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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 1 Portals and Delivery By Janifer Gatenby, OCLC PICA Delivery to ELAG, Trondheim, 9-11 June 2004
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 2 Potential Population Internet users http://www.internetworldstats.com/europa2.htm http://www.internetworldstats.com/europa2.htm –European Union44.2% of the total population –Japan44.7% –Norway50.0% –Switzerland59.6% –Iceland62.5% –Hong Kong63.0% –Australia66.6% –US67.6% –Sweden76.8% 739,721,856 users at February 29, 2004 Their expectations:?
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 3 Simple and Seamless Google –Simple search –Unmediated –Comprehensive –Ranked results –Full text access Don’t we all use it?
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 4 But Guaranteed Delivery? Active articles 27 months old – 87% (Science) Active web addresses 12 months old – 51% 48 months old – 13% (OCLC)
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 5 Portals – Promise Delivery Libraries via their portals can play an important role in delivery –Online and offline –With and without URLs –No matter where the item was discovered
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 6 For libraries to stay relevant in the world of provision of information, they need to make the path from discovery to delivery smooth. (Must bury the complexity)
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 7 The Complexity to Bury Electronic –Has URL or URLs or –Generates URL Uses or refers –Determines best sources Rights, costs, speed –Requests access Multiple protocols –Delivers to user URL direct, email, DD station, mail direct or to library. Physical –Knows holdings or –Finds holdings or –Refers for holdings –Determines / negotiates sources Location, agreements, speed, cost, availability –Requests / Transfers Multiple protocols –Notifies user Email, collect URL Locate Select Request Deliver
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 8 Access and Delivery Electronic access Physical access Electronic delivery Physical delivery Scan on demand Certificates etc.
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 9 Determining the Access Method Access electronically? –URL? –DOI? – send to DOI resolver –Or can an openURL (or type) be generated? Using ISSN or other identifier? –Does the user have access rights? –Or portal forwards to a link resolver?
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 10 Dynamic Linking Parsers for extracting openURL elements Templates for constructing dynamic URL Check date range against date ranges on each possible provider; user privileges Rank possible providers
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 11 Physical Access Behind the scenes distributed search to –Union catalogues, library catalogues, online bookstore, online antiquarian “Free” request to a CBS ILL database (e.g. NCC, GBV, Hebis) “Direct to profile” request to OCLC ILL Refer to supply service –e.g. BLDSC, Subito, CISTI, etc. Can be multi-staged process
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iPort ILL System OCLC ILL WorldCat Z39.50, SRU, HTTP/XML, HTTP/HTML OpenURL TCP/IP BER ISO ILL WorldCat GBV SMTP EDI ISO ILL Local Catalogue iPort and ILL systems Union Catalogue Local Union Cat Local Union Cat SRU, NCIP ARTEL BLDSC RLIN
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 13 Role of Library Directory Portal consults directory to determine –Borrowing preferences; preferred sources –Choice among possible suppliers Policies, conditions, charges …to increase the fulfilled rate, & speed delivery via fewer steps Current development in Australia, Canada, US Standardisation – IPIG, ISO 2146
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 14 Seamless = International –Discovering material –Determining supplierDirectories –Transmitting request Multiple protocols –Delivering materialCollect from web site, DD –Cost of shipping –Logistics of payment Clearing house, OCLC IFM –Copyright / Licensing –Losing control –Willingness / need Mary Jackson Barriers to International Lending http://www.cilip.org.uk/groups/fil/c2003c.ppt http://www.cilip.org.uk/groups/fil/c2003c.ppt
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 15 Evolution Combining reference service with delivery –Forward reference query coupled with access and delivery information Combining acquisition methods –Access, copy, loan, purchase Increase of scan on demand –Portal in the role of collection point “DD” as a chargeable library service –More than cost recoverable –Increasingly international
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Portals and delivery: ELAG, Trondheim June 2004 16 Thank you
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