MetaTab ist ein Programm zum Erstellen und Bearbeiten von Meta-Tags. Die erstellten Meta-Tags können per Mausklick in die HTML-Seite eingefügt werden. - unterstützt Dublin Core - plus selbstdefinierte Felder
Currently there is no defined standard or community agreement about unique and persitent identifers for museum objects on the internet. Persistent identfiers used in other domains have a different scope, are not suitable to identify real-world objects or require a cost-intensive maintenance infrastructure. MuseumID provides a free and easy solution to create and use museum object identifiers. There is no need to replace already established inventory numbers or to run a complex technological infrastructure. MuseumID is a proposal to the International Council of Museums (ICOM) for a recommendation about museum identifiers and museum object identifiers.
The BISAC Subject Headings List, also known as the BISAC Subject Codes List, is a standard used by many companies throughout the supply chain to categorize books based on topical content.
The California Digital Library (CDL), Portico, and Stanford University have received funding from the Library of Congress, under its National Digital Information Infrastructure Preservation Program (NDIIPP) initiative, to collaborate on a two-year project to develop a next-generation JHOVE2 architecture for format-aware characterization.
a hierarchical file package format for the exchange of generalized digital content. A "bag" has just enough structure to safely enclose a brief "tag" and a payload but does not require any knowledge of the payload's internal semantics.
Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records, machine-readable version, FRBR Object-Oriented. The FRBRoo is a formal ontology intended to capture and represent the underlying semantics of bibliographic information and to facilitate the integration, mediation, and interchange of bibliographic and museum information.
The first draft of the re3data.org vocabulary to describe research data repositories and its documentation is online (version 1.0). The vocabulary will be used to index research data repositories gathering issues such as: general information (e.g. subject) information on the provider (e.g. responsible institutions) information on legal aspects (e.g. licenses) information on technical, metadata and quality standards (e.g. software, api and certificates).
The Colectica Platform is an ideal solution for statistical agencies, survey research groups, public opinion research, data archivists, and other data centric collection operations that are looking to increase the expressiveness and longevity of the data collected through standards based metadata documentation.
The Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc.® (OGC) is a non-profit, international, voluntary consensus standards organization that is leading the development of standards for geospatial and location based services.
a set of open-source tools developed to support the implementation of PREMIS in the METS container format. The tools were created by Florida Center for Library Automation for the Library of Congress in 2009.
The Common Metadata Framework is divided into four parts, each of which concentrates on different practical and theoretical aspects of statistical metadata systems, and provides vital knowledge for anyone working with statistical metadata. Part A - Statistical Metadata in a Corporate Context, Part B - Metadata Concepts, Standards, Models and Registries , Part C - Metadata and the Statistical Business Process, Part D - Implementation. The development of a framework for statistical metadata was initiated by national delegates to the February 2004 meeting of the Joint UNECE-Eurostat-OECD Work Session on Statistical Metadata (METIS)
Metadata Object Description Schema (MODS) is a schema for a bibliographic element set that may be used for a variety of purposes, and particularly for library applications. The standard is maintained by the Network Development and MARC Standards Office of the Library of Congress with input from users. As an XML schema it is intended to be able to carry selected data from existing MARC 21 records as well as to enable the creation of original resource description records. It includes a subset of MARC fields and uses language-based tags rather than numeric ones, in some cases regrouping elements from the MARC 21 bibliographic format. richer than Dublin Core. Simpler than the full MARC format (core fields while some specific data may be dropped). an original MARC 21 record converted to MODS may not convert back to MARC 21 in its entirety without some loss
DSPL is the Dataset Publishing Language, a representation language for the data and metadata of datasets. Datasets described in this format can be processed by Google and visualized in the Google Public Data Explorer.
EMET is a tool designed to extract metadata embedded in JPEG and TIFF files. EMET is compatible with Mac OS 10.4+, as well as Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7. EMET also requires Adobe Air 2.0,
The Authorities and Vocabularies service provides access to commonly found standards and vocabularies promulgated by the Library of Congress. This includes data values and the controlled vocabularies that house them. LCSH, LC name authority file, etc.
The Library of Congress and the Florida Center for Library Automation developed the PREMIS in METS (PiM) Toolbox. The project provides PREMIS:METS conversion and validation tools that support the implementation of PREMIS in the METS container format.
It is important to keep track of technologies obsolescence and decay as well as changes to the intended use of the information. To support managing this, IBM has developed the Preservation Manager. It provides the functionality for defining and managing the technical environment needed to render the digital assets. It stores technical metadata for every file format. Technical metadata specify the software and hardware needed to render the digital assets. Based on the concepts of Preservation Layer Models (PLMs) and View Paths. PLMs define different templates to hold specific technical metadata that describe the hardware and software required to use an asset. The set of actual technical metadata based on a specific PLM is a View Path. View Paths can be associated with specific file formats or a collection of assets. Over time the chain could be broken at different places, as software and/or hardware components become obsolete.
This wiki based portal providing access to reference guides, training materials, videos, open source software, and other essential information on the Statistical Data and Metadata Exchange standard (ISO 17369).
Roughly the specification consists of 2 parts: 1. A schema (in essence DCAT) specifying a serialization of Dataset information, and 2. A protocol / API for getting this information from a compliant data catalogue site.
Our main goal is to provide you with data because you know what you want to do with it. Still, we give some information regarding typical MIR tasks below. We hope to provide snippets of code and benchmarks results to help you getting started. If you want to provide additional information / link to your code / new results / new tasks, please send us an email! We also try to maintain an informal list of publications that use the dataset.
Karen Coyle is in the putting the finishing touches on the February issue of Library Technology Reports, titled "RDA Vocabularies for a Twenty-First-Century Data Environment". In the following excerpt, she addresses the difficulty that many librarians have in understanding the basic concepts of FRBR, and offers some diagrams to clarify them. Though understanding FRBR may be tricky, she argues, it is essential to a transformation to a modern, workable data environment.
Highly recommendable introduction to the the current requirements for bibliographic metadata. - This chapter of “Understanding the Semantic Web: Bibliographic Data and Metadata” explores the history of library data and where it stands in a modern context. The rise of a new information environment—the World Wide Web—has revealed the downside of the long history that libraries have with metadata. The question that we must face, and that we must face sooner rather than later, is how we can best transform our data so that it can become part of the dominant information environment that is the Web.
This year the ALCTS Forum at ALA MidwinterL1 brought together three perspectives on massaging bibliographic data of various sorts in ways that use MARC, but where MARC is not the end goal. What do you get when you swirl MARC, ONIX, and various other formats of metadata in a big pot? Three projects: ONIX Enrichment at OCLC, the Open Library Project, and Google Book Search metadata.
In this post, Jennifer Bowen discusses the implications of Karen Coyle's January issue of Library Technology Reports, and places it in the current context of Metadata librarianship.
J. Frey, and S. Hellmann. 13th International Conference on Semantic Systems Proceedings (SEMANTiCS 2017) - Posters & Demonstrations Track, (September 2017)
M. de la Iglesia. document | archive | disseminate graffiti-scapes. Proceedings of the goINDIGO 2022 International Graffiti Symposium, page 175-187. (2023)