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Web Search Pacific - 2010 Tour Dates Announced!
Melbourne: Wednesday 10th - Thursday 11th Nov
Canberra: Monday 15 Nov – Tuesday 16 Nov
Sydney: Wednesday 17 Nov – Thursday 18 Nov
All New Content For 2010!
Register now!
How much time can you spare for finding rubbish?
What could the future be for you if you are able to search
for information as skillfully and as quickly as the top
information professionals can? What do you need to be “Ahead
of the Game?" Web Search Pacific brings together some
of the top professional searchers to share their secrets
of how you, too, can be a Super Searcher.
Web Search Pacific offers intensive workshops designed
to sharpen your skills and provide you with tools to exploit
the Web to find reliable information, and to learn when
to go beyond the Web to other high quality information sources.
Who should attend?
Everyone who needs good quality information as part of their work should attend these workshops - librarians, researchers, scientists, bankers, engineers, lecturers, IT professionals, journalists, lawyers, PR consultants, architects, police, CI specialists, intelligence officers, librarians, advertisers, teachers, strategic planners and ... you? In fact anyone who seeks information from the WWW will find this workshop invaluable - as previous delegates will tell you.
What will you learn?
The aim of the workshops is to provide high quality training for professionals on how to exploit the web to obtain information you can rely upon, and to learn when to go beyond the web. We want to help you deliver the best possible information services to your clients and your organisations.
- The advanced tools and skills that will ensure you search
online information resources efficiently and effectively
to save time and money every single day in your job.
- How search engines are constructed and the strengths
and limitations of various search engines.
- Practical tips and techniques for using fee-based online
services.
- The unique strategies and tactics for searching the
Invisible Web estimated to be between two and fifty times
larger than the part of the web indexed by search engines.
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