Library Cataloging
RedLightGreen
RedLightGreen: What We've Learned Since Launch by Merrilee Proffitt appears in the current
RLG FocusRedLightGreen is a new service developed with funding from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Using some 120 million records from the RLG Union Catalog, RedLightGreen is optimized with specific tools to help undergraduates locate relevant and legitimate works for their research, check availability of those resources through a link to their local online catalog, and create proper citations for those resources in standard formats. The pilot test for this new service launched September 22, 2003.
Lots of changes since the launch. If you have not checked out RedLightGreen recently take another look. The article mentions Catalogablog, I'll need a new hat.
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Rip Redlightgreen
On November 5th the RedLightGreen service will end. It will be missed. RedLightGreen...
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Redlightgreen
Recent changes and improvements to RedLightGreen.New links to thousands of libraries -- now it's easier to check your library for books you find in RedLightGreenFirefox plugin -- you can make RedLightGreen one of the choices in your Firefox toolbarIt...
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Oclc
This has been reported already by Jenny on the Shifted Librarian, but now there is an official notice.The Open WorldCat pilot is a year-long initiative that makes library resources available from nonlibrary Web sites. The pilot aims to test the effectiveness...
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Redlightgreen
RLG's RedLightGreen (formerly known as the Union Catalog Project) is now online.To simplify record retrieval for Web users, RLG has adapted the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records established by the International Federation of Library...
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Redlightgreen
Tuna Breath is a 'blog devoted to the RedLightGreen project at RLG.Judith E Bush discusses the launch and analysis of RLG.org's RedLightGreen.com website -- recasting traditional bibliographic metadata for a world that believes everything should...
Library Cataloging