (passing mentions in indexes), 7.7–8missing indexes, 7.13, 17.11, 21.14, 22.4–5MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), START natural language search engine, 15.11Modern Information Retrieval glossary, 2.11molecular biology, information resources, 23.9Monk, Michael J., “Making Cents of Copy and Print Management” article, 5.8Monographic Principle (Otlet), 14.12Monroe, Marilyn, birth name search, 1.9Morris, Jeff, on taxonomy/classification and search (article), 9.11Morville, Peterfindability article, 3.10findability website, 15.12Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 5.4Moys Classification Scheme website, 20.11Moys, Elizabeth (Betty), 20.11Mozilla (browser), 13.12, 18.9Thunderbird newsreader, 15.10“Mozilla's Firefox: The Searcher's Browser” article (Sherman), 20.11MSN (Microsoft Network), search engine relationship (usage) chart, 8.12multi-volume indexes, 1.4multitasking, and cognitive overload, 21.14MultiTes (taxonomy software), 4.5, 10<strong>Mulvany</strong>, <strong>Nancy</strong>confessions, 16.13, 21.10cookbook index, 6.9–10on embedded indexing, 19.1–7experience of indexing, 3.3first indexing job, 22.8on Henige's JSP article on indexing (web link), 3.4in <strong>Index</strong> (VA), 4.17ph<strong>Index</strong>icon review web link, 1.11on Moys, 20.11NISO TR03 review, 8.8profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.16on Ross, 22.8on see under and see also under references, 3.6UC Berkeley Extension indexing course, 21.5–6Wellisch memories, 13.14See also Letters; Q & A columnMuseum of Online Museums, 18.11museum websites, 18.11music books, U.S. production trends, 6.2–4, 16.2–6I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 39


Mydoom@MM virus, 12.9Myers-Briggs typologyonline test web link, 1.16, 7.17profiled indexer scores, 1.16–17, 7.17–18Nname indexesauthor indexes, 15.9See also scientific name indexesname verification, in Web searches, 1.9–10named anchors (in website indexing), 16.8names. See acronyms; geographic names; personal names; scientific namesNASAAstronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) website, 1.9Visible Earth website, 5.11World Wind website, 22.10National Cancer Institute Thesaurus, 13.14National Information Standards Organization. See “NISO” titlesNational Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), time services, 9.9National Library of Medicine (NLM), medical information resources, 23.9National Research Council of Canada, services, 9.10National Writers Unioncampaign to oppose offshoring, 22.13company alerts, 4.14Natural Language Processing group (Microsoft), Machine Translation project, 14.11natural language search engines, 15.11negotiating with clientsindexing rates, 8.5, 9.2turnaround times, 9.1–2Nelson, Ted, Project Xanadu, 14.12Nemko, Marty, “Offshoring and You” article, 22.13NetNation (domain administration service), 12.9Netscape (browser), 13.12“The New World of Offshoring and Automation” article (McIlroy), 20.12news, Google News website, 1.11newsgroups, 15.10newsreaders, 15.10NISO Guide for Publishers: Metadata Demystified, 8.10NISO TR03: Guidelines for Alphabetical Arrangement of Letters and Sorting of Numbers andOther Symbolshyphen sort, 18.7review article (<strong>Mulvany</strong>), 8.8symbol sort options, 8.8I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 40


NISO Z39.19–200x: Guidelines for the Construction, Format, and Management of MonolingualControlled Vocabularies, 23.9NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology), time services, 9.9NLM (National Library of Medicine), medical information resources, 23.9“No,” “20 Ways to Say 'No'” list (Creel), 22.10“No Time for an <strong>Index</strong>,” 7.13See also missing indexesNolo.com, legal reference resources, 2.16nonclassified entries, mixing with classified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5Norton (company). See W. W. Norton & CompanyNorton AntiVirus, 1.8note management software, 17.8Note Studio, 17.8“The Numbers, Please: U.S. Book Production, 2002,” 6.1–6“The Numbers, Please: U.S. Book Production, 2003,” 16.1–6numerals, sort options, 18.8Oobligations, open-ended, 16.14OCLC (Online Computer Library Center), WorldCat database Google access project, 11.14“Odd Mishaps Cause Computer Grief,” 10.17OEBPS (Open eBook Publication Structure), 8.12digital publishing resource, 3.8“OEBPS: The Universal eBook Format?” article (Sanders), 8.12OFAC. See Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)Office of Foreign Assets Control. See Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control(OFAC)office suite (Linux), 18.9, 19.11officesassistants (pets), 21.17ph, 22.15phcleaned up, 17.17phcleaning up clutter, 17.14–15cluttered, 15.15ph, 16.11“Offices of Two <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 15.15ph, 17.17phoffshoring (outsourcing) (BPO), 12.1–7alarming indications, 20.13of Builder.com's article writing, 14.11in China, 12.3, 20.12, 23.12companies involved in, 12.3–7, 22.13of copyediting, 12.6–7countries hosting offshore operations, 12.2, 3, 6–7, 20.12, 23.12of database indexing jobs, 12.1defined, 12.2I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 41


offshoring (outsourcing) (BPO) (continued)double-speak for, 18.7i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> readers on (letters), 14.6of indexing jobs, 21.4, 23.4and indexing rates, 14.6in India, 12.1–5, 13, 13.7, 14.11, 20.12of IT jobs, 12.3–7, 13, 13.7, 14.11“Keeping Your <strong>Index</strong>ing Business Onshore,” 14.1–5of medical publishing, 23.4organizations against, 22.13outsourceability attributes (of indexing businesses), 14.1–3, 5outsourceability of indexing jobs, 14.3–4, 5, 20.13in the Philippines, 12.2, 3, 6–7, 20.12preferred term, 12.2in the printing industry, 20.12–13, 23.12in the publishing industry, 12.1, 5–7, 14.4, 20.12–13, 23.12publishing industry production focus, 12.7, 14.4pull factors, 12.2resources on, 20.12–13ship for software design venture, 23.11sluggish economy and, 23.12software design ship venture, 23.11software services outsourcing, 12.3SPI indexer job ad, 12.15phof tax return preparation, 12.4–5of technical writing, 13.7, 14.11UCB report (2003), 12.2–3, 14.1in the U.S. from India (letter), 17.6web links, 12.7, 13“Offshoring and the Global Marketplace” article, 20.12“Offshoring and You” article (Nemko), 22.13“Offshoring Report,” 12.1–7Ogbuji, Uche, “The Languages of the Semantic Web” article, 3.9One New Thing weblog, 12.13Online Computer Library Center (OCLC), WorldCat database Google access project, 11.14ontologiescancer ontology, 13.14classification systems as, 1.10–11, 3.9, 5.11IA Summit 2004 panel on, 14.10philosophical meaning, 1.11, 5.11resources on, 3.9, 5.11, 6.15Web Ontology Language (OWL), 13.14Open Directory Project (search engine), search engine relationship (usage) chart, 8.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 42


Open eBook Forum, 8.12, 10.2ebook sales survey, 9.12Open eBook Publication Structure. See OEBPSopen-ended obligations, 16.14Open Publication License, 3.2Open WorldCat pilot project, 11.14OpenOffice (Linux), 18.9, 19.11OpenOffice Writer (Linux), 19.11Opera (browser), 13.12operating systems, embedded, 2.11organizing informationOtlet on, 14.12See also information architecture; managing informationOtlet, Paul, on organizing information, 14.12Otter Amendment (Patriot Act), 8.14outsourceabilityattributes (of indexing businesses), 14.1–3, 5of indexing jobs, 14.3–4, 5, 20.13outsourcing. See offshoring (outsourcing) (BPO)“Overcommitted?,” 22.10overloadcognitive, 21.14See also anxiety about undone tasks conditionOverture (search engine), usage chart, 8.12overwhelm. See anxiety about undone tasks conditionOWL (Web Ontology Language), 13.14Ppage numbers. See locators (reference locators)page rates, 8.4–7for embedded indexing, 18.5–6, 20.8and hourly earnings, 2.2–5, 4tas not keeping pace, 8.4, 10.7, 20.8, 21.3–4specialty area rates, 8.4tiered rates, 8.5See also indexing rates; low pay ratesPageRank tool (Google), 14.8pages, indexable. See indexable pagesPalm Desktop software, 17.7–8paper books. See printed books (on paper)parallel topics, reflecting the text, 15.8–9I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 43


passing mentions (in indexes), 7.7–8Patriot Act (USA Patriot Act), 3.11–12, 8.13, 9.6ACLU suit against, 8.14civil resolutions against, 8.14Freedom to Read Protection Act and, 4.15, 8.13, 15i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> reader on (letter), 9.6Otter Amendment, 8.14Patriot Act IIAshcroft campaign, 9.6draft proposals web link, 3.12“Patriot Acts, Then & Now: Protect Our Freedom to Read” Op-Ed piece (Schroeder), 8.15pay rates. See indexing rates; low pay rates; page ratesPBase (photo sharing/hosting) website, 23.9PDAs (personal digital assistants), 17.7as ebook reading devices, 10.2, 11.8medical dictionary, 10.11software for, 17.7–8using web browsers on, 13.12PDF conversion tools, 5.9, 10PDF filesAdobe Acrobat, 5.9–10backward compatibility, 5.9charging for printing, 5.7–8conversion tools, 5.9, 10download times at various connection speeds, 5.7i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> file printing, 5.9, 11.10PDF format (portable document format)10–year anniversary, 6.15for ebooks, 11.8PDF995 conversion tool, 5.10PDFzone.com website, 5.9, 10“People and Paper,” 4.11people as leashed to new technologies, 21.15“The Perfect Book?,” 17.11Perlman, Janet, 8.1, 9.1on ASI, 9.4, 5business description, 8.1–2on certification of indexers, 9.3on index quality, 8.3, 5, 9.1on the indexing profession, 8.3–4, 9.4–5on indexing rates, 8.3–6interview, 8.1–7, 9.1–5on negotiating with clients, 8.5, 9.1–2I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 44


Perlman, Janet (continued)on professional ethics, 8.3, 9.2profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 7.18on Russell's Wilson Award–winning index, 17.1on the Spanish indexing market, 4.6–7, 8.2on working in The Zone at low rates without sacrificing quality, 8.6–7workshops on quality, 9.3on writing, 9.3personal digital assistants. See PDAspersonal information management, 13.14personal integrity, 9.2personal namesAfrican language materials, 9.13first name vs. last name alias entries, 13.9reflecting the author's usage, 23.7Web search verification of, 1.9–10“Pesky Taxonomists,” 4.11PestPatrol (SaferSite), 3.7pets, “<strong>Index</strong>ers' Office Assistants,” 21.17ph, 22.15phPhilippines, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.2, 3, 6–7, 20.12philosophy books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–5photo sharing/hosting website, 23.9picture of the day, Astronomy Picture of the Day (APOD) website, 1.9Pink, Daniel H., IT jobs offshoring article, 12.13Pitkoff, Kathy, 23.1business description, 23.1on indexing in a rural area, 23.5–6indexing start, 23.1interview, 23.1–6on medical indexing, 23.2–5Pitman, R. J., 6.12Pixar animation shorts, 11.13Places Online website, 12.11plant names (scientific names)regulation of, 4.8taxonomy changes, 4.11See also scientific name indexesplug-ins for indexing in FrameMaker and Word, 20.9PMA (Independent Book Publishers Association), 23.13political issues in taxonomy (classification system) design, 4.1, 4, 5.3Polysearch (search engine), 21.12portable document format. See PDF formatI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 45


posters“Emergency Poster–Virus” flowchart (Calvert), 19.14at <strong>Index</strong>ers' Rest Home, 2.18Renaissance Library Collection website, 20.10Potter, Harry, Harry Potter Lexicon, 7.13power outage protection, generators, 10.5Powerquest Drive Image, 2.9–10Prentice, Scott, 20.9Price, Garyon Google Scholar, 21.11–12on Google's digitizing project, 21.11printed books (on paper)vs. ebooks, 3.1–3, 10.1–2encyclopedia publishers and, 4.11single-source book indexes, 4.2printersink cartridges, 15.4multifunction products, 15.2–3printing costs, 5.7–8and UPSs, 10.6printingcharging for printing PDF files, 5.7–8i-<strong>TORQUE</strong> PDF files, 5.9, 11.10Printing Impressions, offshoring articles, 20.12–13printing industry, offshoring in, 20.12–13, 23.12prints, Renaissance Library Collection website, 20.10privacy, business contact access options, 12.8productivitydesktop organizing software, 17.7–8See also Taking Care of Business & Yourself columnprofessional ethics, 8.3, 9.2profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.16–17, 7.17–18project scope change, agreements on, 5.13–15Project Xanadu (Nelson), 14.12protecting work time, 17.15“Protecting Yourself: Checking Out New Clients,” 4.13–15“Protecting Yourself from Change, Shifting Sands:,” 5.13–15Prozac, “Bush Campaigner's Prozac Solution,” 20.13psychology books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–5public libraries (in the U.S.)book buying in 2004, 22.1listing service for stockings of specific books, 11.14Patriot Act and, 3.11–12, 4.15, 9.6I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 46


public libraries (in the U.S.) (continued)Public Library of Science, 14.5total number and circulation, 22.1Public Library of Science, 14.5publisherson Amazon's book-scanning operation, 7.15, 9.13, 10.13checking out new clients, 4.13–14foreign-owned vs. American-owned, 20.13, 23.13Independent Book Publishers Association (PMA), 23.13large (big six), 23.13new publishers in 2003, 16.6small and midsize publishers study, 23.13Spanish publishers, 22.5suit against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12Top 101 Independent Book Publishers list, 23.13U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10Wiley, 21.4, 22.13See also booksellers; publishing industryPublishers Weekly, 18.7, 19.8salary survey, 7.11–12publishing industryBritannica's return to printing on paper, 4.11digital publishing guide, 3.8ebook operation closures, 6.14, 9.12, 10.1ebooks vs. printed books, 3.1–3, 10.1–2in India, 13.1–8medical publishing, 23.2, 4misperception of indexing and indexers in, 9.4, 5offshoring in, 12.1, 5–7, 14.4, 20.12–13, 23.12offshoring production focus, 12.7, 14.4Open Publication License, 3.2publisher statistics, 23.13salary survey, 7.11–12sluggish economy and, 23.12U.S. book production, 2001–2002, 6.1–6, 3t, 4t, 16.1, 6U.S. book production, 2002–2003, 16.1–3, 2t, 3t, 6, 22.2–5U.S. book production, 2003 vs. 2001, 16.4, 4t, 6U.S. book production trends, by category, 6.2–5, 16.2–6, 18.7, 22.2–5U.S. book sales, 2001–2002, 5.12, 6.5–6U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10See also intellectual property rights; markets; publishers; scholarly publishing; universitypressesPubMed Browser (TouchGraph), 2.13I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 47


PubMed databasebrowser, 2.13resources on, 23.9Punch website (cartoons), 6.13purchase order numbers (for invoices), 4.13–14The Purpose-driven Life (Warren), sales, 22.4push technology, 1.10, 2.6“Put Your <strong>Index</strong>ing in Order” article (Lindstrom), 2.12“Putting it Together: Taxonomy, Classification & Search” article (Morris), 9.11QQ & A columnacronym spellouts, 1.5bold type in indexes, 23.7business telephone line, 12.8, 14.7charging for printing PDF files, 5.7–8classified entries, 4.8–9, 6.9–10columnist introductions, 11.10, 12.13, 15.14cross-references from subheadings, 2.7–8, 3.5–6email aliases, 12.8encyclopedia index entries and locators (Stauber), 19.10finding forthcoming book titles on Amazon, 8.9first name vs. last name alias entries (Stauber), 13.9getting started in indexing, 22.8hyphen sort options, 18.7incomplete or colloquial names, 23.7italic type in indexes, 23.7last minute indexing jobs, 23.8long strings of locators, 7.7–8metatopics and subheadings under (Stauber), 13.10–11multi-volume indexes, 1.4name indexes (author indexes) (Stauber), 15.9numeral sort options, 18.8parallel topics (consistency) (Stauber), 15.8–9passing mentions, 7.7–8power outages and a UPS, 9.7Publishers Weekly, 18.7reporting errors in the text, 9.8see also reference indention under main headings, 11.9see under and see also under references, 3.6shortening titles in index entries, 21.6I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 48


Q & A column (continued)symbol sort options, 8.8UC Berkeley Extension indexing course, 21.5–6UC Berkeley Extension Online indexing course (Wright), 21.5website indexing with HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er (Wright), 16.8wording inconsistencies (Stauber), 19.9–10Yellow Page listings, 14.7qualitywork quality clauses (in contracts), 2.14–16See also index qualityquality of work product clauses (in contracts), 2.15–16Quark, embedded indexing in, 17.12, 13QuicKeys program, 20.9Quint, Barbaraon Factiva Alerts (article), 2.6on Google's digitizing project (article), 21.11on OCLC's WorldCat database Google access project, 11.14RR. R. Bowker. See Bowker book production press releasesR. R. Donnelly, offshoring in China, 23.12RAM overload in short-term memory, 17.14Random House v Rosetta, 2.16Random House Ventures, investment in American Reading Company, 23.12“Ranganathan for IAs” article (Steckel), 13.8Rao, Anitha S., “<strong>Index</strong>ing FrameMaker Documents” paper, 12.11rates. See indexing rates (pay rates); low pay rates; page ratesRayward, W. Boyd, on Otlet (Paul), 14.12Read Me First! A Style Guide for the Computer Industry, “Errata,” 8.17recipe websites, 5.12, 19.13recreation books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–5, 16.2–5Red Hat Linux, 18.9reference booksebook reading experience, 10.3–4in India, 13.1–3market for, 3.1–2public library expenditure trend, 22.2“reference locator,” 13.16phreference locators. See locatorsreflecting the textparallel topics, 15.8–9I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 49


eflecting the text (continued)personal names, 23.7wording inconsistencies, 19.9–10refusing jobs, 9.1–2reinstallations of applications, 15.6religion books, U.S. production trends, 22.4–5Renaissance Library Collection website, 20.10reporting errors in the text, 9.8ResearchBUZZ Extra, 18.13ResearchBUZZ website, 5.12Reville, Lynette, weblog, 12.13Reynolds, Joshua, “Internationalized Back-of-the-Book <strong>Index</strong>es for XSL Formatting Objects”paper, 8.11Rhoades, Gale, 15.1on backup systems, 15.5–6on computer peripherals, 15.1–3, 7on cost analysis of business equipment, 15.3on firewalls, 15.4–5interview, 15.1–7on UPSs, 10.5–6, 15.1–2, 7on Wi-Fi, 15.7Ricci, Christian, “Developing and Creatively Leveraging Hierarchical Metadata and Taxonomy”article, 17.10Rise, Let Us Be on Our Way (John Paul II), 22.4Roberts, Carol, on Henige's JSP article on indexing (web link), 3.4Robertson, Michaeland the German Network of <strong>Index</strong>ers, 17.9on indexing and indexes on the Continent (article), 6.8rolling burnouts, indexers' experiences of, 16.13, 14Rosenblum, Bruce, “A Decade of DTDs and SGML in Scholarly Publishing: What Have WeLearned?” paper, 8.11Rosenfeld, Louis, Information Architecture for the World Wide Web, 5.4Rosetta, Random House v, 2.16Ross, BevAnne, 22.8routers, as firewalls, 15.4–5run-in format, for sub-subheadings in indented indexes, 7.4, 10rural areas, indexing businesses in, 23.5–6Russell, Janetprofessional background, 17.1on Publishers Weekly (letter), 19.8Wilson Award–winning index, 17.1Russia, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.3I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 50


SsalariesASI survey, 1.2–3, 2.1–2for editors, 7.12for executives, 7.12Publishers Weekly survey, 7.11–12See also indexing rates; wagessanctions (U.S.), and the publishing industry, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10Sanders, Glenn, “OEBPS: The Universal eBook Format?” article, 8.12Sanders, Rep. Bernardand the Freedom to Read Protection Act, 4.15, 8.13, 15on the Patriot Act, 8.13Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and invoices, 22.13Sarnoff, Richard, 23.12satellite images of Earth websites (NASA), 5.11, 22.10satisfactory performance clauses (in contracts), 2.14–15saying “No,” “20 Ways to Say 'No'” list (Creel), 22.10scanning. See digitizing (scanning) of booksschedule slips. See slipped schedulesschedules. See calendars; tasks; to do listsscholarly publishingDTDs and SGML in (paper), 8.11U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10See also university presses“Scholarly Publishing Woes,” 18.13Schroeder, Patand the Get Caught Reading campaign, 8.13“Patriot Acts, Then & Now: Protect Our Freedom to Read” Op-Ed piece, 8.15science booksU.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–5See also scientific journalsScience Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, company alerts, 4.14scientific journals (literature), public resource for, 14.5scientific name indexes, 4.8, 5.5–6including nonclassified entries in, 4.8–9, 5.5see references from subheadings in, 2.7–8, 3.5scientific namesplant names, 4.8, 11See also scientific name indexesScrolling Forward: Making Sense of Documents in a Digital Age (Levy), 21.14SDI (selective dissemination of information), 1.10SeaCode venture, 23.11search. See finding information; full-text searches; information retrieval; search engines; SearchInside the Book; Web searchesI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 51


“Search Engine Technologies,” 22.10search enginesA9.com (Amazon), 15.12clustering search engines, 11.11glossaries of terms related to, 2.11Google News Search, 1.11Google Scholar, 21.11–12for Grokker, 6.11, 11.1librarians as human search engines, 21.10natural language search engines, 15.11organization for findability resource, 15.12Polysearch, 21.12relationship (usage) chart, 8.12technologies (article), 22.10text mining programs vs., 10.10visual display of information, 2.13, 4.12, 9.11See also Google; visualizers; Web searchesSearch for Extraterrestrial Intelligence SETI@home project, 7.11Search Inside the Book (Look Inside the Book II) (Amazon.com), 10.12–15full-text searches in, 10.12–13, 14, 15Google Print project vs., 11.14intellectual property rights issues, 7.15, 9.13, 10.12, 13librarians on, 11.15print function disabled, 10.13publisher concerns about, 7.15, 9.13, 10.13sales impact, 10.14scanning operation, 7.14–15, 9.13, 10.12, 13search function, 10.14statistics available through, 23.10user response, 11.15searches. See finding information; full-text searches; information retrieval; search engines;Search Inside the Book; Web searchesSeatGuru.com, 21.14Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Edgar website, 4.14security. See computer securitysee also references, 2.7indention of under main headings, 11.9placement of, 7.3from subheadings, 3.6see also under references, 3.6see referencesprimary purpose, 2.7from subheadings, 2.7–8, 3.5–6target main heading–subheading separator, 7.3I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 52


see under references, 3.6“Seeking Better Web Searches” article, 22.10selective dissemination of information (SDI), 1.10Semantic Web project, 3.9draft specifications, 13.14resources on, 3.9, 15.12September 11, 2001. See 9/11SETI@home project (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence project), 7.11SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language), in scholarly publishing (paper), 8.11Shawvan, Julie, on indexing rate database job market impacts (letter), 20.6–8Sherman, Chris, “Mozilla's Firefox: The Searcher's Browser” article, 20.11ShieldsUP! program (Gibson Research), 19.14“Shifting Sands: Protecting Yourself from Change,” 5.13–15ship for software design venture, 23.11shopping websites, 20.10short-term memory, clearing space in, 17.14shortening titles in index entries, 21.6shredders, 15.2Shuttleworth, Christineon Henige's JSP article on indexing (web link), 3.4profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.17sickness, and indexing jobs, 23.8SIGCR email list, 5.4SIGIA email list, 5.4Signmaker Central, 14.8single-source indexing, 4.2–3, 10.4SIPs (Statistically Improbable Phrases) (Search Inside the Book), 23.10slipped schedules, 23.8contract agreements on, 5.13–15sluggish economy, and the publishing industry, 23.12Snood (game), 21.10societies of indexersGerman Network of <strong>Index</strong>ers (DNI), 17.9See also American Society of <strong>Index</strong>ers (ASI)sociology books, U.S. production trends, 6.2–5, 16.2–6softwareActivate plug-in for Adobe Acrobat, 17.12, 13Adobe Acrobat, 5.9–10Agendus, 17.8anti-virus software, 1.8, 19.14AntiVirus (Norton), 1.8auditing tool (for PCs), 16.9automatic classification/categorization programs, 10.10, 19.14I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 53


software (continued)Backup My PC, 15.6backup software, 2.9–10, 15.6BeLarc Advisor, 16.9ClearForest, 10.10, 19.14cookie removal software, 3.7, 6.12desktop organizing software, 17.7–8eFax, 1.6favicon program, 16.7fax accounts, 1.6FireFox, 13.12, 20.11firewall software, 1.7–8, 15.4, 5games, 12.11, 21.10Grokker, 4.5, 12, 6.11–12, 11.11–12HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er, 11.8, 16.8IconForge program, 16.7InDesign, 14.9, 17.13Linux (operating system), 18.9–10Linux office suite, 18.9, 19.11Logik, 4.5, 10MailWasher, 12.9–10McAfee VirusScan, 1.8MegaClock, 9.10Mozilla, 13.12, 15.10, 18.9MultiTes, 4.5, 10Netscape, 13.12newsreaders, 15.10Norton AntiVirus, 1.8note management software, 17.8Note Studio, 17.8office suite (Linux), 18.9, 19.11OpenOffice (Linux), 18.9, 19.11OpenOffice Writer (Linux), 19.11Opera, 13.12Palm Desktop, 17.7–8PDA software, 17.7–8PDF conversion tools, 5.9, 10PestPatrol, 3.7Powerquest Drive Image, 2.9–10Quark, 17.12, 13Snood (game), 21.10Spybot, 6.12spyware removal software, 3.7, 6.12I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 54


software (continued)taxonomy design software, 4.5, 10temporary file removal software, 3.7terminology-gathering software, 4.5, 10TermTree, 4.5, 10text editors, 10.9TextPad, 10.9thesaurus design software, 4.5, 10Thunderbird, 15.10time software, 9.9–10Timekeep for Windows, 20.14, 21.7–9VirusScan (McAfee), 1.8wastebasket toss game, 12.11website tools, 14.8Webtime, 9.9Window Washer, 3.7ZoneAlarm, 1.7–8, 15.4, 5See also browsers; embedded indexing software; indexing software (dedicated); MicrosoftWord; word processorssoftware design ship venture, 23.11Software Engineering Terms glossary (IEEE), 18.12Software for <strong>Index</strong>ing, 19.3software services outsourcing in India, 12.3SOLs (Standards of Learning), for children's book indexes, 20.3–4sorting rules (alphabetizing/filing rules)CMS-15 rules, 7.4–5, 9, 18.7, 8hyphens, 18.7numerals, 18.8symbols, 8.8South Africa, offshoring (BPO) in, 12.2, 6spam, resource on, 19.14Spanish indexing market, 22.5Perlman on, 4.6–7, 8.2Spanish Internet Glossary, 5.12Spanish publishers, 22.5Spanish publishing market, 2.12, 22.5Críticas publication, 4.7public library buying trend, 22.2specialty area indexing rates, 8.4Specious Report on Google Print (article), 13.13SPI Technologies (Manila)offshore contracts, 14.4offshore indexer job ad, 12.15phoffshore publisher services, 12.6–7I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 55


sports books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–5, 16.2–5SPSS text mining program, 10.10Spybot, 6.12spyware, removal software, 3.7, 6.12SSPS automatic categorization program, 10.10STAIRS document-retrieval system, 16.12Standards of Learning (SOLs), for children's book indexes, 20.3–4Stanford University Press, digitizing of books, 13.13START natural language search engine (MIT), 15.11Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs) (Search Inside the Book), 23.10Stauber, Do Mi, 15.14on classified entries (letter), 5.6Facing the Text excerpt, 11.1–7on first name vs. last name alias entries (Q & A), 13.9on metatopics and subheadings under, 11.1–7, 13.10–11on name indexes (Q & A), 15.9on parallel topics (consistency) (Q & A), 15.8–9profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.17Q & A columnist introduction, 11.10, 12.13, 15.14on wording inconsistencies (Q & A), 19.9–10“Steal this Book? A Publisher is Making it Easy” story (Lohr), 3.2Steckel, Mike“Controlled Vocabularies: A Glosso-Thesaurus” article, 12.11“Creating a Controlled Vocabulary” article, 5.12“Ranganathan for IAs” article, 13.8“Synonym Rings and Authority Files” article, 8.12“What Is a Controlled Vocabulary?” article, 3.10, 4.3Stelmach, Michael, “The Application of <strong>Index</strong> Entries to Search and Retrieval of Books andBook Content” article, 7.15sticker (“<strong>Index</strong>er”), 6.17stress. See anxiety about undone tasks conditionStrindberg, August, Inferno multimedia interpretation, 16.10Strom, David, on push technology, 2.6Strothman, Wendy, 20.10sub-subheadings in indented indexes, run-in format, 7.4, 10subheadingschapter subheading mistake, 11.6cross-references from, 2.7–8, 3.5–6under metatopics, 11.2–3, 4–7, 13.10–11mixing nonclassified with classified entries, 4.8–9, 5.5see also references from, 3.6subject entries, in encyclopedia indexes, 19.10Subscribers Links webpage (i-<strong>TORQUE</strong>), 15.14suits against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12, 20.10I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 56


supra, use of, 3.5–6Swartz, Aaron, “The Semantic Web in Breadth” article, 3.9Swatch (Swiss watch company), on Internet Time, 9.11symbols, sort options, 8.8Synapse“Taxonomies, Ontologies, Thesauri, and Authority Files” white paper, 5.11Taxonomy Warehouse, 5.11synonym rings, 8.12“Synonym Rings and Authority Files” article (Fast, Leise, and Steckel), 8.12synonymous terms, reflecting the text, 19.9–10TTake Back Your Time initiative, 21.15Taking Care of Business & Yourself column, 16.13“20 Ways to Say 'No'” list (Creel), 22.10burnout, 16.13, 14cleaning up cluttered offices, 17.14–15clearing short-term memory space, 17.14protecting work time, 17.15tickler file system, 20.14time tracking and estimating, 20.14, 21.7–9vacation planning, 21.15See also anxiety about undone tasks condition; managing informationtape drives, 15.6tasksdesktop organizing software, 17.7–8multitasking, 21.14tickler file system, 20.14See also anxiety about undone tasks conditiontax return preparation offshoring, 12.4–5tax withholding for independent contractors proposal, 14.13–14“Taxes & <strong>Index</strong>ers,” 14.13–14taxonomies, 4.3–4changes in, 4.11directory (Taxonomy Warehouse), 5.11IA Summit 2004 panel on, 14.10resources on, 5.4, 11, 6.15, 15.12, 17.10and search (article), 9.11U.S. federal agency taxonomy requirements, 12.12usefulness, 4.12See also controlled vocabularies; taxonomy designI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 57


“Taxonomies Galore,” 5.11“Taxonomies Mandated by Law,” 12.12“Taxonomies, Ontologies, Thesauri, and Authority Files” white paper (Synapse), 5.11taxonomy design, 4.1, 3–4contracts for, 5.4indexers and classification system/taxonomy design, 5.2, 6.15markets, 5.3political issues involved in, 4.1, 4, 5.3presentation on (Gassie), 6.15skill development resources, 5.4software for, 4.5, 10Synapse white paper on, 5.11Taxonomy Warehouse, 5.11technical writersemployment estimates, 1.2Indian writers interview, 13.1–8offshoring of work for, 13.7, 14.11wage estimates, 1.2, 2.1See also writers (authors)technical writingin India, 13.6–8offshoring of, 13.7, 14.11technology (technologies)and cognitive overload, 21.14developing nations and, 20.12people as leashed to new technologies, 21.15push technology, 1.10, 2.6requirements for changing to a new technology, 19.4technology books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–4, 16.2–6TechsUnite website, Offshore Tracker, 22.13telephonesbusiness line, 12.8, 14.7Google's map to address via phone number service, 12.8turning off the ringer, 17.15See also answering machinestemporary files, removal software, 3.7Teoma (search engine), and Grokker, 6.11, 11.1TermTree (taxonomy software), 4.5, 10text (in indexable documents)reporting errors in, 9.8structure required for indexing in The Zone at low rates without sacrificing quality, 8.6, 7See also reflecting the texttext analysis, automated. See automatic classification/categorizationI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 58


text editors, 10.9text mining, 10.10Lancaster on “mining,” 10.11See also automatic classification/categorizationtext styles/formatting in index entries, 23.7TextPad (Helios), 10.9TGN (Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names), 6.13Theban Mapping Project (TMP), 3.8TheBrain (graph-based interface), 2.13thesauricontrolled vocabulary terms, 12.11Cook's Thesaurus, 8.10design software, 4.5, 10directory (Taxonomy Warehouse), 5.11Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names, 6.13Milstead papers archive, 7.13National Cancer Institute Thesaurus, 13.14resources on, 5.11, 7.13ThinkMap (graph-based interface), 2.13Thomson Gale, offshoring in India, 12.1Thunderbird (Mozilla newsreader), 15.10tickler file system, 20.14tiered indexing rates, 8.5timeInternet Time, 9.11software for obtaining, 9.9–10websites, 9.9, 10, 11world time, 9.9See also work timeTime Lord (Blaise), 9.10“Time Spent Searching,” 16.11Timekeep for Windows (Anderson), 21.7–9trial report, 20.14tinfoil hats, 21.10, 22.7phTinyURL, 6.13titles (of books)finding forthcoming titles on Amazon, 8.9shortening in index entries, 21.6TMP (Theban Mapping Project), 3.8to do listsdesktop organizing software, 17.7–8tickler file system, 20.14See also tasksI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 59


Top 101 Independent Book Publishers list (Kremer), 23.13“Top Ten Data Disasters,” 10.17topic maps (topic mapping), 4.5, 17.10resource on, 17.10See also visual display of information (information mapping)“Torqueness,” 15.14torquing Google, 15.14TouchGraph visualizers, 2.13, 4.12TOXNET, information resources, 23.9tracking indexing time, 21.7, 9trade book publishing companies, vs. university presses, 6.5–6, 16.1, 3trade embargoes. See embargoes (U.S.)translation, Machine Translation project (Microsoft), 14.11“Travel and Dissociative Fugue,” 21.14travel books, U.S. production trends, 6.3–5, 16.2–6Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)embargo advisories, 13.13Iranian author's suit against, 20.10publishers' and authors' suit against, 19.12regulations against publishing works from embargoed countries, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10Trillin, Calvin, on looking oneself up in an index, 5.17Tufte, Edward, 4.12turnaround timesand index quality, 8.3, 9.1negotiating, 9.1–2turnover lines, acronym spellouts and, 1.5“Tweaking Your Website,” 14.8two-minute rule, 17.15typewriter information website, 15.11typos in the text, reporting, 9.8U“UC Press Digitized Books,” 11.13Udel, Jon, on browsers, 13.12UMLS (Unified Medical Language System), information resources, 23.9unacceptable work clauses (in contracts), 2.14–15undone tasks. See anxiety about undone tasks conditionUnicode order, 8.8Unified Medical Language System (UMLS), information resources, 23.9uninterruptible power supplies. See UPSsI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 60


United Statesbook production, 2001–2002, 6.1–6, 3t, 4t, 16.1, 6book production, 2002–2003, 16.1–3, 2t, 3t, 6, 22.2–5book production, 2003 vs. 2001, 16.4, 4t, 6book production trends, by category, 6.2–5, 16.2–6, 18.7, 22.2–5book sales, 2001–2002, 5.12, 6.5–6book trade deficit with China, 23.12federal agency taxonomy requirements, 12.12government information handbook, 19.13outsourcing in the U.S. from India (letter), 17.6public libraries in (total number), 22.1regulations against publishing works from embargoed countries, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on the publishing industry, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10See also Freedom to Read Protection Act; Patriot Act; Treasury Department Office of ForeignAssets Control (OFAC); “U.S.” topicsUnited States Government Manual, 19.13University of California, CDL (California Digital Library) eScholarship Editions, 11.13University of California BerkeleyFisher Center outsourcing report (2003), 12.2–3, 14.1Teaching Library Glossary of Internet and Web Jargon, 2.11University of California Berkeley Extension indexing course, 21.5–6University of California Berkeley Extension Online indexing course, 21.5University of Washington, Keeping Found Things Found project., 13.14university pressesbook production, 2001–2002, 6.1–2, 4t, 5book production, 2002–2003, 16.1, 3, 3tbook production, 2003 vs. 2001, 16.4, 4tbook sales, 2001–2002, 5.12, 6.5–6publishing woes, 18.13suit against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12vs. trade book publishing companies, 6.5–6, 16.1, 3U.S. sanctions and OFAC regulations effects on, 13.13, 19.12, 20.10See also scholarly publishingUPSs (uninterruptible power supplies), 9.7, 10.5–6, 15.1–2and printers, 10.6and USB hubs, 15.7URLs, short translation service, 6.13U.S. Department of Labor. See Bureau of Labor StatisticsU.S. Department of the Treasury. See Treasury Department Office of Foreign Assets Control(OFAC)U.S. Government Manual, 19.13U.S. Naval Observatory, time services, 9.9U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Edgar website, 4.14USA Patriot Act. See Patriot Actusability studies, “<strong>Index</strong> vs. Full-text search,” 17.12–13I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 61


USB hubs, 15.7USB ports, 15.7Usenet newsgroups, 15.10UTC (Coordinated Universal Time), 9.9Vvacation planning, 21.14, 15Veritas software, 15.6Verity (automatic categorization program), 19.14Veverka, D. L., on Henige's JSP article on indexing (letter), 3.4videos, at <strong>Index</strong>ers' Rest Home, 23.15Violi, Paul, on “<strong>Index</strong>” (his own poem), 19.16virusesinfection response chart, 19.14KLEZ virus, 1.8Mydoom@MM virus, 12.9resources on, 19.14VirusScan (McAfee), 1.8Visible Earth website (NASA), 5.11visual display of information (information mapping), 2.13, 4.12, 9.11See also topic maps (topic mapping); visualizersvisualizers (of Web search results), 2.13, 4.12Grokker, 4.5, 12, 6.11–12, 11.11–12text mining programs, 10.10TouchGraph visualizers, 2.13, 4.12“Visualizing Information,” 4.12vocabulary control, 23.9See also classification systems/schemes; controlled vocabulariesVonnegut, Kurt, on librarians and on indexers, 18.11vulnerability check for computers, 19.14WW. W. Norton & Company, and The 9/11 Commission Report, 17.11W3C (World Wide Web Consortium), 13.14wagesASI salary survey, 1.2–3, 2.1–2BLS estimates, 1.1–2, 3, 2.1See also salariesI-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 62


Wall, Krista, 18.1interview (on indexing at Microsoft Learning), 18.1–6, 19.6–7Wallis, Jim, God's Politics, 22.4, 5Warren, Rick, The Purpose-driven Life sales, 22.4WashTech website, Offshore Tracker, 22.13wastebasket toss game, 12.11Web (World Wide Web)glossary of terms related to, 2.11and information retrieval, 1.10–11, 7.13web browsers. See browsersweb linksi-<strong>TORQUE</strong> Subscribers Links page, 15.14importance for websites, 14.8, 15.14visual display of search results, 2.13, 4.12See also visualizersWeb Ontology Language (OWL), 13.14Web Page Analyzer, 14.8Web Search Garage (Calishain), book and website, 18.13“Web Search: How the Web Has Changed Information Retrieval” article (Brooks), 7.13Web searchescost of flawed search results studies, 14.11, 16.11finding forthcoming book titles on Amazon, 8.9name verification in, 1.9–10“Seeking Better Web Searches” article, 22.10time spent on searches study, 16.11visual display of related links, 2.13, 4.12, 9.11“Web Search” article, 7.13Web Search Garage (Calishain), 18.13See also information retrieval; search engines; visualizersWebFountain project (IBM), 12.12WebFX graphics effects generator, 14.8weblogs, One New Thing, 12.13Webmonkey website design website, 14.8website indexing, 2.12, 11.8with HTML-<strong>Index</strong>er, 11.8, 16.8named anchors, 16.8Website <strong>Index</strong>ing: Enhancing Access to Information within Websites, 2nd Ed. (Browne andJermey), 16.10enquiry, purchasing, and price information (letter), 17.6PDF format availability, 21.13websitesdevelopment issues, 17.10telephone numbers on, 12.8tools for tweaking, 14.8web links importance for, 14.8, 15.14I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 63


Webtime (software), 9.9Weinberg, Bella Hass, “Complexity in <strong>Index</strong>ing Systems: Abandonment and Failure” paper, 3.10Wellisch, Hanson locators after main headings modified by subheadings, 7.7memories of (<strong>Mulvany</strong>), 13.14on mixing classified and nonclassified entries, 4.9on passing mentions, 7.7on see also reference indention under main headings, 11.9on see under and see also under references, 3.6Wells, H. G., on an index to all knowledge, 14.12West (Thomson Corporation), offshoring in India, 12.1“What Is a Controlled Vocabulary?” article (Fast, Leise, and Steckel), 3.10, 4.3“What Is Ontology?” webpage (Corazzon), 5.11“What Is Text Mining?” article (Hearst), 10.10“What's Microsoft Up To?,” 14.11Wheatley, Henry B., on long strings of locators, 7.7“Where is <strong>Index</strong>?,” 3.14–15ph“Why Categorize?” article (Feldman), 19.14Wi-Fi (wireless fidelity), 15.7Wiley (publisher), 21.4, 22.13Wilson Award–winning index, 17.1Window Washer (Webroot), 3.7wireless fidelity (Wi-Fi), 15.7Wolf, Gary, “The Great Library of Amazonia” article, 10.13Woot! shopping website, 20.10Word. See Microsoft Wordword-by-word sortsCMS-15 rules, 7.4, 9, 18.7, 8hyphens, 18.7numerals, 18.8word processorsLinux OpenOffice Writer, 19.11See also Microsoft Wordwording inconsistencies, reflecting the text, 19.9–10work. See employment; indexing jobs (projects); tasks; work timework for hire contracts, 1.12–14work quality clauses (in contracts), 2.14–16work sources. See job marketswork timeestimating indexing time, 20.14, 21.8, 9protecting, 17.15and the sense of time poverty, 21.15tracking indexing time, 21.7, 9Web search time spent study, 16.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 64


world time, 9.9World Wide Web. See WebWorld Wide Web Consortium (W3C), 13.14World Wind website (NASA), 22.10WorldCat database Google access project, 11.14Wright, Alex, on Otlet (Paul), 14.12Wright, Jan C., 4.1, 5.1, 15.14business description, 4.1embedded indexing workshop announcement, 19.8on indexing plug-ins for FrameMaker and Word, 20.9interview, 4.1–5, 5.1–4on metadata, 5.1–2profile data (“<strong>Index</strong>ers Reveal Themselves”), 1.17Q & A columnist introduction, 15.14on single-source indexing, 4.2–3on taxonomy (classification system) design, 4.3–5, 5.2–4UC Berkeley Extension Online indexing course (Q & A), 21.5on website indexing with HTML <strong>Index</strong>er (Q & A), 16.8writers (authors)employment estimates, 1.2indexing authors as citations and as subjects, 15.9indexing guidelines (CUP), 11.17suits against the Treasury Department OFAC, 19.12, 20.10wage estimates, 1.2, 2.1See also intellectual property rights; technical writers; writingwriters' associationscompany alerts, 4.14See also Authors Guild; National Writers Union“Writers Get the Axe,” 14.11WritersWeekly.com, company alerts, 4.14writingon indexing (by indexers), 9.3and professional employment, 21.13See also technical writing; writers“Writing: Still Important,” 21.13XXML (Extensible Markup Language)classes in, 5.4digital publishing resource, 3.8embedded indexing in, 6.7XSLT indexing processes, 8.11I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 65


XSL (Extensible Stylesheet Language)digital publishing resource, 3.8indexing processes, 8.11YYellow Page listings, 14.7“You Don't Have Anti-Virus Protection Because?” article (Calvert), 19.14ZThe Zone (for indexers), 2.3, 4tcharging for printing PDF files, 5.8getting into, 2.4–5quality work at low rates, 8.6–7working in at low rates, 2.4t, 8.6–7, 10.7ZoneAlarm, 1.7–8, 15.4, 5I-<strong>TORQUE</strong> CUMULATIVE INDEX (ISSUES 1–23; JAN. 2003–MAY/JUNE 2005) 66

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!