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Librarians, metadata, and search BCS IRSG Search Solutions 2009 | London | October 1, 2009 Alan Oliver, Ex Libris (UK) Ltd.

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Presentation on theme: "Librarians, metadata, and search BCS IRSG Search Solutions 2009 | London | October 1, 2009 Alan Oliver, Ex Libris (UK) Ltd."— Presentation transcript:

1 Librarians, metadata, and search BCS IRSG Search Solutions 2009 | London | October 1, 2009 Alan Oliver, Ex Libris (UK) Ltd.

2 2 Copyright Statement All of the information and material inclusive of text, images, logos, product names is either the property of, or used with permission by Ex Libris Ltd. The information may not be distributed, modified, displayed, reproduced – in whole or in part – without the prior written permission of Ex Libris Ltd. TRADEMARKS Ex Libris, the Ex Libris logo, Aleph, SFX, SFXIT, MetaLib, DigiTool, Verde, Primo, Voyager, MetaSearch, MetaIndex and other Ex Libris products and services referenced herein are trademarks of Ex Libris, and may be registered in certain jurisdictions. All other product names, company names, marks and logos referenced may be trademarks of their respective owners. DISCLAIMER The information contained in this document is compiled from various sources and provided on an "AS IS" basis for general information purposes only without any representations, conditions or warranties whether express or implied, including any implied warranties of satisfactory quality, completeness, accuracy or fitness for a particular purpose. Ex Libris, its subsidiaries and related corporations ("Ex Libris Group") disclaim any and all liability for all use of this information, including losses, damages, claims or expenses any person may incur as a result of the use of this information, even if advised of the possibility of such loss or damage. © Ex Libris Ltd., 2009

3 3 Librarians

4 4 Librarians are changing…

5 5 What’s in a name? “How did information staff at the University of Hertfordshire come to be called KBICs, not librarians?” Library & Information Update, September 2009, pp32-

6 6 How are librarians changing? Knowledge and Business Intelligence Consultants business analyst account manager specialist strategic adviser being an advocate for best practice Information Hertfordshire: Services and Solutions for the University

7 7 British Library Chief Executive Dame Lynne Brindley called on LIS pros to argue strongly for their role as ‘knowledge creation partners, educational innovators and distinctive contributors to creative digital scholarship and research.’

8 8 Evolution or revolution? 1.Cataloguer Before… Then… 1.Metadata manager 1.Knowledge and Business Intelligence Consultants?

9 9 Metadata

10 10 Metadata is changing…

11 11 Tags hold the secret of eternal life “On-tap tagging tools seem the perfect solution to make content properly searchable” Information World Review (IWR), September 2009, pp11

12 12 Why is metadata changing? Metadata was required to describe physical objects, which were not searchable by themselves Libraries invested time in creating metadata and authority files Users were taught (and were expected to know) how to search

13 13 British Library project Single sheet digitisation project 100,000 sheets of cultural heritage material 65,000 completed Collection Level Description Users will be able to contribute No metadata

14 14 Evolution or revolution? 1.MARC Before… Then… 1.User/automatically – generated tags 1.Full text searching?

15 15 Search

16 16 Search is changing…

17 17 IWR, September 2009 “LexisNexis set to release free taster content (Information giant acknowledges the power of general search),” pp1 “Search looks for big breakthroughs (Archana Venkatraman looks into the quest for smarter searches),” pp14

18 18 Why is search changing?

19 19 “Are we on the brink of a digital search revolution? A slew of search engines, answer engines and specialist resources have now crowded into the sector, seeking to end search-related frustrations.”

20 20 Library search

21 21 Library search is changing…

22 22 National Library of Scotland Voyager/AquaBrowser

23 23

24 24

25 25 University of Strathclyde Voyager/Primo

26 26

27 27

28 28 Primo version 3

29 29

30 30 But, change is a process In a recent Library Management System Specification: 83 Online public access (OPAC) and end user requirements These should include both simple keyword searching and the facility to use a full and explicit range of Boolean operators On certain OPAC terminals the library must be able to restrict functionality, and prevent users from accessing external resources

31 31 Evolution or revolution? 1.Card catalogue Before… Then… 1.Online Public Access Catalogue (OPAC) 1.Discovery to delivery solutions?

32 32 Librarians, metadata, and search ‘Challenging librarians to face and create the future’ Peter Murray-Rust, University of Cambridge, Department of Chemistry “For scientific research, libraries are probably becoming obsolete.” Day 2, Keynote, Internet Librarian International 09

33 33 Search has changed. Metadata is changing. Librarians have to change!

34 34 alan.oliver@exlibrisgroup.com


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