LibX Florida International University (FIU) Medical Library Edition browser extensions provides direct access to your Library's resources
Search your library catalog directly from the LibX toolbar or using the right-click context menu
Using the Library's off-campus proxy, you may reload a page through the proxy, or follow a link via the proxy, making it appear as though you are coming from an on-campus computer
LibX uses Google Scholar to search for articles and directs the user to the electronic copy subscribed to by your Library. Select a citation, then drag-and-drop it onto the Scholar button on the toolbar. You can use this feature even from inside a PDF file, which makes retrieving papers referenced in a PDF file a snap. To use this feature, your library must be a Google Scholar library, or you must activate this link in the Firefox profile in which LibX is installed: Activate Google Scholar support. (See also LibX FAQ Question 11)
LibX places cues
in web pages you visit if your library has resources related to that page. Whenever you see the cue,click on the link to look at what the Library has to offer.
For instance, book pages at Amazon or Barnes & Noble will contain cues
that link to the book's entry in echo $primary_catalog_name; ?>.
Cues are displayed at Google, Yahoo! Search, the NY Times Book Review, and other pages.
Watch this screencast for examples of this cool feature. (requires Macromedia Flash Plugin)
A book title can have different ISBNs for the paperback, the hardcover, even for different editions.LibX supports OCLC's xISBN service:you can find a book, given an ISBN, even if the library holds this book under a different ISBN
By using this extension you may send the URL of pages you are currently visiting to your library's catalog server. Such information is sent only if you are actively using the extension; it is never sent automatically. If you wish to avoid this you must turn off the referrer URL by setting network.http.sendRefererHeader to 0 in your preferences.
In addition, you may be sending information such as ISBN and ISSN numbers to OCLC, DOIs to CrossRef's server, and PubMed IDs to the PubMed server in order to retrieve metadata information. If configured for your edition, you may also send URLs to your library's EZProxy to determine whether the current page can be proxied when using the right-click context menu. Use the LibX -> Preferences panel to turn these services off if desired.
For more information about LibX, visit the LibX Homepage.
Starting with LibX 2.0, we are using Google Analytics to track how users interact with LibX. We track the following events:
LibX users can turn off (opt-out) Google Analytics in the preferences. We are working on a web interface that will allow edition maintainers access to the Analytics data for their editions.