Eric Hellman wrote:

> We need good global metadata catalog/registries. Which of today's
> catalog functions will require a local institutional catalog tomorrow?

I think this is an interesting question.

My opinion is that the libraries of tomorrow will have a distributed catalogue: 
some of it local, some of it non-local.

It makes sense to me that libraries invest in describing resources which are 
produced locally (i.e. as publishers, or institutional repositories), as well 
as in cataloguing resources which are locally appreciated in a distinct way. 
Institutions might just want to deal with a few facets of particular local 
interest, i.e. tagging resources according to some local vocabulary, and 
otherwise rely on other catalogues for their metadata.

As well as their MARC records, each library of the future will collect a 
growing variety of metadata about their holdings, lending histories, reviews 
contributed by users, clusters harvested from usage patterns, or from full-text 
transcriptions, etc, etc, all of which they will want to make use of in 
conjunction with other catalogue data. Some of this data may be of general 
utility, but other data will be local in scope (and privacy laws may prohibit 
some data exchange in any case).

These distinct information systems have to be easy to federate, efficient, and 
work transparently to users, so that institutions can confidently "walk on two 
legs"; relying on outside services for some data, while concentrating their own 
efforts on the areas where they can add most value to their users.

Con

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