History of RLG Programs
1974: RLG is founded by
three universities—Columbia, Harvard, and Yale—and
The New York Public Library, a move The New York Times
calls "a sweeping and controversial program of combined operations."
1975: RLG incorporates as a
not-for-profit membership organization.
1978: RLG moves its offices
to Stanford University. It adopts Stanford Library's BALLOTS
computerized processing system, which will later become the Research
Libraries Information Network (RLIN®).
1980: While expanding its
membership to include key university research libraries across the
country, RLG builds a unique shared cataloging database: the RLIN Union
Catalog.
With the Art Institute of Chicago, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, RLG creates SCIPIO, a shared database of
art sales catalogs.
1982: RLG introduces the British Library's
Eighteenth-Century Short Title Catalogue as a special database.
1983: RLG embarks upon
several decade-long projects to preserve members' "Great Collections"
on microfilm. Preservation microform information is included in online
records for the first time.
RLG adds Chinese, Japanese, and Korean scripts to RLIN.
1986: RLG adds Cyrillic to
RLIN.
1987: RLG establishes an
RLIN help desk for customers.
1988: RLG moves to Mountain
View, California.
1989: RLG welcomes its
100th member.
1990: RLG begins a
decade-long series of member symposia focusing on the challenge of
managing nonprint and electronic materials.
1991: RLG introduces
Ariel®, document transmission software for use in interlibrary
lending transactions.
The organization simplifies and broadens its membership
structure and establishes a member-elected board of directors.
1992: RLG welcomes its
first member outside North America: the British Library.
RLG adds Arabic to RLIN.
RLG introduces article-level access to journals and
conference proceedings with the CitaDel® citation databases.
1993: To make its
information sources more accessible to non-librarians, RLG introduces
the easy-to-use search system Eureka®.
1994: RLG awarded the
Society of American Archivists' Distinguished Service Award.
1995: RLG celebrates its
20th anniversary with a two-day symposium at Harvard University called
"Scholarship in the New Information Environment."
1996: RLG opens its
once-private network, allowing anyone in the world with Internet access
to take advantage of RLG's services.
RLG opens a satellite office in the United Kingdom.
1997: RLG and Cornell
University launch RLG DigiNews, an electronic news
magazine focusing on preservation and digital technology.
1998: RLG introduces unique
online access to the holdings of archival collections: RLG Archival
Resources.
1999: RLG enters the world of electronic images by
becoming the first distributor of the Art Museum Image Consortium's
AMICO LibraryTM.
2000: RLG introduces ILL
Manager, a freestanding, easy-to-use software system that manages all
interlibrary loan transactions.
With membership at 162, RLG celebrates its 25th
anniversary at The New York Public Library with a symposium titled
"Fast Forward: Trends that Affect Our Future."
2001: RLG receives support
from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to create a wholly new information
resource—the RLG Union Catalog on the Web—called
RedLightGreen.
RLG launches two more electronic newsletters, for the
broad IT community: ShelfLife, a weekly; and NewsScan,
a daily.
2002: RLG opens a second
satellite office in New York City.
RLG launches RLG Cultural Materials, the culmination of
several years of collaborative work by members.
2003: Members lead the
migration of interlending to the next-generation, peer-to-peer model,
by moving the SHARES partnership entirely to standards-based
peer-to-peer ILL systems—like ILL Manager. RLG retires the
RLIN ILL legacy system.
RLG launches the RedLightGreen Web site in a pilot phase, and The
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation provides renewed support for further
development.
The organization moves to new open-office headquarters at Stierlin
Court in Mountain View.
2004: RLG launches
Trove.net™, a spinoff from RLG Cultural Materials. Accessible
to the public, the site makes over 248,000 images available for
commercial and individual licensing.
RLG overhauls its membership format, scrapping the two
tiers of "special" and "general" members. In the new plan, dues are
tied to the size of the organization's operating budget, with a single
membership category.
2005: RLG and OCLC jointly
publish the Data Dictionary for Preservation Metadata: Final
Report of the PREMIS Working Group.
RLG completes conversion of RLG databases from a
mainframe system to an open systems server environment.
2006: RLG launches
ArchiveGridSM
—an
innovative access service for archival and special collections,
replacing RLG Archival Resources.
RLG and OCLC announce the passage of an RLG membership
vote to approve the combination of the two organizations. On 1 July
2006, RLG Programs is formed and becomes part of the OCLC Programs and Research division..
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