From junus.msulibraries at gmail.com Thu Sep 21 16:04:50 2017
From: junus.msulibraries at gmail.com (Ranti Junus)
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2017 16:04:50 -0400
Subject: [SigLT-L] Call for nominations - Code4Lib
Message-ID: <037401d33314$e2153700$a63fa500$@gmail.com>
Call for Code4Lib Keynote Speaker Nominations!
Keynote speaker nominations for the 2018 Code4Lib Conference will be accepted from September 18, 2017 until October 15, 2017. Nominations should be made on our wiki page .
The criteria for nominating a candidate to act as keynote are below:
* Speaker?s name (First Name, Last Name)
* Brief description of individual (250-word max)
* Pertinent links (Maximum of 3)
* Contact information of candidate (email address)
We strongly encourage you to nominate speakers who are local to the D.C. Metropolitan Area.
Code4Lib 2018 is a loosely-structured conference that provides people working at the intersection of libraries/archives/museums/cultural heritage and technology with a chance to share ideas, be inspired, and forge collaborations.
For more information about the Code4Lib community, please visit: http://code4lib.org/about/
The conference will be held at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington, DC, from February 13, 2018 - February 16, 2018.
More information about Code4lib 2018 is available on this year?s conference website http://2018.code4lib.org.
Carl Leak
Life Sciences Librarian
4400 University Dr., MSN: 2FL
Fairfax, VA 22030
703.993.8347
http://library.gmu.edu
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL:
From niso-announce at niso.org Mon Sep 25 15:40:06 2017
From: niso-announce at niso.org (NISO Announce)
Date: Mon, 25 Sep 2017 15:40:06 -0400
Subject: [SigLT-L] NISO Releases Issues in Vocabulary Management Technical
Report
Message-ID:
Baltimore, MD - September 25, 2017 - The National Information Standards
Organization (NISO) announces the publication of a new Technical Report, NISO
TR-06-2017, *Issues in Vocabulary Management*
. This document is one
outcome of the NISO Bibliographic Roadmap Development Project, which was
conducted in 2013-14 with funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. The
technical report builds upon the work outlined in the 2014 project summary
report *Roadmap for the Future of Bibliographic Exchange
*
by discussing policies supporting vocabulary use and reuse, documentation
for vocabularies, and requirements for the preservation of RDF
vocabularies.
The audiences for this technical report start with the communities NISO has
brought together: libraries, publishers, and service providers. But beyond
these communities, NISO aims for the document to help the many individuals
and groups building and sharing bibliographic and other descriptive data,
as well as knowledge managers within a variety of organizations using
vocabularies to solve problems.
NISO TR-06-2017, *Issues in Vocabulary Management* is the result of efforts
by three working groups and a steering committee, whose remits illustrate
the breadth of the work involved. The Use/Reuse working group looked at
policy and social considerations, including appropriate licenses and
permissions, maintenance expectations, and versioning. The Documentation
working group explored standards for documentation of vocabulary
properties, particularly as it relates to discovery and usage, as well as
governance and sustainability issues. The Preservation working group
examined the landscape issue of "orphan vocabularies," where organizations
abandon vocabularies for lack of funding or when the vocabularies cannot
make the transition between print and digital.
"NISO is grateful to the many volunteer experts whose work contributed to
this much-needed technical report," comments NISO Executive Director Todd
Carpenter. "In the past, vocabularies were tied to particular collections
and tended to become insular, but today we need descriptive information
that works in the Linked Open Data environment. Enabling interoperability
among systems and organizations is a major goal of NISO's work, and this
technical report moves us forward in that area."
Diane Hillmann, Principal of Metadata Management Associates LLC and
co-chair of the Use and Reuse working group, notes that as well as offering
a way for users of vocabularies to streamline their output, *Issues in
Vocabulary Management* discusses the preservation of those vocabularies.
"We've seen how often orphan vocabularies have arisen over the years," says
Hillmann. "With this technical report, we aim to allow those using or
managing vocabularies to ensure that their work remains viable and
available for years to come."
NISO TR-06-2017, *Issues in Vocabulary Management* and related documents
are available on the NISO website at
http://www.niso.org/topics/tl/BibliographicRoadmap/.
*About NISO*
NISO, based in Baltimore, Maryland, fosters the development and maintenance
of standards that facilitate the creation, persistent management, and
effective interchange of information so that it can be trusted for use in
research and learning. To fulfill this mission, NISO engages libraries,
publishers, information aggregators, and other organizations that support
learning, research, and scholarship through the creation, organization,
management, and curation of knowledge. NISO works with intersecting
communities of interest and across the entire lifecycle of information
standards. NISO is a not-for-profit association accredited by the American
National Standards Institute (ANSI). For more information, visit the NISO
website .
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: