FYI.

Peter


Begin forwarded message:

From: "Todd Carpenter (Gmail)" <tcarpen...@niso.org<mailto:tcarpen...@niso.org>>
Date: January 14, 2013, 10:04:58 PM EST
To: "newsl...@list.niso.org<mailto:newsl...@list.niso.org>" 
<newsl...@list.niso.org<mailto:newsl...@list.niso.org>>
Subject: Inviting community engagement on building a bibliographic roadmap

Good afternoon, NISO community,

Last fall, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation generously awarded the National 
Information Standards Organization (NISO) with a grant to support an initiative 
that will develop a community roadmap toward a new bibliographic exchange 
environment.  This roadmap will help support movement toward a future of 
bibliographic information exchange ecosystem. The bibliographic roadmap 
initiative aims to bring together as diverse a set of stakeholders as possible 
to build agree around on a common development path for bibliographic 
information exchange.  Using a consensus process, NISO hopes to build agreement 
about the problems that we face, which are the best available solutions, and 
work toward coordinating community efforts.  The project is not trying to 
duplicate efforts already underway, nor is it trying to drive a particular 
agenda, nor support a single community project. Through open virtual dialogue 
and an in-person meeting—again open and publicly accessible—, the initiative 
will ascertain the necessary elements of a bibliographic standards environment 
that are implementable, suit our global networked information environment, 
support data sharing, and are economically viable.

Over the course of the next nine months, NISO will host one face-to-face 
meeting in the United States and several global webinars, as well as organize 
at least three working group efforts during the periods between webinars. These 
meetings will be conducted to explore priorities and coordinate the 
requirements of key communities including: libraries of all types including 
national libraries; technologists represented by organizations such as the 
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative (DCMI); 
library system providers; as well as other international standards development 
organizations. The end result of this work will be a report that will identify 
exchange points where standards development is needed, and document suggested 
areas where functionality testing should be performed.  It should help pinpoint 
at a high level the development priorities and coordination points needed over 
the next 24-36 months.

NISO will be hosting an open community teleconference to launch this project on 
Thursday, January 17 at 9:00 ET (UTC -5:00) and we encourage community 
involvement in that meeting. The purpose of this call will be to introduce the 
community to this project, outline our goals, answer any questions and begin to 
map out planning the project and identify dates and locations for the in-person 
meeting that the Mellon Foundation has funded.  We expect the call will take 
about 60 minutes.

Please use the following dial-in:
  Toll-Free (US & Can) 1-877-375-2160
  Conference ID: 767-11-246#
 For a list of international dial-in numbers visit: 
https://ccimeet.tcconline.com/listNumbersByCode.action?confCode=76711246

More information about the project can be found on the NISO website: 
http://www.niso.org/topics/tl/BibliographicRoadmap/  We will also record the 
call and will post the recoding to this page after the event.  You can also 
find an extract of the proposal describing the project in detail at that page.

If you plan to attend, please send an RSVP to 
nis...@niso.org<mailto:nis...@niso.org> prior to Thursday morning.

We look forward to speaking with many of you on Thursday.

With kindest regards,

Todd Carpenter
Executive Director, NISO

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