You'd better include technical services folks (catalogers, metadata specialists, whatever you want to call them) in your collaborative group, since they are the ones who are most intimately acquainted with the content, various ways to manipulate it, what kinds of things it can do to display, and in some cases which things are impracticable (though possibly desirable), and which cool things might be possible (if only .....)
Janet Swan Hill, Professor
Associate Director for Technical Services
University of Colorado Libraries, CB184
Boulder, CO 80309
janet.hill_at_colorado.edu
*****
"For we are catalogers, and therefore the elect of God. To read is human; to catalog, divine." Charity Blackstock. Dewey Death.
-----Original Message-----
From: Next generation catalogs for libraries [mailto:NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of William Denton
Sent: Monday, September 20, 2010 1:57 PM
To: NGC4LIB_at_LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [NGC4LIB] Whiny and demanding; rude and arrogant; clueless and uninformed
I'm giving a talk with my fellow librarian Adam Taves in October at Access
2010 in Winnipeg: "After Launching Search and Discovery, Who Is Mission
Control?"
Here's the description:
| Reference librarians are whiny and demanding.
| Systems librarians are arrogant and rude.
| Users are clueless and uninformed.
|
| A new discovery layer means that they need to collaborate to
| build it and then the next step integrate it into teaching and
| learning. How should we (reference librarians, systems people,
| and users) work together to better exploit the possibilities
| of open source systems so we can focus on discovery and understanding
| instead of the mechanics of searching?
At WILU (a Canadian conference about information literacy), Adam asked
some IL librarians three questions:
1. What do you want from a search and discovery layer?
2. What do you want from your systems people?
3. What should they want from you?
What do systems people want from public services librarians? And what
should they want from you?
This subject has been discussed here before, and the issues crop up in all
kinds of threads, and I'll look through the archives, but all comments are
most welcome, especially from people that have been through a next-gen
catalogue/discovery layer implementation---especially if it went very well
or very badly.
Bill
--
William Denton, Toronto : miskatonic.org www.frbr.org openfrbr.org
Received on Mon Sep 20 2010 - 16:11:28 EDT