Transcript Document

State of Library Technology 2002
May 14, 2002
UCLA Digital Library
http://digital.library.ucla.edu
Who - What - Where - Why
Presenter: Curtis Fornadley, Senior Programmer/Analyst UCLA Library
[email protected]
Qualitative versus Quantitative
Who
Curtis Fornadley - Digital Library Architect and Technical Lead
Howard Bachelor - Digital Library Coordinator (and related duties)
Various Student workers - Creating digital content and Metadata.
Terry Ryan, Stephen Schwartz – guidance, support, management,
politics,budgeting, interface with other institutions etc.
Hannah Walker – Taking on project leadership role for LIS sponsored
Digital Libraries projects.
Brad Read – Oracle database administrator
David Leonian and company - Hardware issues and infrastructure
support.
Gloria Rom – any issues on Unix machines.
Darrow Cole – advisor on image processing
What do we do?
Infrastructure Projects - learning, design, implementation and
maintenance of tools for the support of the Digital Library. Including
Database, Application servers, data collection tools, Java, XML and
Oracle technologies.
Content Projects - Web based applications to search and present digital
content and metadata.
Project Type
Do We have it
Text
Image
Audio
Video
Yes
Yes
No, planned WQ 03
None planned
Content Projects in Production
Archive of Popular American Music (aka the Sheet Music project)
Last updated March 2002. Considered an active project. (S. Davison
will discuss)
Hoover (Thelner) Collection - A pictorial history of the UCLA
Westwood campus. A completed Image project. May be expanded in
the future if funding appears.
Nutrition Bytes – A digital publication containing the best papers
submitted by first-year medical students, on topics pertaining to diet
and nutrition. Last updated April 2002 (Updated annually)
The Drew Clinical Research Papers Archive. Document original
projects conducted by Drew/UCLA medical students. Could be
considered a pilot for the creation of a “Generic Working Papers
Repository”.
Current Content Projects in Development
IMMI – Index of Medieval Medical Images
Migrated metadata from MARC records into UCLA Core.
Create digital images from slides from various manuscripts.
New technologies: Dynamic sizing of images through Oracle
InterMedia Tools.
Diverse group of players: Kathy Donahue, Sara Layne, Rob Stibravy,
and… a Faculty member Inez O’Neill
Demo: http://digidev.library.ucla.edu/immi/search.jsp
Current Content Projects in Development
Comitatus – A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. An
annual publication of the UCLA Center for Medieval and
Renaissance Studies
A “model” text project.
Digitized versus Digital text.
New Technologies: Use of XML and XSLT.
Demo : http://digidev.library.ucla.edu/comitatus/search.jsp
Current Content Projects in Development
Architecture Urban Design (AUD). Digitized slide catalog
teaching resource. Great potential for take off - Faculty and
department interest. Could be considered a pilot for a “Campus Wide
Image Repository”. Pilot demo June 2002.
Campaign Literature Archive – Election materials distributed by
political campaigns from 1920 to the present. Developed prototype.
Work on a production version will resume in the Fall.
Other Areas of Work
• Development of project work flow (Sheet Music Project)
• Development/Refinement of UCLA Core database/data collection
• Work on developing Project Team building and project leaders Sheet Music and IMMI.
The Critical Path:
The demand for new Digital Library projects exceeds the current
staffing.
ExComm involved in setting priorities.
New Projects for the Future (Next 6 months)
Infrastructure - Upgrade Digital Library servers to new hardware
Infrastructure - Upgrade databases to Oracle 9i (Unicode enabled)
OAI Sheet Music Data Provider
OAI Sheet Music Harvester (Design, Build and Test)
Open Archives Initiative
Protocol for Metadata Harvesting
(OAI Version 2.0)
The Goal of OAI:
“to supply and promote an application-independent
interoperability framework that can be used by a variety of
communities who are engaged in publishing content on the Web.”
The OAI protocol facilitates metadata harvesting
Editors: Herbert Van de Sompel and Carl Lagoze
Cornell University - Computer Science
OAI Requests and Responses
OAI Requests and Responses use HTTP - “just like the web”.
But… All OAI Responses are valid XML
Two Classes of Participants:
Data Providers:
expose metadata about the content in their systems.
Service Providers (aka harvesters):
Issue OAI requests to the systems of data providers, and use the
returned metadata as a basis for building value-added services.
OAI Sheet Music Data and Service Providers
Why (In my opinion)
The Practical “Why”
The Digital Library is meeting the need of providing people immediate,
on line, access to content. This is in contrast to a finding aid model like
EAD or an online catalog like Orion2.
Applications are being developed with tools that aid in the use of these
materials when presented in a digital format.
The Intellectual Why
Digital Libraries are a process, just as Invention is a process.
The definitions and boundaries of what a Digital Library, or for that
matter what a Library is, are changing and growing.
A process does not have a final destination.
The UCLA Library must be a part of this “invention process” so that
when Digital Libraries become “commercially viable” UCLA is there
in the game.
Who Invented the Light Bulb?
A Brief History of the Light Bulb
1809 Humphry Davy - First arc lamp
1820 Warren De la Rue - First attempt to produce an incandescent
light bulb
1840 William Robert Grove - Lights an auditorium with
incandescent lamps
1841 Frederik de Moleyns - First patent for an incandescent lamp
1845 W.E. Staite - Second patent
Other inventors in between…
1879 Thomas Edison - Used carbon fiber to produce a lamp that lasts
for 13.5 hours.
and of course:
1893 Heinrich Gobel - Wonn court decision against Edison and
received credit as the inventor of the electric incandescent lamp.