A del.icio.us directory
Put a tag cloud of the most widely held library
works on your Web site or blog
By Andy Havens
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OCLC Top 1000 Tag Cloud |
Whether it’s David Letterman’s famous “Top 10” lists, Academy Award winners
or the New York Times best-sellers, there’s an appeal to knowing who or what is
the “top,” the “most” and the “best.”
What are the most popular items in library collections?
Does your library own them?
The “OCLC Top 1000” list presents the top
works most widely held by libraries. First published
in the fall of 2004, the list was most recently updated
in 2005. The list reflects true classics and
canonical works of western culture. The list also
shows the extent to which libraries strive to meet
the needs of their readers, by offering books in high
demand in any given year. The list contains
classic works such as the Bible, utilitarian
works such as the U.S. Census and
also popular works such as Tom Brokaw’s
Greatest Generation.
Beginning with a list of all items held in
WorldCat by libraries around the globe,
the list brings together different printings
and editions and translations for each
item. Titles are then ranked in descending
order by the number of each work held by
libraries.
In April 2007, OCLC added del.icio.us tags for each of the items described by the
list. del.icio.us is a social bookmarking
Web site (now owned by Yahoo!) that allows
users to store and share Internet bookmarks.
Users categorize links with descriptive
keywords called “tags.” The del.icio.us
bookmarks created for the OCLC Top 1000 all link back into WorldCat.org and, thus,
to the libraries that hold them. The tags
for the list include tag categories such
as genre (e.g., “autobiography,” “banned,”
“children,” etc.), language and time-period.
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OCLC Top 1000 Web Site |
In the same way the WorldCat syndication
program enables library materials
to be indexed by major search engines, such
as Google and Yahoo!, adding del.icio.us
tags for the OCLC Top 1000 list makes
it easier for users to discover library resources through
other Web systems. All part of getting more library data
out “into the flow.”
To include a tag cloud, similar to the
illustration below, of the OCLC Top 1000
on your library’s blog or Web site, paste
the following code into your hypertext (all
one line, no breaks; Javascript support required): <script type=”text/javascript” src=”http://
del.icio.us/feeds/js/tags/oclc2005top100
0?icon;size=12-33;color=66ccff-333399;
title=OCLC%20Top%201000;name;show
add”></script>
Andrew Houghton, a software engineer
with OCLC Programs and Research,
converted list data already available in an
Excel spreadsheet into a form that could
be uploaded programmatically to del.icio.us. A Visual Basic for Applications macro
took the Excel data and pushed it out to
del.icio.us using that site’s API (Application Programming Interface).
According to Houghton, the process
was fairly simple. “I read the del.icio.us
help page, looked over their API—which is
fairly uncomplicated—and did the programming
in Visual Basic to turn our categories
into tags and upload the bookmarks.”
Social networking encourages teen library usage | It’s cloudy in research but with little chance of rain
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