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Fall 1994 Meeting of the Coalition Task Force
Agenda
FALL 1994 MEETING OF THE TASK FORCE
November 29-30, 1994
Walt Disney World Dolphin Hotel
1500 Epcot Resorts Boulevard
Lake Buena Vista, Florida 32830-2653
Phone: 407-934-4290
Fax: 407-934-4880
Highlights
Theme
- Managing the Networked Organization.
Purposes
- To promote discussion of key management issues arising from networks and
networked information resources and services in contemporary organizations.
- To promote understanding of networking technologies, and to encourage
participation in their future development and application.
- To promote understanding of the national and international policy environment
for networking and networked information resources and services.
- To provide an environment in which people associated with the Coalition and
its Task Force can share experiences, visions, and plans.
- To provide an opportunity for people associated with the Coalition and its
Task Force to discuss network and networked information policy issues and
initiatives.
- To provide an opportunity for representatives of members of the Coalition
Task Force, leaders of the Coalition working groups, members of the Coalition
Steering Committee, and the Coalition CEOs to identify needs, to formulate
priorities, and to evaluate results.
- To provide a special opportunity to interact with the CAUSE program and
membership.
Plenary Sessions
- Management issues that institutions and organizations are framing and
addressing in their efforts to seize the opportunities and to face the
challenges of networked information resources and services.
- Key developments affecting the development of networks and networked
information resources and services in the United States and the United
Kingdom.
- Internet security and privacy strategies, technologies, and issues.
- How technology pushes and is pulled by the changes affecting all aspects of
society.
- Update on Coalition priorities, projects, and strategies.
Project Briefings, Working Group Meetings, and Synergy Sessions
- Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
Schedule for Tuesday, November 29, 1994
8:00 am -- Registration and Refreshments [Southern Hemisphere IV/V and
Foyer]
A light breakfast will be available.
9:00 am -- Welcome and Overview [Southern Hemisphere III]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information, will call the Meeting to order and make opening remarks and
announcements.
9:15 am -- Plenary Session [Southern Hemisphere III]
Jerry D. Campbell, University Librarian, Duke University, and President,
Association of Research Libraries, Jack McCredie, Vice Provost for
Information Systems and Technology, University of California, at Berkeley,
Carla Stoffle, Dean of Libraries, University of Arizona, and Ann
Stunden, Director, Academic Computing and Network Services, Northwestern
University, will explore key management issues arising from the development and
use of networked information resources and services, giving special attention
to issues and strategies that characterize and promote effective working
relationships between information technologists and librarians and to ways that
the Coalition might facilitate progress in this area.
10:30 am -- Break [Southern Hemisphere III/V and Foyer]
11:00 am -- Project Briefings and Synergy Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues
related to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for
sharing information and for exploring perspectives.
Key Issues Affecting the Management of the Networked Organization
[Oceanic 1]
Jerry D. Campbell, University Librarian, Duke University, and President,
Association of Research Libraries
Jack McCredie, Vice Provost for Information Systems and Technology,
University of California, at Berkeley
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information
Carla Stoffle, Dean of Libraries, University of Arizona
Ann Stunden, Director, Academic Computing and Network Services,
Northwestern University
This session will provide an opportunity for in-depth discussion of the ideas
and suggestions presented during the opening plenary session, and for spirited
exchange with the panelists who participated in that session. Of particular
interest in this discussion will be prospective agenda items for the Coalition
and its program.
Group Electronic Site Licenses: Hopes, Fears, and Issues as Seen
From Many Sides of the Table [Oceanic 2]
Sean Devine, Vice President and General Manager, Library Division,
Information Access Company
Ronald Dubberly, Director, Atlanta-Fulton County Library
Eleanor Jo Rodger, President, Urban Libraries Council
Mark A. Tesoriero, Market Research Account Executive, Robert Ubell
Associates
Robert N. Ubell, President, Robert Ubell Associates
Many issues and concerns arise as libraries and vendors work to create new,
fair, and hopefully simple ways to price and distribute information in
electronic form. This session will examine potential goals and models for
establishing group site licenses as one possibility. It will give special
attention to the challenge of such licenses for public libraries, particularly
public libraries in large urban settings. The session will also provide an
update on the Coalition's Rights for Electronic Access to and Delivery of
Information (READI) Project, whose draft guide Negotiating Networked
Information Contracts and Licenses has recently been released for public
review.
Arts, Culture, and Humanities Priorities and Activites [Oceanic 3]
Charles Henry, Director of Libraries, Vassar College
This session will provide an opportunity to discuss priorities and activities
in the general area of how networks and networked information can be used to
advance the interests of the arts, culture, and humanities communities. Of
special interest will be the
National
Initiative for a Networked Cultural
Heritage (NINCH), an alliance that seeks the fullest possible participation of
the arts, culture, and humanities communities in the National Information
Infrastructure Initiative and in related developments around the world. NINCH
began just a year ago as a joint undertaking of the Coalition, the American
Council of Learned Societies (ACLS), and the Getty Art History Information
Program (AHIP), and it is now in the early stages of attracting additional
sponsors and supporters. The most significant product of this collaboration to
date is
Humanities
and Arts on the Information Highways: A Profile,
which outlines the case for providing all Americans with electronic access to
the Nation's cultural heritage and identifies the issues in and challenges to
making this possible. This session will provide an update on NINCH, provide a
briefing on related ACLS and Getty AHIP interests and projects, and consider,
using An
American Arts and Letters Network: A Proposal as a point of
departure, priorities and strategies the Coalition should adopt and pursue in
this general area.
Creating New Learning Communities via the Network [Oceanic 4]
Susan Perry, College Librarian, Mount Holyoke College
Course innovation using the Internet as a vehicle involves more than
technological innovation. For instance, many innovators report that the
development of their courses changed the way they interact with other
colleagues on campus, who became part of an instructional development and
delivery team. For this basic reason, the Coalition created its "New,
Networked Learning Communities" workshop, which it offered for the first time
at Estrella Mountain Community College on July 31 and August 1, 1994, and which
was co-sponsored by Educom, the Association of College and Research Libraries
(ACRL), and the American Association for Higher Education (AAHE). Ten
institutions participated in the first workshop, representing teams that have
been developing new learning communities through the integration of networking
and networked information into higher education teaching and learning
environments. Participating teams used new information technologies and
network-based applications to support and build groups of faculty and students
using collaborative strategies to improve both course content and the teaching
and learning process. Plans are being drafted for the second workshop to be
held next summer. This session will feature a videotape of the first workshop,
and will provide an opportunity to discuss how the workshop could be
improved.
Government Information Locator Services (GILS) [Oceanic 5]
Eliot Christian, Information Systems Division, U.S. Geological Survey
Avra Michelson, Digital Libraries Technologies, MITRE Corporation
Celia Shapiro, Digital Libraries Applications, MITRE Corporation
As a part of the National Information Infrastructure, the US Federal
government is establishing a Government Information Locator Service (GILS) to
help the public locate and access information. A global information locator is
also envisioned. Federal policy for implementation and a Federal Information
Processing Standard were released in October. The first part of the session
will discuss current status and provide practical help for information
providers to become GILS-compliant. Over the last year a team of staff from
MITRE developed a prototype GILS-compliant information locator for fifteen
government agencies. The second part of the session will introduce
participants to the key issues the development team confronted in building the
locator, and the chief lessons learned, especially as pertains to the
development of the data architecture, the community response to data population
efforts, and through the user evaluation of the application.
The Berkeley Finding Aids Project: Providing Access to Images
Through SGML Encoded Text [Oceanic 6]
Bernard J. Hurley, Director of Library Systems, University of California,
Berkeley
The
Berkeley
Finding Aids Project is a collaborative endeavor to test the
feasibility and desirability of developing an encoding standard for archive,
museum, and library finding aids. Finding aids are documents used to describe,
control, and provide access to collections of related materials. The first
task will be to create a prototype encoding standard for finding aids. This
prototype standard will be in the form of a Standard Generalized Markup
Language (ISO 8879) Document Type Definition (SGML DTD). Building a prototype
database of finding aids is the second objective of the Project. Available
hardware and software will also be evaluated. This session will provide an
overview of this specific project leading to a general discussion of finding
aid requirements and strategies.
Architectures and Standards Priorities and Activities [Oceanic 7]
Clifford A. Lynch, Director, Library Automation, University of California,
Office of the President
Coalition priorities and activities in the general area of concepts, models,
and protocols that enable the interoperability of networked information
systems, resources, and services will be discussed. Particular attention will
be paid to Uniform Resource Locators / Numbers (URL/Ns), Version 3 of the
Intersystem Search and Retrieval Standard Z39.50, the Text Encoding Initiative
(TEI) and its relationship to the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) popularized
in the WorldWideWeb. The relationship of these and other topics to the
Coalition's recently announced initiative to produce a white paper on
"Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval (NIDR)" (which is the subject of
a separate project briefing) will also be considered.
Networked Access to and Delivery of Dissertations and Theses [Oceanic 8]
David Billick, Director of Development, UMI
John D. Gaboury, Dean of Libraries, Mississippi State University
Wendy Pradt Lougee, Director, Digital Library Program, University of
Michigan
Steven Worona, Assistant Director, Information Technologies, Cornell
University
Since the Coalition-sponsored design meeting of October 1992, several
projects have been undertaken to facilitate networked access to and delivery
of dissertations and theses. As part of the Monticello Electronic Library
Initiative, the Southeastern Universities Research Association has proposed a
demonstration project entitled "Unlocking Research in Dissertations, Theses,
and Technical Reports Through Advanced Information Technology." The CUPID
(Consortium for University Printing and Information Dissemination) Project for
distributed printing will also enhance distribution of theses and
dissertations. UMI is taking advantage of re-engineered microfilming, imaging,
and printing operations to greatly improve delivery time of dissertation copies
and to ultimately offer affordable networked delivery as an alternative to
interlibrary loan. These services are being prototyped with the University of
Michigan in the "Dissertations Express" project. This session will review the
status of these initiatives and summarize near-term next steps and outstanding
issues.
12:30 pm -- Lunch [Southern Hemisphere III/IV/V]
1:15 pm -- Plenary Session [Southern Hemisphere III/V/V]
Toni Carbo Bearman, Dean and Professor, School of Library and Information
Science, University of Pittsburgh, will present her views on the Clinton
Administration's National Information Infrastructure (NII) Initiative and will
describe her priorities for the NII Advisory Council, of which she is a member;
Jim Williams, Executive Director, Federation of American Research
Networks (FARNET), will present a perspective on and provide a status report
about the transition from a NSFNet-based to a community-based U.S. Internet;
and, Derek Law, Librarian, Kings College, London, will present an update
on trends and developments in the United Kingdom, with particular attention to
the new funding initiative of the Joint Information Systems Committee
(JISC).
2:15 pm -- Circulation Break
2:30 pm -- Project Briefings and Synergy Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues related
to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for sharing
information and for exploring perspectives.
Key Developments Affecting the Evolution of Networks and
Networked Information [Oceanic 1]
Toni Carbo Bearman, Dean and Professor, School of Library and Information
Science, University of Pittsburgh
Derek Law, Librarian, Kings College, London
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information
Jim Williams, Executive Director, Federation of American Research Networks
(FARNET)
This session will provide an opportunity for in-depth discussion of the ideas
and suggestions presented during the after-lunch plenary session, and for
spirited exchange with the panelists who participated in that session. Of
particular interest in this discussion will be prospective agenda items for the
Coalition and its program.
Building the Digital Library from the Gound Up: A Collaborative
Effort [Oceanic 2]
Lizanne Payne, Executive Director, Washington Research Library
Consortium
Patricia Stevens, Consultant, OCLC
The Washington Research Library Consortium (WRLC) and OCLC have entered into
a research partnership to develop workstation software that will use electronic
imaging and OCR to convert existing local materials into electronic databases.
These resources will be accessible through OCLC's SiteSearch software and will
be available across the Consortium's Washington, DC service area Consortium
network (and, in some cases, across Internet). Two pilot projects are slated
for Spring 1995: a prototype electronic reserve system at George Washington
University and George Mason University; and, a database of images from George
Mason's American National Theater Academy archives. The universities are
working with WRLC and OCLC to build interfaces using WebZ, OCLC's HTTP-Z39.50
gateway software, and NCSA Mosaic clients. This discussion will highlight how
the networked environment and rapid prototyping tools facilitate collaborative
work. With the proliferation of information resources on the WorldWideWeb, is
it possible to extend beyond partnership into broader collaborative ventures?
Could a collection of HTML-based information navigation and retrieval tools
facilitate this broader collaboration?
Forging a National
Image
Alliance [Oceanic 3]
Paul Gherman, Director of Libraries, Kenyon College
Charles Henry, Director of Libraries, Vassar College
There are a number of critically important projects ongoing at present that
are alliances of different individuals, groups, or institution focusing on one
or more aspects of
digital
imaging, e.g., problems/challenges of technology
standards, copyright, resolution, mutlivalence, costs, applicability to the
curriculum, influence on methodology, and such. This session will bring
representatives of some of these projects together, pose some questions in very
broad terms, and consider forming an alliance (perhaps more accurately a
"meta-alliance") on a national (perhaps even international) scale. Questions
to be discussed include: what are the benefits of a very large alliance that
might include
museums,
universities, colleges, K-12 schools, cultural
institutions and individual artists, to name a few; how might such an alliance
be developed; what are the chief obstacles for a national alliance; what
might such an alliance look like; how might such an alliance be organized;
and, is such an alliance at all feasible. Panelists will include
representatives from the imaging projects of OCLC, the Library of Congress, the
Getty Art History Information Program, MUSE, and Eastman Kodak.
INforum: A Library / Information Technology Collaboration in
Professional Development [Oceanic 4]
Gerald Bernbom, Assistant Director and Senior Information Technology
Architect, Office of Information Technologies, Indiana University
Charlotte Hess, Director of Library and Information Services,
Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, Indiana University
INforum
is a collaborative program at Indiana University created by
librarians, technologists and information scientists to help meet the
professional development needs within these increasingly interdependent
professions. Now in its second year, INforum programs have addressed a range
of issues related to networked information and its increasing importance to
higher education. Some examples of session topics include: standards and the
management of Internet resources; research in electronic texts; usability and
user-centered design; copyright and digital media; and, the local impact of
the National Information Infrastructure Initiative. INforum also sponsored
"Networked Information and the Scholar," a nationally distributed video
teleconference, and helped develop the "Internet Librarian Conference," a
full-day educational program for over 140 librarians and information
professionals. This briefing session will provide an overview of the INforum
program, with discussion of key issues including: the need for professional
development; the value of grassroots initiatives and local focus in program
design; collaboration as a work-style; and, the role of library and
information technology administrators in fostering collaboration and local
initiative.
The Columbia Action Agenda: A Strategic Project Proposal to
Advance Electronic Scholarly Communications in Universities [Oceanic 5]
Douglas Bennett, Vice President, American Council of Learned Societies
Carol Mandel, Deputy University Librarian, Columbia University
James O'Donnell, Professor, University of Pennsylvania
Ann Okerson, Director, Office of Scientific and Academic Publishing,
Association of Research Libraries
The crisis in scholarly publishing (prices for journals through the roof,
cutbacks in acquisition of monographs, and debates about document delivery) is
very real, and it is already shaping the nature and possibility of scientific
and academic discourse. But on most campuses, the working academic still sees
only indirect symptoms and does not sense the true nature of the crisis. A
working group of thirty volunteers (librarians, university presses, and learned
societies with publishing programs) met on September 23rd at Columbia
University for strategic and tactical discussions about how best to influence
the development of scholarly publishing to favor the widest and freest flow of
information for the benefit of education and research. The result of this
brainstorming session was an action agenda and a longer first draft document on
university electronic publishing. These documents will be widely discussed in
the upcoming months, to explore the possibility of undertaking one or more
recommended projects.
CUPID Update and Demo [Oceanic 6]
Steve Worona, Assistant to the Vice President for Special Projects, Cornell
University
Carol Taylor, IT Services Department Group, Harvard University
CUPID is the Consortium for University Printing and Information Distribution,
an informal and open collection of universities interested in the distributed
printing over the Internet of finished, high-quality, production documents.
CUPID is a Coalition project, created four years ago by the Xerox University
Advisory Panel, receiving financial support from Kodak, Sun, and Xerox. In the
past six months, CUPID has evolved from a paper architecture document to a
successfully prototyped and demonstrated reality, named "Innovation of the
Year" by Xplor, International. At this session, representatives from Cornell
and Harvard will report on the recent flurry of CUPID activity and also provide
a live demonstration of CUPID, including a WorldWideWeb-based interface.
Existing and prospective members of the CUPID Consortium are invited to attend,
as well as representatives of any organization that might wish to become a test
CUPID publisher or printshop.
Networked Information Discovery and Retrieval (NIDR) White Paper [Oceanic 7]
Clifford Lynch, Director of Library Automation, University of California,
Office of the President
Avra Michelson, Digital Libraries Technologies, Mitre Corporation
Craig Summerhill, Systems Coordinator, Coalition for Networked
Information
The Coalition recently launched a new research initiative to explore
architectures and standards for advancing networked information discovery and
retrieval (NIDR) in highly distributed heterogeneous environments. The three
convenors of this session will author a white paper on NIDR technologies and
their relationship to existing and future networked data architectures,
standards, and structures. The white paper will focus on technical as opposed
to policy issues. The scope will be limited to exploring problems associated
with identifying, selecting, and retrieving resources and objects in a large
distributed network. The white paper will also provide a foundation for
subsequent efforts that will address other aspects of the overall process of
network navigation, including the training and support of network navigators.
This session will explore some of the issues that the white paper will cover,
and will provide an opportunity for comment on and input into the
initiative.
Scholarly Publishing Using the WorldWideWeb [Oceanic 8]
Stuart L. Weibel, Senior Research Scientist, Office of Research, OCLC
The WorldWideWeb (Web) has rapidly become the most popular means for
accessing networked information, but at this time specific disadvantages
compromise its usefulness for scholarly publishing. OCLC has developed a
process for delivering scholarly journal publishing into the Web without losing
the special characters, the richness of SGML indexing, and session-based,
Z39.50 information search and retrieval that typify many conventional document
retrieval systems. Documents are encoded initially in Standard Generalized
Markup Language and subsequently translated to Hypertext Markup Language
(HTML), the lingua franca of the Web. A hybrid Web server and Z39.50 gateway
marries the stateless model of the Web to the session-based idiom of Z39.50
operations. This system will be used to make Applied Physics Letters
Online, from the American Institute of Physics, available in January of
1995, with other journals to follow.
3:45 pm -- Break [Southern Hemisphere Foyer III/V]
4:00 pm -- Plenary Session [Southern Hemisphere IV/V]
William A. Ruh, Associate Technical Director and Director, Workstation
Systems Engineering Center, MITRE Corporation, will provide an overview of
Internet security issues and strategies, drawing upon the experience of MITRE
in hardening various Internet tools and technologies, like the WorldWideWeb and
NCSA Mosaic; Raman Khanna, Director, Distributed Computing and
Communication Systems, Stanford University, will provide an overview of
Internet user authentication issues and strategies, drawing upon the priorities
and plans of the Common Solutions Group; Peter S. Graham, Associate
University Librarian for Technical and Networked Information Services, Rutgers
University, will provide an overview of Internet content authentication issues
and strategies, drawing upon his work for the Commission on Preservation and
Access; and, David Y. Payton, Vice President, Processing and Networking
Services Division, Information Technology Association of America, will provide
an overview of Federal policy and legislative efforts in the area of network
security and privacy, drawing upon his experience with Clipper, digital
telephony, and related topics.
5:30 pm -- Reception [Southern Hemisphere III]
Enjoy complimentary wine, beer, and soft drinks and a light buffet along with
the company of your fellow Meeting participants. A cash bar will also be
available.
Schedule for Wednesday, November 30, 1994
7:15 am -- Registration and Continental Breakfast [Southern Hemisphere IV/V and
Foyer]
A breakfast buffet will be offered.
8:15 am -- Plenary Session [Northern Hemisphere Ballroom]
This joint session with the CAUSE Annual Meeting will feature Jennifer
James, cultural anthropologist, lecturer, writer, and commentator, who will
speak about the tremendous changes affecting all aspects of our society,
including higher education, and how technology pushes and is pulled by these
changes.
9:30 am -- Break [Oceanic Foyer]
10:00 am -- Project Briefings and Synergy Sessions
Small group briefings and discussions on/of projects, ideas, and issues related
to Coalition themes and priorities in order to provide a forum for sharing
information and for exploring perspectives.
Fair Use of Networked Information [Oceanic 1]
Kenneth Frazier, Director, General Library System, University of Wisconsin
- Madison
Brian Hawkins, Vice President for Academic Planning and Administration,
Brown University
The Clinton Administration's "green paper" draft report on intellectual
property rights and the National Information Infrastructure (NII) proposes to
add "transmission" rights to the exclusive rights of copyright owners. The
report also suggests that fair use is important only to meet the needs of poor
and disadvantaged people. The convenors will outline and discuss the legal
basis and public policy interest in preserving a much stronger doctrine of fair
use in an electronic environment. Ken Frazier will also discuss
Intellectual Property: An Association of Research Libraries Statement of
Principles, of which he is the principal author. Brian Hawkins will
describe Educom's work in this area.
A Center for Collaborative Learning: A Model for Supporting the
Library Without Walls [Oceanic 2]
Willis M. Hubbard, College Librarian, Gettysburg College
In a seeming contradiction, colleges and universities are extolling the
virtues of the library without walls while also refocusing from teaching to
learning. How will networked faculty and student customers become competent in
learning and effectively utilizing new tools? This session presents for
discussion a model of a "Center for Collaborative Learning" as an organization
and physical entity designed to support the library without walls. This model
is based upon: (1) new partnering of libraries, computing services, media,
telecommunications, printing and re-publishing, college stores, faculty
development centers, and commercial ventures, etc.; and, (2) new ideas about
inclusive physical facilities for many of these partnerships. It will also
consider the hypothesis that more, not fewer, customers will be entering our
libraries.
National Learning Initiative [Oceanic 3]
Carol Twigg, Vice President, Educom
Educom's National Learning Infrastructure Initiative's (NLII) goal is to
demonstrate how information technology can increase both the quality of
learning and the cost effectiveness of instruction on a national scale.
Launched in the context of the emerging National Information Infrastructure
(NII), the Initiative is advancing a vision of the strategic application of
information technology to the educational process. The realization of a rich
teaching and learning environment via the NII requires a major collaborative
effort by those with the knowledge, skills and resources to address the
technical, operational, economic and cultural barriers to its creation.
Institutions, organizations and companies participating in the Initiative will
advance this agenda by: (1) exchanging ideas in a program of collaborative
advocacy; and, (2) developing and testing scalable prototypes to demonstrate
the feasibility of the goal.
Working Together: A Planning Retreat for Library and Information
Technology Professionals [Oceanic 4]
Gerald Bernbom, Assistant Director and Senior Information Technology
Architect, Office of Information Technologies, Indiana Unversity
Meredith Butler, Dean and Director of Libraries, State University of New
York at Albany
Martha Fields, Director, Information Resource Management, State University
System of Florida
Over the past ten years, the roles and responsibilities of both librarians
and information technologists on university and college campuses have changed.
These changes have many root causes, but many have occurred in response to
technological innovations and new patterns of scholarly communication. Some of
the changes have brought librarians and information technologists into closer
contact, and, in some cases, blurred the lines separating their areas of
operation. To best serve the needs of the institutions that employ them, these
groups must work effectively together. This session reports on a new Coalition
program that is designed to support and enhance the synergy of those already
successful in working together and to provide assistance to those who continue
to struggle with their differences. The first "Working Together" retreat was
held in October, 1994, and plans are being made for subsequent offerings. This
session will also provide attendees with the opportunity to share their own
experiences with collaboration.
Describing Image Files: The Need for a Technical Standard [Oceanic 5]
Jennifer Trant, Manager, Imaging Initiatiave, Getty Art History Information
Program
Howard Besser, Visiting Associate Professor, School of Information and
Library Studies, University of Michigan
Archives of digital images are being created around the world. Each of these
is shaped by its technical chracteristics, yet the technological means by which
images are created are rarely recorded. Scanning technologies influence the
result of the image capture process. The source material scanned dictates how
much information is available for conversion. Color correction alters the
information presented by an image. Compression algorithms may introduce
artifacts. Each impinges on the informational value of the visual content of a
image file. This session will provide an opportunity for those who are
concerned about the long-term viability of digital image archives to come
together and define a strategy for identifying and describing the standard
characteristics of an image file. A working group will be formed to develop a
draft for comment, and a process for review will be formulated.
The Princeton University Electronic Card Catalog [Oceanic 6]
Eileen Henthorne, Assistant Systems Librarian, Princeton University
Sandeep Somaiya, Software Engineer, VTLS, Inc.
The Princeton University Libraries' catalog of pre-1980 materials has entered
the computer age through an electronically formatted card catalog. The catalog
will give users computer access to more than 6 million catalog card images
representing 1.75 million items. The electronic card catalog will complement
the existing online catalog of 900,000 items cataloged since 1980. The
electronic card catalog gives Princeton the largest image database of any
library in the world, as a result of this first-of-its-kind scanning project.
In addition to preserving and automating the card catalog, the project has
yielded greater speed and ease of use for faculty members and students
searching the pre-1980 materials. Forty workstations are located in Firestone
Library and in the 13 branch libraries.
CIC Virtual Electronic Library Status Report [Oceanic 7]
Charlene Mason, Assistant University Librarian for Automated Systems,
University of Minnesota
The Consortium on Interinstitutional Cooperation (CIC), also known as "The
Big Ten," is engaged in a two year project to develop the first stage of a
Virtual Electronic Library for the thirteen major research libraries in the
Consortium. In the first year, all of the online library catalogs were
connected using Z39.50 protocols. The focus of the second year is on support
of interlibrary loan to share the resources of the libraries more effectively.
The discussion will cover the history of the project, what has been achieved to
date, plans for the second year, and the "gotchas" along the way.
Cost Centers and Measures in the Networked Information Value-Chain [Oceanic
8]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information
The Coalition will soon begin gathering data for an initiative, which it is
undertaking with the support of the Council on Library Resources, which will
lead to a white paper on cost centers and measures along the entire
value-chain of productive relations and activities that link authors with
readers in the scholarly and scientific communication and publication
system. This session will overview the purposes and intended outcomes of
this initiative, and will consider the methods and materials that the
initiative will use to pursue those purposes and to achieve those outcomes.
10:45 am -- Circulation Break
11:00 am -- Plenary Session [Southern Hemisphere IV/V]
Paul Evan Peters, Executive Director, Coalition for Networked
Information, will moderate an update on Coalition priorities, initiatives,
and projects. Project and Working Group leaders will describe selected
initiatives.
12:00 pm -- Meeting Adjourns
CNI
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Washington, DC 20036-1109
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