Hi to all community list
We were wondering if there is a way to integrate MODS schema into dspace
same way as it does with METS or PREMIS.
They are aujtomaticallt generated by dpsace system but we could not find any
related with MODS.
Any help will be extremely appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Dear all:
The ParsCit team has also been updating the ParsCit package, and is
happy to announce a new version that improves on classification
accuracy, especially for general science journals. This version also
adds a module that further processes XML files that are the output of
the commercial
Does this help?
http://wiki.surffoundation.nl/display/standards/DSpace+to+MODS+mappings
On Mon, Jun 20, 2011 at 11:33 PM, david david.blobj...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi to all community list
We were wondering if there is a way to integrate MODS schema into dspace
same way as it does with METS or
Greetings list,
Can anyone direct me towards documentation on creating an OAI feed from
scratch, without a repository infrastructure?
Many thanks!
Nathan Tallman
Associate Archivist
American Jewish Archives
What are you trying to do? Or, more appropriately, what kind of data
are you intending to put into your feed?
Mark A. Matienzo
Digital Archivist, Manuscripts and Archives
Yale University Library
On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 9:50 AM, Nathan Tallman ntall...@gmail.com wrote:
Greetings list,
Can
The CORE project at The Open University in the UK is doing some work on finding
similarity between papers in institutional repositories (see
http://core-project.kmi.open.ac.uk/ for more info). The first step in the
process is extracting text from the (mainly) pdf documents harvested from
I'm using Docsplit (http://documentcloud.github.com/docsplit/), due to
its Ruby bindings. It includes OCR if it fails at extracting the text,
but it also requires you to install a bunch of other (open source)
software. Results seem fine to me so far.
Best,
Andreas
Am 21.06.2011 16:23,
Of possible interest... -J
Begin forwarded message:
Resent-From: public-semweb-life...@w3.org
From: Deus, Helena helena.d...@deri.org
Date: 8 June 2011 12:49:59 GMT+01:00
To: public-semweb-life...@w3.org, kr-...@mailman.amia.org,
gofrie...@genome.stanford.edu, kim...@mailman.amia.org,
Without /any/ infrastructure it would be a challenge, but a simple
database that has timestamps and basic metadata would be sufficient.
The timestamps are the most important, obviously, to populate the feed
correctly and handle the time slicing.
Rob
On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 8:55 AM, Eric Lease
Nathan,
I think what you want is a OAI Static Repository. Info here:
http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/guidelines-static-repository.htm
If I remember right, you will then need someone else to read your files.
Not sure if anyone is still doing that.
Sincerely,
David Bigwood
The University of Illinois Library is still running an OAI static gateway. You
can initiate a static repository from here:
http://imlsdcc.grainger.uiuc.edu/gateway.net/oai.aspx?initiate=http...
Regards,
Tom
Thomas G. Habing
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
-Original
One can set up an OAI static repository without a repository infrastructure.
It is not without ongoing costs in staff time, exporting metadata records from
their source, converting to appropriate XML or other format files, and keeping
it updated and synced. There is some static repository
Thank you everyone for your replies.
Right now, I'm just exploring the options for a potential project. We need
to make our MARC records available as Dublin Core via OAI-PMH. We don't have
a digital repository or similar infrastructure at the moment, so I'll take a
look at the OAI Static
I have tangential experience with the free, java-based OAI service from
UCAR/DLS. Info here:
http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/oai/
I believe this service will take your xml metadata files and serve them in a
number of configurable ways. There are, of course, other implementation
details that may be
You might want to take a look at the XC OAI Toolkit.
http://code.google.com/p/xcoaitoolkit/
The Toolkit provides an infrastructure. It was designed to take MARC
and convert to MARCXML and serve that data up in an OAI repository, and
in XC's end to end system this is the entry point for ILS
I'm aware of at least two Virtua libraries currently using VuFind: USQ
(http://library.usq.edu.au/) and the National Library of Ireland
(http://catalogue.nli.ie/). VuFind is currently bundled with a copy of USQ's
Virtua driver, so it should be possible to get things up and running with
According to this:
http://www.vtls.com/pressrelease/ISSN-International-Centre-Implements-New-Data-Distribution-Services-Using-Enhanced-Version-of-OAI-PMH-Protocol-Custom-Developed-by-VTLS-75
Virtua already supports OAI-PMH. Are you sure you just haven't poked
around enough? Or called VTLS
Hmmm, I did call VTLS Support and they told me I would have to upgraded our
catalog interface to their latest product to get OAI-PMH. I'll have to read
this more closely and call them back.
Thanks!
Nathan
On Tue, Jun 21, 2011 at 11:41 AM, Roy Tennant roytenn...@gmail.com wrote:
According to
Hi,
A number of years ago the now defunct Centre for Digital Library Research at
the University of Strathclyde ran a JISC-funded project to investigate the use
of Static Repositories.
Details and guidance are (currently) available here:
http://cdlr.strath.ac.uk/stargate/
there are some
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