Tuesday, August 19, 2008

Semantic Web Podcast

The Simmons Graduate School of Library and Information Science has a podcast by Rober Wolfe, The Semantic Library: RDF in Practice. Some of the topics he discusses are:
  • SIMILE, Semantic Interoperability of Metadata in unLike Environments
  • Babel, Format Converter developed by the SIMILE Project
  • Longwell, A SIMILE demo by MIT Libraries
  • W3C Semantic Web Activity, Simple Knowledge Organization System
  • Open Archives Initiative Object Reuse and Exchange

‡biblios Released

LibLime announces the release of their open-source cataloging tool, ‡biblios.
At Code4lib 2007 you may have attended a presentation by yours truly about a new open-source cataloging editor initiative at LibLime called ‡biblios. In case you missed it, there's a video of the presentation available from: http://www.code4lib.org/conference/2008/catalfo

Over this past week we put the finishing touches on the project Web site and the .9 release of the ‡biblios editor.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Dangers in the Library

Who was prepared in library school for all the dangerous critters in the library?

Hebrew Script Tool

lc-hebrew-detransliteration allows you to convert from Library of Congress Romanized Hebrew to Hebrew script. Great for adding those 880 fields.

Work and Edition Fields

The Open Library has been doing some FRBR work on their records. They have been trying to decide which fields are work and which expression fields. Some end up as both. Not MARC BTW. They welcome comments.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

A Techie Looks at Libraries

Digital Web Magazine has an article on libraries, Getting The Most Out Of Your Library by William Hicks. Some interesting statemnents:
  • Think of the library system as something akin to the open-source movement before software.
  • You will not be happy with many library websites.
  • So you found the library catalog, fired off a search and found an item that sounds mildly intriguing. The result page probably didn’t have any real reviews of the book, it is doubtful there was a book cover, nor apparently any other related items. You’re most likely staring at a title, some notes on the author, a bunch of useless publication data, some subject headings, notes, and a string of letters and numbers. Amazon.com it is not. It’s not built for you the user. It’s built for the vendors, librarians, and their staff.
  • While you may not get instant gratification from a library, and few if any are really cutting-edge when it comes to their use of web technologies, there is something to be said for the diversity and quality of information they provide you in your daily development tasks.
WorldCat and the LibX Firefox toolbar are both mentioned.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Telescope Library Exhibit

Apply by Sept. 19 to host "Visions of the Universe: Four Centuries of Discovery"
Public libraries are invited to apply to host “Visions of the Universe: Four Centuries of Discovery,” a traveling exhibition developed by the America Library Association (ALA) Public Programs Office in cooperation with the Space Telescope Science Institute Office of Public Outreach and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, to mark the International Year of Astronomy in 2009. The exhibit will travel to 40 selected public libraries from January 2009 through December 2010.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Free Covers from LibraryThing

LibraryThing is making nearly one million book covers available for free. It is pretty simple coding to grab them. Thanks Tim et al.

Update 12 Aug. 2008 I just added 37 links to covers from a page and none of the items had covers in LibraryThing. One million might be enough for a public library, not so much for a research library. Oh well.

WorldCat Search API

Nice for members of OCLC, WorldCat Search API (Web service).
The WorldCat Search API allows your application to search the WorldCat catalog—which indexes the collections of thousands of member libraries around the world—and retrieve:
  • lists of bibliographic records, and individual records, for library-held items;
  • information about WorldCat libraries that have cataloged a particular item; and
  • direct links to those libraries' Web catalog records for the item, when available
Your application will allow users to discover books, videos, music, electronic content and more through WorldCat.

How the API works
  • Send searches in OpenSearch or SRU CQL syntax
  • Receive OpenSearch responses in RSS or Atom format
  • Receive SRU responses in MARC XML or Dublin Core
  • Receive MARC XML content for a single OCLC record
  • Receive geographically-sorted library holdings information (each including the institution's name, location and a catalog link) within requests for single records
  • Receive records in standard bibliographic citation formats (APA, Chicago, Harvard, MLA, and Turabian)
Who can use this tool.