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Technical Services 2.0: “Mashing up” traditional and new services Rebecca Kemp Serials Coordinator, UNC Wilmington ACRL/NY Annual Symposium 2007 “Library.

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Presentation on theme: "Technical Services 2.0: “Mashing up” traditional and new services Rebecca Kemp Serials Coordinator, UNC Wilmington ACRL/NY Annual Symposium 2007 “Library."— Presentation transcript:

1 Technical Services 2.0: “Mashing up” traditional and new services Rebecca Kemp Serials Coordinator, UNC Wilmington ACRL/NY Annual Symposium 2007 “Library 2.0: A New Social Model”

2 What’s a “Mash-up?”  Urban Dictionary: “A remix made by taking two different songs, usually by two separate artists, and combining them into one.” Urban Dictionary  Wikipedia: “a web application that combines data from more than one source into a single integrated tool... Content used in mashups is typically sourced from a third party via a public interface or API” Wikipedia Definitions as they appeared online as of 11/27/2007

3 Presentation Structure  Traditional Technical Services  What’s Hip and Happenin’? Some new OPAC models  Exemplars of Catalog 2.0  The larger information-storage / information- seeking context  What can we do to make the OPAC even better?

4 Traditional Technical Services  Acquisitions  Bibliographic Control (Cataloging)  Authority Control All of these continue in Technical Services 2.0, but with more services added...

5 What’s Hip and Happenin’? Some new OPAC models First of all, ILS vs. OPAC.  Emerging idea: Dis-integrated Library System ILS for business operations, inventory, and circulation Other program(s) for OPAC display What we want: standards-compliant, interoperable systems

6 New OPAC models, continued  What is wrong with the old OPAC? Clunky search interface; no relevance ranking; inability to narrow down results easily Not a social experience, personalized Lack of user-created content Information only about the physical holdings; lack of connection with web resources Lack of information about the cataloged items

7 New OPAC models, continued What’s right with new models “A more fruitful and delightful library catalog search experience.” -- Faiks, Angi, Amy Radermacher, and Amy Sheehan. “What ABOUT the book? Google-izing the Catalog with Tables of Contents.” Library Philosophy and Practice, Special Issue on Libraries and Google (2007) : 1-12.

8 New OPAC models, continued  Good search interface, relevance ranking; faceted search results: NCSU’s Endeca catalog

9 New OPAC models, continued  A social experience: user reviews, rankings; personalized: Ann Arbor District Library SOPAC

10 New OPAC models, continued  User-created metadata / authority control (tags): U Penn’s Penn Tags

11 New OPAC models, continued  Information about the cataloged items: TOCs, cover images, reviews: UNCW’s implementation of Syndetic Solutions, in development

12 New OPAC models, continued  Seamless integration of electronic content, connection to web, and perhaps more to come here: Queens Library AquaBrowser

13 Exemplars of Catalog 2.0  Add-on services to a catalog Del.icio.us tagging / PennTags / LibraryThing information Del.icio.usPennTagsLibraryThing Call number browse (see WNCLN or NCSU Endeca)WNCLNNCSU Syndetic Solutions TOCs, cover images, reviews Syndetic Solutions XC: EXtensible Catalog, in development. Open source software to make catalog metadata OAI- compliant; to index all metadata; make interface to search index XC

14 Exemplars of Catalog 2.0, continued  Del.icio.us in Thunder Bay Public Library

15 Exemplars of Catalog 2.0, continued  LibraryThing widget at Shenandoah Public Library

16 Exemplars of Catalog 2.0, continued New interface and search  Endeca ProFind, MediaLabs AquaBrowser, ExLibris Primo, Innovative Encore, OCLC WorldCat Local (beta at University of Washington) EndecaAquaBrowser PrimoEncoreWorldCat Local  Villanova University’s VuFindVuFind  Casey Bisson’s Scriblio at Plymouth State University (Formerly WpOPAC)Scriblio  Ann Arbor District Library SOPAC (Social OPAC) Ann Arbor District Library SOPAC  Koha and Evergreen (Georgia PINES) open source ILSs KohaEvergreen  Ungava (National Research Council Canada testbed) Ungava

17 Exemplars of Catalog 2.0, continued  Casey Bisson’s Scriblio at Plymouth State University (Formerly WpOPAC)Scriblio

18 The larger information-storage / information-seeking context  Google, especially Google Book SearchGoogle Book Search (AKA “The Competition”)  Amazon.com (Also AKA “The Competition”), LibraryThing Amazon.com LibraryThing  Open Library – meta-library (?) project incorporating OCA digitized materials, Google Book Search, in development Open Library  Open Content Alliance digitization project: incorporating materials in public domain, hosted by Internet Archive Open Content Alliance  A bigger WorldCat.org?WorldCat.org

19 What can we do to make the OPAC even better?  LC Working Group on Bibliographic Control report Watch for draft report: November 30, 2007 on LC website Final report expected January 9, 2008 Use metadata produced by publishers, increase cooperation between publishers, catalogers Establish FRBR structure; serials work-level identifiers Integrate user-created metadata into catalog “De-couple” components of subjects Encourage digitization of materials and integration of digital materials into catalogs

20 What can we do to make the OPAC even better? Continued  FRBR-ized serials...

21 Selected Sources  Bahr, Ellen. “Dreaming of a better ILS.” Computers in Libraries 27.9 (2007) : 11-14.  Faiks, Angi, Amy Radermacher, and Amy Sheehan. “What ABOUT the book? Google-izing the Catalog with Tables of Contents.” Library Philosophy and Practice, Special Issue on Libraries and Google (2007) : 1-12.  Library of Congress Working Group on Bibliographic Control. Interim Draft Report Recommendations. November 13, 2007. Available online at http://www.loc.gov/bibliographic- future/meetings/docs/bibfuture-report-nov13-2007.ppt.http://www.loc.gov/bibliographic- future/meetings/docs/bibfuture-report-nov13-2007.ppt

22 Selected Sources, continued  Markey, Karen. “The Online Library Catalog: Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained?” D-Lib Magazine 13.1/2 (2007). Available online at http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january07/markey/01mark ey.html. http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january07/markey/01mark ey.html  Pennell, Charley. A New Kind of Catalog. 2007. Available online at www.lib.ncsu.edu/endeca/presentations/200710-ncla- pennell.ppt. www.lib.ncsu.edu/endeca/presentations/200710-ncla- pennell.ppt  Rethlefsen, Melissa. “Tags Help Make Libraries Del.icio.us.” Library Journal 132.15 (2007) : 26-28.

23 Questions? Thanks for attending! Rebecca Kemp Randall Library University of North Carolina Wilmington kempr@uncw.edu (910) 962-7220


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