SHAME is a library that leverages editors, presentations and query interfaces for resource centric RDF metadata. The central idea of SHAME is to work with Annotation Profiles which encompasses:how the metadata in RDF should be read and modified.what input is allowed, e.g. multiplicity and vocabularies to use.presentational aspects like order, grouping, labels etc.
These annotation profiles are then used to generate user interfaces for either editing, presentation or querying purposes. The user interface may be realized in a web setting (both a jsp and velocity version exists) or in a stand alone application (a java/swing version exists).
Monday, August 13, 2007
Metadata Editor
SHAME (Standardized Hyper Adaptable Metadata Editor) is a free metadata editor capable of working in Dublin Core, LOM, FOAF and more.
Labels:
Metadata
Tuesday, August 07, 2007
BISAC
Recently there has been plenty of discussion about the library in AZ using BISAC to arrange the collection. Phoenix Public is also adding BISAC terms to the catalog record. Personally I don't see how SCI004000 is any easier to a patron than 520 or QB, but it is good to experiment and they seem to have a significant increase in circulation. If you want to see what they are using, the BISAC classification is available online.
Labels:
BISAC,
Classification
Wednesday, August 01, 2007
ONIX Records for Libraries
Roy Tennant's ONIX Records for Libraries has a new home. The site contains over 100,000 records from:
- Cambridge University PressHarvest House PublishersIngramMcGraw-HillPenguinRandom HouseUniversity of California Press
Labels:
ONIX
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
TLA District 8 Meeting
Looks like I may be presenting on tagging at the TLA District 8 Meeting. If you have any favorite tagging tools, papers or sites please let me know. The meeting will be at Aldine High School Oct 13, 2007 (Sat).
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Tagmash @ LibraryThing
Tim Spalding continues to do some interesting work on tagging books. The latest effort is Tagmash, the ability to combine tags in searching.
I've just gone live with a new feature called "tagmash," pages for the intersections of tags. This is a fairly obvious thing to do, but it isn't trivial in context. In getting past words or short phrases, tagmash closes some of the gap between tagging and professional subject classifications.It is worth reading the entire post to see the thought process that went into creating the feature.
Labels:
LibraryThing,
Tagging
Friday, July 20, 2007
Podcasting Tips
Podcasting is not so new any more. It seems to me, it is past the time that just throwing up an MP3 file is enough. I've heard some pretty poor production that made me just move on to the next selection on my player. So, here are a few tips I've picked up doing a podcast for our library for well over a year.
- Noise reduction. Record about 10-12 seconds of room sounds, as a sample, to have them removed after the recording is done. If you are recording a live event, conference presentation, record the room before it fills up with people. The air conditioning, computer fan, outside traffic and such add nothing and can be distracting. The sound of folks shuffling papers, coughing, etc., gives it a live feel. Don't worry about those. Very long pauses can be shortened.Sound compression. Compressing the sounds removes any clipping from segments that are recorded too loud and makes everything clearer. Do this after removing any noise.Volume. Make sure to record at a decent volume level. Then make sure the file plays back at a good level. I've downloaded files only to find they are too soft and getting the level right brings out the hum in the car's system. I just skip to the next selection. MP3Trim will do smaller files for free. Adjust the volume last.
Labels:
Podcasting
Topic Maps
If you have any projects in a library environment that you are using or are planning to deploy that involves Topic Maps please here is a short survey. They are trying to get a general sense of what, if anything, the library community is doing with this technology.
Labels:
Topic Maps
Pymarc
The latest version of pymarc has the ability to change records from MARC-8 encoding to UNICODE, UTF-8. A task that most of our catalogs will have to go through in the next few years, I guess. Nice to have a tool for when that day arrives.
The pymarc module provides an API for reading, writing and modifying MARC records from python. MARC (MAchine Readable Cataloging) is a metadata format for bibliographic data.
....
While it's not rocket science to read MARC, it's also not something you want to code very often, so pymarc does the lifting for you. pymarc allows you to read records, extract arbitrary fields from each record, update records, and write records back out in transmission format.
Labels:
MARC Tools
Thursday, July 19, 2007
OPAC Replacement
The open-source Next-Gen library catalog browser, VuFind has been released. Currently only works with Voyager, other systems are planned or you could help write the code. Features include:
- Search with Faceted ResultsLive Record Status and Location with Ajax Querying"More Like This" Resource SuggestionsSave Resources to Organized ListsTaggingCommenting
VuFind is a library resource portal designed and developed for libraries by libraries. The goal of VuFind is to enable your users to search and browse through all of your library's resources by replacing the traditional OPAC to include:Catalog RecordsDigital Library ItemsInstitutional RepositoryInstitutional BibliographyOther Library Collections and Resources
VuFind is completely modular so you can implement just the basic system, or all of components. And since it's open source, you can modify the modules to best fit your need or you can add new modules to extend your resource offerings
Labels:
OPAC,
Open Source,
VuFind
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
LibX
There is a new version of the LibX Edition Builder.
LibX is a Firefox extension that provides direct access to your library's resources.
LibX is an open source framework from which editions for specific libraries can be built.
Currently, 61 academic and public libraries are offering LibX editions to their users, an additional 86 libraries are testing editions.
Labels:
LibX
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
MODS in the Digital Llibrary
The Digital Library Federation Aquifer Metadata Working Group has announced the release of the DLF Aquifer MODS Guidelines Levels of Adoption.
The Levels of Adoption document is intended to supplement the Digital Library Federation / Aquifer Implementation Guidelines for Shareable MODS Records, released in November 2006 under the auspices of the DLF Aquifer initiative. The Shareable MODS Guidelines represent a record-centric view of Aquifer's goals, whereas it is often helpful to set priorities for metadata creation with a user- and use-centric view. The newly-released Levels of Adoption document describes five general categories of user functionality that are likely to be supported by following specific recommendations from the Guidelines. It attempts to provide additional guidance to MODS implementers in the planning process by documenting what sorts of functionality is possible when certain elements of the Guidelines are followed.
These documents, together with an FAQ for implementation (forthcoming - stay tuned!), were written primarily to assist institutions preparing metadata for aggregation via the DLF Aquifer initiative, but the Working Group expects they could also be useful in preparing metadata for other aggregations, or for using MODS in a local environment. Comments on the Levels of Adoption are welcome, and can be sent to any Working Group member. Contact information for Working Group members is available from the Levels of Adoption page.
Labels:
Digital libraries,
Metadata,
MODS
Monday, July 16, 2007
Great Offer from a Great Organization
How's this for a great offer?
Special offer for new members:
Join WAML for only $20 (normally $30)
The Western Association of Map Libraries (WAML) is looking for folks who want to expand their knowledge of maps and geospatial information through fun-filled networking opportunities and information-packed meetings and journals!
$20 (normally $30 a year) -- Good for new members only. Membership good from now till June 30, 2008, but offer ends July 31, 2007.
The Western Association of Map Libraries (WAML) is an independent association of map librarians and other people with an interest in maps and map librarianship. Membership in WAML is open to any individual interested in furthering the purpose of the Association which is "to encourage high standards in every phase of the organization and administration of map libraries."
Membership is not limited to people living in the Western US and Canada, but is open to everyone.
BENEFITS:Subscription to the Information Bulletin (IB)Discounted registration fees to WAML's bi-annual meetingsPractical workshops on topics such as aerial photos, scanning projects, and map catalogingNetworking regarding geospatial and cartographic informationParticipation in WAML's electronic discussion board
INFORMATION BULLETIN
WAML's Information Bulletin is issued three times a year and enjoys worldwide readership. It includes feature articles, photo essays, Association business, book and electronic resources reviews, new map lists, and selected news and notes.
MEETINGS!!!
WAML meetings are the most fun-filled library-related events you can attend!! They occur in the Spring and Fall. They are small (around 50 people), held in great locations such as Fairbanks, Seattle and Boulder, and have great field trips and delicious banquets. The presentations deal only with geospatial topics. Roundtable discussions and workshops take place at every meeting. The registration fee runs from $35 to $60. The accommodations are reasonably priced, the camaraderie is great, and the tone is relaxed. Often, WAML has a "map exchange" where attendees bring their withdrawn and extra copies of maps and make them available for others. We are headed to the Denver in October 2007!!
Field trips have taken WAML members to national parks, volcanoes, mountain tops, museums, and vineyards/wineries.
In the last few years, WAML has met in Seattle, Honolulu, Fairbanks, Chico California, Boulder Colorado, Santa Cruz, Palo Alto California, Portland, Provo Utah, Vancouver BC, Flagstaff Arizona, Pasadena California. Future meeting sites include Denver Colorado, Las Vegas Nevada, Salt Lake City Utah, and Yosemite National Park.
If that weren't enough, you are invited to give presentations at the conferences OR write articles for the Information Bulletin. Presentations and papers run from the very formal to "how I done good." In the past WAML presenters and IB authors have been not just librarians but scholars, novelists, artists, map collectors, map dealers, scientists, and cartographers.
Come join us. The price is right. The offer is limited. Good times, good friends and good maps await you!
To join the Western Association of Map Libraries, fill out the information on the web site.
Labels:
WAML
Friday, July 13, 2007
2007 Annual Meetings of the MARC Advisory Committee
The cover sheets for the proposals and discussion papers presented at the 2007 Annual meetings of the MARC Advisory Committee have been updated with the results of the discussions. They are available at:
- Proposal No. 2007-04: Use of field 520 for content advice statements in the MARC 21 bibliographic formatProposal No. 2007-05: Definition of 022 subfields for recording the linking ISSN (ISSN-L) in the MARC 21 Bibliographic, Authority, and Holdings FormatsProposal No. 2007-06: Changes for the German and Austrian conversion to MARC 21Discussion Paper No. 2007-DP05: Data elements needed to ascertain copyright factsDiscussion Paper No. 2007-DP06: Representation of the Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) system in the MARC 21 formats
Thursday, July 12, 2007
PURL 2.0 Coming Soon
OCLC has announced an update to the PURL service.
OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. and Zepheira, LLC announced today that they will work together to rearchitect OCLC's Persistent URL (PURL) service to more effectively support the management of a "Web of data."The software developed will be released under an Open Source Software license allowing PURLs and the PURL infrastructure to be used in various applications for public or proprietary use. OCLC and Zepheira are collaborating to extend the open and inclusive community of PURL users.
Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control
This message was sent to SLA members. Applies to everybody.
Following the third successful public hearing of the Library of Congress’ Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control on 9 July, the Working Group has extended the final date for comments or testimonies to be submitted to the group to 31 July. For information about how to submit written commentary see the website. Although the working group’s report will be sent out for comments in October before submitting the report to the Library of Congress in November, members are encouraged to send comments, however short, in order to make an impact on this important report. For more information please see the Working Group Web site.
Labels:
Cataloging
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Journal of Internet Cataloging => Journal of Library Metadata
Call for Papers
The Journal of Library Metadata (JLM) is a peer-reviewed journal publishing articles on all aspects of metadata applications in libraries. The journal is published quarterly by The Haworth Press, Inc.
Previously titled the Journal of Internet Cataloging, after a change in title and editorship, JLM will now focus on metadata, an exciting, timely subject of importance to all libraries. The journal will publish three categories of articles: standard, peer-reviewed articles; shorter, scholarly, non-peer reviewed articles; and short viewpoint articles.
These articles will cover all aspects of metadata applications in libraries, including:
Application profiles
Best practices
Controlled vocabularies
Crosswalking of metadata and interoperability
Digital libraries and metadata
Display of search results
Federated repositories
Federated searching
Folksonomies
Individual metadata schemes
Institutional repository metadata
Metadata content standards
Metadata harvesting
Ontologies
Preservation metadata
Resource Description Framework
Resource discovery and metadata
Search engines and metadata
SKOS
Stochastic vs. deterministic searching
Tagging and tag clouds
Topic maps
Visual image and moving image metadata
Categories of Articles
Please consider writing and submitting an article that falls into one of the following three categories:
The Journal of Library Metadata (JLM) is a peer-reviewed journal publishing articles on all aspects of metadata applications in libraries. The journal is published quarterly by The Haworth Press, Inc.
Previously titled the Journal of Internet Cataloging, after a change in title and editorship, JLM will now focus on metadata, an exciting, timely subject of importance to all libraries. The journal will publish three categories of articles: standard, peer-reviewed articles; shorter, scholarly, non-peer reviewed articles; and short viewpoint articles.
These articles will cover all aspects of metadata applications in libraries, including:
Application profiles
Best practices
Controlled vocabularies
Crosswalking of metadata and interoperability
Digital libraries and metadata
Display of search results
Federated repositories
Federated searching
Folksonomies
Individual metadata schemes
Institutional repository metadata
Metadata content standards
Metadata harvesting
Ontologies
Preservation metadata
Resource Description Framework
Resource discovery and metadata
Search engines and metadata
SKOS
Stochastic vs. deterministic searching
Tagging and tag clouds
Topic maps
Visual image and moving image metadata
Categories of Articles
Please consider writing and submitting an article that falls into one of the following three categories:
- Peer-reviewed articles (original research, scholarly manuscripts), which should be 10-50 typed pages, double-spaced.Short, scholarly, non-peer-reviewed articles, often practical in nature (for example, describing a particular library metadata implementation). These should range from 500-2,000 words, with limited citations to other resources.Upbeat Viewpoint articles giving the author’s opinion on a timely topic related to library metadata applications. These should range from 500-2,000 words and may or may not contain citations. Focus should be on improvements or solutions instead of negative aspects of an existing system, standard, or service.
Labels:
Metadata
Monday, July 09, 2007
The Future of Bibliographic Control Meeting
The Library of Congress Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control 3rd meeting is available as a Real media video. Wish they had made an MP3 version also.
Labels:
Cataloging
Library PR
Getting the word out to other groups about libraries is something I feel strongly about. I've presented at music teacher conferences and the Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Now my suggestion for a story has been picked up by CommandN. It was about LibraryThing and the hook was the $1000.00 worth of books they are offering to referrals for new employees. One small bit of PR but I'm feeling good about it.
Labels:
PR
Friday, July 06, 2007
SCATNews
The latest issue of SCATNews is now available on the IFLA website.
Labels:
Cataloging,
IFLA,
SCATNews
Thursday, July 05, 2007
ONIX Directory
ON AUTOCAT there was some discussion recently about vendor supplied records, so I asked about ONIX records. A helpful person pointed me to this list of Companies Sending ONIX Files. The file doesn't seem to link back to the files, but it does give a nice listing of who is creating and distributing these files.MarcEdit will convert ONIX into MARC21XML which can then be turned into MARC21 records.
Tuesday, July 03, 2007
Revised DCMI Namespace Policy Published
News from the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
Following a public comment period earlier this year, a revised DCMI Namespace Policy has been published. The revision documents the creation of a new namespace for entities of the DCMI Abstract Model and updates the terminology used.
Monday, July 02, 2007
Subject Authority Records
News from LC.
CPSO has begun a project to create subject authority records for every subject string appearing in bibliographic records to aid Library of Congress catalogers, and external users in the validation of LCSH subject heading strings. Effective immediately subject authority records are being created for valid subject strings obtained from bibliographic records. Formerly, these subject strings did not prompt the creation of subject authority records, because they contained free-floating subdivision[s].
Some of these records are being created manually by the Cataloging Policy and Support Office staff, and some will be generated by machine, but all of them will be reviewed before distribution occurs. We anticipate at least 200 records per month at the start of this project. These records will not be printed in the annual editions of LCSH (the "red books"). The records can be identified by the legend "[proposed validation record]" appearing at the end of the 1xx string. This legend will be removed once the records have been approved and distributed. Additionally each record will contain a 667 field with this data: "Record generated for validation purposes."
Labels:
Subjects
Friday, June 29, 2007
RDA Drafts
An announcement about Resource Description and Access.
Revised draft of Chapter 6-7
The Joint Steering Committee for Development of RDA (JSC) is pleased to announce that a revised draft of RDA part A, chapters 6-7 has been made available for comment. Please see the following Web page for the draft and details on making comments:
Revised RDA scope document
For information, the RDA Scope and structure document has been revised and now has two accompanying documents, an RDA element analysis and an RDA to FRBR mapping.
The JSC is committed to ensuring that the metadata produced using RDA will be well-formed, i.e., instructions are provided on how to record the values of elements, controlled vocabularies are used where appropriate, and the overall structure is governed by a formal model.
These documents have been issued for the JSC and Editor to refer to, in the process of developing RDA, to ensure this aim is met. In addition, we hope that these documents will be useful to the metadata and semantic web communities and in our ongoing discussions with these communities.
Labels:
RDA
Thursday, June 28, 2007
Union Bugs
At the John Edwards rally last night I noticed the sign had a union bug in the lower corner. We might consider adding information about and from these bugs to the bibliographic record. Proposal for Inclusion of Union Label Description In Bibliographic and Archival Cataloging Guidelines is a paper on the topic.
Data are like drops of water. Individually, they are usually quite meaningless. Only once they are organized, with purpose, do they take on significance. This proposal seeks to rectify the oversight by catalogers to include information about a small but important item of published data - the union label, or "bug".
Labels:
Union lables
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Dublin Core Survey
Resoum Kidane of Bibliographic Services at King’s College London is conducting a survey on DC use.
I am currently conducting a survey concerning the use of Dublin Core (DC) and MARC amongst cataloguers and other information professionals. The main aim of this research is to obtain a perception from cataloguers and other information professionals, concerning the future trends of cataloguing. As the future of MARC becomes the subject of debate amongst information professionals, there is a possibility that DC will replace MARC for cataloguing both digital and print documents.
Labels:
Dublin Core
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
FRBR/CIDOC CRM Harmonization
The Working Group on FRBR/CIDOC CRM Harmonization now has its Web page on IFLANET. The current draft of the object-oriented version of FRBR, nicknamed "FRBRoo", and consolidated minutes of the WG's meetings are also available there.
Tasks: in cooperation with the CIDOC CRM Special Interest Group, prepare an object-oriented formulation of FRBR (FRBRoo) that is a compatible extension of the CIDOC Conceptual Reference Model (CRM).
....
CIDOC CRM is the conceptual reference model for museum information, expressed in object-oriented formalism. Originally developed by the International Committee for Documentation of the International Council of Museums (ICOM CIDOC), it has now become an ISO standard (ISO 21127:2006).
Thursday, June 21, 2007
Podcasts
A nice tool for those listening to lots of podcasts or creating them is mpTrim. It fixes lots of errors, adjusts the volume and cuts off silence from the start and end of the file, thus making it a bit leaner. Free for a basic version. For longer podcasts or batch processing there is a paid version.
Labels:
Podcasting
Wednesday, June 20, 2007
FOAF & DC
Dan Brickley has written the paper, FOAF and the draft DC Agents requirements, to investigate and assess feasibility of using Friend of a Friend for Dublin Core agent descriptions.
Labels:
Dublin Core,
FOAF,
Metadata
Tuesday, June 19, 2007
TEI Meeting Announcement
This announcement was received via e-mail, slightly edited for Web presentation.
TEI@20: 20 Years of Supporting the Digital Humanities
31st October - 3rd November 2007, University of Maryland
Pre-conference workshops: 31 October 2007
TEI conference: 1-2 November 2007
Business meeting: 3 November 2007
We invite you to come to the annual showcase of all things TEI.
The meeting includes:
Conference papers will be published by LLC: The Journal of Digital Scholarship in the Humanities.
The meeting will be held at the University of Maryland Libraries, University of Maryland, College Park, just outside Washington, D.C.
The event is open to all and free of charge for TEI Consortium institutional members, subscribers and invited guests. Others will be charged $75, which entitles you to conference admission and subscriber benefits for the remainder of the calendar year.
For program details , registration, hotel, and travel information, please visit the conference website.
TEI@20: 20 Years of Supporting the Digital Humanities
31st October - 3rd November 2007, University of Maryland
Pre-conference workshops: 31 October 2007
TEI conference: 1-2 November 2007
Business meeting: 3 November 2007
We invite you to come to the annual showcase of all things TEI.
The meeting includes:
- the launch of TEI P5a full programme of invited speakers, panels, roundtable discussionspecial interest group sessionsTEI business meeting and elections
Conference papers will be published by LLC: The Journal of Digital Scholarship in the Humanities.
The meeting will be held at the University of Maryland Libraries, University of Maryland, College Park, just outside Washington, D.C.
The event is open to all and free of charge for TEI Consortium institutional members, subscribers and invited guests. Others will be charged $75, which entitles you to conference admission and subscriber benefits for the remainder of the calendar year.
For program details , registration, hotel, and travel information, please visit the conference website.
Labels:
TEI
Monday, June 18, 2007
Meeting of Experts for an International Cataloguing Code
The website is now available for the 5th IFLA Meeting of Experts for an International Cataloguing Code. Lots of papers available.
Labels:
Cataloging
Resource Description and Access
There is a survey about the print version of RDA on the website. There is another for educators. Look for both in the left sidebar. Make your opinion count.
Labels:
RDA
Structure and Form of Folksonomy Tags
Structure and form of folksonomy tags: The road to the public library catalogue by Louise Spiteri appears in Webology 4(2).
Folksonomies have the potential to add much value to public library catalogues by enabling clients to: store, maintain, and organize items of interest in the catalogue using their own tags. The purpose of this paper is to examine how the tags that constitute folksonomies are structured. Tags were acquired over a thirty-day period from the daily tag logs of three folksonomy sites, Del.icio.us, Furl, and Technorati. The tags were evaluated against section 6 (choice and form of terms) of the National Information Standards Organization (NISO) guidelines for the construction of controlled vocabularies.Another paper on tagging is @toread and Cool: Tagging for Time, Task and Emotion by Margaret E.I. Kipp in Proceedings 8th Information Architecture Summit, Las Vegas, Nevada, USA.
This paper examines the use of non subject related tags in three social bookmarking tools (Del.icio.us, Connotea and Citeulike). Previous studies of Del.icio.us and Citeulike determined that many common tags are not directly subject related but are in fact affective tags dwelling on a user's emotional response to a document or are time and task related tags related to a users current projects or activities. A set of non subject tags from the previous studies was used to collect posts with non subject tags from the three listed social bookmarking tools. These tags have been analysed to examine their role in the tagging process.
Labels:
Folksonomies,
Tagging
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
Digitization Tool
A tool from the Carnegie Mellon may help speed digitization of texts.
Carnegie Mellon researchers have launched a new service that will not only protect e-mail addresses on the web from spambots, but also help digitize a backlog of old books, magazines, and newspapers so that they can eventually be computer searchable. The service, called reCAPTCHA, hopes to use the eyeballs of millions of Internet users to identify thousands of words for the Internet Archive.
Naval Observatory Library
I've just returned from a visit at the U.S. Naval Observatory Library. The largest astronomy library in the country, with 80,000 volumes. The main reading room is beautiful. The grounds are beautiful . The view from the roof is breath-taking. Greg and Sally were good hosts. The folks who visit next week during ALA are in for a special treat
Friday, June 08, 2007
The Future of Bibliographic Control Meeting
Economics and Organization of Bibliographic Data Background Paper for the Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control sets the stage for the third meeting.
The purpose of the third public meeting is to better understand the economic and organizational needs and challenges facing stakeholders currently, in the near future, and in the more distant future in regard to creating, maintaining, sharing, and supporting the metadata, structures, and standards of bibliographic control. In this context, the term “economic” refers to the human, technological, and monetary costs of bibliographic control, from both the narrow micro- and broad macro-economic perspectives.
Labels:
Cataloging
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Linux ILS
Any suggestions for a Linux based ILS? I know of Koha and Evergreen. Are there any commercial products? We are looking for something inexpensive. We may have some funds next fiscal year.
AIPs and Mashups
APIs and Mashups For The Rest Of Us by Gareth Rushgrove appears in the latest Digital Web Magazine.
This article, the first in a series of two, aims to lift the lid on all things API; the second article will give you some hands-on tools and tips to get you started. For now, it’s all about how we managed to get here--and where here actually is.Why should we even care about this? Well, with an API our users could create mash-ups of our OPACs making them more useful and user-friendly.
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Browsing the Catalog
Browsing Library Collections: From the Shelf to the Online Catalog by Robert Kieft appeared in EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 41, no. 3 (May/June 2006): 12–13. It discusses a project to add TOC to bib records.More info at ALCTS' Technical Services Directors of Large Research Libraries Discussion Group, on Friday morning, 6/22/07.
Labels:
Cataloging,
TOC
Monday, June 04, 2007
DCMI Abstract Model
A revised version of the DCMI Abstract Model has been has been approved as a DCMI Recommendation.
This document specifies an abstract model for Dublin Core metadata. The primary purpose of this document is to specify the components and constructs used in Dublin Core metadata. It defines the nature of the components used and describes how those components are combined to create information structures. It provides an information model which is independent of any particular encoding syntax. Such an information model allows us to gain a better understanding of the kinds of descriptions that we are encoding and facilitates the development of better mappings and cross-syntax translations.
Labels:
Dublin Core,
Metadata
Phoenix Catalog
Phoenix Public Library has just started using a faceted approach to the catalog. Personally, I think the multiple access points clustered in a sidebar in a very useful and intuitive approach.Another innovation is that they are using the BISAC Subject Headings. Look at field 695. Another access point. I hope they used a program to grab them from ONIX records. I'd like to know the details. There are problems with multiple thesauri in one catalog. Ask anyone who has both LCSH and MeSH. The facet approach may limit those problems. Interesting experiment.
Friday, June 01, 2007
Google in Cataloging
"Have You Searched Google Yet?" Using Google as a Discovery Tool for Cataloging Jennifer Lang by appears in the latest issue of Library Philosophy and Practice.
This paper demonstrates how some of Google's search functionalities can be used to locate information to assist in the cataloging process. In addition, the results of an informal survey of catalogers shows that while some respondents never considered using Google or prefer different methods for finding information, others find Google to be a good supplement to "traditional" cataloging tools.One use not mentioned is finding an e-version of the item being cataloged. Happens fairly often with the materials I work with.
Labels:
Cataloging,
Google
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Now We Have Our Own Planet!
Planet Cataloging is an automatically-generated aggregation of blogs related to cataloging and metadata designed and maintained by Jennifer Lang and Kevin S. Clarke.Thanks for putting it together. Added to my reader.
Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control Report
Brief Meeting Summary: May 9, 2007, Structures and Standards for Bibliographic Data (Chicago, IL) by Nancy J. Fallgren
Friday, May 25, 2007
VRA Core
The Visual Resources Association has announced that the release version of VRA Core 4.0 is now available.
VRA Core 4.0 is a data standard for the cultural heritage community that was developed by the Visual Resources Association's Data Standards Committee. It consists of a metadata element set (units of information such as title, location, date, etc.), as well as an initial blueprint for how those elements can be hierarchically structured. The element set provides a categorical organization for the description of works of visual culture as well as the images that document them.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Tagging
Order Is in the Eye of the Tagger by David Weinberger appears in the latest Wired. It is an excerpt from his recently published book Everything Is Miscellaneous
In the age of social tagging and folksonomies, where we all get to classify the things of the world into categories we make up on the spot, Linnaeus the Taxonomist seems quaint. But we shouldn't feel too smug. We are struggling against the same limitations as he did … and this time we don't have an excuse.
Labels:
Tagging
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Access to Images
A new HP report Sharing, Discovering and Browsing Geotagged Pictures on the Web by Carlo Torniai, Steve Battle, and Steve Cayzer discusses access to images.
In recent years the availability of GPS devices and the development in web technologies has produced a considerable growth in geographical applications available on the web. In particular the growing popularity of digital photography and photo sharing services has opened the way to a myriad of possible applications related to geotagged pictures. In this work we present an overview of the creation, sharing and use of geotagged pictures. We propose an approach to providing a new browsing experience of photo collections based on location and heading information metadata.
Request for Comments: SKOS Use Cases and Requirements: Working Draft
This W3C working group is asking for comments on their work.
The Semantic Web Deployment Working Group has published the First Public Working Draft of SKOS Use Cases and Requirements. Knowledge organization systems, such as taxonomies, thesauri or subject heading lists, play a fundamental role in information structuring and access. These use cases and fundamental or secondary requirements will be used to guide the design of SKOS (Simple Knowledge Organisation System), a model for representing such vocabularies. Learn more about the Semantic Web Activity. We would greatly appreciate your comments and feedback on this Working Draft, which should be submitted to the SWD mailing list.
Labels:
Ontologies
Tuesday, May 22, 2007
MARC @ ALA
Announcement for a presentation at ALA that sounds very interesting.
Did you know that catalogers use only 10-20% of available MARC fields/subfields? Given evolving search behaviors and the amazoogle effects do our bibliographic records provide information users need?The MARC Content Designation Utilization (MCDU) project team would like to invite you to "Informing the Future of MARC: An Empirical Approach", a panel presentation at the ALA 2007 Annual Conference in Washington, D.C. The session will take place on Saturday, June 23rd, 8am-10am.
This is an ALCTS sponsored event and will feature Dr. William E. Moen, Associate Professor and Dr. Shawne D. Miksa, Assistant Professor, from the School of Library and Information Sciences, University of North Texas and Sally H. McCallum, Chief, Network Development and MARC Standards Office, Library of Congress.This program presents findings from a major IMLS-funded research study on catalogers’ use of MARC and an opportunity to discuss future directions for MARC and cataloging practices in the context of FRBR, RDA, and XML. The results of this study provide a much needed empirical basis to better inform MARC’s future in the bibliographic control environment.
Labels:
MARC
Monday, May 21, 2007
MARC RTP
A while back I posted that the MARC Record Translation Program (MARC RTP) had disappeared. Now it is back, though at a temporary home.
MARC RTP was especially developed so that catalogue data contained in MARC format files could be converted, and selectively imported, into databases built with general-purpose applications.....RTP allows you to select any part or parts of each MARC record, therefore you do not have to design a large unnecessarily complicated database. You need only include the data that is of interest to you. As an aid, RTP can produce a readable listing of all of the records from the MARC file, and information about which tags and fields exist in your MARC records.
Labels:
MARC,
MARC Tools
Walt Crawford
Not since the Astros let Nolan Ryan go has such a poor management decision been made.
Ever thought you or one of the groups you work for or with could use a Walt Crawford?Here’s your chance.The RLG-OCLC transition will be complete in September. I’ve received a termination notice from OCLC, effective September 30, 2007.I’m interested in exploring new possibilities. For now I’m trying not to narrow the options too much.
Friday, May 18, 2007
Resource Description and Access
Outcomes of the April 2007 meeting of the Joint Steering Committee
for Development of RDA have been mounted on the JSC Web site.
for Development of RDA have been mounted on the JSC Web site.
Labels:
RDA
Jon Udell's Interviews with Innovators
Lou Rosenfeld is the guest this week on Jon Udell's Interviews with Innovators.
Jon Udell speaks with Lou Rosenfeld on this week's Interviews with Innovators. Fellow superpatron Edward Vielmetti put Jon in touch with Lou, with whom he shares an affection not only for Ann Arbor, Michigan, but also for a cluster of topics including information architecture, search analytics, print and online publishing, designing for usability, tagging, and microformats.
Labels:
Microformats,
Podcasting,
Tagging
Tuesday, May 15, 2007
Microformats
John Allsopp, has just come out with the book, Microformats: Empowering Your Markup for Web 2.0. In the Five Pertinent Questions column he briefly discusses the importance of this mark-up.
Labels:
Microformats
Monday, May 14, 2007
Enhancing the Catalog
In Danbury Conn. the public library has added LibraryThing for Libraries to their catalog.
What is LibraryThing for Libraries?Give your patrons exciting new content, including recommendations and tag clouds.Let your patrons take part, with reviews, ratings and tags. Keep the control you want.Enhance your catalog with just a few lines of HTML. Works with any OPAC and requires no back-end integration. Really.Draw on the collective intelligence of your patrons and LibraryThing members.
Labels:
LibraryThing,
OPAC
Future of Bibliographic Control
Extensive notes, by Mark R. Lindner, on the 2nd meeting of the LoC Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control are available on the Off the Mark weblog.
Labels:
Cataloging
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.
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.
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:
More information about this update may be found online at:
Labels:
MARC
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.
MODS
MODS
Labels:
Dublin Core,
MODS
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:
- Proposal No. 2007-01: Definition of subfields $b and $j in field 041 in the MARC 21 Bibliographic FormatProposal No. 2007-02: Incorporating invalid former headings in 4XX fields of the MARC 21 Authority FormatProposal No. 2007-03: Addition of subfield $5 in fields 533 and 538 in the MARC 21 bibliographic and holdings formatsDiscussion Paper No. 2007-DP01: Changes for the German and Austrian conversion to MARC 21Discussion Paper No. 2007-DP02: Use of field 520 for content advice statementsDiscussion Paper No. 2007-DP03: Recording the linking ISSN (ISSN-L) in the MARC 21 Bibliographic, Authority, and Holdings FormatsDiscussion Paper No. 2007-DP04: Definition of Field 004 in the MARC 21 Bibliographic Format
Labels:
MARC
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.
MARC
MARC
Labels:
MARC
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.
Cataloging
Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging
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.
WorldCat
WorldCat
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?
LC
LC
Labels:
LC
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Microformats
Karen Coombs at Library Web Chic points to a nice Firefox extension, Operator.
Microformats
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.
Microformats
Labels:
Microformats
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.
Cataloging
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.
Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging
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.
Cataloging
Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging
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 libraryMan threatens legal action against cityMySpace joins with Illinois Library Association to promote online safetyKentucky attempts to meet demand for library construction project fundsResearchers’ use of academic libraries and their servicesAnonymous donor gives Philadelphia library $15 millionLibraries: Shhh... it's a book bar.
Labels:
Podcasts
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.Weblogs
Labels:
Weblogs
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Addition to the MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description Conventions
The codes listed below have been recently approved for use in MARC 21 records. The codes will be added to the online MARC Code Lists for Relators, Sources, Description Conventions.The codes should not be used in exchange records until after June 5, 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.Classification Sources
The following code is for use in subfield $2 in field 084 in Bibliographic and Community Information records (Other Classification Number), in subfield $2 in field 084 in Classification records (Classification Scheme and Edition) and in subfield $2 in field 065 in Authority records (Other Classification Number).Addition:
The following codes are for use in subfield $2 in fields 600-657 in Bibliographic and Community Information records, and in subfield $f in field 040 (Cataloging Source) in Authority records.Additions:
The following code is for use in subfield $2 in field 084 in Bibliographic and Community Information records (Other Classification Number), in subfield $2 in field 084 in Classification records (Classification Scheme and Edition) and in subfield $2 in field 065 in Authority records (Other Classification Number).Addition:
- ncsclt
- New classification scheme for Chinese libraries
(Taipei: Wen-hua) [use only after June 5, 2007]
The following codes are for use in subfield $2 in fields 600-657 in Bibliographic and Community Information records, and in subfield $f in field 040 (Cataloging Source) in Authority records.Additions:
- finmesh
- FinMeSH [use only after June 5, 2007]
- muzeukc
- MuzeMusic UK classical music classification (London: Muze Europe Ltd) [use only after June 5, 2007]
- muzeukn
- MuzeMusic UK non-classical music classification (London: Muze Europe Ltd) [use only after June 5, 2007]
- csht
- Chinese subject headings (Taipei: National Central Library) [use only after June 5, 2007]
- lcstt
- List of Chinese subject terms (Taipei: National Central Library) [use only after June 5, 2007]
- bibalex
- Bibliotheca Alexandrina name and subject authority file (Alexandria, Egypt: Bibliotheca Alexandrina) [use only after June 5, 2007]
Labels:
MARC
Monday, April 16, 2007
Google Summer of Code
Among the 900 projects selected for the Google Summer of Code is one for cataloging.
The purpose of this project is to create a professional web-based library cataloging application for searching, retrieving and editing library catalog records. It will be capable of integrating with any Integrated Library System using the Z39.50 protocol. The user interface will be as responsive to user input as possible and include the use of keyboard shortcuts and integrated help features. It will allow the user to search for records on user-defined Z39.50-enabled library catalogs, edit the records efficiently, and save them in standards compliant formats from which they can be imported into a library catalog.This application would benefit the library community by providing an intuitive, customizable, professional interface for library catalogers which would work with existing Library Systems. Currently, libraries either have to pay to use proprietary cataloging systems or are limited to the editing interface which comes with their Integrated Library System. Not only would an open source alternative provide a free editor, it would also allow libraries to customize it to meet their cataloging staff's needs.Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Skypecasting
Recently we got DSL at home, an upgrade from our dial-connection. So I've been exploring Skype. Nice. Works fine and is simple enough to use. We had used it when traveling and the place we were staying had a high-speed connection. Cora just finished her term as VP for the Texas Music Educators' Association and she often used it at board meetings.Now I notice there is a service called Skypecasts, lets you talk to as many as 100 people and have control of who speaks and when. Looks like a useful tool. Anyone using it? I'm going to have an experimental Skypecast, just to get a feel for the tool and how it works. I'll just be reading my weekly podcast What's New at the Lunar and Planetary Institute Library. Wednesday evening at 8 Central Time. I have it down for 15 minuets, the shortest time slot they have, but it is more likely to last about 5 minuets, unless lots of folks join and say Hi.
Skype
Skype
Labels:
Skype
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records
The IFLA Working Group on Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records (FRANAR) has made this announcement.
The IFLA Working Group on Functional Requirements and Numbering of Authority Records is pleased to announce that a 2nd draft of "Functional Requirements for Authority Data" (previously titled "Functional Requirements for Authority Records") is now available for worldwide review. This draft, updated in response to comments received during the previous review, is on the IFLA web site. Comments should be sent by July 15, 2007.FRANAR
Labels:
FRANAR
Monday, April 09, 2007
Friday, April 06, 2007
Dublin Core News
News from the Dublin Core folks.
Public comment will be held from 2 to 30 April 2007 on two related documents: the "DCMI Abstract Model" and the specification "Expressing Dublin Core metadata using the Resource Description Framework", or DC-RDF. In accordance with feedback received in an earlier public comment period from 4 February to 4 March 2007, the Abstract Model has been modified to differentiate literal and non-literal values in order to support unambiguous transformations into RDF from any encoding syntax that follows the Abstract Model. The DC-RDF specification, a DCMI Proposed Recommendation, updates an earlier draft in line with the latest version of the Abstract Model, as detailed in the document "Notes on DCMI specifications for Dublin Core metadata in RDF"DC
Labels:
Dublin Core,
RDF
Thursday, March 29, 2007
MODS Implementation Registry
The MODS Implementation Registry contains descriptions of MODS projects planned, in progress, and fully implemented. It provides the MODS community with important information about how MODS is being used in various projects throughout the world.Please review your entry if you have one or submit any new ones. Institutions and organizations who are implementing or planning to implement MODS should submit the following information to the Network Development and MARC Standards Office (ndmso@loc.gov) at the Library of Congress.
- Name of the institution or organization implementing MODSThe MODS project nameA short description of the MODS projectProjected dates of implementationA URL to the MODS project web site (if available)A URL to any available documentation or specifications developed for the MODS project A list of any MODS tools developed and or used as part of the MODS projectThe MODS version used in the projectContact name and e-mail address
Labels:
MODS
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Microformats
As a cataloger who appreciates all forms of structured mark-up, I'm putting this on my to-read list. Microformats: Empowering Your Markup for Web 2.0
I like microformats and hope they become more widespread on the Web. Can't link to WorldCat, since it has yet to make it into any libraries.
Microformats
Microformats
Labels:
Microformats
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Schematron
Schematron is an XML schema language that sounds better than what we have been using for our data. It allows for data validation. O'Reilly has a paid downloadable PDF on Schematron.
Schematron is a rule-based XML schema language, offering flexibility and power that W3C XML schema, RELAX NG, and DTDs simply can't match.You need Schematron and can't settle for other languages if you have to check rules that go beyond checking the document structures (i.e., checking that an element bar is included in element foo) and their datatypes. Schematron is the right tool for checking conditions such as "startDate is earlier than or equal to endDate."Schematron is also the right tool to use if you have to raise user-friendly error messages rather than depend on error messages that are generated by a schema processor and that are often obscure. Schematron builds on XPath. You will need to understand XPath to to get the most from Schematron.XML
Labels:
XML
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Happy 5th
I just noticed, a couple of weeks back, Catalogablog hit the 5th anniversary. The first post was early March 2002. I've had fun along the way, trying out different tools and metadata on the weblog. Lately I've been stressed and tired, maybe time to take a break or even close up shop. Not today though. I'll give it a bit more time and see if it passes. Maybe all I need is a good evening of contra dancing. Dancing here in Houston this Saturday. See you Friday at the TX SLA meeting or back here Monday.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
"AACR2 Compatible" Headings
This notice from the Cataloging Policy and Support Office was seen on the SLA catalog email list.
The Cataloging Policy and Support Office (CPSO), Library of Congress, has mounted on the Acquisitions and Bibliographic Access (ABA) Web site a PDF file containing an introductory statement and several draft revisions to Library of Congress Rule Interpretations (LCRI) that provide guidelines for a more relaxed policy in dealing with "AACR2 compatible" headings. This document may be retrieved directly from the ABA Web site as the first item under General, Descriptive Cataloging or through the URL. CPSO would like comments from the library community by close of business, April 23, 2007, so that the resulting revisions may be prepared for the next update of LCRI in May. Comments, as noted in the introductory statement should be sent to cpso@loc.gov.Authority
Labels:
LC,
Name authority records
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Metadata for All Memory Institutions
Metadata for All: Descriptive Standards and Metadata Sharing across Libraries, Archives and Museums by Mary W. Elings and Günter Waibel appears in the March issue of First Monday
Integrating digital content from libraries, archives and museums represents a persistent challenge. While the history of standards development is rife with examples of cross-community experimentation, in the end, libraries, archives and museums have developed parallel descriptive strategies for cataloguing the materials in their custody. Applying in particular data content standards by material type, and not by community affiliation, could lead to greater data interoperability within the cultural heritage community.In making this argument, the article demystifies metadata by defining and categorizing types of standards, provides a brief historical overview of the rise of descriptive standards in museums, libraries and archives, and considers the current tensions and ambitions in making descriptive practice more economicMetadata
Labels:
Metadata
Monday, March 19, 2007
DeLange Conference on Emerging Libraries
Rice University recently had the The DeLange Conference on Emerging Libraries. The talks were recorded and are available for downloading.
Libraries
Libraries
Labels:
Libraries
Users and Uses of Bibliographic Data Meeting
There is a Brief Meeting Summary of the Users and Uses of Bibliographic Data Meeting held March 8, 2007 at Mountain View, CA now available.
The purpose of this first public meeting of the Working Group is to gain insight into the requirements of the bibliographic record and bibliographic control in the context of users and usage. The following brief summary of the Users and Uses Meeting highlights particularly relevant portions of some presentations and recurring themes, as well as some more specific requests for change. Fuller documentation will be prepared as part of the Working Group’s final report.Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging
Sunday, March 18, 2007
SLA Talk
I've posted the text to my talk for the SLA Texas Chapter meeting, this coming Friday. Any suggestions welcomed.Here are the slides.
SLA
SLA
Labels:
SLA
Thursday, March 15, 2007
Koha and Google
Exciting news from LibLime, the Koha support company.
I’m excited to announce that LibLime has been selected as a mentoring organization for the Google Summer of Code program. Google Summer of Code offers student developers stipends to write code for various open source projects.Some of the area suggested are:
- Creation of CDS/ISIS Migration to Koha ToolkitImprove Kartouche for Koha Translation ManagerImprove Koha Unicode SupportImprove Koha WorldmapImprove Koha Documentation/Online HelpImprove Koha Cataloging InterfaceImprove Koha Report WizardTool to build 'map' of shelvesOpenShareTags
Labels:
ILS,
Koha,
Open Source
Serials Cataloging Paper
Catalog/Cataloging Changes and Web 2.0 Functionality: New Directions for Serials by Rebecca Kemp will be published in The Serials Librarian later this year.
This article presents an overview of some of the important recent developments in cataloging theory and practice and online catalog design. Changes in cataloging theory and practice include the incorporation of the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records principles into catalogs, the new Resource Description and Access cataloging manual, and the new CONSER Standard Record. Web 2.0 functionalities and advances in search technology and results displays are influencing online catalog design. The paper ends with hypothetical scenarios in which a catalog, enhanced by the developments described, fulfills the tasks of finding serials articles and titles.Cataloging
Labels:
Cataloging,
Serials
Photo Metadata
MS Windows users may be interested in this download that allows editing photographic metadata within Windows Explorer, Microsoft Photo Info.
Metadata
Microsoft Photo Info allows photographers to add, change and delete common "metadata" properties for digital photographs from inside Windows Explorer.When installed, a new "Photo Info" item appears on the context menu for files selected in Windows Explorer. To use, simply select one or more image files, right-click and choose "Photo Info" to open the Photo Info properties editor. You can edit metadata for files individually, or all together as a batch. Photo Info reads and writes metadata in IPTC and XMP formats (depending on file type). It also provides enhanced "hover tips" and additional sort properties for digital photographs in Windows Explorer.Seen on the Travelin' Librarian.
Metadata
Labels:
Metadata
Tuesday, March 13, 2007
My Next Talk
SLA Texas Chapter Spring Meeting
Friday, March 23, 2007
University of Houston's Rockwell Pavilion
This year's meeting is a spotlight on Innovation. We have a diverse topic line-up to stimulate innovative strategies that can be implemented in your library/research center.
Speakers
Joanie Oliver, Executive Partner and founder of Iconitel, Inc. - this session is sure to supply even the most experienced content buyer with effective strategies for purchasing, managing and implementing research information contracts. Since starting her career working for Dialog a Thomson company in 1992, she has gained a unique perspective and knowledge of managing and marketing information.
Carol Simpson, associate professor at the School of Library and Information Sciences at the University of North Texas, will speak on copyright in the special/corporate library environment. She will give an overview of copyright law, recent court cases and the importance of mitigating copyright liability.
Keith DeWeese, taxonomy consultant for Dow Jones, will give an overview of taxonomy development and will also speak on innovative approaches to incorporating taxonomies and other controlled vocabularies into various information management scenarios.
Panel Discussion featuring our own Chapter Members:
Online Registration
Price includes continental breakfast, lunch, and closing reception
SLA Members $40
Non-Members $60
SLA Members (between jobs) $15
Students or Retirees $15
Agenda
8:00 - 8:45 Registration and Breakfast
8:45 - 9:00 Welcome by Marcia Schemper-Carlock, Texas Chapter President
9:00 - 10:30 Panel Discussion
Greg Lambert, King & Spalding, LLP
David Bigwood, Lunar & Planetary Institute
Sandy Miller, Southern Methodist University
Marcia Schemper-Carlock, Verizon
10:30 - 10:50 Break and Networking
10:50 - 11:50 Dr. Carol Simpson - Copyright
12:00 - 1:00 Lunch - Keith DeWeese - Taxonomy Development (sponsored by Factiva
1:00 - 2:20 Joanie Olivier - Innovative Negotiation Strategies for Purchasing Information Resource Contracts (sponsored by EBSCO)
2:20 - 2:40 Break and Networking
2:40 - 4:00 Joanie Olivier - Innovative Marketing Strategies
4:00 - 4:45 Wrap Up, Awards, Chapter Business
5:00 - 6:30 Wine & Cheese Reception
Directions
The meeting will be at the Elizabeth D. Rockwell Pavilion, located on the second floor (Room 214A) of the M.D. Anderson Library, which is the main library at the University of Houston (central campus). Map
Elizabeth D. Rockwell Pavilion
M.D. Anderson Library, 2nd Level
114 University Libraries
Houston, TX 77204-2000
SLA
Friday, March 23, 2007
University of Houston's Rockwell Pavilion
This year's meeting is a spotlight on Innovation. We have a diverse topic line-up to stimulate innovative strategies that can be implemented in your library/research center.
Speakers
Joanie Oliver, Executive Partner and founder of Iconitel, Inc. - this session is sure to supply even the most experienced content buyer with effective strategies for purchasing, managing and implementing research information contracts. Since starting her career working for Dialog a Thomson company in 1992, she has gained a unique perspective and knowledge of managing and marketing information.
Carol Simpson, associate professor at the School of Library and Information Sciences at the University of North Texas, will speak on copyright in the special/corporate library environment. She will give an overview of copyright law, recent court cases and the importance of mitigating copyright liability.
Keith DeWeese, taxonomy consultant for Dow Jones, will give an overview of taxonomy development and will also speak on innovative approaches to incorporating taxonomies and other controlled vocabularies into various information management scenarios.
Panel Discussion featuring our own Chapter Members:
- Greg Lambert, King & Spalding, LLP - This law firm has developed a method for compiling articles and alerts published by their competitors. By taking that information, adding internal taxonomies, and pinpointing the distribution to those that benefit most, they have a better understanding of what their competitors are doing, and what can be done to advance the firm's position in the marketDavid Bigwood, Lunar & Planetary Institute - Based on the desire to provide on-going marketing to users, the Institute's library has generated a Homegrown Outreach plan that requires little support. Using simple free or low-cost tools, a weekly news page, RSS feed and podcast has been created.Sandy Miller, Southern Methodist University - SMU's Business Information Center has incorporated educational technology initiatives into the library. A primary benefit is that students may now start and complete their entire academic assignments within the library, from the first reference question to a polished presentation or podcast as the finished product.Marcia Schemper-Carlock, Verizon - Due to the increase in market research content and the decline of available staff time for processing content, this research team has implemented Northern Light's integrated search portal. The implementation provides end-users faster access to new content and greatly reduces the manual cataloging process.
Online Registration
Price includes continental breakfast, lunch, and closing reception
SLA Members $40
Non-Members $60
SLA Members (between jobs) $15
Students or Retirees $15
Agenda
8:00 - 8:45 Registration and Breakfast
8:45 - 9:00 Welcome by Marcia Schemper-Carlock, Texas Chapter President
9:00 - 10:30 Panel Discussion
Greg Lambert, King & Spalding, LLP
David Bigwood, Lunar & Planetary Institute
Sandy Miller, Southern Methodist University
Marcia Schemper-Carlock, Verizon
10:30 - 10:50 Break and Networking
10:50 - 11:50 Dr. Carol Simpson - Copyright
12:00 - 1:00 Lunch - Keith DeWeese - Taxonomy Development (sponsored by Factiva
1:00 - 2:20 Joanie Olivier - Innovative Negotiation Strategies for Purchasing Information Resource Contracts (sponsored by EBSCO)
2:20 - 2:40 Break and Networking
2:40 - 4:00 Joanie Olivier - Innovative Marketing Strategies
4:00 - 4:45 Wrap Up, Awards, Chapter Business
5:00 - 6:30 Wine & Cheese Reception
Directions
The meeting will be at the Elizabeth D. Rockwell Pavilion, located on the second floor (Room 214A) of the M.D. Anderson Library, which is the main library at the University of Houston (central campus). Map
Elizabeth D. Rockwell Pavilion
M.D. Anderson Library, 2nd Level
114 University Libraries
Houston, TX 77204-2000
SLA
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SLA
Friday, March 09, 2007
Lunar and Planetary Science Conference
Posts will be light and less regular next week. This is our annual Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Also, my podcast, news page and recent additions to the collection page at the LPI will not be updated next week.If you will be at the conference stop by the library or the Publishers' Exhibit and say Hi.
LPSC
LPSC
Thursday, March 08, 2007
MARC RTP RIP
It seems that the MARC Record Translation Program is no longer available. It's a shame when tools disappear.
MARC
MARC
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MARC
WorldCat Citations
Item records in WorldCat.org, WorldCat's open-Web interface, now include a Cite this Item link that provides bibliographic citations in five common styles: APA, Chicago, Harvard, MLA and Turabian.That was a nice feature on the RedLightGreen site. Glad to see it here.
WorldCat
WorldCat
Podcasting Tips
I do a weekly podcast for the Lunar and Planetary Institute (MPOW). Short, simple and easy. I do read a bit about podcasting looking for useful tips, here is an audio file that covers a new aspect, Using Format to Engage the Listener by Stacy Bond.
Although podcasters may savor the raw style of extemporaneous talk, Bond shares many pro-level tips to help ensure content is presented in a listenable way. By envisioning a timeline or arc for the show, podcasters can build an identity and create hooks to engage and stimulate their audience. Breaks should be designed to allow people a chance to catch up and stay clear on who's speaking and what's happening. Rhythms, repetition and certain milestones can reinforce the tone and trajectory of a show in order to keep listeners on track and well entertained within a familiar framework for audio storytelling.Podcasting
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Podcasting
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