Help

Icon - KMLM List KMLM List

View email archives for the history of this mailing list.

List Home All Archives Dates Threads Authors Subjects
kbart_interest - Launch of the KBART phase I Recommended Practice Message Thread: Previous | Next
  • To: kbart_interest@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • From: Charlie Rapple <charlie.rapple@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 15 Jan 2010 09:45:05 +0000
Send Email to kbart_interest@list.niso.org:
Send new message
Reply to this message
Dear all,

I am delighted to share with you the final KBART Phase I Recommended Practice. This will be published formally on Monday (18th January) but I wanted to send it on to you in advance (attached PDF). There is also an HTML version of the report at http://www.uksg.org/kbart/s1/summary and this will be mirrored on the NISO site in due course. We hope that the guidelines we have developed are useful and represent a strong foundation for the group's future work. 

We are about to undertake a big campaign to raise awareness of the report and you should hopefully see plenty of coverage in the next few weeks. We'd really appreciate your help in spreading the word - to your colleagues and networks, via blogs, discussion lists, Twitter, email, whatever! The PDF press release is attached and a plain text version is below - please use as you see fit.

I am standing down from chairing the group now that the first phase is complete, and would like to take this opportunity to thank its members for time and effort over the last couple of years; to thank you for your interest and input; and to wish good luck to incoming chair Sarah Pearson and the phase II working group!

All the best,

Charlie Rapple
Peter McCracken

KBART Phase I Co-Chairs

Attachment: KBART_Phase_I_Recommended_Practice.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document

Attachment: KBARTRP_pr18jan10_final.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document


___________________

Charlie Rapple
Head of Marketing Development
TBI Communications
___________________

UKSG and NISO Release First KBART Recommendations 
for Improved OpenURL Data Supply

January 18, 2010 - Baltimore, MD and Newbury, UK - UKSG and NISO are pleased to announce the first report by the KBART (Knowledge Bases And Related Tools) Working Group, a joint initiative that is exploring data problems within the OpenURL supply chain. The KBART Recommended Practice (NISO RP-9-2010) contains practical recommendations for the timely exchange of accurate metadata between content providers and knowledge base developers.

The KBART Recommended Practice, a report from Phase I of the KBART project, provides all parties in the information supply chain with straightforward guidance about the role of metadata within the OpenURL linking standard, and recommends data formatting and exchange guidelines for publishers, aggregators, agents, technology vendors, and librarians to adhere to when exchanging information about their respective content holdings.

“Six years after NISO’s ratification of the OpenURL standard (ANSI/NISO Z39.88-2004), many stakeholders in the information supply chain still have a limited understanding of how best to share data to maximize the value of OpenURL linking,” says Peter McCracken, NISO co-chair of the KBART Working Group (Phase I). UKSG’s co-chair (Phase I), Charlie Rapple of TBI Communications, adds, “It was important for us to get back to basics and provide step-by-step guidance to address some of the fundamental problems that were occurring. With their track records for practical leadership and their reach across the extended information community, UKSG and NISO have been ideal project sponsors.”

Sarah Pearson, E-Resources & Serials Coordinator at the University of Birmingham, is taking on the role of UKSG co-chair for KBART’s Phase II. “As a librarian who has struggled with poor quality, outdated holdings data and the frustration this causes our users, I’m pleased to see some really practical guidance being made available. I hope to see widespread adoption of KBART’s recommendations as they will lead to more reliable access for users, increased traffic for publishers, easier data management for vendors and reduced administration for librarians.”

The KBART Working Group will shortly embark on the project’s Phase II, which will build on the foundation phase to address more complex data issues, including different types of content, emerging business models, and customized licensing. The UKSG Committee and the NISO Discovery to Delivery Topic Committee are in the final stages of approval.

For more information, to review the KBART Recommended Practice, or to find out how to get involved in future phases of KBART’s work, please visit www.uksg.org/kbart or www.niso.org/workrooms/kbart.

About KBART

KBART (Knowledge Bases And Related Tools) was set up following the 2007 publication of the UKSG research report “Link Resolvers and the Serials Supply Chain.” Central to the efficient operation of the OpenURL is the knowledge base, which consists of data supplied by content providers including publishers. The report found that a lack of awareness of the OpenURLs capabilities and requirements is impacting the quality and timeliness of data provided to populate knowledge bases, and thus undermining the potential of the sophisticated OpenURL technology. UKSG partnered with NISO to commission the KBART Working Group to develop guidelines for best practice and provide educational materials. The core NISO/UKSG Working Group consists of representatives from libraries, knowledge base developers, publishers, intermediaries and other content providers, and is supported by a monitoring group of interested parties. Its Phase I report (KBART Recommended Practice (NISO RP-9-2010) and guidelines have been widely reviewed and tested by a wider group of information supply chain stakeholders. For more information, visit www.uksg.org/kbart or www.niso.org/workrooms/kbart.

About NISO

NISO 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 an information standard. NISO is a not-for-profit association accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). More information about NISO is available on its website: www.niso.org. For more information please contact NISO on (301) 654-2512 or via email on nisohq@xxxxxxxx.

About UKSG

UKSG exists to connect the information community and encourage the exchange of ideas on scholarly communication. It spans the wide range of interests and activities of the extended scholarly information community of librarians, publishers, intermediaries and technology vendors. In a dynamic environment, UKSG works to:

• facilitate community integration, networking, discussion and exchange of ideas
• improve members' knowledge of the scholarly information sector and support skills development
• stimulate research and collaborative initiatives, encourage innovation and promote standards for good practice
• disseminate news, information and publications, and raise awareness of services that support the scholarly information sector.

For more information, please visit the UKSG website, www.uksg.org.

For more information, please contact:

Karen Wetzel, NISO Standards Program Manager, kwetzel@xxxxxxxx

Tracy Garden, UKSG Marketing Associate, tracy@xxxxxxxxxxxx



By Date: Previous | Next Current Thread By Thread: Previous | Next
  • Launch of the KBART phase I Recommended Pract, Charlie Rapple  (you are here)