[Updated 06/11/2012. In light of a comment left below, I should clarify that this post was written to record an announcement by Ex Libris made at the ICAU/SMUG (International Consortium of Aleph Users/SFX and Metalib Usergroup – now merged as IGELU – the International Group of Ex Libris Users) meeting at the British Library in London in 2005. The text below was from the Ex Libris website at the time, and may no longer be valid]
Google Scholar and SFX®: New Opportunities for Libraries and Researchers
Ex Libris has worked with Google and a number of SFX customers to ensure that Google Scholar search results display OpenURL links to SFX; and thereby to the scholarly peer-reviewed papers, theses, books, preprints and technical reports from your library collection.
…
If you are not yet an SFX customer, Ex Libris is pleased to offer a free service, ScholarSFX. This groundbreaking service enables libraries to create customized links based on your institution’s electronic journal holdings and display these links in Google Scholar search results. Your users will then be able to link from the Google Scholar results to articles that are available through local institutional subscriptions or for free on the Web. ScholarSFX includes links to thousands of such free journals.
ScholarSFX offers a simple web-based Wizard to guide you through the setup procedure whereby you configure ScholarSFX to represent your institution’s holdings.
To sign up to receive the free ScholarSFX service from Ex Libris, please fill out the form located on this page.
Time ago our library had ScholarSFX from site http://scholarsfx.exlibrisgroup.com/scholarsfx/express
From this site I was able to add links Fundamental library of the Latvia University of Agriculture subscribed databases (CAB Abstracts, EBSCO, Elsiever …) and library designed open e-resources such as Univerity of Agriculture Conference Proceedings, dissertation summary, free journals and so on. Now I do not this possibility.