Thanks Karen,

This goes in a bit of a direction from what I'm hoping for and your project 
does suggest that some matching to build such searches might be possible. 

What I really want is to apply LCSH and related data to the Netflix search 
process, essentially dropping Netflix holdings into a library catalog 
interface. I suspect you'd have to build a local cache of the OCLC data for 
known Netflix items to do so, and maybe a local cache of the Netflix title 
list. I wonder if either or both of those actions would violate the TOS for the 
respective services. 

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Karen 
Coombs
Sent: Monday, August 19, 2013 11:26 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] netflix search mashups w/ library tools?

Ken,

I did a mashup that took Netflix's top 100 movies and looked to see if a 
specific library had that item.
http://www.oclc.org/developer/applications/netflix-my-library

You might think about doing the following. Search WorldCat for titles on a 
particular topic and then check to see if the title is available via Netflix. 
Netflix API for searching their catalog is pretty limited though so it might 
not give you what you want. It looks like it only allows you to search their 
streamable content.

Also I had a lot of trouble with trying to match Netflix titles and library 
holdings. Because there isn't a good match point. DVDs don't have ISBNs and if 
you use title you can get into trouble because movies get remade. So title + 
date seems to work best if you can get the information.

Karen

On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 8:54 AM, Ken Irwin <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> Is anyone out there using library-like tools for searching Netflix? I'm 
> imagining a world in which Netflix data gets mashed up with OCLC data or 
> something like it to populate a more robustly searchable Netflix title list.
>
> Does anything like this exist?
>
> What I really want at the moment is a list of Netflix titles dealing with 
> Islamic topics (Muhammed, the Qu'ran, the history of Islamic civilizations, 
> the Hajj, Ramadan, etc.) for doing beyond-the-library readers' advisory in 
> connection with our ALA/NEH Muslim Journey's Bookshelf. Netflix's own search 
> tool is singularly awful, and I thought that the library world might have an 
> interest in doing better.
>
> Any ideas?
> Thanks
> Ken

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