| Activities and Plans of the Digital Library Federation | | Donald Waters | Digital Library Federation | |
| In this session, an overview of the current projects and plans of the Digital
Library Federation will be provided. Special attention will be given to the
current status of the Making of America project, which focuses on the means
of linking Encoded Archival Descriptions (EAD) with digitized source material
of Americana from the Gilded Age. Status reports will also be provided on DLF
initiatives with the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) and
Columbia's Center for Research on Information Access (CRIA) to help advance
the state of campus authorization systems and thereby contribute to the CNI
program on Authentication, Authorization and Access Management.
| |
|
|
|
| The Arts and Humanities Data Services (AHDS) |
| Daniel Greenstein | Arts & Humanities Data Service | |
| Neil Beagrie | Arts & Humanities Data Service | |
| Robin Murray | Fretwell-Downing Informatics | |
| The Arts and Humanities Data Service (AHDS) collects, preserves, and
encourages re-use of digital resources which result from or support
research and teaching in the humanities. In the course of its work
on extensively distributed mixed media and inter-disciplinary collections,
the AHDS is forced to address issues of common concern to those interested
in aspects of our digital cultural and scholarly heritage. Those issues,
the AHDS has attempted to address through a mixture of research, broad
consultation, and practical application. In all cases it adopts
internationally agreed standards and best practices where they exist
and uses its own research and development efforts to progress the
identification of consensus where it is lacking. The session
introduces the AHDS and focuses on three areas in which it is
currently active, and into which it seeks input from and collaboration
with the widest possible community:
- developing policy guidelines for those involved in the creation or preservation of digital resources
- integrating access to distributed mixed media and inter disciplinary collections using Dublin Core metadata for resource discovery
and tools based upon the Z39.50 network application profile
- developing collections and services through formal consultation
with user communities
| |
|
|
|
|
Assessing the Academic Networked Environment |
| Christopher Peebles | Indiana University | |
| Charles R. McClure | Syracuse University | |
| Steve Hiller | University of Washington | |
| Michael Martys | Gettysburg College | |
| The institutions participating in CNI's Assessing the Academic Networked
Environment project used a variety of methodologies to explore assessment
issues on their campuses. Project leaders will give an overview of the
initiative, and two team leaders will report on their campus efforts. At
the University of Washington, assessment activities focused on the impact
of the UWired program, a teaching and learning initiative, networked
information seeking and using behavior among faculty and students, and
use of electronic library/information resources. At Gettysburg, the
efforts resulted in the development of an automated data collection tool
for electronic reserves that is incorporated into a campus information
system. The session closes with recommendations and suggestions for
implementing a regular program for assessing networked information
services and resources.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| CIC Virtual Electronic Library Z39.50 Project |
| Barbara McFadden Allen | CIC Center for Library Initiatives | |
| Charlene Mason | University of Minnesota | |
| Mark Hinnebusch | Florida Center for Library Automation | |
| The Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC) is undertaking a
broad-based study of the existing Z39.50 implementations in the
member university libraries in order to improve the efficacy of
the CIC Virtual Electronic Library -- a project linking the 13 online
library systems of the CIC member university libraries. The study will
result in a report that will document the Z39.50 situation in each of
the CIC research libraries, an articulation, analysis, and description
of the most significant problems, a checklist that technical staff can
use in defining local attribute sets, and will include a recommendation
about how the CIC libraries can generally improve the existing
Z39.50-based services to their users. The report and recommendations
will be available after May, 1998, and will be extensible to any group
of libraries undertaking a linked system project based on Z39.50. The
briefing will provide information on the project; describe methodologies
employed in the study; and offer some preliminary observations.
| |
|
|
CIC News Release handout CIC VEL Technical Issues handout
|
CNI Program on Authentication, Authorization, and Access Management |
| Clifford Lynch | Coalition for Networked Information | |
| CNI, in partnership with member organizations from the Task Force, is
undertaking a program to advance both infrastructure and policy formulation
in the areas of authentication, authorization and access management with
the goal of facilitating resource sharing and use of licensed networked
information resources. The CNI program is cast within a framework of
facilitating electronic commerce in content among organizations. The
objective of the program is first to establish a common taxonomy of best
practices and de facto standards that can be used to facilitate both the
negotiation of contracts and the actual implementation of access
arrangements, and then to move to proof of concept testbeds that actually
validate the technical approaches in practice. As its first step, a white
paper summarizing architectural models for inter-organizational access
management, and outlining technical and standards issues involved in each
model, as well as discussing privacy, accountability, and management issues
implicit in each model and the extent to which they are addressed by
technical or contractual provisions, has been developed. The white paper's
conclusions will be presented in this session and there will be a discussion
of the second stage of the program in which we will seek to begin work on
establishing one or more implementation testbeds.
| |
|
|
|
Creating a Tri-lingual Archival Guide for the Central Historical Archive, Tbilisi, Georgia |
| Anthony Rhinelander | St. Thomas University & Friends of the Georgian National Archives | |
| Kenneth Church | St. Thomas University & Friends of the Georgian National Archives | |
| Friends of the Georgian National Archives has designed a project with the
Central Historical Archive (CHA) in Tbilisi, Georgia, to create a
tri-lingual archival guide (Georgian, Russian, and English) for the
archive. It is an IREX-sponsored pilot project that is scheduled to
begin in July, 1998, and run for six months. This Project Briefing
discusses the archive, the nature of our collaboration with the CHA,
and factors about the current situation in Georgia that have affected
the design of the project. It then examines the technological
difficulties associated with creating a guide using three alphabets
and the software we plan to use. We conclude with a discussion of
the ramifications of this pilot project for linking other archives
in Georgia and Trancaucasia at large, including Armenia and Azerbaijan.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Current Legislation and Implications for InstitutionalLiability |
| Prue Adler | Association of Research Libraries | |
| Stuart Lynn | University of California, Office of the President | |
| A number of new and recurring institutional liability concerns are being
raised by a range of legislation currently under discussion in Congress.
Making institutions liable for the actions of their users in the networked
environment has important policy and planning implications for all of us,
and is a particularly troubling trend in a wide range of legislative
initiatives. Whether or not the institution is an Internet service
provider, the language of some of the proposed legislation could create
grave conflicts between following the law and respecting the privacy of
our constituents. After an overview of current legislation and issues,
attendees will be asked to discuss their concerns from their
institutional perspectives.
| |
|
|
|
| The Digital Object Identifier System (DOI) |
| Craig Van Dyck | John Wiley & Sons | |
| Albert Simmonds | R.R. Bowker Company | |
| Priscilla Caplan | The University of Chicago | |
| Julia Blixrud | Association of Research Libraries | |
| Sandra Paul | SKP Associates | |
| The Digital Object Identifier System (DOI) went public in October 1997, as
a system for the identification of digital content, as well as for the
successful resolution of Internet hits on that content. This session will
include an update on the nonprofit International DOI Foundation, which
has been founded to oversee the system, an update on the role of the
International ISBN Agencies and the DOI, a review of the role of NISO
vis-a-vis the DOI, and an update on Book & Serial Identifier Standards
and their relationship to the broader DOI initiative.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
|
Digital Libraries
|
|
Michael Lesk |
National Science Foundation |
|
|
In this session, Michael Lesk will discuss digital library issues and
related NSF Initiatives. Attendees will have an opportunity to discuss
these issues in depth with our keynote speaker.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Digitizing Archival Records in The Five Colleges Archives Digital Access Project |
| Peter Nelson | Five Colleges | |
| The presentation will discuss goals, methods and current progress of the
Five Colleges Archives Digital Access Project, a three-year pilot project
funded by the Mellon Foundation and now in its second year. The project
is making accessible on the Web(URL: <http://clio.fivecolleges.edu/>)significant archival and manuscript collections relating to women's history,
particularly women's education. The project expects to digitize about
25,000 items. The Five Colleges consortium of western Massachusetts
(Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke and Smith Colleges, and the University
of Massachusetts-Amherst) features institutional diversity but also enjoys
a tradition of close cooperation. The briefing will include a discussion
of the way the project was cooperatively conceived and planned, criteria for selection of content, archival access issues, and methods for
digitization and presentation.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Dissemination of Images on University Campuses: Final Report from the Museum Educational Site Licensing Project |
| Howard Besser | University of California - Berkeley | |
| Christie Stephenson | New York University | |
| This session will discuss the final report of a 7 university/7 museum
cooperative project to explore the distribution of digital images and
associated metadata. Panelists will discuss highlights from the final
report including distribution issues, use, and impact. Major observations
from instructors and technical staff will be covered, as will important
lessons for future projects.
In addition, this session will provide preliminary reports from a
Mellon-sponsored study examining the costs, infrastructure, and
efforts needed to implement this project. This study identifies
major cost centers and compares what it took to distribute these
digital images to the efforts involved in the operation of
traditional slide libraries. | |
|
|
|
Drafting Electronic Information Policies -- Questions, Issues, Rights and Responsibilities |
| Gerald Lowell | University of California - San Diego | |
| Prue Adler | Association of Research Libraries | |
| In today's emerging electronic information environment, it is importantthat every university and other institutions prepare and disseminatepolicies concerning the use, creation, and exchange of electronicinformation. Electronic information policies, though requiring uniqueelements, ought to be an extension of existing information policies.These policies should describe roles and responsibilities of users andproviders, and should address appropriate behaviors, not only on campussystems, but also on the WWW and the Internet generally. The session isdesigned as a guide for universities and other institutions that aredeveloping, reviewing, or revising electronic information policies.
| |
|
|
| ARL Newsletter article about the project
|
The Educom/NLII Instructional Management Systems Project (IMS) |
| Mark Resmer | Sonoma State University | |
| Steve Griffin | Collegis | |
| The IMS Project is developing and promoting open specifications for
facilitating online activities such as locating and using educational
content, tracking learner progress, reporting learner performance, and
exchanging student records between administrative systems. The goal
of the IMS project is the widespread adoption of specifications that
will allow distributed learning environments and content from multiple
authors to work together. To this end, the project is producing a
technical specification and proof-of-concept prototype. The project
is funded by a group of academic, commercial, and government organizations,
sponsored by Educom.
| |
|
|
| The IMS project website can be seen @ http://www.imsproject.org/
|
Funding Models for Library and Information Technology Resources and Services
|
|
Shirley K. Baker |
Washington University |
|
|
Ken Klingenstein |
University of Colorado, Boulder |
|
|
This session will be a facilitated discussion on the topic of funding
models that affect libraries and information technology units on campus.
Some issues that will be discussed include innovative cost accounting and
cost recovery, consistent cost accoun ting across services, student fees,
charging for materials such as paper, and charging for services.
Participants are encouraged to help lay out the issues, describe existing
models, and make suggestions for CNI program initiatives in this area.
|
|
|
|
|
Guidelines for Electronic Recordings Management on State and Federal Websites |
| Charles R. McClure | Syracuse University | |
| Records managers will need to devote resources immediately to ensuring thatstate and federal web-based electronic records are managed and preserved asare other official records of government. Findings from a one year studycompleted by Co-principal investigators Charles R. McClure and J. TimothySprehe, and funded by the National Historical Publications and RecordsCommission (NHPRC) include the following:
- Policy for electronic records management (ERM) of websites at the Federal and state level is confusing, ambiguous, and contradictory.
- The "state of the art" for ERM of state and Federal websites is rapidly changing and evolving; there are new practices and techniques being developed by selected Federal agencies are developing new practices.
- At the Federal level, until there are better guidelines and policy, individual agencies will have to develop their own policy and "best practices" for ERM of websites.
- For a number of states, issues related to ERM of websites are only now being recognized as to their importance and impact.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
The Humanities & The DLI-2 Challenge: Raising the Bar For Humanities DigitalResearch & Projects |
| David L. Green | National Initiative for a Networked Cultural Heritage | |
| David Bearman | Archives & Museum Informatics | |
| George Farr | National Endowment for the Humanities | |
| Stephen Griffin | National Science Foundation | |
| Michael Lesk | National Science Foundation | |
| John Unsworth | Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, University of Virginia | |
| For the next round of the Digital Libraries Initiative, the sponsors of this
award have expanded beyond NSF, DARPA and NASA to include the National
Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress. This recognizes
that the humanities have a significant contribution to make to the
development of the nation's national digital infrastructure and
provides a major opportunity for the humanities to present projects
that demonstrate their unique challenges on a larger scale than before.
Speakers will address the growing awareness of the importance of including
the humanities in such research and demonstration projects as well as
approaches that are being taken and recommended. | |
|
|
|
| Information Technology Literacy |
| Herb Lin | Computer Science & Telecommunications Board National Research Council | |
| The session will be used to solicit views of participants on what constitutesinformation technology literacy. These views will be used to inform thedeliberations of the CSTB/NRC's Committee on Information Technology Literacy.
| |
|
|
Power Point Presentation Download Herb Lin's PPT File
|
|
Institution-Wide Information Strategies for Information Access |
| Marvin Pollard | California State University System | |
| Gerald Bernbom | Indiana University | |
|
Gordon Smith |
California State University System |
|
| Karin Steinbrenner | Villanova University | |
| CNI's Institution-Wide Information Strategies (IWIS) initiative has brought together nine teams of institutions from the US and UK who are engaged in institution-wide information planning in a diverse array of organizational settings and with a range of organizational goals. In this project briefing, two participants in the IWIS project will present case study reports of strategies for institution-wide information access.
| |
|
|
California State University System handout
Villanova University handout
|
Institution-Wide Information Strategies for Information Technology Support |
| Joan Gargano | University of California - Davis | |
| Brian Voss | Indiana University | |
| Gerald Bernbom | Indiana University | |
| CNI's Institution-Wide Information Strategies (IWIS) initiative hasbrought together nine teams of institutions from the US and UK who areengaged in institution-wide information planning in a diverse array oforganizational settings and with a range of organizational goals. In thisproject briefing, two participants in the IWIS project will present casestudy reports of strategies for the use of network tools, networkedinformation resources, and networked organizations to provide informationtechnology support on an institution-wide basis.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
|
International Interlibrary Loan Through Technology/Cost Reduction ThroughTechnology: NAILDD Project Activities |
| Shirley K. Baker | Washington University | |
| Mary E. Jackson | Association of Research Libraries | |
| This spring marks the five year anniversary of the NAILDD Project. NAILDDwas formed to seek the involvement of private sector vendors to promotetechnology developments in three areas identified by the librarycommunity. This update will summarize the current status of theimplementation of the international standard for ILL communication - ISO10160/1 - and review progress made toward the project's other goals:management software and improvements in billing/payment. While seekingtechnical improvements, the NAILDD Project has just completed a two-yearstudy of the performance of ILL/DD operations in 119 North Americanresearch and college libraries. Highlights of the findings will beshared, especially those that relate to the Project's technicalpriorities.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Internet2 Update |
| Ted Hanss | Internet2 | |
| This session provides an update on the most recent activities and future plans of the Internet2 Project, including organizational, engineering, and applications efforts. In addition, you will hear an overview of the application demonstrations taking place at Highway 1 (601 Pennsylvania Avenue) on 15 and 16 April, to which all CNI attendees are invited.
| |
|
|
|
| The LIBLICENSE Project |
| Ann Okerson | Yale University Library | |
| The Yale University Library, funded by a grant from theCLIR (Council on Library & Information Resources), created in 1997the LIBLICENSE web site, a resource for librarians, educators, andinformation providers. The site, which is rich in definitions, samplecontracts, numerous links, and bibliography, is intended to informand educate those who create or use such licenses, generally novicesto this area. The LIBLICENSE project includes a discussion list,<liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>,which enriches the site through dialog between players. Phase IIof the LIBLICENSE Project, also funded by CLIR, is being developedin 1998. It involves the creation of an unloadable "generic"educational site license for electronic content. Users of DOS/NTsystems will be able to unload this software off the WWW andcreate their own licenses to present either to customers or tosuppliers. Currently, this software is in pre-beta mode andfeedback will be welcomed.
The purpose of this briefing session is to describe Phases I & II of theLIBLICENSE project and to seek input about current offerings and futuredevelopments of interest to both the CLIR and libraries or publishers. | |
|
|
| handout
|
| Moving Digital Libraries from Project to Production |
| Wendy Lougee | University of Michigan | |
| John Price-Wilkin | University of Michigan | |
| As a community, our investments in digital library initiatives reflect the
centrality of those efforts and the extent to which we value the
resources. Many current efforts sit on the margins, funded primarily by
grants and other short-term funding, and focused primarily on projects
rather than infrastructure activities.
The University of Michigan's project activity--through its collaborative
Digital Library Initiatives program (DLI)-- has matured into an integral
component of campus library and information technology services. DLI is
a jointly supported program, focusing on building a coherent and
coordinated campus networked information environment through projects,
but also through development of campus infrastructure, services and
capabilities. Recently, the DLI established the Digital Library Production
Services (DLPS) with substantial commitments from the University Library,
the University's Information Technology Division, the School of Information,
and the Media Union. With staffing from the partner organizations, the DLPS
has moved the various project-oriented efforts to a general architecture for
digital resources. The roughly 18FTE have a wide range of responsibilities
including data loading, automated large-scale OCR operation, interface
development and assessment, content specialization, and domain-based
programming (e.g., building systems for delivery of continuous tone images). The CNI briefing will focus on project examples enabled by this infrastructure, including: - PEAK: A research project that builds on an established mechanism for delivering large quantities of page-image based journal literature
- Making of America: A vast collection of historical US publications that merges preservation and access models, making less significant the question of approaches (i.e., text encoding or page image?), and bringing more pressure to bear on ensuring the long-term viability of the material.
- Image Services: "Federating" the various disjoint efforts on campus in one image access system, Image Services has articulated a model of access that can accommodate approaches ranging from "exhibits" to intensive analysis with the same body of material, instantiated once and with a single program managing all methods.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| The Museum Digital Licensing Collective (MDLC) |
| H. Thomas Hickerson | Cornell University | |
| Bernie Hurley | University of California at Berkeley | |
| Geoffrey Samuels | Museum Digital Licensing Collective | |
| The Museum Digital Licensing Collective is a 501(c)3 corporation organized
to help fund the digitizing of museum collections, and manage their storage,
distribution, and licensing to educational institutions, commercial companies
and the public. It will serve all types of museums and original materials
collecting institutions. The MDLC has a close affiliation with the American
Association of Museums, which has appointed a majority of the MDLC Board's
museum, university, and library association directors. Computer services
will be performed under contract with major academic research libraries, and
the initial providers are University of California at Berkeley and Cornell
University. Sun Microsystems is a technology partner. A diverse group of
twenty art, history, and general museums, as well as original materials
collecting institutions, will participate in organizing the MDLC, with a
planned organizing phase start in late Spring 1998. Further information
about the MDLC can be found at
<http://www.museumlicensing.org/>.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
|
New Learning Communities: What We Learned |
| Philip Tompkins | Indiana University-Purdue University of Indianapolis | |
| Susan Perry | Mt. Holyoke College | |
| Joan K. Lippincott | Coalition for Networked Information | |
| CNI's New Learning Communities project, co-sponsored by ACRL, AAHE, and
Educom and funded, in part, by the U.S. Department of Education, focused
on recognition for early innovators in the use of information technology
and electronic information resources in higher education. In addition,
the project sought to increase the ranks of those prepared to develop
collaborative teaching and learning projects in higher education. In
this session, the leaders of the initiative will describe some of the
innovative projects developed by the participating institutions, how
collaborative development of courses often led to collaborative learning,
and the kinds of support and infrastructure that are needed for success.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Next Generation Organization Model at USC |
| Jerry Campbell | The University of Southern California | |
| John Silvester | The University of Southern California | |
| The University of Southern California libraries and information technology division have recently developed a new organizational model for converged services. In this session, the goals of the reorganization will be discussed, the plans for restructuring will be described, and there will be a discussion of the progress that is being made.
| |
|
|
|
| Research on the AMICO Library: Issues in Providing Access |
| David Bearman | Archives & Museum Informatics | |
| Jennifer Trant | Archives & Museum Informatics | |
| David Millman | Columbia University | |
| Jerome Yavarkovsky | Boston College | |
| Terry Noreault | OCLC | |
| The Art Museum Image Consortium (AMICO) is building a library of multimedia
documentation of works of art for educational licensing. In 1998/99, the
Library will be available from the Research Libraries Group to a selected
group of universities which have agreed to undertake research using its
contents. In addition, this winter OCLC R&D Division has been conducting
research with the AMICO Library to explore the full expression of Dublin Core
metadata and relations in RDF. These research projects range from user
needs and access issues, to image quality and systems architecture, but
each addresses in some way the question of what characteristics of the
Library constitute value to whom and under what circumstances.
This session will report on R&D plans at several universities and on
the achievements of the first major R&D project devoted to the
expression, in XML/RDF of a fully qualified Dublin Core compliant
metadata record for the images and associated multimedia files in
the library.
| |
|
|
Power Point Presentation
Download Jerome Yavarkovsky's PPT File
The Art Museum Image Consortium website can be seen @
http://www.amn.org/AMICO/
|
Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition: Progress Report |
| Ken Frazier | University of Wisconsin Libraries | |
| Mary Case | Association of Research Libraries | |
| The Scholarly Publishing & Academic Resources Coalition (SPARC)
continues its rapid development. Sixty-three ARL libraries have signed
on as Founding Members; a Business Plan is under development; and
recruitment for a full-time Enterprise Director is underway. SPARC
continues to talk with potential partners and hopes to have at least
one project underway by summer 1998.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Teaching Information Literacy |
| Jim Elmborg | Washington State University | |
| Jane Scales | Washington State University | |
| "Accessing Information for Research" is a one-hour credit class that
originated in Washington State University's distance education program.
Taught primarily in the Internet using web modules and e-mail, the course
content addresses database searching as well as such issues as understanding
the publication cycle and disciplinary thinking. The course aims to teach
students advanced methods of gathering materials for research by focusing on
a single research project and pursuing it for the entire semester.
"Accessing Information for Research" is positioned to become an extremely
important part of the General Education curriculum at WSU. A workshop this
summer will orient new faculty and librarians to the course, which is
predicted to grow rapidly in the fall. Future development includes
experimenting with streaming video over the web to develop a way to
deliver more powerful content.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
| Unicode Support in Integrated Library Systems |
| Ari Palttala | VTLS Inc. | |
| This presentation will cover an overview of the principles of Unicode
support within a library automation system. The session will provide
a review of the Unicode standard, without being overly technical.
Discussion will focus on the viewing capabilities enabled with Unicode
support within a library system and what customers can expect from
vendors who support Unicode in their library systems.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
Uniform Resource Names (URNs) -- the Next Generation of InternetIdentifiers |
| Leslie L. Daigle | Bunyip Information Systems Inc. | |
| Uniform Resource Identifiers (URIs), and in particular Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), have long been regarded as part of the fabric of the World Wide Web. This presentation looks at the larger scope of identifying resources in the whole picture of Internet information activities (general publishing mechanisms, services, etc). This includes a detailed presentation of Uniform Resource Names (URNs) and their role in developing commercial-grade information applications.
| |
|
|
handout handout (in PDF format)
|
|
Update on Digital Theses and Dissertations |
| Ed Fox | Virginia Tech | |
| Joan K. Lippincott | Coalition for Networked Information | |
| Jeff Moyer | University Microfilms, Inc. |
|
| This presentation will provide information on two important networked
information content initiatives. A report will be given on the current
progress of UMI's ProQuest Digital Dissertations, which now has over
65,000 full text dissertations for Web access. The report will present
the most recent features of the program and some of the lessons learned
through its implementation.
Progress on the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations
(NDLTD) project, which is working towards a sustainable, worldwide,
collaborative, educational initiative of universities committed to
encouraging students to prepare electronic documents and to use digital
libraries, will be described.
| |
|
|
Ed Fox's handout Ed Fox's handout (in PDF format) Jeff Moyer's handout
|
| Using Metadata Real Time |
| Grace Agnew | Georgia Institute of Technology | |
| Miriam Drake | Georgia Institute of Technology | |
| Metadata in real time will deal with creating and using EAD to index a
multimedia database. Access will include links to multimedia objects
and links to digital transcript databases for key word access to text,
audio and video files.
| |
|
|
|
| Web Realm Authentication Protocol (WRAP) |
| John Ulmschneider | North Carolina State University | |
| Charles Kneifel | North Carolina State University | |
| Mona Couts | Triangle Research Libraries Network | |
| Authenticating users as eligible recipients of services and resourcesdelivered via Web browsers has become a critical strategic necessityfor many enterprises. Colleges and universities face especially challengingtechnical problems that are not easily solved by available technicalsolutions. Universities in consortia environments, which may collaborativelyshare resources as diverse as faculty, students, library collections, andcomputing infrastructure, work under even greater technical constraints, sincethey possess different means of identifying and authenticating valid users internally.
The North Carolina Giganet Initiative (NCGNI), part of the Internet2 Project,working with the Triangle Research Libraries Network (TRLN) and North CarolinaState University, have developed the Web Realm Authentication Protocol (WRAP)specifically to address the needs of wide-area network partners in consortiaenvironments. WRAP provides for flexible authentication that utilizes existingauthentication mechanisms for on-campus users to authenticate users fromextra-campus IP domains. In consortia environments, users are authenticated bythe mechanism used by their home campus before permitted access to restrictedresources provided by consortia arrangements. The WRAP authentication protocol has been implemented at North Carolina StateUniversity for access to the NCSU Libraries' electronic reserves systems andits Web-accessible licensed digital resources. After assessment of itsperformance, the protocol will be extended to library resources providedby the libraries of TRLN, and eventually will be used for access to studentrecords, grades, and other resources restricted by both IP and by user profile. | |
|
|
|
| WorldLinQ: A World of Information |
| Gary Strong | Queens Borough Public Library | |
| Charles E. McMorran | Queens Borough Public Library | |
| Xuemao Wang | Queens Borough Public Library | |
| WorldLinQ is an innovative multilingual Web based Internet information
system, developed by Queens Borough Public Library with the aid of a grant
from AT&T. It is the goal of WorldLinQ to provide free of charge
electronic multilingual information resources to the Library's customers,
as well as the Internet community at large. WorldLinQ will include a
multilingual catalog of materials owned by the library in vernacular script.
| |
|
|
| handout
|
|