Library Legislation (Public Libraries Acts)
Sl. No. | States | Cess | Year |
1. | Tamil Nadu | Library Cess on Property tax or house tax. | 1948 |
2. | Andhra Pradesh | Library Cess on House tax and properties. | 1960 |
3. | Karnataka | Library Cess on lands and buildings Octroi, duty, vehicle tax, Taxes on professions, trades callings and employments. | 1965 |
4. | Maharashtra | No Library Cess | 1967 |
5. | West Bengal | No Library Cess | 1979 |
6. | Manipur | No Library Cess | 1988 |
7. | Kerala | Library Cess on buildings or property tax | 1989 |
8. | Haryana | Library Cess on property tax and house tax | 1989 |
9. | Mizoram | No Library Cess | 1993 |
10. | Goa | No Library Cess | 1993 |
11. | Gujarat | No Library Cess | 2000 |
12. | Orissa | No Library Cess | 2001 |
13. | Uttarakhand | No Library Cess | 2005 |
14. | Rajasthan | No Library Cess | 2006 |
15. | Uttar Pradesh | No Library Cess | 2006 |
16. | Chattisgarh | 2009 | |
17. | Pondichery | 2007 | |
18. | Bihar | No Library Cess | 2008 |
19 | Arunachal Pradesh | 2009 |
RRRLF Website Source Accessed on 27/06/2017: Status of library legislation in India
RRRLF Website Accessed on 27/06/2017: Public Library System In India
ILA Website Accessed on (28/06/2017): Public Libraries Acts
Source: IGNOU BLIS (BLI-221, Library, Information & Society, Library & Information Related Legislation 02)
Bibliometrics
Sl. No | List of Types | Founder/Coin By | Year |
1. | Bibliometrics | Alan Pritchard | 1969 |
2. | Statistical Analysis | Cole and Eales | 1917 |
3. | Statistical Bibliography | Hume | 1923 |
4. | Scientometrics | T. Braunin (Dubrov Karinros) | 1977 |
5. | Librametry | S. R. Ranaganathan | 1948 |
6. | Informetrics | Otton Nacke | 1979 |
7. | Webometrics | Almind and Ingwersen | 1997 |
8. | Wikimetrics | ||
9. |
Source Accessed on 27/06/2017: Librametric, Bibliometric, Scientometrics, Informetrics
Accessed on 27/06/2017: The journey from librametry to altmetrics: a look back
Management
Sl. No. | Period | Year |
1 | Pre-Scientific Period | Pre 1880 |
2 | Scientific Period | 1880 – 1927 |
3 | Human Relation | 1927 – 1950 |
4 | Synthesis Period | 1950 – 2007 |
Classification
Sl. No. | Name of the Scheme | Author | Year |
1. | Dewey Decimal Classification (DDC) | Melvil Dewey | 1876 |
2. | Expansive Classification (EC) | C. A. Cutter | 1879 |
3. | Library of Congress Classification (LC) | Library of Congress | 1904 |
4. | Universal Decimal Classification (UDC) | FID (Paul Outlet & Henry La Fontane | 1905 |
5. | Subject Classification (SC) | J. D. Brown | 1906 |
6. | Colon Classification (CC) | S. R. Ranganathan | 1933 |
7. | Bibliographic Classification (BC) | H. E. Bliss | 1935 |
8. | Library Bibliographic Classification (BBK) | Lenin Library Moscow | 1959 |
9. | Rider’s International Classification (RIC) | F. Rider | 1961 |
10. | Broad System of Ordering (BSO) | FID/UNESCO | 1978 |
List of Cataloguing Scheme
Sl. No. | Cataloguing Scheme | Author | Year |
1. | Anglo- American Cataloguing Rules- I | American Library Association | 1967 |
2. | Anglo- American Cataloguing Rules- II | ALA | 1978 |
3. | Anglo- American Cataloguing Rules- II R | ALA | 1988 |
4. | American Library Association Code (ALA Code) | 1949 | |
5. | Vetican Code | 1927 | |
6. | Anglo- American Code | 1908 | |
7. | British Museum Code | A .Pannizi | 1841 |
8. | Rules for Dictionary Cataloguing | C. A. Cutter | 1876 |
9. | Machine Readable Catalogue (MARC) | Library Of Congress | 1966 |
10. | Classified Catalogue Code (CCC) | S. R. Ranganathan | 1934 |
11. | RDA | RDA Steering Committee (formerly the Joint Steering Committee in for the Development of RDA) | 2010 |
12. | CCF | UNESCO | 1978 |
13. | ISBD | IFLA | 1974 |
14. | UNIMARC | IFLA | 1977 |
15. | Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records (FRBR) | IFLA | 1998 |
16. | Functional Requirements for Authority Data (FRAD) | IFLA | 2009 |
17. | Functional Requirements for Subject Authority Records (FRSAR) | IFLA | 2010 |
Library Networks in India
Sl. No. | Library Network | Supported By | Year |
1. | INFLIBNET: Information and Library Network | UGC | 1988 |
2. | DELNET: Developing Library Network | NISSAT | 1992 |
3. | CALIBNET: Calcutta Library Network | NISSAT | 1986 |
4. | ADINET: Ahmedabad Library Network | NISSAT | 1993 |
5. | MYLIBNET: Mysore Library Network | NISSAT | 1994 |
6. | PUNENET: Pune Library Network | NISSAT | 1992 |
7. | MALIBNET : Madras Library Network | INSDOC | 1993 |
8. | BONET: Bombay Library Network | NISSAT | 1994 |
9. | SIRNET: Scientific and Industrial Research Network | CSIR & CDAC | NISCAIR 1989 |
10. | NICNET (Others) | Govt. of India | 1977 |
Indexing System/Originators & Years
Sl. No. | Name of Indexing Systems | Originators | Years |
1. | PREserved Context Indexing System (PRECIS) | Derik Austin | 1974 |
2. | Chain Indexing | Ranganathan | 1934 |
3. | Postulate based Permuted Subject Indexing (POPSI) | Ganesh Bhattaacharya | 1964 |
4. | Uniterm Indexing | Mortimer Taube | 1953 |
5. | Citation Indexing | E. Garfield | |
6. | Subject Indexing | M. E. Sears | |
7. | Key Words Indexing | H. P. Luhn | 1959 |
8. | Automated Indexing | H. Ohlaman | |
9. | SLIC Indexing | J. R. Sharma | |
10. | Thesaurus Indexing | P. M. Rogget | |
11. | COMPAS Indexing | 1953 | |
12. | Relational Indexing | J. E. L. Farradane | 1950 |
13. | Coats Subject Indexing | E.J. Coats | 1963 |
14. | Kaisers systematic Indexing | Julius Otto Kaiser | 1911 |
15. | Science Citation Index | Institute for Scientific Information, Philadelphia | 1974 |
16. | Social Science Citation Index | 1973 | |
17. | Arts & Humanities Citation Index | 1978 | |
18. | Systematic Indexing | J. E. L. Farradane | |
19. | Coordinate Indexing | Mortimer Taube | |
20. | PERMUTERM | Institute for Scientific Information | |
21. | Peek-a-boo (Optical Coincidence System) | W. E. Beaten | |
22. | Edge-notched Cards | C. N. Mooers | |
23. | PANDEX | ||
24. | ASI (Articulated Subject Index) | M. F. Lynch and others | |
25. | KWPSI | G. Vladutz and E. Garfield | |
26. | ABC-Spindex System | J. D. Falk and K. H. Baser | |
27. | TABLEDEX | R. S. Ledley | |
28. | SLIC (Selecting Listing In Combination) | J. R. Sharp | |
29. | MULTIERM | H. Solink | |
30. | Statement Indexing System | J. C. R. Yeats | |
31. | CASIN (Computer Aided Subject Index) | K. Schneider | |
32. | KWIDER | P. Ekern | |
33. | NEPHIS (Nested Phrase Indexing System) | T. C. Craven | |
34. | LIPHIS (Linked Phrase Indexing) | T. C. Craven | |
35. | NETPAD | T. C. Craven | |
36. | Iowa State University Indexing System (Mischo’s System) | W. H. Mischo | |
37. | System for the Mechanical Analysis and Retrieval of Text (SMART) | G. Salton | 1964 |
38. | CIFT (Contextual Indexing and Faceted Taxonomic Access System) | J. D. Anderson |
International Library Network
Sl. No. | Library Network | Place | Year |
1. | OCLC: Online Computer Library Centre | USA | 1967 |
2. | RLIN: Research Libraries Information Network | Stanford University. California | 1978 |
3. | JANET: Joint Academy Network | U.K | 1st April 1984 |
4. | CURL: Consortium of University Research Libraries | 1983 | |
5. | CALIS: China Academic and Library Information System | 1998 | |
6. | AARLNET: Australian Academic and Research Library Network | ||
7. | UTLAS (Union of Toronto Library Automation System) | Canada & U.S | |
8. | BLAISE (British Library Automated Information Services) | 1977 | |
9. | SURNET | Netherland | |
10. | BITNET | USA |
Library Association of India
Sl. No. | Name of State | Year |
1. | Andhra Pradesh Library Association | 1914 |
2. | All Assam Library Association | 1938 |
3. | Bengal Library Association | 1925/9 |
4. | Bihar Library Association | 1936 |
5. | Delhi Library Association | 1953 |
6. | Gomantak Library Association | 1961 |
7. | Gujarat library Association | August, 1953 |
8. | Hyderabad Library Association | 1951/3 |
9. | Jammu & Kashmir Library Association | 1966 |
10. | Karnataka Library Association, | 1929 |
11. | Kerala Library Association | 1945 |
12. | Madhya Bharat Library Association | 1957 |
13. | Madras Library Association | 1928 |
14. | Maharashtra Library Association | 1921 |
15. | Manipur Library Association | 1987 |
16. | Meghalaya Library Association | 1994 |
17. | Mizoram Library Association | 1987 |
18. | Nagaland Library Association | 1996 |
19. | Punjab Library Association | 1929/1916 |
20. | Rajasthan Library Association | 1962 |
21. | Samastha Kerala Pustakalaya Samiti | 1931 |
22. | Tripura Library Association | 1967 |
23. | U. P. Library Association | 1951 |
24. | Utkal Library Association | 1944 |
25. | Haryana Library Association | 1966 |
Library Association
Sl. No. | Library Association | Place | Year |
1. | Indian Library Association | 1933 | |
2. | Society for Information Science | 1977 | |
3. | IASLIC | Calcutta | 1955 |
4. | Librarian Club | 1962 | |
5. | Government of India Libraries Association (GILA) | New Delhi | 1933 |
6. | Indian Association of Teachers in Library and Information Science (IATLIS) | 1969 |
Copyright Act
SL No. | Copyright Act | Year |
1 | Berne Convention | 1886 |
2 | Delivery of Books & Newspaper Act | 1954 |
3 | Digital Millennium Copyright Act | 1998 |
4 | Geographical Indications of Goods (Protection Act) | 1999 |
5 | India Design Act | 2000 |
6 | Indian Patents Act | 1970 |
7 | Information Technology Act | 2000 |
8 | Indian Copyright Act | 1957 |
9 | Trade Marks Act | 1999 |
10 | Right to Information Act (RTI) | 2005 |
11 | US Copyright Act | 1976 |
Library Association of World
Sl. No. | Library Association | Place | Year |
1. | American Library Association ALA | Chicago | 1876 |
2. | The Canadian Library Association | 1946 | |
3. | Special Libraries Association (SLA) | New York | 1909 |
4. | The Association of Research Libraries | 1932 | |
5. | Commonwealth Library Association (COMLA) | Lagos, Nigeria | 1972 |
6. | Japan Library Association | 1892 | |
7. | China Society of Library Science | ||
8. | German Library Association | 1949 | |
9. | Association of Academic Librarians | 1900 | |
10. | Library Association (UK) | London | 1877 |
11. | International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA) | Hague | 1927 |
12. | Association for Special Libraries and Information Buraux (ASLIB) | London | 1926/24 |
Digital Library Software
Sl. No. | D.L Software | Developed by | Year |
1. | Greenstone | New Zealand DL Project at the University of Waikato & Developed & distributed in cooperation with UNESCO and the Human Info NGO | 1997 |
2. | Dspace | Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Libraries and Hewlett-Packard (HP) | 2002 |
3. | E-print | University of Southampton School of Electronics and Computer Science | 2000 |
4. | Fedora (Flexibile Extensible Digital Object Repository Architecture) | Cornell University | 1997 |
5. | CDSware (CERN Document Server Software) | CERN | 2002 |
6. | Archimedia | ||
7. | Bepress | ||
8. | CONTENTdm | ||
9. | Open repository | ||
10. | OPUS | ||
11. | I-Tor | ||
12. | My Core | ||
13. | Roads | ||
14. | ARNO | ||
15. | e-Scholarship | ||
16. | Dispute | ||
17. | Ganesha Digital Library version 3.1 (GDL) | Indonesian Digital Network, (IndonesiaDLN) Library |
Information Systems and Organisation
Sl. No. | Name of the Organisation | Place | Year |
1. | International Federation for Documentation (FID) | Hague | |
2. | International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) | Viena | 29 July 1957 |
3. | International Council of Scientific Union (ICSU) | Brussels | |
4. | World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) | Viena | 14 July 1967 |
5. | International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) | Hague | 1927 |
6. | Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) | Bombay | 3 Janu. 1954 |
7. | Documentation Research & Training Centre (DRTC) | Banglore | 1962 |
8. | University Grants Commission (UGC) | New Delhi | 1956 |
9. | Defence Research & Development Organisation (DRDO) | New Delhi | 1958 |
10. | Patent Information system (PIS) | Nagpur | 1980 |
11. | International Nuclear Information System (INIS) | Viena | 1970 |
12. | Agricultural Information System of Food & Agriculture Organisation (FAO) (AGRIS) | Rome | 1975 |
13. | Development Science Information System (DEVSIS) | Canada | |
14. | International Serial Data System (ISDS) | Paris | 1973 |
15. | International Patent Documentation Centre (INPADOC) | Viena | 1972 |
16. | UNIDO Industrial Information System (UNIDO- IIS) | 1977 |
National/ International
Sl. No. | Name of Network | Place | Year |
1. | Online Computer Library Centre (OCLC) | Ohio | 1967 |
2. | Joint Academic Network (JANET) | UK | 1984 |
3. | Research Libraries Information Network (RLIN) | 1978/4 | |
4. | Washington Libraries Network (WLN) | 1972 | |
5 | Consortium of University Research Libraries (CURL) | 1997 | |
6. | Regional Network for Exchange of Information & Experiences in Asia & Pacific (ASTINFO) | 1985 | |
7. | Australian Academic & research Library Network | ||
8. | Development Information Network in South Asia | 1986 | |
9. | Pan- African Development Information System (PADIS) | 1980 | |
10. | Asia & Pacific Information Network in Social Sciences (APINESS) | 1986 | |
11. | Asia & Pacific Information Network on Medicinal & Aromatic Plants | 1987 |
References
Sl. No. | Abbreviations | Meaning |
1. | Ibid | Same reference cited immediately above |
2. | Loc. Cit. | The same place cited |
3. | Op. cit | Previously cited |
4. | Vide | See |
Library Committee
Sl. No. | Committee | Related to | Year |
1. | Roy Committee on State Universities Review | ||
2. | Radhakrishnan Commission on Education | Importance of library in academic Institutions | 1948 |
3. | Kothari Commission on Education | Library Budget as a percentage of organisation budget | 1964 |
4. | Mudaliar Commission of Secondary Education | Related with School library | 1953 |
5. | Fyzee Commission | Importance of library in academic Institutions | |
6. | Mehrota Commission | Status and pay scales of librarians | |
7. | Library Committee | Quality of standards of library education | 1957 |
8. | National Mission on Libraries |
| 2012 |
9. | National Knowledge Commission | 2005 | |
10. | Sadler Commission | 1917 | |
11. | Working Group of Planning Commission of India | 1985 – 90 | |
12. | Wadia Committee | New technique of Library training | 1967 |
13. | Lal Committee | MLibsc |
Computer
Sl. No. | Name | Used | Year |
1 | 1st Generation | Vaccum Tubes | 1940-1956 |
2 | 2nd Generation | Transistors | 1956-1963 |
3 | 3rd Generation | Integrated Circuits | 1964-1971 |
4 | 4th Generation | Microprocessors | Microprocessors |
5 | 5th Generation | Artificial Intelligence | Present and Beyond |
Theories & Models of Communication
Sl. No. | Name of Model of Communication | Year |
1 | Harold Lasswell’s Model of Communication | 1948 |
2 | Shannon and Weaver Model of Communication | 1949 |
3 | Theodorem Newcomb’s Model of Communication | 1953 |
4 | Wilbur Schramm & Osgood Model of Communication | 1954 |
5 | George Gerbner’s Model of Communication | 1956 |
6 | Westley and Maclean’s Model | 1957 |
7 | David Berlo Model of Communication | 1960 |
8 | Dance’s Helix Model | 1967 |
9 | DeVito’s Interactive Model | 2003 |
10 | Davis Foulger | 2004 |
Bibliometric Laws
Sl. No. | Name of Law | Related to | Year |
1. | Zipf’s Law | Word frequency | |
2. | Lotka’s Law | Author Productivity | 1926 |
3. | Bradford’s Law | Scattering | |
4. |
Metadata
Sl. No. | Name | Founder by | Year |
1 | CCF | UNESCO | 1978 |
2 | UNIMARC | IFLA | 1977 |
3 | DUBLIN CORE | 1995 | |
4 | USMARC | Library of Congress | |
5 | MARC | Library of Congress | 1966 |
Library
Sl. No. | Name of Library | Place | Year |
1. | Nehru Memorial Museum Library | Delhi | |
2. | Connemara Public Library | Chennai | 1890 |
3. | Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Library | Pune | 1917 |
4. | Khudabaksh Oriental Library | Patna | 1891 |
5 | Rampur Raza Library | Uttar Pradesh | 1774 |
6 | National Library of India | Calcutta | |
7 | Bibliothec National | Pris | |
8 | National Library | France | 1400 |
9 | National Diet Library | Japan | 1948 |
10 | National Library | Germany | 1912 |
11 | Library of Congress | USA | 1800 |
MANAGEMENT THEORIES AND THEIR PROFOUNDERS
Sl. No. | Name | Founder | Year |
1. | Scientific Management Principles | F.W. Taylor | |
2. | Principles of Management | Henry Fayol | |
3. | Management by Objectives | Peter Drucker | 1954 |
4. | Hierarchy of Need Theory | A.Maslaw | |
5. | Theory X and Theory Y | D. McGregor | |
6. | Motivation Hygien approach | F. Herzberg | |
7. | Social Relation of Management | Elton Mayo | |
8. | System school of Management | Urwick |
Subject Headings
Sl. No. | Name | Year | |
1. | Library of Congress Subject Headings | 1898 | |
2. | Sears List of Subject Headings (SLSH) | 1923 | |
3. | Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) | United States (NLM) | 1960 |
Search Engine
Sl. No. | Name of Search Engine | Founder | Year |
1. | Larry Page, Sergey Brin | 04/09/98 | |
2. | Yahoo | 02/03/95 | |
3. | Infoseek (Go.com) | ||
4. | Looksmart | 2001 | |
5. | Teoma | ||
6. | Lycos | ||
7. | Hotbot | ||
8. | Altavista | ||
9. | Excite | ||
10. | Mangellan | ||
11. | Webcrawler | ||
12. | Khoj | ||
13. | Alexa Web Search | ||
14. | AOL Search | ||
15. | Ask.com | ||
16. | Exalead | ||
17. | Factbites | ||
18. | Hakia | ||
19. | iSEEK Education | ||
21. | KoolTorch | ||
22. | Live Search | ||
23. | MSN | ||
24. | SearchEdu.com | ||
25. | Ujiko | ||
26. | Webbrain | ||
27. | Opentext | ||
28. | Northern-Light | ||
29. | WiseNut | 2001 | |
30. | Fast Search and Transfer | ||
31. | MSN Search |
Software Related to Library and Information Science (ILMS)
Sl. No. | Software | Produced By | Place | Year |
1 | SOUL | INFLIBNET | Ahamdabad | 2009 |
2 | SANJAY | NISSAT/DESIDOC DSIR | New Delhi | |
3 | DLMS | DESIDOC | New Delhi | 1988 |
4 | Maitrayee | CMC | Calcutta (for the CALIBNET Project) | |
5 | Tulib | Tata Unisys Ltd. | Bombay | |
6 | MINISIS | SNDT, Women University | Mumbai | |
7 | SLIM | Algorithims | Pune | |
8 | Slim 1.1 | Algorythms | Bombay | |
9 | Suchika , | DESIDOC | New Delhi | |
10 | Granthlaya | INSDOC | New Delhi | |
11 | TLMS | INFLIBNET | Ahamdabad | |
12 | Tech Lib+ | NIC/OCLC NISCAIR | Hyderabad | |
13 | LIBSYS | LibSys Corporation | New Delhi | |
14 | LIBRIS | Frontier Information Technology | Hyderabad | |
15 | OASYS/Alice Softlink , | New Delhi | ||
16 | Nirmals Nirmal | Institute Of Computer Expertise | Thiruchirapala | |
17 | WILSYS | Wipro | Banglore | |
18 | LibSoft | ET&T | New Delhi | |
19 | Liberator | CMC Ltd. | Calcuta | |
20 | Librarian | Soft Aid | Pune | |
21 | SALIM | Expertise, Tiruchirapalli, Uptronlndia Ltd., | New Delhi | |
22 | NILIS | ASMITA Consultants | Bombay | |
23 | Library Manager | System Data Control Pvt. | Bombay | |
24 | Library Mgmt. | Raychansysmatics | Bangalore | |
25 | Archives (l,2,3) | Microfax Electronic; Systems | Bombay | |
26 | Acquas, | Ascat, Ascir, Asire, Seras Ober Information System | Calcutta | |
27 | Catman | INSDOC | New Delhi | |
28 | Golden Libra | Golden Age Software Technologies | Bombay | |
29 | Krvger Library | Manager Blitz Audio Visuals | Pune | |
30 | Libman | Datapro Consultancy Services | Pune | |
31 | Libra | Ivy System Ltd. | New Delhi | |
32 | Libsys | Micro-Libsys Libsys Corpn. | New Delhi | |
33 | Lib Soft | ET & T Corpn. | New Delhi | |
34 | Loan Soft | Computek Computer Systems | Hyderabad | |
35 | MECSYS | MECON | Ranchi | |
36 | NlLlS | Asmita Consultants | Bombay | |
37 | Trishna | NISTADS | New Delhi (Under NISSAT Project) | |
38 | Ulysis | WlPRO Information Technology Ltd. | Secunderabad | |
39 | Wilisys | Wipro India | Bangalore | |
40 | VirtuaILS | VTLS | Virginia | |
41 | Basisplus & Techliplus | Information Dimensions, Inc | USA & NIC, India |
Sampling
Sl. No. | Probability Sampling | Non – Probability Sampling |
1. | Simple Random Sampling | Judgement Sampling |
2. | Systematic Sampling | Quota Sampling |
3. | Stratified Sampling | Snowball Sampling |
4. | Multistage Sampling | Convenience Sampling |
5. | Cluster Sampling | Purposive Sampling |
6. | Multiple Sampling | Incidental Sampling |
Indexing
Sl. No. | Pre Co-ordinate Indexing | Post Co-ordinate Indexing |
1. | PRECISE | KWOC |
2. | POPSI (DEAMP) | Uniterm |
3. | Chain Indexing | Peak-a-boo |
4. | Kaiser Systematic Indexing | Batten System |
5. | Coats Subject Indexing | Optical Coincidence System |
6. | Relational Indexing | |
7. | SLIC (Selecting Listing In Combination) |
Xeroxography
Sl. No. | Name | Related with |
1. | Mimeography | Stencil duplication |
2. | Hectography | Spirit duplication |
3. | Lithography | Off – set – printing |
4. | Diazography | Ammonia vapour process |
ISO Standard
Sl. No. | Standard | Description |
1. | IS0 – 2709 | International standard format for bibliographic information exchange on magnetic tape |
2 | ISO 1086:1991 | Title Leaves of Books |
3 | ISO 11620:2008 | Library Performance Indicators |
4 | ISO 14416:2003 | Binding Requirements |
5 | ISO 15511:2011 | International Standard Identifier for Libraries |
6 | ISO 15706-1:2002 | Audio Visual Number ISAN |
7 | ISO 15919:2001 | Transliteration of Indic Forms |
8 | ISO 18:1981 | Contents List of Periodicals |
9 | ISO 2108:2005 | ISBN |
10 | ISO 2145:1978 | Numbering for Written Documents |
11 | ISO 214:1976 | Abstracts for Publications and Documentation |
12 | ISO 215:1986 | Contributions to Periodicals |
13 | ISO 23950:1998 | Information Retrieval Z39.50 |
14 | ISO 25577:2008 | MARC Exchange |
15 | ISO 28560-1:2011 | RFID in Libraries |
16 | ISO 3050:1962 | Indian standard for reinforced binding of library book |
17 | ISO 3297:2007 | ISSN |
18 | ISO 3901:2001 | Recording Code |
19 | ISO 5122:1979 | Abstracts Sheets in Periodicals |
20 | ISO 5127:2001 | Vocabulary |
21 | ISO 6357:1985 | Spine Titles |
22 | ISO 7144:1986 | Presentations of Thesis |
23 | ISO 7154:1983 | Bibliographic Filing |
24 | ISO 7220:1996 | Presentation of Cataloguing |
25 | ISO 8:1977 | Periodicals Presentations |
26 | ISO 9707:2008 | Statistics of Production of Books etc. |
27 | ISO 9:1995 | Information and Documentation |
28 | ISO/TR 13028:2010 | Digitization of Records |
29 | ISO/TR 8393:1985 | Bibliographic Filing Rules |
30 | ISO – 9960 | Standard for encoding data on CD – ROM |
31 | IS0 – 9000 | Quality Related Standards |
32 | ISO 10160/10601 | Loan |
NISSAT Sectoral Centre
Sl. No. | Centre Name | Place | Year |
1. | NCCC | New Delhi | |
2. | National Information Centre for Leather and Allied Industries (NICLAI) | Central Leather Research, Institute, Madras | 1977 |
3. | National Information, Centre for Food Science and Technology (NICFOS) | Central Food and Technological Research Institute, Mysore | 1977 |
4. | National Information Centre for Machine Tools and Production (NICMAP) | Central Machine Tools Institute, Banglore | 1977 |
5. | National Information Centre for Drugs and Pharmaceuticals (NICDAP) | Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow | 1977 |
6. | National Information Centre for Textiles and Allied Subjects (NICTAS) | Ahmedabad, Textile Industry’s Research Association Ahmedabad: | 1986 |
7. | National Information Centre on Chemistry and Chemical Technology (NICCHEM) | National Chemical Laboratory, Pune | 1986 |
8. | NICMAN | Ahmadabad | |
9. | NICMAS | Goa | |
10. | NICAC | Kolkata | |
11. | NCB | New Delhi | |
12. | National Information Centre for Crystallography (NICRYS) | Deptt. Of Crystallography and Biophysics, Madras Univ., Chennai | 1981 |
13. | NICDROM | Bangalor |
Open Source Software of Integrated Library Management
Sl. No. | Software | Founder | Year |
1. | Koha | Katipo work with HLT | 2000 |
2. | Avanti | ||
3. | Emilida | ||
4. | Evergreen | Georgia Public Library System | 2006 |
5. | Firefly | ||
6. | GNU Teca | ||
7. | Karuna | ||
8. | Learning Access ILS | ||
9. | PHP My Library | ||
10. | Pytheas | ||
11. | Weblis | ||
12. | CDS/ISIS | 1985 |
Programming Language
Sl. No. | Name | Founder | Year |
1. | FORTAN | 1957 | |
2. | COBOL | 1959 | |
3. | PASCAL | 1970 | |
4. | Basic | 1979 | |
5. | C | 1972 | |
6. | C++ | 1979/1983 | |
7. | Visual basic | 1991 | |
8. | Java | 1995 | |
9. | ADA |
Operating System
Sl. No. | Name | Founder | Year |
1 | UNIX | 1969 | |
2 | Linux | 1991 | |
3 | MS-DOS | 1982/81 | |
4 | Windows | 1985 |
Library Consortium
Sl. No. | Name of Consortium | Year |
1. | Forum for resource Sharing in Astronomy (FORSA) | 1982 |
2. | TIFR Libraries Consortium | 1999 |
3. | ISI Library Consortia Deals | 1999 |
4. | STI Network for resource sharing amongst S&T libraries | 1999 |
5. | DAE Consortium | 2001 |
6. | IIM Libraries Consortia | 2001 |
7. | JCCC & VIC | 2002 |
8. | CSIR E-Journal Consortium | 2002 |
9. | INDEST-AICTE Consortium | 2003 |
10 | RGUHS-Health Science Library and Information Network (HELINET) | 2003 |
11. | UGC-INFONET Digital Library Consortium | 2004 |
12. | MCIT Library Consortium | 2005 |
13. | BJ Medical Consortium | 2006 |
14. | Consortium for e-Resources in Agriculture (CeRA) | 2007 |
15. | Electronic Resources in Medicine ( ERMED) |
2008 |
16. | CSIR E-Journal Consortium now The National Knowledge Resource Consortium (NKRC) | 2009 |
17. | DRDO Consortium | 2009 |
18. | DeLCON Consortium | 2009 |
19. | National Library and Information Services Infrastructure for Scholarly Content (N-LIST) | |
20. | E-Shodhsindhu | 2016 |
21. | ICICI Knowledge Park |
Ranganathan Six Basic Laws:
- Law of Interpretation
- Law of Impartiality (Preference for anyone should be made only on sufficient ground & not arbitrarily) Ex. in case of joint authorship, the law of impartiality recommends equal right to the names of all the authors for choice.
- Law of Symmetry
- Law of Parsimony (Overall economy in terms of manpower, material, money, & time etc.)
- Law of Local Variation
- Law of Osmosis (Reclassification & Recataloging)
Laws of Library Science:
- Books are for use
- Every reader his/her book
- Every book its reader
- Save the time of the reader
- A library is a growing organism
Principles of Facet Sequence:
- Wall-Picture Principle
- Whole-Organ Principle
- Cow-Calf Principle
- Act and Action-Actor-Tool Principle
LIS Personality History Date and Year:
- J. D. Brown (1862-1914) English Librarian
- E. C. Richardson (1860-1939) First Librarian of Hartford Theology Seminary, USA
- E. W. Hulme (1859-1954) Librarian of the Patent Office Library. London
- W. C. B. Sayers (1881-1960) English Librarian and Teacher of S. R. Ranganathan
- H. E. Bliss (1870-1995)
- S. R. Ranganathan (1892-1972)
Automation Acquisition Subsystem Steps:
- Book Suggestion
- Request Processing (By Users and Staff)
- Order Data Entry and Updating
- Accessioning
- Received Invoice Processing
- Claims
- Cancellation
- Physical Preparation
- Financial Records, Budgeting and Reporting
- Search and Retrieval
- Management Information Reporting
Automation Circulation Subsystem Steps:
- Membership Registration
- Charge/Discharge
- Renewals
- Holds/Reservations
- Recalls
- Inter Library Loan
- Overdue
- Fines
- Search and Retrieval
- Binding
- Management Information Reporting
Automation Serial Control Subsystem Steps:
- Check In or Registration
- Claims
- Binding
- Serials Union List
- Subscription Management
- Search and Retrieval
- Physical Preparation
- Management Information Reporting
Mnemonics (To remember) (According to Ranganathan four kinds):
- Alphabetical Mnemonics (Ex. Ambassador-A, Fiat- G, Ford-Fo, Standard-S etc.)
- Scheduled Mnemonics
- Systematic Mnemonics
- Seminal Mnemonics
Collocation: According to Bliss, Collocation means “bringing together in proximity subjects which are most closely related. S. R. Ranganathan termed this is filiatory sequences.
Call Number: It represents three elements, viz., class number, book number & collection number.
Phase Relation Type
- General Relation
- Bias Relation
- Comparison Relation
- Difference Relation
- Influencing Relation
- Tool Relation
Division & Structure of an Universe
- Dichotomy (Two) Ex. Animals>Vertebrates>Invertebrates, Plants>Flowering> Nonflowering
- Decachotomy (Ten) Ex. DDC
- Polychotomy (Many) Ex. Expansive Classification
Data Transmission (Different Media):
- Magnetic Media
- Wire Pairs or Twisted pair
- Coaxial Cable
- Fiber Optics or Optical Fibers
- Wireless Transmission
- Radio Transmission
- Microwave Transmission
- Communication Satellite
Traditional Tools of Information Retrieval System:
- Bibliographies (Example: Indian National Bibliography, British National Bibliography)
- Classification Either enumerative (e.g. Dewey Decimal Classification, Library of Congress Classification, Universal Decimal Classification) or faceted (Colon Classification, Bibliographical Classification) schemes.
- Catalogue
- Indexes & Indexing
Modern Tools of Information Retrieval System:
- Web OPAC
- Search Engines

Practical Colon Classification Steps:
- Raw Title
- Expressive Title
- Kernel Title
- Analysed Title
- Transformed Title
- Title in Standard Terms
- Title in Focal Numbers
- Class Number
- Verification
Species of Classification:
- Purely Enumerative Classification (Ex. Library of Congress Classification, Riders International Classification etc.)
- Almost Enumerative Classification (Ex. Subject Classification, DDC etc.)
- Almost Faceted Classification (Ex. UDC, Bibliographic Classification etc.)
- Almost Freely Faceted Scheme (Ex. Ed. 4 (1952), 5 (1957), 6, (1960) of Colon Classification)
- Freely Faceted Scheme (Ex. 7th Edition of Colon Classification)
International Standards Organisation – Open Systems Interconnection (ISO-OSI) Model
- Physical Layer
- Data Link Layer
- Network Layer
- Transport Layer
- Session Layer
- Presentation Layer
- Application Layer
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Model
- SMTP
- Telnet
- FTP
- HTTP
Switching Techniques
- Circuit Switching (Ex. Telephone)
- Packet Switching (Ex. Intelligence Network, Telephone Line, I-Net etc.)
- Message Switching (Ex. Email, Telegram)
Metadata Types
- Descriptive Metadata
- Structural Metadata
- Administrative Metadata
Variable/Scale
- Nominal Variable/Scale – Classification of gender/Gender as variable/Represent the actual amount of variable – theoretically unobtainable
- Interval Variable/Scale – Temperature in centrigrade/Temperature measurement/
- Ordinal Variable/Scale – Grades of students/Ranking of library services/Involves judges to rank items into categories
- Ratio/Scale – Students & Faculty/Mass of a body/Classify objects/Observations
Ranganathan
- Nadir to Ascendant – Empirical Phase
- Ascendant to Zenith – Hypothesing Phase
- Zenith to Descendant – Deductive Phase
- Descendant to Nadir – Verification Phase
Knowledge Types:
- Tacit Knowledge– Tacit knowledge is knowledge that an individual is unable to express and thereby convert into information. it can only be transmitted via training or gained through personal experience. (Source: Leena Khullar, Knowledge Management in Libraries, Fifty Third All India Library Conference, Dec. 13-16, 2007, Page No. 482.) Tacit Knowledge is subjective and experience based knowledge that cannot be expressed in words, it resides in the human mind. This type of knowledge can be seen in the behaviour or action of a person. (Source: Vimal Sharma, KM: Roles of Libraries & Librarians in KM, NACLIN 2006 Page 450-451)
- Explicit Knowledge : Explicit Knowledge is knowledge that individuals are able to express fairly easily using language or other forms of communications. It also means storing information and documents that can be shared and reused, for example manuals, research reports. (Source: Leena Khullar, Knowledge Management in Libraries Fifty Third All India Library Conference, Dec. 13-16, 2007, Page No. 482.) Explicit Knowledge is objective and rational knowledge that can be expressed in words. It is well communicable and available in some media. As a librarian & informational professionals, we basically deal with explicit knowledge. (Source: Vimal Sharma, KM: Roles of Libraries & Librarians in KM, NACLIN 2006 Page 450-451)
Match
- Impact Factor-
- SNIP-
- Immediacy factor-
- Cited Half Life-
E-Resource Management & Licensing Issues
1. Systematic Down Loading and Unauthorized Uses
2. Original Clause
3. RTI
4. Warranty
5. Indemnity
6. Disclamier
7. Archival
Arbitration
Perpetual access clause (LOCKSS, CLOCKSS, Portico)
International Center for Alternative Dispute Resolution (ICADR), New Delhi
SERU- Shared Electronic Resource Understanding (NISO)
Usage Statistic of E-Resources
- COUNTER (Counting Online Usage of Networked Electronic Resources) COUNTER was officially launched in March of 2002 with the first release of the COUNTER Code of Practice (COUNTER, 2002) for online journals and databases published in January of 2003. Source: https://www.niso.org/niso-io/2016/12/brief-history-counter-and-sushi
- SHUSHI (Standard Usage Statistics Harvesting Initiative) In August of 2004, the Digital Library Federation (DLF) published “Electronic Resource Management: The Report of the DLF Initiative” (Digital Library Federation, 2004). Source: https://www.niso.org/niso-io/2016/12/brief-history-counter-and-sushi
The term disruptive technologies was coined by Clayton M. Christensen and introduced in his 1995 article Disruptive Technologies: Catching the Wave. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disruptive_innovationhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disruptive_innovation
Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) is a division of the American Chemical Society. It is a source of chemical information. CAS is located in Columbus, Ohio, United States. Chemical Abstracts ceased print publication on January 1, 2010.Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_Abstracts_Service
In campus and out of the campus access to resources:
a) EZproxy is a web proxy server used by libraries to give access from outside the library’s computer network to restricted-access websites that authenticate users by IP address. This allows library patrons at home or elsewhere to log in through their library’s EZproxy server and gain access to resources to which their library subscribes, such as bibliographic databases.
The software was originally written by Chris Zagar in 1999 who founded Useful Utilities LLC to support it. OCLC announced in January 2008 that it had acquired the product and was hiring Zagar as a full-time consultant for a year.[1] Zagar is a librarian who serves as a systems librarian at the Estrella Mountain Community College, a part of the Maricopa Community Colleges in Arizona. He won the 2006 LITA/Brett Butler Entrepreneurship Award for his work with EZproxy. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EZproxyhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/EZproxy
b) RemoteXs has enabled all leading institutions (academic or research) in optimizing usage of the precious eResources and nurturing research interests of faculty and their students. Source: https://www.remotexs.co/https://www.remotexs.co/
c) INFLIBNET Access Management Federation (INFED) has adopted Shibboleth, a standard-based open source software, for authenticating authorized users from institutions and provide them seamless access to e-resources from anywhere, anytime. Shibboleth offers a mechanism for users to access multiple resources within a federated single sign-on framework. The goal of the INFED is to allow users to access internal and external resources seamlessly using a single, institutionally controlled identity. Source: https://parichay.inflibnet.ac.in/about.php
Patron-driven acquisition (PDA), also referred to as demand-driven acquisition (DDA),[1] is a model of library collection development in which a library only purchases materials when it is clear that a patron wants them. In an ideal transaction, libraries provide the patron with access to search engines, academic databases and/or library catalogs from which the patron can request items. When certain thresholds are reached for an item (e.g., number of pages read or number of requests), the library purchases the item and delivers instant access to patrons.[2] The library may acquire the resource permanently, or acquire a license to use the resource only at certain times or in certain ways. Since content purchased is in digital format, “PDA emphasizes collecting for and at the moment of need” instead of collecting with a long-term focus. Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patron-driven_acquisition
The Licenses of Creative Common

Attribution
CC BY: This license lets others distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon your work, even commercially, as long as they credit you for the original creation. This is the most accommodating of licenses offered. Recommended for maximum dissemination and use of licensed materials.

Attribution-ShareAlike
CC BY-SA: This license lets others remix, adapt, and build upon your work even for commercial purposes, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms. This license is often compared to “copyleft” free and open source software licenses. All new works based on yours will carry the same license, so any derivatives will also allow commercial use. This is the license used by Wikipedia, and is recommended for materials that would benefit from incorporating content from Wikipedia and similarly licensed projects.

Attribution-NoDerivs
CC BY-ND: This license lets others reuse the work for any purpose, including commercially; however, it cannot be shared with others in adapted form, and credit must be provided to you.

Attribution-NonCommercial
CC BY-NC: This license lets others remix, adapt, and build upon your work non-commercially, and although their new works must also acknowledge you and be non-commercial, they don’t have to license their derivative works on the same terms.

Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike
CC BY-NC-SA: This license lets others remix, adapt, and build upon your work non-commercially, as long as they credit you and license their new creations under the identical terms.

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
CC BY-NC-ND: This license is the most restrictive of our six main licenses, only allowing others to download your works and share them with others as long as they credit you, but they can’t change them in any way or use them commercially. Source: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/
SHERPA/RoMEO is a service run by SHERPA to show the copyright and open access self-archiving policies of academic journals. The database uses a colour-coding scheme to classify publishers according to their self-archiving policy.[1] This shows authors whether the journal allows preprint or postprint archiving in their copyright transfer agreements.[2] It currently hold records for over 22,000 journals.[3] Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHERPA/RoMEO
SHERPA/FACT is a tool to help researchers check if the journals in which they wish to publish their results comply with their funder’s requirements for open access to research. Source: http://sherpa.ac.uk/fact/index.php?la=en
Sherpa Romeo: Sherpa Romeo enables researchers and librarians to see publishers’ conditions for open access archiving on a journal-by-journal basis.
Visit Sherpa Romeo
Sherpa Juliet: Sherpa Juliet enables researchers and librarians to see funders’ conditions for open access publication.
Visit Sherpa Juliet
OpenDOAR: OpenDOAR enables the identification, browsing and search for repositories.
Visit OpenDOAR
Sherpa Fact: Sherpa Fact checks if compliance with funder open access policies can be achieved with a particular journal.
Visit Sherpa Fact
Sherpa REF: Sherpa REF helps authors and institutions decide whether a journal allows them to comply with the OA REF policy.
Visit Sherpa REF
A Library Services Platform (LSP) is the “next generation” of library management systems that provides the capabilities to better manage our collections in all formats, and handle the ever growing means of access to electronic resources and print materials.(https://news.lib.uci.edu/newlibrary-services-platform-lsp-launching). Source: https://www.inflibnet.ac.in/publication/newsletter/jan_mar_2019/jan_march_2019.pdf
Requirements for Joomla! 4.x
Software | Recommended | Minimum[7] | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
PHP | 8.0 | 7.2.5 | https://www.php.net |
Supported Databases | |||
MySQL | 5.6 + | 5.6 | https://www.mysql.com |
PostgreSQL | 11.0 + | 11.0 |
(ext/pgsql support in PHP has been removed. Now uses the PostgreSQL PDO Driver) |
Supported Web Servers | |||
Apache[3] | 2.4 + | 2.4 |
(with mod_mysql, mod_xml, and mod_zlib) |
Nginx | 1.18 + | 1.10 | https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/ |
Microsoft IIS[6] | 10 + | 8 | https://www.iis.net |
For Microsoft IIS (depending on your setup) you may need the following:
- PHP – Installation instructions
- MySQL – Installation instructions
- Microsoft URL Rewrite Module – Required for SEO URLs only. For more information, click here. For information about using ISAPI, click here.
- FastCGI – Download for IIS6. Download for IIS7.
Configuration Options
- LAMP (Linux) – Most Linux distributions come with a pre-configured LAMP server.
- WAMP (Windows) – For more information, visit the WampServer homepage
- MAMP (Apple OS) – For more information, visit the MAMP homepage
- XAMPP (Multi-platform) – Not for live sites. For more information, visit the XAMPP homepage
Source: https://downloads.joomla.org/technical-requirements (Accessed On 01/02/2022) https://www.joomla.org/
Difference between Open source Software and Proprietary Software :
S.No. | OPEN SOURCE SOFTWARE | PROPRIETARY SOFTWARE |
---|---|---|
01. | Open source software is a computer software whose source code is available openly in internet and programmers can modify it to add new features and capabilities without any cost. | Proprietary software is a computer software where the source codes are not publicly not available only the company which has created can modify it. |
02. | Here the software is developed and tested through open collaboration. | Here the software is developed and tested by the individual or organization by which it is owned not by public. |
03. | In open source software the source code is public. | In proprietary software the source code is protected. |
04. | Open source software can be installed into any computer. | Proprietary software can be installed into any computer without valid license. |
05. | Users do not need to have any authenticated license to use this software. | Users need to have a valid and authenticated license to use this software. |
06. | Open source software is managed by an open source community of developers. | Proprietary software is managed by an closed team of individuals or groups that developed it. |
07. | It is more flexible and provides more freedom which encourages innovation. | It is not much flexible so here is very limited innovation scope with the restrictions. |
08. | Users can get open software for free of charge. | Users must have to pay to get the proprietary software. |
09. | In open source software faster fixes of bugs and better security is availed due to the community. | In proprietary software the vendor is completely responsible for fixing of malfunctions. |
10. | Examples are Android, Linux, Firefox, Open Office, GIMP, VLC Media player etc. | Examples are Windows, MacOS, Internet Explorer, Google earth, Microsoft Office, Adobe Flash Player, Skype etc. |
Source: (https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/difference-between-open-source-software-and-proprietary-software/) Accessed on 01/02/2022
Digital Library and Ontology Library
Principally both a digital library and an ontology library have the similar kinds of purposes and objectives to achieve (e.g., store, organize and provide access to the digital objects), except the kind of materials they deal with.
A digital library deals with the documents of various types, such as text, audio, video, images, etc., while an ontology library deals with the ontologies (where an ontology is an intelligent object, often referred as a digital artifact, consisted of representations of the entities in terms of their types, properties and the relationships of a domain of discourse).
Source: https://hal.univ-lille.fr/hal-01398427/file/ETD_2016-1.pdf Accessed on 01/02/2022
History: DSpace was originally developed by MIT Libraries and Hewlett-Packard (HP) Labs. Since its initial open source release in 2002, the platform has been guided by a global community of committers, developers, repository managers, and other stakeholders who contribute to project governance. DSpace became a DuraSpace project in 2009 when the Fedora Commons and DSpace organizations merged to form DuraSpace. (PDF) https://duraspace.org/wp-content/uploads/dspace-files/specsh_dspace.pdf
Prerequisite/Technical Aspects/Technical Specifications:
Operating System: Written in Java, tested under Linux, Windows, and Mac OSX
License: BSD
Release version: 6.0, https://duraspace.org/dspace/download/
Documentation: https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/DSDOC/
Other prerequisite software: Java 7 or 8, Apache Maven, Apache Ant, Relational Database – PostgreSQL or Oracle, Servlet 3.0 container (Tomcat 7+ or similar).
Key Features
Application Architecture: DSpace is a full stack web application, consisting of a database, storage manager and front end web interface. The architecture includes a specific data model with configurable metadata schemas, workflows and browse/search functionality.
Modern, RESTful Web UI (coming soon): DSpace 7.0 will feature a completely rewritten web user interface based on the Angular 2 javascript platform.
Built-in workflows: Originally designed for libraries, the embedded DSpace data model and approval workflows are familiar to librarians and archivists.
Built-in search engine: DSpace comes packaged with Apache Solr, an open source enterprise search platform that enables filtered (faceted) searching and browsing of all objects. The full text of common file formats is searchable, along with all metadata fields. Browse by interfaces are also configurable.
Unlimited File types: DSpace can store any type of file. In addition, it auto-recognizes files of most common formats (e.g., DOC, PDF, XLS, PPT, JPEG, MPEG, TIFF).
Metadata: By default, DSpace uses a Qualified Dublin Core (QDC) based metadata schema. Institutions can extend that base schema or add custom QDC-like schemas. DSpace can import or export metadata from other major metadata schemas such as MARC or MODS.
Tools/plugins: DSpace comes with a suite of tools (batch ingest, batch export, batch metadata editing, etc.) and plugins for translating content into DSpace objects. Additionally, commercial plugins are available through service providers.
Security: DSpace provides its own built-in authentication / authorization system, but can also integrate with existing authentication systems such as LDAP or Shibboleth.
Permissions: DSpace allows you to control read/write permissions site-wide, per community, per collection, per item and per file. You may also delegate administrative permissions per community or per collection.
Disaster Recovery: DSpace allows you to export all of your system content as AIP (Archival Information Packages) backup files. These AIPs can be used to restore your entire site, or restore individual communities, collections or items.
OAI-PMH / SWORD (v1 and v2) / OpenAIRE / Driver: DSpace complies with standard protocols and best practices for access, ingest, and export.
REST: DSpace provides RESTful APIs in accordance with modern web standards.
Configurable Database: Organizations can choose either PostgreSQL or Oracle for the database in which DSpace manages items and metadata.
Configurable File Storage: Files in DSpace can be stored either using a local filesystem (default) or a cloud-based solution, such as Amazon S3.
Data Integrity: On upload, DSpace calculates and stores a checksum for each file. Optionally, you may ask DSpace to verify those checksums to validate file integrity.
Languages: DSpace is available in over 20 languages.
Source: https://duraspace.org/dspace/download/ (Accessed on 01/02/2022)
Designed and Maintained By Sur Chandra Singha
Copyright © Bibliophile Virtual Library Updated: 01/02/2022
Very nic collected information sir.. Plz update soon and add more content as it is very useful.
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Thanks sir for give such a wonderful brief summary of library’s technical term.
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Most welcome. I will try to update.
Please provide previous year question paper for Semi professional assistant and professional assistant.
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Yes, I will do. Thank you very much for your kind words.
Sir give some step-wise flowchart as modern educational library organisation and management. thank u
Thank you for your kind words. If I get time, I will do that.
Digital library
Sir, How to download this study materials?
You can take print out. For downloading material https://bibliophilevirtuallibrary.com/ugc-net/library-science-ugc-net-material/ugc-jrfnet-lis-question-bank/
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