and another piece to the puzzle.

Confidentiality Notice - This e-mail transmission, and any documents, files or 
previous e-mail messages attached to it, may contain information that is 
confidential or legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, or a 
person responsible for delivering it to the intended recipient, you are hereby 
notified that you must not read or play this transmission and that any 
disclosure, copying, printing, distribution or use of any of the information 
contained in or attached to this transmission is Strictly Prohibited. If you 
have received this transmission in error, please immediately notify the sender 
by telephone or return e-mail and delete the original transmission and its 
attachments without reading or saving in any manner. Thank you.

Federal Tax Advice Disclaimer - We are required by U. S. Treasury Regulations 
to inform you that, to the extent this message includes any federal tax advice, 
this message is not intended or written by the sender to be used, and cannot be 
used, for the purpose of avoiding federal tax penalties.

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Douglas 
Campbell
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 5:38 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] A newbie question

5) FRBR's strength is defining the relationships between things, Dublin Core's 
strength is how to describe the things.

Douglas Campbell
National Library of New Zealand


>>> stuart yeates <stuart.yea...@vuw.ac.nz> 15/04/10 10:11 >>>
Karen Coyle wrote:
> Quoting John Moss <john.m...@hro.com>:
>
>> I trying to wrap my head around the differences between Dublin Core
>> and FRBR. Is one based upon the other? If so, which came first?
>
> 1) totally unrelated, apples and grommets
> 2) DC started up first; FRBR was issued in 1998, but didn't get much
> attention for the first 10 years of its life. DC was getting
> increasing use during that time.

3) DC takes a 'start simple' approach whereas FRBR attempts to encompass
every bibliographic need
4) DC can be readily applied to almost any media/data; FRBR really only
fits human-generated things that have been 'published' in some sense.

cheers
stuart
--
Stuart Yeates
http://www.nzetc.org/       New Zealand Electronic Text Centre
http://researcharchive.vuw.ac.nz/     Institutional Repository

Reply via email to