Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W292418080> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 66 of
66
with 100 items per page.
- W292418080 startingPage "1" @default.
- W292418080 abstract "INTRODUCTION The world is inundated with information. Since the appearance of the Web in the mid-1990s, information has become available to anyone at the click of a button. In 2000, the Web had more than 4 billion public pages and an additional 550 billion connected documents in the deep Web. By 2000, the Web was written in more than 220 languages, 78% of which were in English with 7 million pages added daily. The average life span of a Web page was only 44 day, and 44% of Web sites available in 1998 had disappeared by 1999. (Lyman and Varian 2000) Despite the popularity of the Web, many concerns exist regarding the discovery, organization, retrieval, and description of information in this new digital universe. The familiar library challenges of describing and organizing information in the print world multiply in the virtual world. For instance, the entire concept of seriality and serial publications in cyberspace requires new definitions and approaches. Web pages are updated constantly, in terms of redesign, graphics, and content. Do those updates make Web pages serials? And what about online newsletters and electronic versions of print serials? In the print environment, librarians have always had to address similar problems regarding reissued, revised, and updated government documents and items, but the Internet has only magnified these challenges. Other concerns include authenticity and reliability of Internet information (especially in the areas of health and medicine), filtering, privacy, and copyright. The explosion of electronic projects that focus on the digitization and organization of an institution's unique resources has revitalized interest in special and local collections around the world. Suddenly, money is available to anyone who can spark interest in his or her unique resources by identifying grant sources and writing intelligent grant proposals. The swell of digital libraries and digitization projects has reintroduced the age-old questions of how to manage and describe information. Not only are the challenges of information organization and description in the print environment still being discussed, but now the Internet and the electronic environment have magnified the problems. If a document is available in both the print and electronic environment, for instance, but the electronic document provides hyperlinks to references and has been given a slightly different title on the Web page, are the two documents still the same? When a Web page has been substantially revised or redesigned, does this change necessitate a new bibliographic record? The debate on whether to organize information by format/container (print, video, audio, CD, DVD, and so on) or by content (focusing on the information itself rather than how it is presented) has again resurfaced in the professional cataloging community. Libraries and related information organizations such as museums and archives have always been the repositories of human knowledge and information. These information communities have been developing standards that are uniquely related to their own information and patron needs in the digital era. Metadata helps information providers handle the challenges of organizing information for access. Metadata is a relatively new buzzword in the digital universe, but its purpose and meaning have been around as long as humankind. Its most familiar emanation is known as cataloging. For librarians, metadata is just a fancy term for the organization and description of information in its many forms. Organization and preservation are indeed the main challenges and concerns for those confronting the production and efficient search and recall of digital information, as well as its future preservation and usefulness. Many organizations have created proprietary sets of metadata standards. The current emphasis of the metadata community is to create interoperability among these many standards, as well as to begin the process to narrow and refine the number of standards to a few acceptable and agreeable general ones. …" @default.
- W292418080 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W292418080 creator A5035835737 @default.
- W292418080 date "2002-09-01" @default.
- W292418080 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W292418080 title "Metadata and Its Application" @default.
- W292418080 hasPublicationYear "2002" @default.
- W292418080 type Work @default.
- W292418080 sameAs 292418080 @default.
- W292418080 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W292418080 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W292418080 hasAuthorship W292418080A5035835737 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C110875604 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C21959979 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C2779308522 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C2780586970 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C2781241145 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C31972630 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C79373723 @default.
- W292418080 hasConcept C93518851 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C110875604 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C136764020 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C17744445 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C199539241 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C21959979 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C2779308522 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C2780586970 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C2781241145 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C31972630 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C41008148 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C79373723 @default.
- W292418080 hasConceptScore W292418080C93518851 @default.
- W292418080 hasIssue "5" @default.
- W292418080 hasLocation W2924180801 @default.
- W292418080 hasOpenAccess W292418080 @default.
- W292418080 hasPrimaryLocation W2924180801 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W1535542529 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W1976357773 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W1985314094 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2008203407 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2029588954 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W205658136 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2104066544 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2125593278 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2144097205 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2151819565 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2171094963 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2182764901 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2205849047 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2413343793 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2905230688 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W293959071 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W306601538 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W68774430 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W1861254125 @default.
- W292418080 hasRelatedWork W2120319357 @default.
- W292418080 hasVolume "38" @default.
- W292418080 isParatext "false" @default.
- W292418080 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W292418080 magId "292418080" @default.
- W292418080 workType "article" @default.