In 2020, the COVID-19 situation forced academic libraries to move exclusively to the Web. Torespond to the COVID emergency, in April 2020 a group of librarians under the aegis of IFLAcreated "Resource Sharing during COVID-19" (RSCVD): the first experiment in free digital resourcesharing worldwide.RSCVD is based on the voluntary contribution of hundreds of librarians around the world, whoworked with the tools available at that moment in order to share documents held in their librarieswith the world academic community. After the success of this initiative in the face of the COVIDemergency, the Erasmus Plus Programme, through the HERMES project, gives us the opportunity todesign a new Resource Sharing software platform for the RSCVD international community.TALARIA software is being designed to support library communities in their resource sharing (RS)management. We aim to build a flexible platform to support different needs and policies of a RScommunity. Librarians will have access to the RSCVD international community when they have tolocate very difficult resources, those RS requests that they are not able to find in their usual collaboration network. For this reason, TALARIA supports the management of difficult requests,allowing users to send a request to all libraries in the community, as well as to a specific library.The software will also support interoperability with other RS management systems, based on the ISO18626 protocol, in order to connect existing national resource sharing networks. TALARIA will bereleased as Open Source software, and it will use free Open Source third party software and externalservices as much as possible.In this paper we present the state of the art of the project and the new concepts introduced inTALARIA that may contribute to shaping a different and more effective way of resource sharingamong libraries world-wide.
Designing TALARIA: A New Software to Support Resource Sharing of International Communities
Silvana Mangiaracina
Primo
;Alessandro Tugnoli;Debora Mazza;Rabih Kahaleh
2022
Abstract
In 2020, the COVID-19 situation forced academic libraries to move exclusively to the Web. Torespond to the COVID emergency, in April 2020 a group of librarians under the aegis of IFLAcreated "Resource Sharing during COVID-19" (RSCVD): the first experiment in free digital resourcesharing worldwide.RSCVD is based on the voluntary contribution of hundreds of librarians around the world, whoworked with the tools available at that moment in order to share documents held in their librarieswith the world academic community. After the success of this initiative in the face of the COVIDemergency, the Erasmus Plus Programme, through the HERMES project, gives us the opportunity todesign a new Resource Sharing software platform for the RSCVD international community.TALARIA software is being designed to support library communities in their resource sharing (RS)management. We aim to build a flexible platform to support different needs and policies of a RScommunity. Librarians will have access to the RSCVD international community when they have tolocate very difficult resources, those RS requests that they are not able to find in their usual collaboration network. For this reason, TALARIA supports the management of difficult requests,allowing users to send a request to all libraries in the community, as well as to a specific library.The software will also support interoperability with other RS management systems, based on the ISO18626 protocol, in order to connect existing national resource sharing networks. TALARIA will bereleased as Open Source software, and it will use free Open Source third party software and externalservices as much as possible.In this paper we present the state of the art of the project and the new concepts introduced inTALARIA that may contribute to shaping a different and more effective way of resource sharingamong libraries world-wide.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Descrizione: Designing TALARIA: a New Software to Support Resource Sharing of International Communities
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