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Open Borders Project. The new Open Borders Project. A merger of the old Open Borders (Project 2) and Connecting and Discovering Content (Project 10) The common thread is seamless access to NSLA content by users Trove provides the key infrastructure for:
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The new Open Borders Project • A merger of the old Open Borders (Project 2) and Connecting and Discovering Content (Project 10) • The common thread is seamless access to NSLA content by users • Trove provides the key infrastructure for: • making NSLA collection holdings visible and discoverable • improving state and territory-based discovery services • providing more seamless access to e-resources.
Trove • A powerful tool for the public to discover NSLA content including: • print collections • special collections (mss, pictures, etc.) • digitised Australian newspapers • the content of PANDORA • e-resources at article level (potentially) • and to discover content from other libraries, digitised collections and university repositories • and to discover biographical information.
Annotation issues • Trove has now made it possible for all Australian library collection content to be annotated by users • There is a need to define how this capability will mesh with Reimagining Libraries Project 5 • There is a need to develop a mechanism for two-way exchange of annotations between Trove and local library systems
NSLA member content in Trove • This content is incomplete • Libraries Australia is the key pathway for contributing content • There are barriers to contributing some categories of content • Project 8 will be the vehicle for addressing these barriers
Project 2 deliverables • Trove prototype (May 2009) and production version (December 2009) • Plan for NSLA members to leverage off the Trove data store using an Application Programming Interface • Plan for pushing NSLA content into other spaces (eg Wikipedia) • E-resources deliverables
E-resources deliverables • Survey report on e-resource systems and capabilities (May 2009) • E-resource authentication discussion paper (December 2009) • Project Group decisions on authentication approach • Enhancement of Trove to support e-resource access (early 2011)
The e-resources vision • Users can discover, at article level, e-resources that meet their information need • If any of the libraries with which the user is affiliated subscribes to a product containing such an article, the user can easily click through to and read that article • The vision will be achieved through: • expansion of Trove to include article-level metadata • collaboration with e-resource vendors
The e-resources challenges • How can we ensure that only genuinely affiliated users gain access to the full text of the e-resource? • How can we support authentication of users who are off-site? • How can we ensure that public libraries (who often lack control over their IT facilities) are included in the authentication model?
Authentication issues [1] • On-site authentication is relatively straightforward: • but an on-site-only approach would fall short of users’ needs and would fail to realise the “multiple affiliated libraries” vision • Off-site authentication will be assisted by the deployment of EZproxy servers: • Trove links to the EZproxy server, the user is authenticated there and re-directed to the article URL • but Trove will need to build a database of EZproxy server addresses • many public libraries will never have EZproxy servers
Authentication issues [2] • To cover all public libraries we would need to: • build a database of public library login pages, with enough data to recognise what a successful login looks like • set Trove up to request user credentials, then “pretend to be a human being” and login at the relevant public library page • if the login is successful, connect to the vendor site, obtain the article and provide it to the user • gain the trust of e-resource vendors for this procedure.
The proposal • A staffing resource would work for 6 months to: • build a database of EZproxy servers and a prototype database of public library login pages • assist public libraries to implement EZproxy servers (where possible) • work with NSLA member libraries to settle on a process for maintaining and updating these databases • liaise with e-resource vendors on any authentication issues with the process
Next steps • Development of the e-resources component of Trove is likely to commence in August 2010 and will not be finished until early 2011 • The delivery of the Trove API (second half of 2010) will allow state and territory libraries to prototype new state-wide discovery services that leverage off Trove