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WorldCat Mashathon US show and tell login information

If you weren't able to join us at one of the sites for the WorldCat Mashathon US, here's the WebEx information to join the Show and Tell portion, which starts at approximately 3 pm ET:

 

WorldCat Mashathon U.S. happens this week!

We're all getting excited about the WorldCat Mashathon, set to begin this week. Karen leaves for DC tomorrow, and I follow her on Wednesday. We're expecting lots of code blossoms along with the cherries, if you excuse the bad analogy.

HTML5 Workshop a Huge Success

The HTML5 webinar which the Developer Network co-sponsored last week was a huge success. More than 300 people from the United States and Canada attended the webinar to hear Christopher Schmitt speak about HTML5 and CSS3. The group had lots of great questions and there was good discussion in the chat window. Christopher showed off the power of HTML5 including:

WorldCat Mashathon U.S. registration now open

VIAF gets bigger and better

VIAF, the Virtual International Authority File, keeps on improving. In fact, OCLC Research staff just installed an update to VIAF recently. On 18 Feb 2011, to be exact. As of that update, VIAF now contains:

18.4 million source records
14.5 million VIAF clusters
6.2 million links between source records
2.4 million VIAF clusters built from more than one source record

As part of this update, new data has been added from Spain, France, Germany, Canada, LC, Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, Swiss National Library and Sweden.

What do we mean when we say format?

I was rereading a post by Jakob Voss got me revisiting an issue that I've thought about quite a bit since I started working with and building web services. What do we mean when we say format? For me format is a really thorny issue. Sometimes when we say format we mean a metadata format (or language for describing the thing that is being described) other times what we really mean is serialization. There is a pretty big differences between these two things.

code4lib recap and follow-up

As always code4lib was a terrific conference. There were too many great sessions to pick a favorite. Things kicked off for me with the unconference preconference in which I participated in two "sessions" on on web services and libraries and other other on Linked Data. The web services and libraries session left me thinking that OCLC Developer Network could do more to talk about the technologies and process behind how we're building the web services at OCLC.

Planned downtime for OCLC services on February 27 to upgrade network storage

On Sunday, February 27 there will be a scheduled service downtime for a number of OCLC services from 1:00 am until at least 6:00 am and, at most, 11:00 am (U.S. Eastern Time). We apologize for any inconvenience this causes. We need to take the following services off-line in order to upgrade the storage systems and capacity for all OCLC services. During this time, the following services will be unavailable:

HTML5 and CSS3 Webinar coming in March

Calling all Web designers, developers and general Webby types of folks. If you've been wondering what the low-down was on the relatively new HTML5 standard and what it might mean for your code--here's a great opportunity to learn more at a quick, free session made possible by a joint sponsorship from OCLC Developer Network and OCLC Research.

Book signing at Code4Lib for Open Source Web Applications for libraries

Karen is far too modest to ever post out about the fact she's written another book. But she has (!) they'll be giving away copies as part of the book raffle at Code4Lib next week and if you bring your copy with you to the conference, she might even sign it for you.

The book is called Open Source Web Applications for Libraries and here's what publisher Information Today says about it:

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