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Great strides for Intute - one year on
Intute, the free national online service funded by JISC,
celebrates its first birthday today by renewing its commitment to enable
lecturers, researchers and students to discover and access high quality
Internet resources.
Over the last year, Intute has seen a rapid rise in
usage and the launch of new features and services. It now looks forward to
a future of continuing to take innovative approaches to delivering the best
of the web for education and research within this ever changing Internet
environment.
Intute offers a range of tools and services, responding
to the need for quality assured Internet information and Internet research
"Intute offers what search engines don’t - a
commitment to quality - by using subject specialists in universities
and colleges to hand-pick Web resources that will support education and
research.” skills for the academic community.
"Intute offers what search engines don’t”, says Stephen Hoare in The
Guardian; “commitment to quality – by using subject specialists in
universities and colleges to hand-pick Web resources that will support
education and research.”
What this means in practice is a searchable database,
across all subject areas, of over 115,000 Internet resources and websites,
complemented by over 60 revised and updated Virtual Training Suite
tutorials, Blogs, MyIntute, and much more.
“I’m delighted with the success of the service so far
and the opportunities we have had to engage with the community and take on
other exciting developments, for example the Intute Repository Search
project” says Caroline Williams, Executive Director of Intute. “We
have established a unique collective expertise through our partner
institutions and contributors which I believe will enable us to go from
strength to strength.”
The success of Intute over the last year has been
unquestionable, with over a quarter of a million hits on the website every
day and over 3,000 registered users of the MyIntute personalisation
service. In addition, since the successful launch of the new Informs, the
interactive tool for creating online tutorials, the number of subscribers
has doubled. In response, JISC has made a commitment to funding Intute
for a further five years.
As Intute looks to the future, the needs of its users
are at the forefront of its drive to be a service developed for the
community by the community. As Stephen Downes of the Canadian
National Research Council observes, "What Intute represents is a
turning point in the sharing of academic resources.”
Intute is freely available at: The best of the web