Penders, J.M.A. (author / Director of Agricultural Extension, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, The Hague) and Director of Agricultural Extension, Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, The Hague
Format:
Book chapter
Publication Date:
1963
Published:
International
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 44 Document Number: B05310
Notes:
cited reference, In: J.M.A. Penders, ed. Rural Extension at the Crossroads. Wageningen, The Netherlands: International Agricultural Centre, 1963. p. 27-38.
AGRICOLA IND 90017261, A minicomputer online information retrieval program is described that is designed to facilitate timely distribution of agricultural market news to state and county research and extension faculty. These faculty have designed programs that extend this information to clientele in their areas. An evaluation indicates that users find great value in this network. Usage has grown rapidly over the period the network has been available. This program is available and can be used by other states and clientele.
Parsons, Samual D. (author), Reeder, Randall C. (author), Whiting, Larry R. (author), and Reeder: Extension Agricultural Engineer, The Ohio State University; Parsons: Extension Agricultural Engineer, Purdue University; Whiting: Head, Section of Information and Applied Communications, College of Agriculture, The Ohio State University
Format:
Conference paper
Publication Date:
1987
Published:
USA
Location:
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 86 Document Number: C05733
Notes:
Paper presented at the 1987 Summer Meeting of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers; 1987 June 28 - July 1; Baltimore Convention Center, Baltimore, MD; AGRICOLA IND 88026415, St. Joseph, MI : The American Society of Agricultural Engineers, 1987. 11 p. (American Society of Agricultural Engineers Microfiche Collection. Paper no. 87-5015), Producing top quality educational videotapes for "mass marketing" to a regional audience requires good organization, cooperative authors, broadcast quality equipment and experienced technical assistants. Four segments, totaling 82 minutes, of a planned 9-segment series on conservation tillage took 11 days for field shots on 20 farms in 11 counties, about 450 minutes of original footage, and more than 100 hours for editing.