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Publicada porSantiago Placido Modificado hace 10 años
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Descubrimiento, entrega de información y gestión:
Tendencias Actuales de las Nuevas Tecnologías de las Bibliotecas Marshall Breeding Independent Consultant, Author, Founder and Publisher, Library Technology Guides 27 August 2014 InnovaTics
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Abstract Explore the realm of index-based discovery services oriented more to academic libraries, including Ex Libris Primo, ProQuest Summon, EBSCO Discovery Service, and OCLC WorldCat Discovery Service. An update on the Open Discovery Initiative and the recent movement toward more participation by content providers. Discuss technologies better suited for public libraries that have more concerns for customer engagement, access to print and electronic books, with less stringent requirements for article-level discovery of scholarly resources. The role of open source discovery interfaces such as VuFind and Blacklight. The status of the new generation of library services platforms. The presentation will provide highlights of global library automation industry, with a focus on the players and trends in Latin America Based on “Library Systems Report 2014”
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Una perspectiva internacional
La forma en la que las bibliotecas desarrollan e implementan sus estrategias tecnológicas dependerá de su situación económica y del acceso a los recursos relacionados, incluyendo la red y la infraestructura informática, Internet de banda ancha, y el nivel de interés y la capacidad de sus usuarios para aprovechar los servicios informáticos y basadas en Web, así como otros factores. (InnovaTICs 2011) How libraries develop and implement their technology strategies must be informed by their economic situation and their access to related resources, including network and computing infrastructure, Internet bandwidth, and the level of interest and ability for their users to take advantage of computer and Web-based services and many other factors. How libraries develop and implement their technology strategies must be informed by their economic situation and their access to related resources, including network and computing infrastructure, Internet bandwidth, and the level of interest and ability for their users to take advantage of computer and Web-based services and many other factors.
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Global perspective Libraries all over the world share much in common in the services they provide to their communities Values to provide high-quality content resources Each global region has its own unique character Available resources vary Technology must be sensitive to those differences
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Library Technology Guides
librarytechnology.org
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Recursos en “Library Technology Guides”
Noticias de actualidad sobre la biblioteca orientada a tecnologías, productos, y las organizaciones “GuidePosts” Blog de Marshall “libraries.org”: directorio internacional de bibliotecas y de las tecnologías que utilizan El texto completo de muchos artículos relacionados con la tecnología de la biblioteca Incluyendo artículos de Marshall, informes y presentaciones Directorio de organizaciones que ofrecen productos para la automatización de la biblioteca Servicios de notificación: Web, , RSS, Twitter
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Chile
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Mergers and Acquisitions
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Library Technology Industry Reports
American Libraries Library Journal 2013: Rush to Innovate 2012: Agents of Change 2011: New Frontier 2010: New Models, Core Systems 2009: Investing in the Future 2008: Opportunity out of turmoil 2007: An industry redefined 2006: Reshuffling the deck 2005: Gradual evolution 2004: Migration down, innovation up 2003: The competition heats up 2002: Capturing the migrating customer 2014: Strategic Competition and Cooperation
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Library Systems Report 2014
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Library Systems Report 2014 Spanish
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Library Systems Report 2014 Arabic
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Library Systems Report Tables
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Broad Industry Trends Continued Consolidation
International companies increasingly dominate in a growing set of international regions Discovery services now routine infrastructure in academic libraries New Generation systems becoming better established New and existing systems shifting to hosted or SaaS deployment Subscription-based technology infrastructure
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Latin American Industry Trends
International companies target well-funded libraries As libraries develop, many move to systems from international providers Many operate through regional distributors Local systems and open source dominate smaller and less well funded libraries Cloud technologies often less well suited Bandwidth, annual subscription costs
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The Evolution of Library Resource Discovery
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Challenge: More integrated approach to information and service delivery
Library Web sites offer a menu of unconnected silos: Books: Library OPAC (ILS online catalog module) Search the Web site Articles: Aggregated content products, e-journal collections OpenURL linking services E-journal finding aids (Often managed by link resolver) Subject guides (e.g. Springshare LibGuides) Local digital collections ETDs, photos, rich media collections Metasearch engines Discovery Services – often just another choice among many All searched separately Compare to Amazon.com where a very complex business environment is presented seamlessly.
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Online Catalog Scope of Search
ILS Data Online Catalog Search: Scope of Search Books, Journals, and Media at the Title Level Not in scope: Articles Book Chapters Digital objects Web site content Etc. Search Results
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Discovery from Local to Web-scale
Initial products focused on technology Mostly locally-installed software Current phase is focused on pre-populated indexes that aim to deliver Web-scale discovery
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Web-scale Index-based Discovery
ILS Data Web-scale Index-based Discovery (2009- present) Digital Collections Search: Web Site Content Institutional Repositories Search Results Aggregated Content packages Consolidated Index Profile of Library Subscriptions Open Access … E-Journals Usage-generated Data Customer Profile Reference Sources Pre-built harvesting and indexing
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Open source in Discovery
Flexible and powerful open source interfaces: VuFind (php-based) Blacklight (Ruby on Rails) No open access discovery index Hybrid model: Open source interface + Commercial Index
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Bento Box Discovery Model
Aggregated Content packages Search: Open Access ILS Data VuFind / Blacklight E-Journals Consolidated Index Search Results Web Site Content Digital Collections Institutional Repositories Pre-built harvesting and indexing
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Biblioteca Nacional de Universidad de Chile
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Challenge for Relevancy
Technically feasible to index hundreds of millions or billions of records through Lucene or SOLR Difficult to order records in ways that make sense Many fairly equivalent candidates returned for any given query Must rely on use-based and social factors to improve relevancy rankings
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Socially-powered discovery
Leverage use data to increase effectiveness of discovery Usage data can identify important or popular materials to inform relevancy engines Identify related materials that may not otherwise be uncovered through keyword matching Be careful to avoid introducing bias loops
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Evaluating Index-based Discovery Services
Intense competition: how well the index covers the body of scholarly content stands as a key differentiator Difficult to evaluate based on numbers of items indexed alone. Important to ascertain now your library’s content packages are represented by the discovery service. Important to know what items are indexed by citation and which are full text Important to know whether the discovery service favors the content of any given publisher
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Library Perspective Strategic investments in collection materials: print, digital, and electronic Strategic investments in Discovery Solutions to provide access to their collections Expect comprehensive representation of resources in discovery indexes Need to be able to evaluate the coverage and performance of competing discovery models
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Update on the NISO Open Discovery Initiative
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ODI context Facilitate a healthy ecosystem among discovery service providers, libraries and content providers
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Balance of Constituents
Libraries Publishers Service Providers Sara Brownmiller, University of Oregon Marshall Breeding, Vanderbilt University Jamene Brooks-Kieffer, Kansas State University Lucy Harrison, College Center for Library Automation (D2D liaison/observer) Laura Morse, Harvard University Ken Varnum, University of Michigan Michele Newberry Lettie Conrad, SAGE Publications Roger Schonfeld, ITHAKA/JSTOR/Portico Jeff Lang, Thomson Reuters Linda Beebe, American Psychological Assoc Aaron Wood, Alexander Street Press Jenny Walker, Ex Libris Group John Law, Serials Solutions Michael Gorrell, EBSCO Information Services David Lindahl, University of Rochester (XC) Jeff Penka, OCLC (D2D liaison/observer)
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ODI deliverables Standard vocabulary NISO Recommended Practice:
Data format & transfer Communicating content rights Levels of indexing, content availability Linking to content Usage statistics Evaluate compliance Inform and Promote Adoption
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ODI Timeline Milestone Target Date Status June 2014
Appointment of working group Dec 2011 Approval of charge and initial work plan Mar 2012 Completion of information gathering Jan 2013 Completion of initial draft Jun 2013 Completion of final draft Sep 2013 Public Review Period commences NISO Publishes Recommended Practice June 2014
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E-Books in Libraries Academic Libraries focus on chapter-level access for reference and research Public Libraries aim to provide full lending and reading experience Critical for libraries to master e-books as they gain more prominent place in general society
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Challenges for library automation
Provide the same types of management control for e- books as other collection component Acquisitions: select and acquire materials from multiple providers Cataloging: High-quality descriptive metadata Electronic copies appropriately aligned with those in print or other media Circulation: Integrated with other media. Option to lend e-reader devices Discovery Integrated with all other formats Unified environment for content delivery
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E-Book Integration Model
Aggregated Content packages Search: ILS Data Library Catalog Index Search Results Web Site Content Digital Collections Authentication Checkout - Download External E-Book Lending Service Local E-book Repository Discovery
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Trends in Management of Library Resources
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Dynamic Library Environment
Requires technologies responsive to the changes in play Adapt to publishing models and new formats that reshape library collections Generational Change in Technology Changes in metadata practices and standards
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Bibliotecas en la Transición
Cambio de lo impreso > electrónico Transición casi completa de revistas electrónicas Transición de libros impresos a libros electrónicos (e-Books) Las bibliotecas académicas están viendo la disminución de la circulación impresa Las bibliotecas públicas están viendo un aumento en la circulación impresa Necesitan mejores herramientas para que sus usuarios puedan acceder a colecciones complejas de materiales en diferentes formatos: impresos, electrónicos y digitales
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Usuarios de la biblioteca en la Transición
La nueva generación de usuarios de la biblioteca Autosuficiente - reacios a pedir ayuda Estilos de trabajo colaborativos Digital nativos – “digital natives” Se perciben a sí mismos como competentes para utilizar las herramientas de información sin la ayuda de los bibliotecarios o maestros Pero no son necesariamente competentes en la búsqueda de información.
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Los Cambios en la gestión de los metadatos
De priorizar la creación del registro, se pasa a la gestión a nivel de colección Metadatos muy compartidos: enfoque de base de conocimientos (broadly shared metadata, knowledge bases) Gran interés en el avance hacia la web semántica y abrir los datos vinculados (open linked data) AACR2 > RDA; MARC > RDF > BIBFRAME
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RDA Resource Description and Access
Major change relative to resources devoted to transition Minor impact relative to operational and strategic use of metadata
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BIBFRAME Emerged from the Initiative for Bibliographic Transformation of the Library of Congress bibframe.org Replacement for MARC (Machine Readable Cataloging), but broader in scope Encoded using RDF (Resource Description Framework) Major departure from MARC Today more conceptual than operational
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Transformación de las tecnologías
Arquitectura orientada a servicios Énfasis en las Interfaces de programación de aplicaciones Integración de las aplicaciones sociales en infraestructura básica Computación local a cambio de plataformas en la nube Nuevas expectativas para múltiples usuarios de software-as-a-service Soporte para todos los tipos de dispositivos de tamaño completo computadoras / tablet / móvil
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Tecnologías de la Computación en Nube (Cloud Computing)
Las principales tendencias en Tecnología de la Información Esencialmente la externalización del alojamiento y gestión del servidor Productos de automatización de la mayoría de las nuevas versiones con un cierto sabor de computación en la nube Depende del ancho de banda de Internet, que sea rápida y fiable (fast and reliable)
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Biblioteca de automatización en la nube
Casi todos los proveedores de automatización de bibliotecas ofrecen algún tipo de servicios basados en la nube La responsabilidad de la administración de servidores se mueve de la biblioteca a los Proveedores Basado en suscripción el nuevo modelo de negocio: El pago integral de suscripción anual Reduce la necesidad de apoyar la tecnología local
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Cambios en el escenario de automatización de bibliotecas
SIGB (Sistema Integrado de Gestión de Biblioteca) sigue siendo el corazón de la infraestructura Interés estratégico en tecnologías de descubrimiento fuerte necesidad de herramientas para gestionar los recursos electrónicos Tendencia hacia la gestión de recursos unificado
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Las tendencias en modelos de implementación de automatización
Mayor interés en proyectos de cooperación para reducir los costos de automatización y para aumentar el impacto de las colecciones Iniciativas regionales, estatales, nacionales y de infraestructura de automatización Ejemplos reciente incluyen Dinamarca, Irlanda, Orbis-Cascade Alliance Los SIGB independientes siguen donde la cooperación a gran escala no es posible
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SIGB de código abierto: Escenario Internacional
Fuerte interés en EE.UU., Canadá Principalmente a través de servicios de soporte comercial pagados Muy poco o ningún interés en Asia El interés sigue creciendo lentamente en Europa Cada vez mayor interés en el software de código abierto en América Latina
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Koha Originally developed in 1999 for small group of libraries in New Zealand, Horowhenua Library Trust by Katipo Communications, production use by January 2000 Gained widespread use in the United States around and has seen steady growth in use Wide international adoption Used in many thousands of libraries. 2,682 represented in libraries.org, with many large groups not yet registered. Dominant open source SIGB in Latin America
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Koha Worldwide
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National Projects to deploy Koha
Philippines: A systematic effort to install Koha in the public libraries sponsored by the state libraries Turkey: 1,200+ public libraries Spain: Koha-Kobli Argentina. CONABIP (Comisión Nacional de Bibliotecas Populares) Customized version of Koha: DigiBepe
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Evergreen SIGB de código abierto desarrollado por el Sistema de Bibliotecas Públicas de Georgia en los Estados Unidos Apoyado y desarrollado por una empresa llamada Equinox Software originalmente diseñado para grandes consorcios compose de pequeñas bibliotecas Se utiliza principalmente en los Estados Unidos y Canadá. No implementaciones en de América Latina Ver:
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Kuali OLE ILS being developed for and by large academic and research libraries in an open source, community based model Funded in part by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, managed through the Kuali Foundation 4-year project to build the software recently concluded Placed in production in August 2014 in University of Chicago and Lehigh University Recent announcement that Kuali will move to for-profit business model (August 25, 2014)
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Nuevas direcciones en el desarrollo de Automatización de Bibliotecas
Premisa fundamental: Impreso + Electrónico + Digital Lo impreso domina en los SIGB tradicionales y eso no se adecua al modelo de la realidad actual de la biblioteca y al futuro Las bibliotecas actualmente cuentan con un ILS núcleo, rodeado por módulos adicionales para manejar los contenidos electrónicos Nuevas interfaces de descubrimiento que sustituyen o complementan el módulo de catálogo en línea del SIGB Tecnologías en la nube ofrecen un potencial para nuevos niveles de eficiencia y cooperación
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Unificado de Gestión de Recursos
Ya no es sensible el uso de diferentes plataformas de software para la gestión de los diferentes tipos de materiales de la biblioteca SIGB + ERM + OpenURL Resolver + la gestión de activos digitales, etc, es un muy ineficiente modelo Es mejor tener una plataforma flexible capaz de gestionar múltiples tipos de materiales de la biblioteca, múltiples formatos de metadatos, con flujos de trabajo adecuado
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Sistemas Abiertos La apertura se ha incrementado como principal clave en las estrategias de tecnología de la biblioteca Las bibliotecas necesitan llegar más lejos con sus datos Capacidad para mejorar la experiencia del cliente y la eficiencia operativa La demanda de interoperabilidad De código abierto - el pleno acceso al programa interno de la aplicación abierto API - exponer interfaces de programación a los datos y la funcionalidad
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Library Services Platform
Library-specific software. Designed to help libraries automate their internal operations, manage collections, fulfillment requests, and deliver services Services Service oriented architecture Exposes Web services and other API’s Facilitates the services libraries offer to their users Platform General infrastructure for library automation Consistent with the concept of Platform as a Service Library programmers address the APIs of the platform to extend functionality, create connections with other systems, dynamically interact with data
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Library Services Platform Characteristics
Highly Shared data models Knowledgebase architecture Some may take hybrid approach to accommodate local data stores Delivered through software as a service Multi-tenant Unified workflows across formats and media Flexible metadata management MARC – Dublin Core – VRA – MODS – ONIX Bibframe New structures not yet invented Open APIs for extensibility and interoperability
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Library Services Platforms
Category WorldShare Management Services Alma Intota Sierra Services Platform Kuali OLE Responsible Organization OCLC. Ex Libris Serials Solutions Innovative Interfaces, Inc Kuali Foundation Key precepts Global network-level approach to management and discovery based on central data: stores WorldCat + holdings + Items Consolidate workflows, unified management: print, electronic, digital; Hybrid data model Knowledgebase driven. Pure multi-tenant SaaS Service-oriented architecture Technology uplift for Millennium ILS. More open source components, consolidated modules and workflows Manage library resources in a format agnostic approach. Integration into the broader academic enterprise infrastructure Software model Proprietary Open Source
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Development Schedule WorldShare Management Services Alma Intota
Sierra Services Platform Kuali OLE General Release in July 2011 ~200 now in production First ARL member in production in June 2014 329 libraries have signed for Alma. Over 200 in production Libraries in production by 2015 336 contracts completed, many libraries in production (~250?) Version 1.0 released Dec 2013 Version 2.0 underway Summer 2014 implementations at University of Chicago and Lehigh University
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Library technical infrastructure
Consolidated index Search Engine Unified Presentation Layer Search: Digital Coll ProQuest EBSCO … JSTOR Other Resources Self-Check / Automated Return ` API Layer Library Services Platform Discovery Service Stock Management Enterprise Resource Planning Smart Cad / Payment systems Learning Management Authentication Service
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Library Web Presence Presentation Layer Public Interfaces:
Integrated Library System Library Web site Subject Guides Article, Databases, E-Book collections Public Interfaces: Presentation Layer
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Convergence Discovery and Management solutions will increasingly be implemented as matched sets Ex Libris: Primo / Alma Serials Solutions: Summon / Intota OCLC: WorldCat Local / WorldShare Platform Except: Kuali OLE, EBSCO Discovery Service Both depend on an ecosystem of interrelated knowledge bases API’s exposed to mix and match, but efficiencies and synergies are lost
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Progressive consolidation of library services
Centralization of technical infrastructure of multiple libraries within a campus Resource sharing support Direct borrowing among partner institutions Shared infrastructure between institutions Examples: 2CUL (Columbia University / Cornell University) Orbis Cascade Alliance (37 independent colleges and universities to merge into shared LSP)
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Challenges and opportunities for Latin America
Selective adoption of global trends Some opportunities to acquire services from global providers Spirit of technical proficiency and innovation Exercise APIs of commercial systems Adopt open source solutions and participate in their development communities Create technical infrastructure to support unique character of libraries in Chile and Latin America
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