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From: | Douglas Irwin |
Subject: | [help-serveez] archbishop |
Date: | Fri, 29 Sep 2006 02:10:24 +0200 |
![]() He suggests that librarians are being similarly
bypassed by 'on-line journals'.
In its sober darkness it sits between two splashes
of red.
In his terms, the aura is that which is original or
authentic about a work.
It lists various publications.
Of course, this is one example of mixing ILS
functionality into another application. It certainly bears the traces of its
creation! We will watch to see what impact this has on traffic to library
services.
Nor is there a clear sense of requirement coming
through these various resources.
In its sober darkness it sits between two splashes
of red. And I think we can indeed see some of this.
We will watch to see what impact this has on
traffic to library services. Aura depends on the position of a work within a
tradition and its uniqueness.
Access is integrated nicely with Mirlyn, the online
catalog. OCLC makes this information available via an XML web service.
A couple of things caught my eye.
We will watch to see what impact this has on
traffic to library services. Most folks I know probably never use any of
them.
A couple of things caught my eye. These are the
services I tend to look at.
The need for an agreed service layer is growing.
Failure to properly curate means that investments are not maximised, research cannot
be validated or reliably extended, and may even result in data loss and incorrect
interpretation. He made an Optimus Prime Menorah! Of course, NCIP sits in this
space.
It will be interesting to see if they prove popular
enough to be given higher billing. Nor is there a clear sense of requirement coming
through these various resources. Here are two examples I was looking at
recently.
It was nice to see the 'auratic traces' left by the
staff at the University of Michigan on the scanned copy - the cataloger's marks, the
UM perforated stamp. I have been surprised over the years not to see it replicated
elsewhere.
In some cases, materials may be available in the
catalog, in others as separate resources. In his terms, the aura is that which is
original or authentic about a work.
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