On 22 May this year, the National Library released a Prototype of its new integrated discovery service. During the following month, the Prototype generated considerable discussion in blogs and forums in Australia and overseas. In the Library Journal blog, Roy Tennant of OCLC called it 'one stop searching with a can-do attitude' (http://www.libraryjournal.com/blog/1090000309/post/1900044990.html).
The Prototype, as yet unbranded, can be found at http://sbdsproto.nla.gov.au.
The Library commenced the development of this new discovery service in August 2008, with the aim of improving and replacing its current free search services to the public. There are currently eight of these services:
- Libraries Australia free search service
- Picture Australia
- Music Australia
- Australian Research Online
- Register of Australian Archives and Manuscripts
- Australia Dancing
- PANDORA search service
- Australian Newspapers Beta.
In 2007 the Library decided that it could not go on building additional silo discovery services. It resolved to integrate all of these services through a project called the 'Single Business Discovery Project'.
The Library has also embarked on a new program to aggregate biographical metadata, the People Australia program. This data will support discovery of information in Australian web-based biographical services. The new discovery service will be the vehicle for searching this aggregated data.
The new discovery service will provide access to a significantly greater range of resources from a wider range of sources, including more full-text content. It will enhance ease of discovery through improved relevance ranking, refinement by facets, and FRBR grouping of related items. You can find more background about the Project in the Libraries Australia Advisory Committee paper which is referred to at: https://wiki.nla.gov.au/display/LABS/2.+Single+Business+Discovery+Project.
Some people will argue that 'all discovery should be left to Google' but the National Library still thinks that there is strong justification for this Project:
- try as we might, we can't get Google to harvest all or even most of the data that we are currently aggregating in programs like Picture Australia
- we want to preference Australian collections in the relevance ranking (this is the focus of our service)
- we want users to exploit the tailored search refinement facets that we have developed (eg for narrowing searches of newspaper articles).
The National Library intends to seek additional content for this service, such as high level collection guides and finding aids from libraries and archives, and article-level metadata for e-journals from participating vendors and aggregators.
The Library is also working closely with the State and Territory libraries through the 'Connecting and Discovering Content' Project of the NSLA Re-imagining Library Services initiative. Discussions have started concerning additional content that could be contributed by NSLA members, and how those libraries can use the National Library’s data aggregation within their own online services.
You are invited to try out the Prototype, if you haven’t done so already, and to contribute comments through the Feedback box on the Home Page.
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