Library Industry
Submitted by chadwick on Tue, 11/20/2007 - 3:38pm.
This is a very popular blog post from Jeremiah Owyang, a web strategist and analyst in SF CA. He spends most of his time traveling from tech conference to tech summit and hobnobs with the industry leaders. I have been following his posts through a variety of platforms and get lots of great info from him. Anyway, this link is about the various software apps and platforms that are termed "white label", or easily integrated into, or used as the basis of, an existing brand and website. They include lots of social networking platforms as well as the CMS standards like Drupal, Joomla, Movable Type, Sharepoint, etc. The current PALNI website runs on a pre-packaged version of Drupal called CivicSpace. Anyway, this is mainly just a "best of" list and a nice introduction to Jeremiah's blog. I know several librarians who follow his work and see more and more systems and web services librarians using web strategies like he describes to improve library integration and "market penetration".
Submitted by admin on Wed, 08/29/2007 - 9:10am.
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Submitted by admin on Thu, 12/21/2006 - 9:38pm.
Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/21/2006 - 3:50pm.
Submitted by jason on Thu, 04/13/2006 - 2:36pm.
One of the sponsors of the Computers in Libraries conference I went to a couple of weeks ago was PALINET, an organization serving the east coast who's mission is not all that unlike INCOLSA's mission. One of the cool things they were flaunting was a new podcast series - something I've been wanting to do here for quite some time. They have two series up now, one on general technology conversations and another on institutional repositories (which, if you don't know what that is, you should look into it!).
I'm wondering how to leverage the power of podcasting for PALNI. There's a lot of possibilities there, but it needs to be done in a way that returns the most value to our schools. Meanwhile, I'm getting my podcast fix in one of my library classes, L563 with Prof. Mary Alice Ball. You can check out our website we've build here. It's members only, but you can get a feel for what we've done. As part of our class, we are all recording podcasts in a couple of weeks. I don't know what will come of it, but it will at least be good practice.
Submitted by jason on Wed, 04/12/2006 - 3:21pm.
Submitted by jason on Mon, 04/03/2006 - 2:21pm.
By now a lot of people have heard about 'Primo', the OPAC project that Ex Libris is working on to create a 'next-generation' OPAC. And none too soon; there are plenty of people out there doing cool things that make the Ex Libris OPAC look outdated. They are not the only one, almost every LIS vendor out there right now has an OPAC project with a spiffy name.
At CIL, I attended a presentation by Roy Tennant of California Digital Library and Andrew Pace of North Carolina State University Libraries. The NC State OPAC has gotten considerable attention, and I know it has made the rounds on the PALNI listservs. This session was great, and a couple of things stood out:
1. The term 'OPAC' is apparently anathema now. It's back to 'catalog'. And rightfully so. Most patrons don't know what an 'opac' is. It's jargon. Plus, the term 'catalog' better defines what the application is supposed to be doing in the first place. The catalog is just a tool. It's not the be-all-end-all application that will serve all of a patron's needs.
2. Most of the cool stuff being done right now, and the NC State catalog is no exception, is being done in spite of the underlying integrated library system. NC State went with a web design company that had not previously worked with libraries, and came up with a cool and innovative tool.
Submitted by vince on Mon, 01/09/2006 - 3:33pm.
Submitted by vince on Mon, 10/24/2005 - 7:34am.
The American Association of Publishers (AAP) has sued Google over its digital library plans. The AAP, which includes McGraw-Hill, Simon & Schuster, and John Wiley & Sons publishers, filed suit against Google last week, claiming that the Google Print digital library project will violate their copyrights. See this Guardian article for the details. The AAP lawsuit follows a previous law suit filed by the Author's Guild against Google on similar grounds.
Here is an interesting response from Google CEO, Eric Schmidt, that describes what Google is trying to accomplish with its Google Print project . . .
"Imagine sitting at your computer and, in less than a second, searching the full text of every book ever written. Imagine an historian being able to instantly find every book that mentions the Battle of Algiers. Imagine a high school student in Bangladesh discovering an out-of-print author held only in a library in Ann Arbor. Imagine one giant electronic card catalog that makes all the world's books discoverable with just a few keystrokes by anyone, anywhere, anytime.
That's the vision behind Google Print, a program we introduced last fall to help users search through the oceans of information contained in the world's books. Recently, some members of the publishing industry who believe this program violates copyright law have been fighting to stop it. We respectfully disagree with their conclusions, on both the meaning of the law and the spirit of a program which, in fact, will enhance the value of each copyright."
Read the full Schmidt article about why Google does not think their digital library project violates copyright law.
Submitted by vince on Fri, 10/14/2005 - 10:29pm.
Submitted by palniadmin on Fri, 10/14/2005 - 2:32pm.
Submitted by jason on Mon, 10/10/2005 - 12:02pm.
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