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Dublin and Core
The full set of Dublin Core metadata terms can be found on the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative ( DCMI ) website.
The original set of 15 classic metadata terms, known as the Dublin Core Metadata Element Set are endorsed in the following standards documents:
Dublin Core Metadata can be used for multiple purposes, from simple resource description, to combining metadata vocabularies of different metadata standards, to providing interoperability for metadata vocabularies in the Linked data cloud and Semantic web implementations.
The semantics of Dublin Core were established and are maintained by an international, cross-disciplinary group of professionals from librarianship, computer science, text encoding, museums, and other related fields of scholarship and practice.
The Dublin Core Metadata Initiative ( DCMI ) incorporated as an independent entity, separating from OCLC, in 2008 that provides an open forum for the development of interoperable online metadata standards for a broad range of purposes and of business models.
The Dublin Core standard includes two levels — Simple and Qualified.
Simple Dublin Core comprises 15 elements ; Qualified Dublin Core includes three additional elements ;— Audience, Provenance and RightsHolder ;— as well as a group of element refinements, also called qualifiers, that refine the semantics of the elements in ways that may be useful in resource discovery.
The Simple Dublin Core Metadata Element Set ( DCMES ) consists of 15 metadata elements:
Each Dublin Core element is optional and may be repeated.
There is no prescribed order in Dublin Core for presenting or using the elements.
The Dublin Core became ISO 15836 standard in 2006 and is used as a base-level data element set for the description of learning resources in the ISO / IEC 19788-2 Metadata for learning resources ( MLR ) -- Part 2: Dublin Core elements, prepared by the ISO / IEC JTC1 SC36.
Full information on element definitions and term relationships can be found in the Dublin Core Metadata Registry.
Subsequent to the specification of the original 15 elements, an ongoing process to develop exemplary terms extending or refining the Dublin Core Metadata Element Set ( DCMES ) was begun.
The additional terms were identified, generally in working groups of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative, and judged by the DCMI Usage Board to be in conformance with principles of good practice for the qualification of Dublin Core metadata elements.

Dublin and metadata
The guiding principle for the qualification of Dublin Core elements, colloquially known as the Dumb-Down Principle, states that an application that does not understand a specific element refinement term should be able to ignore the qualifier and treat the metadata value as if it were an unqualified ( broader ) element.
When considering an appropriate syntax, it is important to note that Dublin Core concepts and semantics are designed to be syntax independent, are equally applicable in a variety of contexts, as long as the metadata is in a form suitable for interpretation both by machines and by human beings.
* Dublin Core Meta Toolkit ( Conversion of Access, MySQL, or CSV data to DublinCore metadata )
In 1995, the Dublin Core standard of metadata was conceived.
The AWMT paper did not describe any automatic search, nor any universal metadata scheme such as a standard library classification or a hypertext element set like the Dublin core.
The main facility is the element, where the document can be described using Dublin Core metadata properties ( e. g., title, creator / author, subject, description, etc ).
This protocol mandates that individual archives map their metadata to the Dublin Core, a simple and common metadata set for this purpose.
In other words, the relation of OAI compatibility to Dublin Core is that OAI standards allow a common way to provide content, and part of those standards is that the content has metadata that describes the items in Dublin Core format.
This new version, which reclaimed the name RDF Site Summary from RSS 0. 9, reintroduced support for RDF and added XML namespaces support, adopting elements from standard metadata vocabularies such as Dublin Core.
The transcriptions of the book were digitally encoded using the Text Encoding Initiative guidelines, and metadata for the images and transcriptions included identification and cataloging information based on Dublin Core Metadata Elements.
* Dublin Core, a metadata standard
* Dublin Core, a metadata standard

Dublin and terms
Gaelic football is the most popular sport in Ireland in terms of attendance, with the 2011 All-Ireland Senior Championship Final, held at Croke Park, Dublin, drawing an attendance of 82, 300 people.
To these may be added the historic County Corporate of the city of Dublin, which, under the terms of the Local Government ( Ireland ) Act 1898 was abolished to be succeeded by the County borough of Dublin.
This was is in turn abolished under the terms of the Local Government Act 2001 and the area is now under the jurisdiction of Dublin City Council.
Trinity College and the University of Dublin have a complex relationship, and while a " difference or distinction " between the two is often asserted, it has also been said that they are " one body " – this was the finding of the High Court of Justice of Ireland delivered by the then Master of the Rolls in Ireland, Andrew Maxwell Porter, on 2 June 1888, which reviews a legal history where he finds that the two terms seem often to have been used interchangeably.
Ulster Scots is defined in an Agreement between the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the Government of Ireland establishing implementation bodies done at Dublin on the 8th day of March 1999 in the following terms:
He became intensely parochial, and suffered from his loss of intimacy with British politicians in 1938, when the British government concluded agreements with Dublin to end the ' economic war ' between the two states, on terms highly unfavourable to Northern Ireland.
Having belatedly become a barrister by completing his terms at the King's Inns, Dublin, being called to the Irish bar in 1887 ( and to the English bar a year later ), Redmond busied himself with agrarian cases during the Plan of Campaign.
He was initially on friendly terms with John Henry Newman, but they fell out as the divergence in their views became apparent ; Newman later spoke of his Catholic University as continuing in Dublin the struggle against Whately which he had commenced at Oxford.
He had served terms in both the Dublin and the Westminster bodies, sometimes simultaneously, but had not taken sides in political wrangles.
Kenny held firm on his refusal to alter the corporate tax, which he reiterated in his first Leaders ' Questions the following week — also declaring his government's intention to withhold further state funds from Dublin banks until the EU agreed to new terms that forced banks ' senior bondholders to share in the losses.
Reginald Lyvet was probably the son of Gilbert de Lyvet, who was Lord Mayor of Dublin for several terms in the early thirteenth century, and was a partisan of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke.
In an address to the 1916-1921 Club in Dublin Castle last night, the Lonford-Westmeath TD said that most voters no longer defined themselves in terms of Civil War politics.
Belfast International is the busiest airport in Northern Ireland and the second busiest airport on the island of Ireland in terms of passenger numbers after Dublin Airport, and is followed by Belfast-City, Cork and Shannon.
Dublin Airport also welcomes over one million passengers per annum from across the border in Northern Ireland, whose largest airport is less than a quarter the size of Dublin in terms of passenger numbers.
In 2011, Cork Airport handled 2. 36 million passengers, making it the state's second busiest airport in terms of passenger numbers, after Dublin, and fourth busiest on the island of Ireland, after Dublin, Belfast International and Belfast City.

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