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The introduction is comprised of two sentances taken directly from 1.2. What is the Dublin Core?.
The dublincore.org document use rules appears to permit that, provided a copyright notice is included. Jayvdb 00:00, 22 May 2006 (UTC) (edit on 05:03, 18 April 2006)
The audience element is now officially part of the DCMES:
see:
http://dublincore.org/documents/2002/10/06/current-elements/index.shtml
URI: http://purl.org/dc/terms/audience Name: audience Label: Audience Definition: A class of entity for whom the resource is intended or useful. Comment: A class of entity may be determined by the creator or the publisher or by a third party. Type of term: http://dublincore.org/usage/documents/principles/#element Status: http://dublincore.org/usage/documents/process/#recommended Date issued: 2001-05-21 This version: http://dublincore.org/usage/terms/dc/#audience-002
--
[2005-06-22] Removing the following comment:
"The recommended standard is considered to be poorly organized; notable flaws include a difficulty in finding definitions of the individual metadata elements (the "audience" element is particularly difficult to locate)."
1) Considered by whom? (This is just personal opinion.)
2) Clearly listed now at
http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/
--
Liberty 23:33, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I had several people at work try to find things in the DCMI pages. They all failed. The DCMI Web site is one of the most byzantine, overly complex sites I have ever seen. And I have seen a lot of Web sites during my work as a usability consultant. It might seem logical to a professional cataloguing librarian or a computer scientist but to normal human beings it is an amalgalm of edicts where outdated versiosn are as easily accessible as the correct recent ones instead of being archived and clearly marked as such. Of course, you might still say that it is just an opinion on my part, following these tests. But isn't its clarity also an opinion on your part? -- AlainV 04:16, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC)
"In 2001, it [Dublin Core] became an official ANSI/NISO standard (Z39.85) and in 2003 Dublin Core was issued as an international standard (ISO 15836)."
From Understanding Metadata published by NISO Press, National Information Standards Organization; page 12
There is much in this article about Dublin Core, some of which I attempted to look up on Wikipedia and failed to find information. I am new to using Wikipedia, to understanding Dublin Core and metadata in general, and to the field of information science in general. But there are other ISO numbers linked in Wikipedia. Maybe this one should be too?
I cleaned up the introduction to try to make it understandable for those not in the field. If you didn't understand this article before, and you can understand it now, feel free to remove the "cleanup request". GUllman 22:56, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
Maybe I'm not the only one who's interested in the origin of that term, could someone please provide this information and include it in the article?
LaMona 15:03, 18 March 2007 (UTC)DC-1: OCLC/NCSA Metadata Workshop
March 1-3, 1995
Dublin, Ohio USA
Co-sponsored by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.
Does anyone know how many people (site creators, site users) use DC? I've been designing sites for over a decade and just came across the element for the first time today (in a client's terrible, standards non-compliant, outdated site).
Could someone who undertands Dublin Core better than me explain how DCMI Metadata Terms relates to "qualified Dublin Core"? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.47.222.9 ( talk) 13:03, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
"If the web to you is HTML pages, then you'll not come across much DC and probably you need not worry much about that."
The semantic web is not just for library searches.
Currently HTML5 is compatible with a fraction of the semantic markup that was previously usable as valid XHTML.
Yet this finds no mention in this wikipedia article on DC - which is not a reference e-book for library tech.
G. Robert Shiplett 00:38, 10 November 2012 (UTC)
Someone added in a reference to "ifla" - possibly meaning IFLA. That isn't relevant, so I reversed the edit. (I still have this on my list of articles that need updating but will take considerable effort.) LaMona ( talk) 20:00, 6 August 2014 (UTC)
http://purl.org/dc/terms no longer works. http://purl.org now redirects to https://archive.org/services/purl/, and the transfer of PURL to the Internet Archive needs to be taken into account. Charles Matthews ( talk) 09:08, 4 September 2017 (UTC)
Recently when I clicked on a certain link from this article -- (the Latest revision as of 21:06, 18 September 2019 version) -- it took me to a "Not Found" ( error message) web page.
The link I had clicked on was the link in footnote "[8]" which pointed to this: https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/1995-03-01_the-oclcncsa-metadata-workshop-the-essential-elements-of-network-object-description/ [URL 1a] ... which seems to be (now) a " dead link".
My first attempt to figure out what the [correct] web page used to say, (when that link was "alive and well"), involved using the " Wayback machine" web site (at "web.archive.org").
I quickly found [the web page at] this URL:
but it did not seem to contain very much information.
Ordinarily, I would have just assumed that the information (limited though it might be) at [URL 1b] was probably a reliable indicator -- (in fact, was probably a faithful copy!) -- of the information that used to be accessible using the ["OLD"] link to [URL 1a].
I still think that such an assumption is a pretty good bet. However, since there was not very much information at [URL 1b], I did some more checking.
It turns out that there is a URL [of a web page] right on the "www.dublincore.org" web site, that seems to correspond to the web page that used to be accessible using the ["OLD"] link to [URL 1a].
I found it at https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/03-01-the-oclcncsa-metadata-workshop-the-essential-elements-of-network-object-description/ [URL 1d] ... although there is also a link to [URL 1d] from https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/ [URL 1c] ... and [URL 1c] itself seems to include pretty much the same (limited) amount of information as [URL 1d].
I decided to write something here on this "Talk:" page, before proceeding with an edit ... partly due to finding out that... apparently,
While I was getting the URL (and the "display string") for the first hyperlink in this section (shown above), I was looking at https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Dublin_Core&type=revision&diff=916483607&oldid=915284859 [Diff URL 2a] which was the DIFF listing for the most recent edit of the article. (It was one easy way to obtain both that URL and that "display string").
Lo and behold, the "edit comment" shown there -- at that [Diff URL 2a] web page -- said:
(top: Task 16: replaced (1×) / removed (0×) deprecated |dead-url= and |deadurl= with |url-status=;)
and ... that -- [the fact that << "| deadurl = yes
" >> is now deprecated!] -- was news to me.
Ordinarily, when I find some "
Wayback machine" URL, for a saved "archive" copy of some web page that has been moved [from its old URL to a new one] or that has been deleted, I just enter the new URL as an "archiveurl" field value, and add an "archivedate" and (something like) "| deadurl = yes". (Well, that was in the past; ... in the future, I guess I will be using (something more like) << "| url-status = dead
" >> instead.)
But now, even though I now know to use "| url-status = dead" instead, I am still a little bit hesitant to update that "{{ cite web}}" template [instance] for (the "ref" tag for) footnote number "[8]" in the [Dublin Core] article. I am wondering about ... the limited information available at the [presumptive] "target" web page -- whether [URL 1b] or [URL 1d].
I understand that the information at the web page at [URL 1b] -- OR [URL 1d] -- is probably just about [exactly!] as helpful to the reader, as the information that used to be at the ["OLD"] web page at [URL 1a]. However, I am unsure about what the original intent was, as far as ... the usefulness of clicking on that link in [what is now] footnote number "[8]". If I had a better understanding of what that original intent had been, then I think I would feel more confident about being able to determine whether or not the web page at [URL 1b] or [URL 1d] would be "up to the task" [sufficiently useful] for accomplishing the intended goal.
Any advice? or other comments? -- Mike Schwartz ( talk) 07:50, 12 October 2019 (UTC)
The first sentence ("The Dublin Core schema is a small set of vocabulary terms ...") is untrue. A schema or scheme is a set of rules. Terms, OTOH, are members of vocabularies. The Dublin Core schema (or scheme) is *not* a vocabulary. Misha Wolf ( talk) 15:05, 5 August 2020 (UTC)
I have no personal objection to the removal of the trade mark symbols in the lede paragraph (see the differences) but the entire paragraph is a quotation so I don't know whether it's OK to remove them. Misha Wolf ( talk) 11:00, 10 September 2020 (UTC)
Warning. I am about to replace the page with a major rewrite. It still needs work and I don't mind corrections, etc. I know of some sources that would be useful but I don't have access to them (paywalls). If you do have access to things like Elsevier and Taylor and Francis, please do a search for review articles and articles on the history of development.
I apologize but I did the rewrite in my sandbox because it was so extensive and the changes were legion. If this is a problem I suppose I could repeat them here piecemeal, but it's already been a lot of work.
I do interact with the DCMI so I have a minor COI, but I am working hard to be neutral.
The article still needs:
Lamona ( talk) 17:08, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Or Dublin Core Metadata Terms? Just "Dublin Core" doesn't seem to be enough. Lamona ( talk) 17:50, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||||||||||||
|
The introduction is comprised of two sentances taken directly from 1.2. What is the Dublin Core?.
The dublincore.org document use rules appears to permit that, provided a copyright notice is included. Jayvdb 00:00, 22 May 2006 (UTC) (edit on 05:03, 18 April 2006)
The audience element is now officially part of the DCMES:
see:
http://dublincore.org/documents/2002/10/06/current-elements/index.shtml
URI: http://purl.org/dc/terms/audience Name: audience Label: Audience Definition: A class of entity for whom the resource is intended or useful. Comment: A class of entity may be determined by the creator or the publisher or by a third party. Type of term: http://dublincore.org/usage/documents/principles/#element Status: http://dublincore.org/usage/documents/process/#recommended Date issued: 2001-05-21 This version: http://dublincore.org/usage/terms/dc/#audience-002
--
[2005-06-22] Removing the following comment:
"The recommended standard is considered to be poorly organized; notable flaws include a difficulty in finding definitions of the individual metadata elements (the "audience" element is particularly difficult to locate)."
1) Considered by whom? (This is just personal opinion.)
2) Clearly listed now at
http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/
--
Liberty 23:33, 22 Jun 2005 (UTC)
I had several people at work try to find things in the DCMI pages. They all failed. The DCMI Web site is one of the most byzantine, overly complex sites I have ever seen. And I have seen a lot of Web sites during my work as a usability consultant. It might seem logical to a professional cataloguing librarian or a computer scientist but to normal human beings it is an amalgalm of edicts where outdated versiosn are as easily accessible as the correct recent ones instead of being archived and clearly marked as such. Of course, you might still say that it is just an opinion on my part, following these tests. But isn't its clarity also an opinion on your part? -- AlainV 04:16, 23 Jun 2005 (UTC)
"In 2001, it [Dublin Core] became an official ANSI/NISO standard (Z39.85) and in 2003 Dublin Core was issued as an international standard (ISO 15836)."
From Understanding Metadata published by NISO Press, National Information Standards Organization; page 12
There is much in this article about Dublin Core, some of which I attempted to look up on Wikipedia and failed to find information. I am new to using Wikipedia, to understanding Dublin Core and metadata in general, and to the field of information science in general. But there are other ISO numbers linked in Wikipedia. Maybe this one should be too?
I cleaned up the introduction to try to make it understandable for those not in the field. If you didn't understand this article before, and you can understand it now, feel free to remove the "cleanup request". GUllman 22:56, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
Maybe I'm not the only one who's interested in the origin of that term, could someone please provide this information and include it in the article?
LaMona 15:03, 18 March 2007 (UTC)DC-1: OCLC/NCSA Metadata Workshop
March 1-3, 1995
Dublin, Ohio USA
Co-sponsored by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.
Does anyone know how many people (site creators, site users) use DC? I've been designing sites for over a decade and just came across the element for the first time today (in a client's terrible, standards non-compliant, outdated site).
Could someone who undertands Dublin Core better than me explain how DCMI Metadata Terms relates to "qualified Dublin Core"? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.47.222.9 ( talk) 13:03, 21 January 2010 (UTC)
"If the web to you is HTML pages, then you'll not come across much DC and probably you need not worry much about that."
The semantic web is not just for library searches.
Currently HTML5 is compatible with a fraction of the semantic markup that was previously usable as valid XHTML.
Yet this finds no mention in this wikipedia article on DC - which is not a reference e-book for library tech.
G. Robert Shiplett 00:38, 10 November 2012 (UTC)
Someone added in a reference to "ifla" - possibly meaning IFLA. That isn't relevant, so I reversed the edit. (I still have this on my list of articles that need updating but will take considerable effort.) LaMona ( talk) 20:00, 6 August 2014 (UTC)
http://purl.org/dc/terms no longer works. http://purl.org now redirects to https://archive.org/services/purl/, and the transfer of PURL to the Internet Archive needs to be taken into account. Charles Matthews ( talk) 09:08, 4 September 2017 (UTC)
Recently when I clicked on a certain link from this article -- (the Latest revision as of 21:06, 18 September 2019 version) -- it took me to a "Not Found" ( error message) web page.
The link I had clicked on was the link in footnote "[8]" which pointed to this: https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/1995-03-01_the-oclcncsa-metadata-workshop-the-essential-elements-of-network-object-description/ [URL 1a] ... which seems to be (now) a " dead link".
My first attempt to figure out what the [correct] web page used to say, (when that link was "alive and well"), involved using the " Wayback machine" web site (at "web.archive.org").
I quickly found [the web page at] this URL:
but it did not seem to contain very much information.
Ordinarily, I would have just assumed that the information (limited though it might be) at [URL 1b] was probably a reliable indicator -- (in fact, was probably a faithful copy!) -- of the information that used to be accessible using the ["OLD"] link to [URL 1a].
I still think that such an assumption is a pretty good bet. However, since there was not very much information at [URL 1b], I did some more checking.
It turns out that there is a URL [of a web page] right on the "www.dublincore.org" web site, that seems to correspond to the web page that used to be accessible using the ["OLD"] link to [URL 1a].
I found it at https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/03-01-the-oclcncsa-metadata-workshop-the-essential-elements-of-network-object-description/ [URL 1d] ... although there is also a link to [URL 1d] from https://www.dublincore.org/news/1995/ [URL 1c] ... and [URL 1c] itself seems to include pretty much the same (limited) amount of information as [URL 1d].
I decided to write something here on this "Talk:" page, before proceeding with an edit ... partly due to finding out that... apparently,
While I was getting the URL (and the "display string") for the first hyperlink in this section (shown above), I was looking at https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Dublin_Core&type=revision&diff=916483607&oldid=915284859 [Diff URL 2a] which was the DIFF listing for the most recent edit of the article. (It was one easy way to obtain both that URL and that "display string").
Lo and behold, the "edit comment" shown there -- at that [Diff URL 2a] web page -- said:
(top: Task 16: replaced (1×) / removed (0×) deprecated |dead-url= and |deadurl= with |url-status=;)
and ... that -- [the fact that << "| deadurl = yes
" >> is now deprecated!] -- was news to me.
Ordinarily, when I find some "
Wayback machine" URL, for a saved "archive" copy of some web page that has been moved [from its old URL to a new one] or that has been deleted, I just enter the new URL as an "archiveurl" field value, and add an "archivedate" and (something like) "| deadurl = yes". (Well, that was in the past; ... in the future, I guess I will be using (something more like) << "| url-status = dead
" >> instead.)
But now, even though I now know to use "| url-status = dead" instead, I am still a little bit hesitant to update that "{{ cite web}}" template [instance] for (the "ref" tag for) footnote number "[8]" in the [Dublin Core] article. I am wondering about ... the limited information available at the [presumptive] "target" web page -- whether [URL 1b] or [URL 1d].
I understand that the information at the web page at [URL 1b] -- OR [URL 1d] -- is probably just about [exactly!] as helpful to the reader, as the information that used to be at the ["OLD"] web page at [URL 1a]. However, I am unsure about what the original intent was, as far as ... the usefulness of clicking on that link in [what is now] footnote number "[8]". If I had a better understanding of what that original intent had been, then I think I would feel more confident about being able to determine whether or not the web page at [URL 1b] or [URL 1d] would be "up to the task" [sufficiently useful] for accomplishing the intended goal.
Any advice? or other comments? -- Mike Schwartz ( talk) 07:50, 12 October 2019 (UTC)
The first sentence ("The Dublin Core schema is a small set of vocabulary terms ...") is untrue. A schema or scheme is a set of rules. Terms, OTOH, are members of vocabularies. The Dublin Core schema (or scheme) is *not* a vocabulary. Misha Wolf ( talk) 15:05, 5 August 2020 (UTC)
I have no personal objection to the removal of the trade mark symbols in the lede paragraph (see the differences) but the entire paragraph is a quotation so I don't know whether it's OK to remove them. Misha Wolf ( talk) 11:00, 10 September 2020 (UTC)
Warning. I am about to replace the page with a major rewrite. It still needs work and I don't mind corrections, etc. I know of some sources that would be useful but I don't have access to them (paywalls). If you do have access to things like Elsevier and Taylor and Francis, please do a search for review articles and articles on the history of development.
I apologize but I did the rewrite in my sandbox because it was so extensive and the changes were legion. If this is a problem I suppose I could repeat them here piecemeal, but it's already been a lot of work.
I do interact with the DCMI so I have a minor COI, but I am working hard to be neutral.
The article still needs:
Lamona ( talk) 17:08, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Or Dublin Core Metadata Terms? Just "Dublin Core" doesn't seem to be enough. Lamona ( talk) 17:50, 6 June 2024 (UTC)