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  • × author_ss:"Lupovici, C."
  1. Lupovici, C.: ¬Le digital object identifier : le système du DOI (1998) 0.01
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    Abstract
    The Digital Object Identifier (DOI) has been developed by the academic technical and medical publishing sectors to enable the management of access rights to information published electronically. The DOI system has evolved from the physical documentary unit identifiers developed in the 1970, physical and document logical unit identifiers developed in the 1980s and recently modified to meet the needs of electronic distribution. This experience is integrated into the standardization, currently in progress on the Internet network, of the identification of resources and their localization. The DOI system is potentially the object of an international standard as the ISBN and the ISSN have been
    Date
    22. 1.1999 19:29:22
    Theme
    Internet
  2. Lupovici, C.: Web crawling : the Bibliothèque Nationale de France experience (2005) 0.00
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    Abstract
    The Bibliothèque Nationale de France in the framework of its Legal deposit mission, is currently experimenting with web harvesting procedures and is organising the long-term preservation of digital documents. The work carried out to achieve this goal includes fundamental thoughts on the essence of Legal deposit and on the bibliographic treatment of Internet resources. Working on real scale, the huge amount of digital resources is an important factor to help in any decision to be taken by the National Library.
    Theme
    Internet
  3. Lupovici, C.: ¬L'¬information secondaire du document primaire : format MARC ou SGML? (1997) 0.00
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    Abstract
    Secondary information, e.g. MARC based bibliographic records, comprises structured data for identifying, tagging, retrieving and management of primary documents. SGML, the standard format for coding content and structure of primary documents, was introduced in 1986 as a publishing tool but is now being applied to bibliographic records. SGML now comprises standard definitions (DTD) for books, serials, articles and mathematical formulae. A simplified version (HTML) is used for Web pages. Pilot projects to develop SGML as a standard for bibliographic exchange include the Dublin Core, listing 13 descriptive elements for Internet documents; the French GRISELI programme using SGML for exchanging grey literature and US experiments on reformatting USMARC for use with SGML-based records

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