Source OECD

Click here to see this item with working links – copied from the Economics Library Blog

We now have a subscription to Source OECD – the OECD portal which links to OECD books, periodicals and statistical databases. Click here for a list of titles covered by our subscription.

Notably our access to OECD Economic Outlook, OECD Main Economic Indicators, and OECD National Accounts will now be via Source OECD. Up until now we have used EconData Times Series Databases to access this OECD data.

Also of interest is the ITCS International Trade Data for detailed commodity import and export data in quantity and value (thousand U.S. dollars. Previously this data was available for New Zealand from Statistics New Zealand’s INFOS database. ITCS Trade Data includes imports and exports for all of the countries of the OECD.

As well as these interactive data sources, Source OECD gives easy access to the OECD Economic Surveys.

I like the new podcasts which may also be popular with students. For example The EURO area – will the recovery last?

Source OECD is web based and is accessable on and off campus to registered users and offers a considerable improvement to our access to OECD data.

Requesting items from Storage or Closed stack

Thursday 15th March is the first day of a New Era for borrowers wanting to make requests for items in Storage or in closed stack collections. For more information on requesting, please read the new updated web pages.
The old Central Library ‘online request form’ is now gone and has been replaced with a ‘storage request form’ with wider scope. See this page:
Central Library and PSL thesis are now requestable through Horizon. See this page:
Macmillan Brown stack collections are now available for request via the library catalogue. See this page:
The music scores in the Brian Douglas Collection are no longer requestable online. See this page:
Please make yourselves familiar with the new requesting processes.

Login problems with some PCs on L2

Library IT are trying to find out what the problem is with the bank of PCs on L2 that are taking 5-10 minutes to login at busy times of the day. This problem is also occurring with the PCs in the AV room across from Lending.

ICTS have checked the network and say there are no problems. The problem occurs on PCs with 10 and 100Mb connections so it is not connection speed. It is not related to PC age as there no problems with less powerful machines in other libraries and one PC with the problem in AV is newer and significantly more powerful than the black PCs. All the PCs having problems are in a particular group that decides the printer used. We are currently reinstalling some PCs in one group and some in another PC group to see if this identifies the problem. We will not be able to tell if the outcome until the load goes on tomorrow.

If you see a PC with the blue screen and the student has walked away, look to see if an Library IT person is working on them first, if not then reboot the machine.

Literature review handouts

If any postgrad students ask for a copy of the literature review handout, I’ve left some behind the Help Desk. I’ve also delivered some to Stephanie Day at the Learning Skills Centre (Level 7). Over 50 students attended this session and I ran out of handouts. There was also a good deal of interest expressed in EndNote and Current Contents so I’ve added a couple of extra classes on the Library bookings page.

Matters of interest to UC library staff