Interview
Library Cataloging

Interview


Stuart Weibel Interviews Tim Berners-Lee, July 29, 2003.
This interview with Tim Berners-Lee, Director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was conducted by OCLC Researcher Stuart Weibel. Tim agreed to discuss his perspectives on major trends in the information landscape and their impact on use and access to public information. This interview was conducted in support of the OCLC environmental scan of the Library and Information communities, developed for strategic planning purposes for OCLC and its member libraries.
It is good to see the Web tech folks and library folk talking. There is much we can learn from each other.




- A Couple Of Items Of Possible Interest
Gary Price from INFOdocket has brought a couple of items to my attention. First, Interviews With Five Metadata Experts. The interviews where held in connection with the DCMI 2011 Conference. The five interviewees are: Emmanuelle Bermès, Modern Art Museum...

- Identifiers In Public Namespaces
Inkdroid discusses The "info" URI Scheme for Information Assets with Identifiers in Public Namespaces and has some ideas on how it can be used by the library community.Now why would you *ever* want to express a LCCN as an info-uri? The LoC has spent a...

- Rlg + Oclc
RLG and OCLC are going to unite.Two of the world's largest membership-based information organizations have agreed to come together. The combined organization will offer an integrated product and service line, and will give libraries, archives and...

- Perceptions Of Libraries And Information Resources
The latest Talking With Talis interview is George Needham on OCLC's new Perceptions report and their Environmental ScanIn this 45 minute conversation, George Needham talks about the Perceptions of Libraries and Information Resources report released...

- Dublin Core & Learning Object Metadata
The article by Erik Duval, Wayne Hodgins, Stuart Sutton and Stuart L. Weibel Metadata Principles and Practicalities discusses the common ground between DC and LOM and the necessarily for interoperability and the Lego approach to metadata."The rapid changes...



Library Cataloging








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