scholarly journals National libraries project on CD‐ROM

1990 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 412-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Smith
Keyword(s):  
Cd Rom ◽  
Author(s):  
John Davies

The evolutionary struggle between the printed page, CD-ROM, online services and the Internet as media for publishing has huge implications for the national archive. Authors, publishers and the libraries that have current responsibility for the UK national legal deposit collection all have a consuming interest in the outcome of the government's Consultation Paper on legal deposit. Publishers want the least onerous extension of the law to new and particularly to electronic formats, which some see as an opportunity to reduce the statutory six copies for deposit. The copyright libraries see their status possibly being affected, whilst universities see a new and important role for themselves in electronic archiving. The government has stipulated a solution at minimum cost to the industries involved, and if the publishing industry successfully lobbies for a reduction in the number of deposit copies, the national libraries will probably have the strongest case for retaining their privileges. Similar tensions arise over access to information content and its use in electronic form, especially transmission and reproduction, tensions that are already present in the British Library's service provision and its alleged impact on publishers' sales. The concept of ‘fair dealing’ will clearly have to be redefined. These and other important issues are now being aired, perhaps with more goodwill and trust than 20 years ago, between the British Library, some leading publishers, and the Publishers Association. Extension of the national archive to electronic and multimedia works will be a huge project requiring significant new funding. Indications for the future are greater selectivity, a reduction in the number of copies required, and a more streamlined administrative process. A comprehensive archive is unlikely to be achieved other than by statutory means.


Author(s):  
Hope E.A. Clement

The International MARC Network Committee of the Conference of Directors of National Libraries was established in 1975 to address issues of the international sharing and use of national bibliographic records and continues to advise the Conference and the IFLA-UBCIM Programme. Issues that it has covered include the exchange of MARC records on tape, directly on-line and most recently on CD-ROM, the maintenance and promotion of the UNIMARC format and the means of ensuring the MARC creator agencies a fair return on the high costs of record creation while allowing maximum use of records by bibliographic utilities, commercial database providers and individual libraries. Future issues to be addressed include the future of MARC formats and the relationship of the high costs of creation of bibliographic records to standards used.


Author(s):  
Annika Salomonsen

In 1989 a consortium of the national libraries of Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal and the UK agreed to cooperate in investigating CD-ROMs as means a of distributing and using national bibliographic data. The project, which was divided into ten manageable sub-projects, was launched in January 1990. One major result is a draft specification of requirements for a common retrieval interface for bibliographic data, designed to match as closely as possible the needs of four user groups: acquisition librarians, cataloguers, reference librarians and end users. A second is the production of a pilot CD-ROM in UNIMARC, The Explorers, containing records from the national bibliographies of Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands and Portugal. Other major products are MARC to UNIMARC conversion tables, and a multilingual interface. Valuable if sometimes painful experience was gained during the project.


VINE ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 24-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Smith

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