Friday, May 11, 2007

Genre/Form Authority Records

The draft of Subject Cataloging Manual: Subject Headings H1913 is available of comment.
In working to define the guidelines for the creation and application of these headings, the Cataloging Policy and Support Office (CPSO) has drafted instruction sheet H 1913 for the Subject Cataloging Manual: Subject Headings.... Note that this instruction sheet covers only the development and use of genre/form headings for motion pictures, television programs, and videos; however, the plan is to create similar instruction sheets for other areas where genre/form headings can be created and applied, such as music, radio, law, etc. Because this instruction sheet will serve as the model for these other subject areas, CPSO invites comments, suggestions for improvement, etc.

Vacation

I'll be in the Washington D.C. area June 11-15. Any suggestions? We are going to visit a brewery, Old Dominion. Maybe catach a play at the Folger Library. We have been to Glen Echo, any other dancing going on?

RSS Ping

RSS Ping looks like a useful combination of the RSS/Atom metadata and the Ping function. This work is in progress, so librarians could contribute to the development.
RSS Ping combines RSS item metadata with site update information. It enhances the current ping specification, adding information about exactly what has been updated or published, with the notification that something has been updated. RSS Ping reduces the need to revisit or work done by aggregators and search engines when revisiting the publisher site after being pinged, to provide truly real-time updates for information on the Web.

CDWA-Lite

A request for comments:
CDWA-Lite is a lightweight XML schema that describes core information for cultural materials and their visual surrogates....

The Advisory Committee for this standard is seeking broad community review of it from a technical viewpoint as well as for its value in collection cataloging and access/sharing. We encourage completion of the survey (or those parts of it you are comfortable with)

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Fun Videos

The latest Tiki Bar is one of their best. Kevin Rose is a guest and very funny.

There has been lots of to-do about the code to crack HD-DVDs being available. The best or at least most amusing item is this episode of Geek Brief. Cali Lewis may be at the next Texas Library Association annual conference. She lives in Dallas and the conference is in Dallas. Could be fun.

MARC21 Updates

Update No. 7 (October 2006) to all five MARC 21 Formats (authority, bibliographic, classification, community information and holdings) is now available from the Library of Congress. This update includes changes made to the MARC 21 formats resulting from proposals which were considered by the ALA ALCTS/LITA/RUSA Machine-Readable Bibliographic Information Committee (MARBI) at its 2006 meetings, the Canadian Committee on MARC (CCM) at its meetings in 2006 and by the Book Industry Communications/Bibliographic Standards Technical Subgroup (BIC/BSTS) at its 2006 meetings.

More information about this update may be found online at:

Tuesday, May 08, 2007

xISBN API

The api for xISBN that Xiaoming Liu previewed at the Code4Lib meeting is now officially launched and supported, and provisions for commercial use are now in place.

For those of you who missed it, in addition to "related" ISBN's, xISBN will now also return metadata such as title, edition, language and publication year that can be used to distinguish manifestations of a work. xISBN supports a RESTful API, as well as OpenURL and UNAPI, and can return results in a variety of formats.

xISBN is free for non-commercial, low volume use.

Friday, May 04, 2007

MODS to Simple DC

A new MODS 3.2 to simple Dublin Core stylesheet, based on the LC MODS to simple DC mapping, is now available.

MARC Advisory Committe

The cover sheets for the proposals and discussion papers presented at the 2007 Midwinter meetings of the MARC Advisory Committee have been updated with the results of the discussions. They are available at:

Thursday, May 03, 2007

MARC21 Update

The 2006 update to the MARC 21 formats (Update No. 7) is now available for free download as PDF from the CDS web site.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Future of Bibliographic Control

The registration form for the May 9 meeting of the Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control at ALA headquarters in Chicago is now online.

ALCTS Subject Analysis Committee

The ALCTS Subject Analysis Committee Midwinter 2007 meetings minutes are now available.

Free Comic Book Day

May 5 is Free Comic Book Day. Is your library participating?

WorldCat Local

WorldCat Local is up and running at the University of Washington.

The search results include articles as well as more traditional catalog materials. It shows other local libraries with an item. It is possible to link to a search result. Facets along the left side to narrow the search. Lots of good things here.

Some drawbacks I see are that there is no option to view the MARC record. When I do reference I often find that useful. Maybe it is an option for the staff? There is a place for reviews but no place for tagging or a simple thumbs up/down. How about saving a search and getting an RSS feed or email when something that matches is added. Since there are articles there that would be a very useful way to keep up with a subject area. Cite this item is nice, but why can't I select the format I want and then only get that one. And why limit the options to only a few. How about the option to import it into Endnotes.

This is shown as a beta version. Maybe further developments will make this the system of the future, but not just yet.

Friday, April 27, 2007

Problems at LC

Back in January we received an invoice for our subscription to Classification Web. We paid it from our deposit account. Since then we have continued to receive invoices and no replies from LC. We have e-mailed them many times. We call, but the voice-mailbox is full. never does a person answer. Now they have cancelled my access, since we did not paid the bill. Only we did, months ago. What is going on at the Cataloging Distribution Service? Anyone have a secret to contacting them?

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Microformats

Karen Coombs at Library Web Chic points to a nice Firefox extension, Operator.
Operator leverages microformats that are already available on many web pages to provide new ways to interact with web services.

Operator lets you combine pieces of information on Web sites with applications in ways that are useful. For instance, Flickr + Google Maps, Upcoming.org + Google Calendar, Yahoo! Local + your address book, and many more possibilities and permutations. All of these scenarios are possible due to Microformats, an emerging standard for injecting semantics into HTML.

Have to see if it works with COinS.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control

The 2nd meeting of the Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control in the series of three public hearings is scheduled for May 9th at the American Library Association's headquarters in Chicago.

In preparation for that meeting, the Working Group subgroup that is coordinating the meeting has worked with Nancy Fallgren, consultant to the Working Group, to develop a background paper.

News from LC

Bibliographic records distributed by CDS will no longer have a record status set to *p*. This record status was for Cataloging in Publication (CIP) records that had been previously distributed with an encoding level of *8*.

This change in the use of record status value *p* in distributed records was made after considering a variety of factors including system limitations, receipt of records from sources outside the Library of Congress, and the amount of resources required to program for continued distribution. An additional factor relates to the meaning of value *p*. Although customers may have expected this status to indicate the item was published and available, in fact, this status has always meant only that the cataloging record had been upgraded. While the reason for the upgraded record is often the availability of the published item, this is not true in all cases.

LibVive

LibVive, the library podcast, is always worth a listen. The April 23 show is special because it includes a PSA by me for my podcast from the LPI Library. The stories covered in this epsoide include:
  • Man found shot at library
  • Man threatens legal action against city
  • MySpace joins with Illinois Library Association to promote online safety
  • Kentucky attempts to meet demand for library construction project funds
  • Researchers’ use of academic libraries and their services
  • Anonymous donor gives Philadelphia library $15 million
  • Libraries: Shhh... it's a book bar.

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Cataloging Futures Weblog

Here is another cataloging weblog to add to your reader, Cataloging Futures.
The focus of this blog is the future of cataloging and metadata in libraries. The preparation of the new cataloging code, RDA: Resource Description and Access, is a significant issue. The future of the MARC 21 format will also be explored. ILS/OPAC's future will be touch on also, but will not be the central focus. Also, I hope to use this blog to collocate some of the important papers, articles, websites, etc. that deal with the future of cataloging and metadata.