|
Background
on DLF Electronic Resource Management Initiative
On 22 November
2000, Karen Calhoun, Director, Central Technical Services,
Cornell University Libraries, posted a message to her colleagues
within the ALCTS
Technical Services Directors of Large Research Libraries
group. Her message said:
Dear
colleagues,
As part
of Cornell's CORC
project, the CORC team began to describe a set of administrative
metadata fields that could potentially be useful to collection
development and acquisitions staff working with licensed
networked resources. In general these administrative metadata
fields would capture information like selector IDs, fund
codes, number of simultaneous users, licensing details,
evaluative notes, troubleshooting information, etc., etc.
Currently a Cornell library staff member, Adam Chandler,
is preparing a research
proposal for further defining what a database of e-resource
administrative metadata might contain, if and how the information
might be linked to bibliographic and holdings data, and
design and implementation issues related to building and
maintaining such a database.
I'm
aware that some of your libraries have made advances this
area of inquiry, and I'm guessing that some of you already
have working databases of this type. If you have, would
you please respond to me with a one or two-sentence description
of what your library has done and the name/email address
of a person that Adam might contact for further information?
Your help would be most appreciated. Happy Thanksgiving
to all, and thanks in advance for any advice you can provide.
--Karen
Tim Jewell at
the University of Washington responded to Karen's message.
Tim and I started a correspondence and quickly discovered
that we were engaged in very similar initiatives. We have
combined our efforts. This page is our common research log
on the Web.
- Adam Chandler,
1/12/2001
|