> 1) totally unrelated, apples and grommets
> 2) DC started up first; FRBR was issued in 1998, but didn't get much
> attention for the first 10 years of its life. DC was getting
> increasing use during that time.
3) DC takes a 'start simple' approach whereas FRBR attempts to encompass
every bibliographic need
4) DC can be readily applied to almost any media/data; FRBR really only
fits human-generated things that have been 'published' in some sense.
FRBR has entities ( [Group1:Work, Expression, Manifestation, and Item], [Group2: person and corporate body], [Group3: concepts, objects, events, places] and relationships between those entities (is-version, is-replaced-by, etc.).
All of these entities and relationships can be expressed using DC elements (and vocabulary) using DC description sets. FRBR is about the entities and their relations and both entities and relations can be expressed using DC.
Think of DC description sets as an expression of the FRBR concepts. FRBR can be expressed by using other means and DC can be used for describing things that don't conform to the FRBR model (OAI-DC for example).
--Brian
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