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Folks:

Though we still haven't had time to bring the 
notes together from the RDA Special Session, it 
may interest you to know that the conversation is 
continuing at this conference about how RDA is 
progressing (and might progress) in ways that 
benefit us all.

Stu Weibel posted his thoughts on the 
conversation here on his blog: 
http://weibel-lines.typepad.com/weibelines/  Pay 
particular note to this paragraph near the end:

The Web has forced us all out of isolated 
communities of practice and into the Internet 
Commons. Certainly the practice and topography of 
librarianship is changing out from under us. As 
we struggle under the stress of these changes, it 
is perhaps predictable that legacy systems such 
as cataloging practice will change even more 
slowly. The RDA effort recognizes the importance 
of updating our profession to fit more 
comfortably into the Internet Commons. If we are 
to achieve anything like the interoperability we 
hope for, we will need common structural models. 
If the effort devolves to simply unraveling 
existing rules and rewinding the yarns, we will 
fall short of the integration we need to support 
our future. The successes and failures of the DC 
community in its own modeling struggles can be 
usefulŠ and reusable.  I gather that the Joint 
Steering Committee has sought consultation with 
representatives of the IEEE LOM metadata 
community as well as with DCMI. It would be 
fitting if the DCMI could return some value to 
the community that has provided so much of the 
insight that has motivated its own progress.

I'm pleased to have been able to take the 
conversation about RDA "on the road" and 
encountered such engagement here.  I look forward 
to sharing more details as I can.

Diane
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Diane I. Hillmann
Research Librarian
Cornell University Library
Email: [log in to unmask]
Voice: (607) 387-9207
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