Hmm...I'm not sure that a "find more like this one" link would actually work the way users think about it. In other words, instead of returning records for additional printings, translations, etc. of a specific work they will probably expect to get back new works related to that one in some way -- either through topic or genre or ? In other words, more like the functionality of OCLC's FictionFinder rather than xISBN per se. Roy
On May 11, 2005, at 6:19 AM, Eric Lease Morgan wrote:
On May 10, 2005, at 8:19 PM, Hickey,Thom wrote:
Here are some thoughts about what we might do next with our xISBN service (see http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/xisbn/ and http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/xisbn/technical.htm):
* ISBN to author/title * Adding 'distinctive' information to the response to help selection * xOCLC: take in an OCLC number and return the OCLC numbers in its FRBR work-set * xLCCN: do the same thing for LCCNs * xISSN: do the same thing for ISSNs * SOAP wrappers around everything * Expose it all via OpenURL 1.0
Any ideas about what you would use? Something else along these lines?
I see most of these tasks as examples/implementations of a Find More Like This One service. "I have this record that I like, now find more more similar to it." These services could be implemented in a number of ways:
1. A REST-ful target would be created in each library that could accept xISBN queries.
2. REST-ful URLs could be embedded in HTML files pointing to the services
3. Like your toolbar links, people could view Web pages and click the toolbar links to "find more like this one"
I like #3 the most. I think we as libraries need to be creating things akin to Google and Yahoo toolbars for our local clientele. These toolbars would enable things like xISBN- and Wag The Dog-like services for our users wherever their Web browser takes them.
-- Eric Lease Morgan University Libraries of Notre Dame
