|
|
HOME | About PALNI | PALNI OPAC | Digital Library | Recent News |
|
|
Earlham . Franklin . Goshen . Grace . Hanover . Huntington Manchester . Marian . Oakland City . St Francis . St Josephs St Meinrad . Taylor . Trine . U of Indianapolis . Wabash |
User loginOPAC Quick Search |
Future of the Integrated Library SystemPALNI and Open SourceSubmitted by admin on Mon, 02/18/2008 - 2:29pm.
( categories: Open Source Systems and Projects )
Web StrategySubmitted 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". Are we ready for Library 2.0?Submitted by chadwick on Mon, 11/05/2007 - 10:57am.
Library 2.0 is still considered a 'buzzword' by some, but is fast becoming a standard concept at conferences and user groups, in journals and the 'biblioblogosphere', as well as part of the curriculum in many SLIS programs. The debate has been heated, and while there are still some nuances as to what is meant when we use the term, it is most commonly thought of as this: Library 2.0 is a loosely defined model for a modernized form of library service that reflects a transition within the library world in the way that services are delivered to users. With Library 2.0 library services are constantly updated and reevaluated to best serve library users. Library 2.0 also attempts to harness the library user in the design and implementation of library services by encouraging feedback and participation. Proponents of this concept expect that ultimately the Library 2.0 model for service will replace traditional, one-directional service offerings that have characterized libraries for centuries. The key principles of Library 2.0 are not just about access to books and information. It is about innovation, about people, and about community building, enabled through the participation that social computing brings. Source: Library 2.0. Wikipedia 11/05/2007 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_2.0 While there are individual efforts that fall within the aegis of Library 2.0 in specific PALNI institutions, the collaboration and participation that so fundamentally characterizes Library 2.0 has thus far been missing within the consortium as a whole. I think there are numerous valid reasons for this. 1 comment | Continue Reading . . . | 178 reads
( categories: Library 2.0 & PALNI | Open Source Systems and Projects )
INCOLSA Open-Source PartnershipSubmitted by admin on Wed, 08/29/2007 - 9:10am.
INCOLSA announced today that it has entered into an agreement with LibLime, an Athens, Ohio-based company, to offer new open-source automation solutions to INCOLSA member libraries. LibLime provides system support, migration, and customization services for open-source library systems, including both the Koha and Evergreen integrated library systems. Through its partnership with LibLime, INCOLSA will in turn be able to offer these services to its members. Koha has been in production in hundreds of libraries worldwide since early 2000, and Evergreen has received a good deal of attention lately as the foundation for the Georgia PINES resource-sharing network of 250+ public libraries. INCOLSA and LibLime also jointly announced plans to migrate the Indiana Shared Library Catalog (ISLC) to a new, open-source Koha ZOOM integrated library system. The ISLC, which includes an art museum, the Indiana Supreme Court Library, and a number of small public and school libraries, will use the Koha ZOOM web OPAC, cataloging, circulation, acquisitions, and serials modules. ISLC's system will be hosted at INCOLSA, with system implementation and support provided by LibLime.Ex Libris Launches the Primo Discovery and Delivery SolutionSubmitted by admin on Mon, 05/07/2007 - 8:44am.
Here is a May 1 press release from Ex Libris announcing the production release of their new Primo "Discovery and Delivery System":
Ex Libris Launches the Primo Discovery and Delivery Solution
|
|
Select
readings for a PALNI discussion about
--
February 2007 PALNI Board Meeting --
A sketch of the "NGC" (Next Generation Catalog) by one of the leading "think and doers" who now resides in our own state!
Dempsey, L. (2006). The library catalogue in the new discovery environment: Some thoughts. [Electronic version]. Ariadne, (48) http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue48/dempsey/
These are reflections about
the big picture together with key questions by a strategically
positioned, provocative thinker and researcher whose ideas will
quite likely contribute in a significant way to the shaping the
future OPAC. 3)
Kieft,
R. (2006). Browsing library collections: From the shelf to the
online catalog. [Electronic version]. EDUCAUSE Review, 41(3),
12-13.
Explores ideas and issues surrounding enriching the OPAC. The specific challenge for Kieft is how to find resources in new ways when you can’t browse the shelves.
SUPPLEMENTARY READINGS:
(the stuff, as on a syllabus, you won't
likely get to but makes the bibliographer feel good):
6) Lewis, D. W. (2007). A Model for Academic Libraries 2005 to 2025. Paper presented at ”Visions of Change,” California State University at Sacramento, January 26, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/1805/665.
7) Breeding, Marshall. The Millennial Generation Joins the Library Community. Paper presented at "Managing Electronic Collections: Strategies from Content to User" Denver, Colorado, Sept 28, 2006. http://www.niso.org/presentations/MEC06-01-Breeding.pdf
8)
9) (For those who need something more for that new media player you got for Christmas!) Library
2.0 Gang. (March 2, 2006). The library 2.0 gang consider the future
of the OPAC from
http://talk.talis.com/archives/twt20060410-L2Gang-OPACFutures.mp3
[Will require an .mp3-capable media player – PC or a portable to
which you can port the .mp3.] This is a discussion by seven participants who are steeped in future OPAC interests.
12) Coyle, Karen. Hillman, Diane (2007). Resource Description and Access (RDA): Cataloging Rules for the 20th Century. D-Lib Magazine, 13(1/2). [Electronic version.] http://www.dlib.org/dlib/january07/coyle/01coyle.html
|
|
_________________________ D. Bowell - Taylor University - 1/8/07; Rev. 2/23/07 For information: dnbowell@taylor.edu
|
|
Questions for the PALNI Discussion on the Future of the OPAC Tuesday, February 27, 2007 ________________________________
After reading some of the articles on the list, you may be shaking your head over the complexity of the issues and technologies; or, finding yourself calculating how early you can retire. For those of us who live with the daily concerns of budgets, buildings and business at hand the discussion about OPAC/catalog evolution (or revolution) seems rather daunting and perhaps even removed from where we live. But, of course, it isn’t. Much of the material addresses technical issues that are in some ways beyond our abilities to fully understand much less change -- like whether LCSH lives or dies and translating MARC to XML. That’s to be expected and okay. There still are questions and issues with which we need to wrestle that affect not only the direction PALNI takes but the kind of leadership we provide in our individual libraries and institutions. The questions below are of the “big” variety – more on issues than practical implications but that’s where we need to start.
Our conversation next Tuesday likely will raise more questions than answers, as do the readings, but will give us a concerted time to consider some of these issues for the present and future of PALNI, our home libraries, and even librarianship as a whole.
The changing(ed) environment
1) Consider this statement: A library catalog has always been a means to an end. This means must change dramatically and soon if the end -- libraries connecting users with information resources -- is to persist viably and successfully and not be circumvented by competing discovery tools and access services.
To what extent do you agree with this statement? Do you think that there is such a sense of urgency?
2) To quote from Calhoun (36-37), “the most recent OCLC report presents compelling evidence that college students begin looking for information on search engines -- 89% of this group said that they begin searches with a search engine vs. 2% who start their searches on library Web pages.”
How do we address the demand for "instant gratification" (arguably a pervasive perspective in general across our contemporary society) by providing more substantive information resources with which to gratify (and satisfy) the user?
3) To what extent do you agree with the notion that (to adapt from Kieft) the library catalog as a discovery or browsing mechanism with its focus upon the local collection will cease to have a viable future in an age of Web browsers and immediate access to information?
The purpose of the OPAC: putting first things first
1) Would you agree that a (re-)consideration and refashioning of the OPAC/catalog is one of the most important challenges facing libraries and librarianship?
2) More than one author suggests that in the past (and continuing to the present) libraries placed too much emphasis on information sources and systems and not enough on users. How is this orientation transferred to the library catalog and what must be done to reorient it?
3) Here is a quote from one of Calhoun's interviewees: "users don't get the idea of the catalog; they just want results." If this is true, how does it shape our priorities in cataloging and the catalog as a discovery tool?
(Consider the "Principle of Least Effort" -- people aren't going to expend effort to find "better" information when they can they get something for less effort -- even when that something may be of lesser quality or relevance to their information need.)
Characteristics of a “Next Generation OPAC”
1) What does Morgan mean by a "silo" system -- and how are our traditional "catalogs" and "databases" like silos? How are the results of a web-browser search less like a “silo”?
2) How does the "abundance" of information resources today drive new thinking about the OPAC?
3)
Our colleague, David Lewis, Dean of
the IUPUI Library
recently wrote
(http://tinyurl.com/38wgsh) Both students and faculty will use the general Web search engines as their primary discovery tools. Library tools, resources, and expertise need to be where the users are. The simply truth is: if you can't get to the library from Google, you won't go there. Libraries need to use linking strategies to make this simple and easy. It should also be transparent.
“Why can't the library catalog be more like Amazon.com [or can it]?” What lies behind this question? How have Amazon.com and Google (etc.) dramatically changed user expectations in search and access?
Implications for consortia – and PALNI, in particular
1) Enough with the demands for customization! We need to develop more parallel even replicated work flows to get on with addressing the larger challenges. We need to get over our resistance to changing “the way we do it here” when it diverts energies and retards progress toward more important ends.
2) Is it important to distinguish the OPAC/catalog from the ILS? How might our expectations and requirements for ILS functionality be different in the future? What are possible implications for PALNI?
3) What does Dempsey mean when he says that the collection is much larger than the "local cataloged collection”? Has PALNI practically thought much beyond the “local cataloged collection” – even our “collections” in aggregate? What are some possible implications of such thinking for PALNI?
1) As the “next generation catalog’s” reach and delivery go well beyond our local collections and even PALNI, can we justify the need to customize capabilities and services for our local contexts – including a customization of the next generation catalog? What are some of the criteria we might employ to rationalize and prioritize local, contextual customization?
2) Should we do any local cataloging of any item for which we can obtain cataloging copy from another library or an external source? How does this relate to the suggestion to "simplify the catalog record?" (Should PALNI libraries do any local cataloging? Should PALNI consider centralized technical services that create “simplified” records which are enriched for new resource discovery tools?)
3) In light of information abundance, what are the implications for libraries in terms of traditional functions: collection, organization, dissemination, and preservation?
How do these traditional functions compare to the processes that Dempsey suggests: discover, locate, request, deliver? What will it mean for us to put greater emphasis on Dempsey’s processes? What are the things we continue to do locally (and in PALNI) that should be curtailed – since we can’t do everything?
_______________________________
_____________ D. Bowell February 2007 |