The rest of the week I'll be in San Antonio at the Texas Music Educators' Association (TMEA) conference. I'll be presenting a poster on the TEKSLink Project. Also, I'll be providing support for my wife since she is the elementary chair, VP, and conference chair. Don't expect I'll do any posting the rest of the week. Last year, it is a two year gig, we worked from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. most days. Anyone reading this in S.A.?
TMEA
Tuesday, February 13, 2007
MARC to Solr
There is a preconference on Lucene and Solr before the Code4lib conference. Because of that Andrew Nagy has made available his MARCXML2SOLR XSLT document. If you have some MARC records in XML and want to get them into a format Solr understands, now you can. MarcEdit, among other tools, will get your MARC into MARCXML format. Can't make it to the preconference, use this tool to play along at home.
MARC
MARC
WorldCat Identities
Thom Hickey at Outgoing describes a new research project at OCLC, WorldCat Identities. Interesting. I searched for Wright, Austin Tappan and got a page showing classification numbers used, works by him, works about him, a time-line of publications, audience level, and related names. Nice summary. Could be used in NACO work.
Names
Names
Labels:
WorldCat Identities
CONSER Standard Record Delayed
Good news from LC, the CONSER Standard Record has been delayed.
At the CONSER at large meeting held during ALA Midwinter, consensus was reached to wait for comments from the JSC before proceeding with implementation of the CONSER standard record. The expected date for JSC's discussion would be at their April meeting, or perhaps sooner, if the JSC is able to review the recommendations at an earlier meeting. Although agreement was not unanimous, the importance of CONSER libraries implementing the new standard record in a unified fashion was also supported by meeting attendees. In the event that remaining issues surrounding the full implementation of the standard record are not resolved by May, the CONSER Operations Committee will plan to discuss and recommend next steps at their regularly scheduled spring meeting.Serials
Revision of LCRI 22.2 for Composers and Perfomers
LC is asking for comments on this change.
A discussion on the NACO-Music e-mail list concerning the current exception not to treat composers and performers as "contemporary authors" under AACR2 22.2B3 and applicable LCRIs has led to a reexamination of the need for the exception.Before 2000, this exception resided only in the Music Cataloging Decisions (MCDs) [no longer published] and was applied by Library of Congress music catalogers and members of the NACO-Music funnel. NACO contributors unaware of the MCD may have created separate records for contemporary composers and performers under the conditions authorized in AACR2. The placement of the exception in LCRI 22.2 when it was moved from the MCDs has also generated some degree of confusion, misinterpretation, and misapplication (AACR2 itself discusses only "contemporary authors" in 22.2B3).Given these issues, and the fact that the Cataloging Policy and Support Office has found contradictory information as to the reasons for the exception in the first place, CPSO recommends that the exception be removed from LCRI 22.2.LCRIs
Labels:
Name authority records
Monday, February 12, 2007
xISBN Service to Move
Eric Hellman has this announcement about the OCLC xISBN service.
At about 4PM EST on Tuesday, February 13, a switch will be flipped, and traffic aimed at the experimental version of xISBN will begin to be routed to a replacement xISBN service supported by the Openly Informatics Division of OCLC. Any application that follows http redirects- this should be most xISBN client applications- will continue to work without needing changes. The timing of this switch has been dictated by the decommissioning of a server, and we apologize if this short notice seriously impacts anyone.xISBN
After the switch, the traffic currently sent to "http://labs.oclc.org/xisbn/[ISBN]" will be redirected to "http://old-xisbn.oclc.org/webservices/xisbn/[ISBN]". This service will respond in almost exactly the same way that the research version has responded; you can change your applications to use the replacement address effective immediately. Of immediate benefit to all users of xISBN is be the drastically improved currency and frequent updates of the xISBN data set.
As you might guess from the replacement system host name, there will soon be a "new" version of the xISBN service. Xiaoming Liu, who has been working on xISBN for 3 months, will unveil the "WorldCat xISBN Service" at the Code4Lib conference at the end of the month.
There is a small difference in the behavior of the replacement service. If you send the replacement service a 13 digit ISBN, the entire result set will be returned with 13 digits.
If you expect your xISBN client service to use more than 1000 queries per day, please let us know (xisbn-support@oclc.org), as the traffic control systems have also changed.
To make sure that you are alerted of all of the coming changes surrounding xISBN, please make sure to sign up for the XIDENTIFIER-L listserv.
Labels:
xISBN
Friday, February 09, 2007
Yahoo Pipes
Yahoo Pipes looks interesting. No time to play with it now, but how about running the RSS feeds from our catalogs through Flickr, Google Maps or .... Dead simple mash-ups. Accepts XML, so it is not limited to RSS feeds, those just seem to be the most commonly used.
Mash-ups
Mash-ups
Thursday, February 08, 2007
Video Annotation
Integrating Contextual Video Annotation into Media Authoring for Video Podcasting and Digital Medical Records by I-Jong Lin and Hui Chao is a new HP report.
In this paper, we demonstrate how rich media annotation can enable two new applications for video podcasting and digital medical records. At WIAMIS 2004, we introduced an innovative video annotation technology called Active Shadows, that captures a virtual presence interacting with a displayed image and overlays on top of a digital image. With Active Shadows, we combine the expert opinion and presence (of a professor and doctor) with the informationally rich images (presentation slides and medical images, respectively). We identify current forms of media whose value can be enhanced through this type of annotation, and introduce a basic workflow to produce new forms of media. This paper specifically discusses two experimental media workflows, one for authoring video for portable video devices (video podcasting) and another for integrating diagnoses with medical imaging for digital patient records.Video
Labels:
Video annotation
Geospatial Metadata Standards
News from the FGDC community.
The InterNational Committee for Information Technology Standards (INCITS) Technical Committee L1, Geographic Information Systems and the Canadian General Standards Board – Committee on Geomatics (CGSB-CoG) have released a draft of the North American Profile of International Standards Organization Standard 19115: 2003, Geographic information - Metadata (NAP – Metadata) for review. Review and comment from other metadata practitioners are also invited. Comments are invited to assure that the Profile meets the needs of the geographic information community in both the United States and Canada.The review period began on February 1, 2007 and ends March 16, 2007.FGDC
ONIX Resource
Here is a go-to place for ONIX Records for Libraries
ONIX
I am trying to gather information on publishers who make ONIX records available for downloading. Here is what I have so far. If you know of another publisher that freely offers ONIX records for downloading, please contact me.Provides searching of the records and instructions on getting them for yourself.
ONIX
Monday, February 05, 2007
Public comment for revision of DCMI Abstract Model
The DCMI Abstract Model, which attained the status of DCMI Recommendation in March 2005, has been revised in light of discussion and feedback from the DCMI Architecture Working Group, the DCMI Usage Board, and the broader community. This revised version of the Abstract Model has been posted for a four-week public comment period. A revised DCMI Namespace Policy proposing a new DCMI namespace for Abstract Model entities has been posted for comment at the same time. For more information please consult a longer announcement on the DC-ARCHITECTURE mailing list. Interested members of the public are invited to post comments on these Proposed Recommendations to the DC-ARCHITECTURE mailing list, including "[DCAM Public Comment]" in the subject line. Public Comment will be open from 5 February through 5 March 2007.
DCMI
DCMI
Labels:
Dublin Core
Friday, February 02, 2007
Dublin Core for Scholarly Works
A Dublin Core Application Profile for Scholarly Works. Julie Allinson, Pete Johnston and Andy Powell describe a Dublin Core application profile for describing scholarly works that makes use of FRBR and the DCMI Abstract Model.
DCMI
DCMI
Labels:
Dublin Core,
FRBR
Thursday, February 01, 2007
Pew Report on Tagging
The Pew Internet and American Life Project has released a report on tagging.
Just as the internet allows users to create and share their own media, it is also enabling them to organize digital material their own way, rather than relying on pre-existing formats of classifying information.A December 2006 survey has found that 28% of internet users have tagged or categorized content online such as photos, news stories or blog posts. On a typical day online, 7% of internet users say they tag or categorize online content.The report features an interview with David Weinberger, a prominent blogger and fellow at Harvard's Berkman Center for Internet & Society.Tagging
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Tagging
Metasearch
Exciting news from Oregon State.
Oregon State University releases LibraryFind® software.We are pleased to announce the first public release of the LibraryFind metasearch software, developed by Oregon State University Libraries. LibraryFind is free software licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL).This first public release, version 0.7, has a number of advanced features, such as (but not limited to):LibraryFind2-click user workflow (one click to find, one click to get)Integrated OpenURL resolver2-tiered caching system to improve search response timeCustomizable user interface
As this is a pre-1.0 release, there are still a number of features, functions, and efficiencies we plan to add to the software. We encourage involvement from others in the library community who are interested in working on an open source metasearch product.
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Metasearch
Wednesday, January 31, 2007
MARC21 slim to MODS 3.2 stylesheet
LC has recently revised the MARC21 slim to MODS 3.2 stylesheet.
This revision adds requested functionality for outputting invalid or outdated standard numbers represented in subfields $y or $z in MARC 010, 020, 022, 024, 028, and 037 to the @invalid in MODS.
MARC
MODS
This revision adds requested functionality for outputting invalid or outdated standard numbers represented in subfields $y or $z in MARC 010, 020, 022, 024, 028, and 037 to the @invalid in MODS.
MARC
MODS
Tuesday, January 30, 2007
UNT Call Number
Well, it's not Rolling Stone but I got my picture on the cover of Call Number.
Labels:
UNT
Music TEKSLink
The Feb. issue of Southwestern Musician, in the Elementary Division column, has a description of the TEKSLink Project and an invitation to participate. If any Texas school librarians and their music teacher want to team-up just let me know. If you are a Texas school librarian and are not familiar with the project, you might want to get up to speed before your music teacher asks about it.
TEKSLink
TEKSLink
Web Directions South
The presentations from Web Directions South are now available as slides and MP3s. I plan to listen on my commute to Microformats and You-biquity. Plenty of other good ones are available.
Web2.0
Web2.0
Labels:
Web 2.0
Metadata and Delicious
Eric Lease Morgan has taken the Alex texts and extracted keywords from them and their metadata and then loaded this on del.icio.us. All automated. Nice for discovery of the texts in the Alex Catalog. However, I wonder, since this is possible, just how soon before spammers set up something like this and destroy the social bookmarking sites.
Tagging
Tagging
Monday, January 29, 2007
MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description Conventions
Addition to the MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description ConventionsThe code listed below has been recently approved for use in MARC 21 records. The code will be added to the online MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description Conventions.The code should not be used in exchange records until after March 26, 2007. This 60-day waiting period is required to provide MARC 21 implementers time to include newly defined codes in any validation tables they may apply to the MARC fields where the codes are used.Addition to the MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description ConventionsOther SourcesThe following code is for use in subfield $2 in field 886 (Foreign MARC Information Field) in Bibliographic records.Addition:
- bibsysm
- BIBSYS-MARC (Trondheim: BIBSYS) [use after March 26, 2007]
Labels:
MARC
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