All mashed up
Clouds, mash ups and
Web services are tech
terms that are resonating
throughout the
information industry.
They are also part of the
next generation of library
services that we are developing
at OCLC.
Broadly defined, Web
services enable applications
to interconnect
over the Web through
machine-to-machine interfaces.
They cover a wide range of activities that let
people tap into computing power on the Web. Here are
some examples of how OCLC is implementing them.
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The xISBN service, developed by OCLC
Research, supplies International Standard Book
Numbers (ISBNs) associated with an individual
intellectual work, based on information in the
WorldCat database. Give it one ISBN, and it
returns a list of related ISBNs and selected
metadata.
-
WorldCat Identities creates a summary page for
every name in WorldCat. Each page presents a
visually attractive summary for the individual or organization
identified, including total works, genres,
roles and classifications. There is also a publication
timeline and an audience-level indicator.
-
The WorldCat Registry enables a library to
manage its institutional identity more efficiently.
On a secure Web platform, a library can create
and maintain a single profile that includes information
of use to the library’s consortium members,
technology vendors, e-content providers, funding
agencies and other partners. This access enables
the library to automate routine tasks such as activation
of a new subscription service or renewal of
an existing one.
We recently invited a small group of developers
from OCLC cataloging institutions in North America
and Europe to use the WorldCat API (Applications
Programming Interface) to build applications that would
drive people from the Web to WorldCat and library
services. These developers could then link WorldCat
information to Internet applications as well as presentations,
blogs and e-mails. This shared development
will enhance the creativity and usage of this data.
Most recently, OCLC and Google have agreed to
exchange data that will facilitate the discovery of
library collections through Google search services.
OCLC member libraries participating in the Google
Book Search™ program, which makes the full text of
more than one million books searchable, may share
their WorldCat-derived MARC records with Google to
better facilitate discovery of library collections through
Google. Google will link from Google Book Search to
WorldCat.org, which will drive traffic to library OPACs
and other library services.
Finally, it should be noted that OCLC services and
governance of the cooperative have always been intertwined.
Indeed, we are going forward not only with
next-generation services, but also with a next-generation
governance structure for the OCLC cooperative.
(See page 20). These changes in governance are designed
to extend participation in the cooperative by
an increasing number of libraries and cultural heritage
institutions around the world.
For the OCLC cooperative, the future will require
even more mash ups—more collaboration, more libraries,
more archives and museums, more services on a
Web scale and, of course, more innovation.

Jay Jordan
OCLC President and Chief Executive Officer
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