International and Comparative Librarianship

DEDICATED TO PIONEERS   INCLUDING:
S. R. Ranganathan, P. N. Kaula, R. N. Sharma, J. F. Harvey, D. J. Foskett, J. P. Danton, M. M. Jackson, etc.
This Blogosphere has a slant towards India [a.k.a Indica, Indo, South-Asian, Oriental, Bharat, Hindustan, Asian-Indian (not American Indian)].

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Excerpts from the "Really Modern Library" blog entry:

"The goal of this project is to shed light on the big questions about future accessibility and usability of analog culture in a digital, networked world."

"Our aim with the Really Modern Library project is not to build a physical or even a virtual library, but to stimulate new thinking about mass digitization and, through the generation of inspiring new designs, interfaces and conceptual models, to spur innovation in publishing, media, libraries, academia and the arts."

The blog entry also mentions "plans for a major international design competition calling for proposals, sketches, and prototypes for a hypothetical 'really modern library.' " The blog entry goes on to describe this competiton as follows:

"The call for entries will go out to as broad a community as possible, including designers, artists, programmers, hackers, librarians, archivists, activists, educators, students and creative amateurs. Our present intent is to raise a large sum of money to administer the competition and to have a pool for prizes that is sufficiently large and meaningful that it can compel significant attention from the sort of minds we want working on these problems."

For more info, go to: the really modern library



Info courtesy: Bernie Sloan.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Saturday, October 06, 2007

RANGANATHAN REVISITED: FACETS FOR THE FUTURE


ISKO UK meeting: Connecting communities: Content, knowledge, information: Same Difference?

Event Details:

5th November 2007
14:00 - 18:00
Venue
University College London
Sir David Davies Lecture Theatre (G08), Ground Floor, Engineering Faculty
Roberts Building, Torrington Place, WC1E 7JE

Programme

14:00
Vanda Broughton Facet analysis as a fundamental theory of knowledge organization
14:40
Claudio Gnoli ‘Classic’ vs. 'freely' faceted classification
15:20
Jan Wyllie
Simon Eaton
Faceted classification as an intelligence analysis tool
16:00
Tea/coffee
16:30
Factiva Faceted Categorisation for the corporate desktop
Visualisation and interaction using metadata to enhance user experience
17:15
Aduna AutoFocus: An Open-source Facet-Driven Enterprise Search Solution
18:00
Networking, wine & nibbles

Click here for more Info

Labels: , , , , , , , ,

Sunday, September 02, 2007

Library ditches microfilm in favour of RIAs

By: Briony Smith
ComputerWorld Canada (30 Aug 2007)
Nestled up in the northern interior of British Columbia, even the small town of Terrace isn’t untouched by the rich Internet applications trend — the local public library has recently recreated its newspaper archiving system into a digital version that’s getting rave reviews. continue reading

When Willings Multimedia needed help building an interactive web-based library for the Terrace Public Library in British Columbia, Canada, they contacted Integration New Media (INM). The two companies worked together to build the “Eleanor Muehle Newspaper Archive”, a dynamic and interactive web application that allows users of all ages and technical capabilities to search through and read newspapers online.


The image “http://www.inm.com/gallery/galleryItems/1179/simage1.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors. The image “http://www.inm.com/gallery/galleryItems/1179/simage2.jpg” cannot be displayed, because it contains errors.

Labels: , , , , ,

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Demise of the Local Catalog or The OPAC Reborn?


  • Demise of the Local Catalog, by Roy Tenant***
  • The OPAC Reborn.(Online Public Access Catalog at libraries)
  • The Future of Cataloging, by Peachy
  • Thought for the day - Now if we had the semantic web or enough catalogers

    ***My 2 cent:
    This article is an excellent eye opener, and makes a good feed-forward. Thanks to John Jaeger for sharing this info.

    I agree with Roy that libraries must pack off their catalogs (I packed it too, and seen so many). But moving with a Google model (a free search-ware mindset) is probably not going to make the library catalog that useful and value-added, on the face of umpteen competitors; and a searchology (as Google calls it) that comes with a package minus the controlled vocabulary (with whatever name one likes it, LC, Meta tags, etc.).

    I think there must be an effort to upgrade our mindset of catalogoing / cataloguing and fine tune it with our own foundations of librarianship and user-friendly ventures.

    I have been working on the idea of visual catalogs, that started with the idea of an indepth, as well as, localized cataloging spirit of my professional inspirer: Sanford Berman.

    FYI. I have compiled a webliography on this theme. Would appreciate your comments on this dimension. The link to my webliography is:
  • Labels: , , , , , , , , ,