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    NPArC - NRC Publications Archive

    As noted by Richard, and amplified by MichaelGeist and Peter Suber - The National Research Council (NRC) of Canada's Senior Executive Committee (SEC) has mandated that effective January 2009, all deposit copies of all peer-reviewed publications (articles, proceedings, books, book chapters) and technical reports produced by NRC will require deposit in the NRC Publication Archive (known as NPArC). 

    CISTI has produced a press release providing additional details including some areas of potential exemption: 

    Wherever possible, NPArC will provide access to the full text of these publications. NRC's License to Publish (Crown Copyright) will be updated to declare its intent to deposit the full-text of NRC-authored publications in NPArC. However, the nature, timing and extent of access to individual publications depends on a variety of factors, including agreements with publishers, or in the case of technical reports the sensitivity or confidentiality of content.

    As the architect for the NPArC project, I'm proud to see some movement forward by NRC on the difficult legal and policy issues for this initiative.  The technology is one thing, but as has been demonstrated time and again, the true hurdles with institutional repositories are less technical, and more human in origin.

    That said... just a bit of the technology/architecture:  The NPArC project is intending to piggy-back on our ongoing Trusted Digital Repository (TDR) project that CISTI has been working on for the past while.  The TDR is, among other things, CISTI's solution to moving forward with SOA-based article-level content and metadata management.  The TDR - based broadly on the OAIS reference model - is intended to handle tens of millions of bibliographic records and articles - and is planned to be CISTI's primary article-level storage and management infrastructure.  It's much more than NPArC itself needs - but it's planned that TDR will be supporting a number of other CISTI offerings and services as well.



     


    Library puppet videos - Weasel and Goose

    Despite my usual rule against posting about things that Richard Akerman has already blogged, I feel it's required that I pay homage to the creativity and comedy of Llord Llama (or is it King Goose?) who provides a collection of amusing and silly puppet-based videos - mostly about libraries, copyright, publishers and such.  Awesome.

    The one about copyright vs publisher vs librarians is particularly poignant.

    Encyclopedia of Life

    The Encyclopedia of Life is a project that proposes to catalogue all of Earth's 1.8 million species and make them available via the web.

    ...will include species descriptions, pictures, maps, videos, sound, sightings by amateurs, and links to entire genomes and scientific journal papers.

    Sounds like a huge, but worthwhile project.  I wonder what encoding they will use for species, and what services/API's they might make available?  I can imagine some useful linking that could be done between scientific papers, references within this database, and publisher and library services that could make good use of this set of data.

    - via Digg, via Daily News