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Scenario 1

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on September 15, 2006 at 1:09:05 pm
 

Scenario 1 - Catalog as Inventory

 

 

 

Introduction

We know that information resource discovery takes place in a lot of different ways. It is possible (probable?) that the library catalog is not the primary information discovery resource for most users. In this scenario (which anyone can edit, hint, hint), the library catalog is mainly an inventory of owned, licensed, and otherwise available items managed by the library. Searching of the library catalog is for the most part a machine-to-machine activity. Users may or may not encounter a library catalog interface, because the catalog works in the background to provide access through other services. It looks basically like:

Although the catalog may need to have some direct search capabilities, the user interface is generally pushed out to other services that are closer to the user's actual workspace, such as courseware systems, web search engines, and actual documents.

 

One thing this does is that it takes some of the pressure off of library cataloging to provide rich topical discovery. What the library catalog does best is known item and related item (series, etc.) discovery. However, in this scenario accurate identification of resources across different systems is very important. The creation of machine-to-machine identification metadata could be separate from the identification provided by library catalog. Library cataloging, however, will be useful for displays and as downloadable citation information.

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