Monday, December 17, 2007
code4lib 2008
See discussion at conference home page and Google Groups and on code4lib IRC (cf. FAQs)
Some proposals of particular interest: Andrew Nagy on VuFind; Jon Phipps on the NSDL Metadata Registry; Winona Salesky and Michael Park on "XForms for Metadata creation," Terry Reese and Emily Lynema on DLF ILS Discovery Interface Task Force API, Aaron Swartz on the Open Library Project, Rob Styles on RDF extraction of MARC data, Gabriel Farrell on Solr-powered Helios, Casey Durfee on MARCThing
Registration is $125. Hotel rooms are $150 per night, and include full breakfast and "free happy-hour." There's a wiki page with suggested Portland restaurants/hang-outs.
Here's the basic conference schedule:
Monday, February 25 - Preconference Day
Tuesday, February 26 - Conference full day
Wednesday, February 27 - Conference full day
Thursday, February 28 - Conference half day
Also, regarding Panizzi supybot, download Last.fm
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
VuFind 0.7
Yale Puts Course Content Online
”Lectures can be downloaded and run in streaming video or in audio only. There are searchable transcripts of each lecture, as well as course syllabi, reading assignments, problem sets, and other materials." (per University spokesman Tom Conroy.)
So far, 7 courses have been posted to the Open Yale Courses web site. I checked Shelley Kagan's lectures on the philosophy of death and Christine Hayes' Introduction to the Old Testament, and the production values are excellent.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Bibliographic Control Working Group Report
Monday, November 26, 2007
"The Three Worlds of IT"
Sunday, November 25, 2007
Wednesday, November 21, 2007
OSS for the Masses
Wednesday, November 14, 2007
"Productivity Toolbox"
Things to Do in Rochester and Buffalo
View Larger Map
has the George Eastman House; and Buffalo, the Albright Knox Gallery
Movable Type Goes Open Source
Cf. dlovins.wordpress.com
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Fun with LoC Authority files
Friday, November 09, 2007
Michigan and Yale Take Heat on Commercial Digitization
A related article appeared in the Nov. 9 Yale Daily News, regarding the contract signed between Yale and Microsoft. The reporter points out Yale's endowment now exceeds $22 billion, and the 2008 library budget is $89.6 million. And assuming a $3.5 million price tag, covering the full processing of 100,000 volumes would cost only one-half of one percent of the University's $615 million capital expense budget. (Though estimate I've heard was more like $7.5 million).
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
Some Upcoming NELINET Events
Nov. 16, 8:30 AM-3:30 PM, the 2007 Bibliographic Services Conference: "Subject Access - Out of Control?"
Dec. 10, 9:30 AM-3:30 PM a workshop by Ed Sperr on "Widgets, Mashups and Web Services", a kind of companion to the "Exploding Your OPAC" class of October 25.
Dec. 12, 10-11 AM, a webinar on the Open Archives Initiative (OAI).
FAST Database Available on Web
Joseph Lucia's Thought Experiment
Here's an excerpt:
What if, in the U.S., 50 ARL libraries, 20 large public libraries, 20 medium-sized academic libraries, and 20 Oberlin group libraries anted up one full-time technology position for collaborative open source development. That's 110 developers working on library applications with robust, quickly-implemented current Web technology -- not legacy stuff. There is not a company in the industry that I know of which has put that much technical effort into product development.
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
BiblioCommons founder Beth Jefferson Interviewed
Beth was a speaker at 2007 code4lib .
Digitization and its Discontents
Here are some of his conclusions:
"The supposed universal library, then, will be not a seamless mass of books, easily linked and studied together, but a patchwork of interfaces and databases ... The real challenge now is how to chart the tectonic plates of information that are crashing into one another and then learn to navigate the new landscapes they are creating".
Noting the great wealth of resources now available on line, he suggests that "these streams of data, rich as they are, will illuminate, rather than eliminate, books and prints and manuscripts that only the library can put in front of you."
Monday, November 05, 2007
Is Waterboarding Torture?
Saturday, October 27, 2007
E-Books Coming of Age?
Sloan shares this telling excerpt:
"I just read 'Pride and Prejudice' on my BlackBerry. And, reader, I liked it. Against all my own prejudices, all my own pride in the history and tradition of the printed word, I liked it...The experience taught me that a book is not what I had thought it to be. It is not, in any important sense, typeface, paper stock or cover art. A book is, foremost, the arrangement of words in sequence, and they are, to borrow a buzz-phrase from the digital folk, platform agnostic."
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Exploding Your OPAC (NELINET)
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
The Open Library (John Hostage memo)
NYTSL 2007
Ed co-authored a winning IMLS grant toward developing an open source OPAC and is a member of the Code4Lib Journal editorial board.
Mass Digitization and Open Access
Mass digitization will certainly improve access to Yale's collections. The problem is that while the majority of Web searchers rely on Google (54% versus 13% for Microsoft's Live Search) , Microsoft requires that the new digital copies be indexed exclusively in Live Search. Google users will simply not be able to find the full texts presented or indexed there (though they may find catalog records courtesy of openworldcat.org). One wonders, therefore, whether this arrangement undermines Yale's commitment, mentioned above, "to provide the widest possible access to its collection."
Yale is committed to providing the widest possible access to its collection ... The full text of the digitized books will be indexed. Full text searching enables researchers to locate relevant material that they could never find through traditional indexes or library catalogs (e.g. a single paragraph in a work on an unrelated topic).
Compare this to the approach taken by UConn, which is partnering with the Boston Library Consortium and Brewster Kahle's Open Content Alliance. According to the October 4th LJ Academic Newswire, Vice-Provost Brinley Franklin said, "The library staff at UConn was unanimous in its endorsement of unrestricted access to materials we digitize ... We are ready to turn down funding from companies that restrict searching digital collections through their proprietary search engine." An October 22 New York Times article (slashdotted on Oct. 23) reports that the Boston Public Library, MIT, Brown, the Smithsonian, and others, have similarly opted out of the Google/Microsoft model.
Friday, October 19, 2007
People's Choice Music
"The most unwanted music is over 25 minutes long, veers wildly between loud and quiet sections, between fast and slow tempos, and features timbres of extremely high and low pitch, with each dichotomy presented in abrupt transition.
The most unwanted orchestra was determined to be large, and features the accordion and bagpipe (which tie at 13% as the most unwanted instrument), banjo, flute, tuba, harp, organ, synthesizer (the only instrument that appears in both the most wanted and most unwanted ensembles). An operatic soprano raps and sings atonal music, advertising jingles, political slogans, and 'elevator' music, and a children's choir sings jingles and holiday songs. The most unwanted subjects for lyrics are cowboys and holidays, and the most unwanted listening circumstances are involuntary exposure to commercials and elevator music."
Soldier and lyricist Nina Mankin actually went on to compose two pieces of music based on the survey results. I've listened to them and, ironically, the "Most Wanted Music" is so ingratiating that it's too painful to hear more than once, while the "Most Unwanted Music" is wonderfully stimulating and quite funny.
Josephus online
Thursday, October 18, 2007
BookMooch
World Digital Library
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Open Content Aliance (OCA) Attracts New Members
ALA Preconference on Metadata
Knights Templar in the News
Open Source ILS Market Penetration
Also posted to CMS weblog.
Sunday, October 14, 2007
The Israel Lobby
By John J. Mearsheimer and Stephen M. Walt
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 484 pp., $26)
Despite accusations to the contrary, there is nothing anti-semitic about this book. The authors are simply performing an exercise in "political realism". "Although we believe that America should support Israel's existence [i.e., for moral and historical reasons]," the authors write, "Israel's security is ultimately not of critical strategic importance to the United States ... By contrast, if oil exports from the Persian Gulf oil were insignificantly reduced, the effects on America's well-being would be profound." (p. 338). Tough words, but not racist.
The final chapter offers some policy advice: the United States should abandon its current efforts at regional transformation in the Middle East and return to a strategy of "offshore balancing" since "the United States does not need to control this vitally important region; it merely needs to ensure that no other country does" (p. 339). Israel, a regional economic and military superpower, can largely fend for itself. If (however improbably in their view) her existence should ever be threatened by enemies, the U.S. would at that point have a moral obligation to intervene. Otherwise, they maintain, Israel should be treated like any other state, based on U.S. national interest, and not subject to the "special relationship".
For Jeffrey Goldberg in The New Republic, however, this book represents "the most sustained attack, the most mainstream attack, against the political enfranchisement of American Jews since the era of Father Coughlin." Backed up by the recorded words of Richard Clarke and Lawrence Wright, he effectively challenges the book's analysis of Bin Ladin's motives (i.e. that Israel's treatment of the Palestinians was close to Bin Ladin's heart) and representation of Israel's position on Iraq (i.e., that Iran wasn't the greater threat in Israel's view). Goldberg fails to offer a counter-explanation, however, for why the Israel policy debate has been so strangely stifled in the U.S.. He also unhelpfully smears journalist Robert Fiske as a "rabid anti-Zionist who has lately made common cause with the September 11 conspiracy movement".
Leslie Gelb, former president of the Council on Foreign Relations, also roughs up the authors a bit in his piece for the New York Times Book Review. Gelb points out some significant problems with the book (e.g., cherry-picking of quotations, absence of original research, reflexive blame on Israel for failed peace negotiations) , but, in their response the following week, Walt and Mearsheimer point out a fatal flow in Gelb's critique, one that reflects the distorted way in which he read their book: "Gelb refers repeatedly to a "Jewish lobby", despite the fact that we never employ the term in our book. Indeed we explicitly rejected this label as inaccurate and misleading, both because the lobby includes non-Jews like the Christian Zionists and because many Jewish Americans do not support the hard line policies favored by its most powerful elements." Another error was Gelb's inference that they turned their wrath on the Israel lobby out of exasperation and disbelief over the invasion of Iraq. But the Atlantic Monthly commission of the original article began in October 2002, still nearly 6 months before the war began.
Meanwhile, Ray McGovern of Consortium News has an article on Alternet (10/10/07) regarding Israel's June 7, 1967 attack on the USS Liberty. McGovern attributes the 40-year cover-up to--you guessed it--intimidation by the Israel lobby. The recent declassification of government documents along with aggressive reporting by John Crewdson make it increasingly hard to deny that the Israelis intentionally destroyed a "friendly" U.S. spy ship, and that the two governments conspired afterward to keep it secret from the U.S. public.
Friday, October 12, 2007
A Brief History of Slashdot
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
How to Eliminate Unwanted Catalogs
Tuesday, October 09, 2007
Sunday, October 07, 2007
Saturday, October 06, 2007
Fac-Back-OPAC
Dan Scott mentioned how Solr dominated the code4lib 2007 conference, including all-day preconference led by Erik Hatcher and MyResource portal demo by Andrew Nagy. The Fac-Back-OPAC was derived from Casey Durfee's "Open Source Endeca in 250 Lines or Less".
1. MARC records (bibs and holdings) are extracted nightly from traditional OPAC.
2. then run through marc4j scripts (controled by Jython programming language) converting them to UTF-8 MARCXML.
3. then indexed through Solr (see tutorial) configured with bibliographic schema, run inside Jetty application server. Fields are extracted from MARCXML records as XML strings and sent to Solr instance via HTTP POST method.
4. The Django Web application framework then comes into play. It "implements the model-view-controller (MVC) pattern written in Python".
Thursday, October 04, 2007
Richard Akerman on Library Futures
Dupuis: "Can academic/research libraries change fast enough to stay relevant? Similarly, can libraries rush to transform themselves into the wrong things, and just a different path to irrelevance?"
Akerman: "I think there was a big, big intermediation role that libraries just have to let go of. It isn't coming back. And there's also a big, big technology investment, in catalogues and ILS systems that worked in ways that librarians understoood, that were basically library operations, turned into computer programs and databases."
LCSH Browser
"Can New Haven Become a Sustainable City?"
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Thursday, September 27, 2007
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
Saturday, September 22, 2007
Siris Cross Catalog Searching
SIRIS stands for Smithsonian Institution Research Information System.
Solr "is an open source enterprise search server based on the Lucene Java search library, with XML/HTTP and JSON APIs, hit highlighting, faceted search, caching, replication, and a web administration interface. It runs in a Java servlet container such as Tomcat. See the complete feature list for more details, then check out the tutorial." There are several sessions on Lucene/Solr offered at the Apache Convention, Monday-Friday, Nov. 12-16, 2007, in Atlanta.
MyLibrary
Friday, September 21, 2007
Drupal
Monday, September 17, 2007
Yale Weblogs
Roller uses Velocity template language. See Velocity website and Reference Guide. In Roller the words "page" and "template" are used interchangably.
Invitations
Trying to invite registered Yale Weblog members to CMS Blog.
Interpreting error message via RollerWiki UserGuide_2.x:
"Set the users Permissions by selecting Admin, Author, or Limited. Click on Send Invitation. If roller is not configured to talk to the mail server, you may get the following messages:
User successfully invited.As long as the first message is present, the invite is successful. The next time the user logs into the blog site, they will see the following: on the Main Menu page:
ERROR: Notification email(s) not sent, due to Roller configuration or mail server problem.
You are invited to join weblog [weblog name will appear here] – accept | decline
Sunday, September 16, 2007
Tags Help Make Libraries Del.icio.us
Saturday, September 15, 2007
Big E
Friday, September 14, 2007
LISNews - Drupal Beta Site
Monday, September 10, 2007
Sakaibrary
University Libraries Explore OSS Options
OSS learning management system (LMS) Moodle now used in 56 percent of universities and "an increasing number of content management and portal systems are also open source, and many university libraries are involved in setting up open source repositories." Koha and Evergreen are mentioned as popular OSS library systems in the US and Australia. The Oxford University Library chose Moodle as its LMS and is implementing a CMS called MySource Matrix, derived from Squiz.
OSSWatch manager Randy Metcalfe wisely points out, though, that "open source is not the key feature; the key feature is value for money."
Sunday, September 09, 2007
Yehuda Amichai conference at Yale
According to Benjamin Harshav, the keynote speaker: “Amichai is the most universal Israeli poet, expressing the human condition… In an age of ideology, he celebrated the individual’s private moments and existential situation; in an age of war, he celebrated love and love-making.”
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Earlham Professor Charlie Peck wins Ultimate Geek Award
Monday, August 27, 2007
Sunday, August 26, 2007
New Haven Citizens’ Action Network BOA Accountability Project
19th ward alderman candidates for Sept. 11 election:
1. LaMont Moye. MBA from Albertus Magnus. New Haven public school substitute teacher. Proposes: Increased parent involvement in schools, etc.; More summer jobs/afeter school programs; mandatory programs & uniform sentence, NO GOOD TIME, for prison inmates; Community Review Board jurisdiction over redev and zoning in our neighborhoods; better legislation and reduced spending by city government. In 1999 organized First Christian Softball Association in New Haven, in 2006 founded Parent Project 99 (PP99) non-profit group operated by parents in New Haven. Pet project: tracking device in school vans for children with special needs.
2. Cleaven Johnson. MDIV '98. Seems responsible for New Haven Citizens' Action Network flyer: BOA accountability project; provides links on evaluation board of alderman, with emphasis on increase versus decrease in taxes. Main point: "Did you know Alfreda Edwards voted to raise your taxes?" President/CEO of "Last Kingdom Productions"
3. Alfreda Edwards. The incumbant. Doesn't seem to be campaigning much if at all.
Apple Boot Camp
Friday, August 24, 2007
Courses in Modern Hebrew
"HEBR 103a, Advanced Modern Hebrew: Israeli Society. TTh 4.00-5.15 Shiri Goren I ; Not Cr/D/F L5 (27) Permission of instructor required Meets during reading period An examination of major controversies in Israeli society. Readings include newspaper editorials and academic articles as well as documentary and history-related material. Advanced grammatical structures are introduced and practiced. Conducted in Hebrew. Prerequisite: HEBR 102 or equivalent."
"HEBR 104b, Introduction to Modern Israeli Literature. MW 1.00-2.15 Ayala Dvoretzky I ; Not Cr/D/F L5 (0) Permission of instructor required. Reading, discussion, and analysis of fiction, poetry, films, drama, and magazine articles representative of contemporary cultural, social, and political issues in Israeli life. Conducted in Hebrew. Prerequisite: HEBR 102 or equivalent."
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
OPAC 2.0 betas
Monday, August 20, 2007
LibX (Firefox extension)
Step Schmitt developed one for Morris that seems to query Orbis as well.
It works with Voyager (and other ILSs), and features toolbar, drop-down context menu (usu. right mouse click), drop-and-drag searches. For example, if ISBN is selected, context menu offers option to search directly using that unique identifier. The following identifiers are currently recognized: CrossRef DOIs, ISBNs, and ISSNs, and PubMed IDs.
It uses OpenURL resolvers (in Yale's case, SFX) to retrieve local holdings and subscriptions, and will provide full-text where available. Within Google Scholar, for example, one can quickly look up references (even from within PDFs) and retrieve paid-for copies of full text.
Graphical cues (e.g., university logo) appear next to text strings in Web pages if LibX determines that the library owns related content. For example, a book record on amazon.com might link back to the same edition held at Yale. (See screencasts in Demo 3 for examples). Click on cue to activate link and view fulfillment options
Jesse Ruderman has created an autolinking script which allows LibX automatically to link ISBNs, ISSNs, DOIs, and other identifiers to one's catalog or OpenURL resolver.
LibX provides support for proxy server access. It also supports COinS, which turn tags hidden by web site authors or publishers into actionable OpenURLs links. And it also supports OCLC's xISBN, which allows one to find a similar book in one's library even if the exact edition is not held or currently unavailable.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Inheritance and loss? A brief survey of Google Books
"The Google Books Project is no doubt an important, in many ways invaluable, project. It is also, on the brief evidence given here, a highly problematic one. Relying on the power of its search tools, Google has ignored elemental metadata, such as volume numbers. The quality of its scanning (and so we may presume its searching) is at times completely inadequate. The editions offered (by search or by sale) are, at best, regrettable."
Brewster Kahle Interviewed in LJ
Some snippets courtesy of Matt W. ...
You've been critical of Google's library partnerships. What is Google
doing right and/or wrong?
Two problems: one is perpetual restrictions on the public domain.
Another is that these negotiations are all going on in secret. It
shouldn't take a subpoena to get information from a librarian. But in
this new world order, both perpetual restrictions and gag orders are
being put in place on libraries by a corporate enterprise. The idea
of making all books accessible online in new and different ways is
all good news. But if you do this in a way that the materials that
have been housed in libraries for centuries are made available only
through one corporate interface, that is an Orwellian future.
-------------
Google's pitch to libraries can be awfully attractive, and it is so
ubiquitous. How does the OCA compete for library partners?
Revolutions aren't started by majorities. They come from leaders who
see things that need to be done. Boston Public Library, for example,
has been courted by Google, but it has said it is going to remain
open. The Library of Congress also announced it is going to work with
the Open Content Alliance. That's what it takes. It takes guts on the
part of our leadership to keep librarians first-class members of this
information world, not just in a service role of feeding the machine
and then checking out at the end of the day because everything's
going to be handled by some great search engine in the sky. No. It
should be handled by us. We have the tools to build this open world
right now. We can invest in ourselves, in the traditions that we come
from. This is a choice.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Art Museum Social Tagging Project ("steve")
Andrew Keen v Emily Bell: "Is the Internet Killing our Culture?"
Monday, August 13, 2007
Hawk Inn (Vermont)
VuFind
See also Andrew Nagy's oss4lib 2007 presentation on MyResearch Portal (VuFind installation at Villanova University)
According to the about page, it's a "library resource portal" running on Solr Energy, supporting search and browse across all library resources. These include:
- Catalog Records
- Locally Cached Journals
- Digital Library Items
- Institutional Repository
- Institutional Bibliography
- Other Library Collections and Resources
Eric Lease Morgan on OSS for Libraries
In his message to NGC4Lib ... Morgan writes,
"At the end of this month I will have the privilege of a presenting a
day-long, hands-on workshop on open source software and XML at the
Ticer "digital library" school, and I have made much of my
presentation available online in the hopes of getting some feedback
from you, sets of my peers. Please see:
About Ticer - http://tinyurl.com/yso2ey
OSS and XML - http://boole.uvt.nl/
"The OSS and XML workshop covers things such as:
* reading and writing MARC records
* indexing and searching MARC records
* harvesting and serving metadata via OAI-PMH
* moving from MARC to XML
* designing and implementing XML vocabularies
* transforming XML into other document types
* indexing and searching XML
* "mashing" content together
"From the workshop's summary:
"The combined use of open source software and XML are the current
means for getting the most out of your computing infrastructure.
Their underlying philosophies are akin to the principles of
librarianship. They enable. They empower. They are flexible.
They are "free". The way to get from here to there is through a
bit of re-training and re-engineering of the way libraries do
their work, not what they do but how they do it. Let's not
confuse the tools of our profession with the purpose of the
profession. If you think libraries and librarianship are about
books, MARC, and specific controlled vocabularies, then your
future is limited. On the other hand, if you think libraries are
about the collection, organization, preservation, and
dissemination of data, information, and knowledge, then the
future is quite bright.
"Finally, be forewarned, the link to the workshop is temporary since
the hosting machine will be wiped clean as soon as a the day after
the workshop."
Sunday, August 12, 2007
Facebook Apps for Librarians
European Library Portal
Includes browsable (but not keyword searchable) section on European Digital Library Treasures. Metadata is available in drop-down text boxes, but images are generally not of high enough resolution to read what's on them, and some of the metadata is poor, e.g., the subject of a Vatican Arba Turim ms. is given as "politics".
Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Feedity RSS Generator
Sunday, July 29, 2007
500 jokes
Friday, July 27, 2007
Tim Spalding at the Library of Congress (webcast)
Thursday, July 26, 2007
Ghost Towns in Second Life
"Uncontrolled Vocabulary"
Wednesday, July 25, 2007
OpenBiblio (free ILS software)
Free information for the taking
Includes annotated links to resources like JStor , The Historical New York Times Project, Ebrary, etc.,
read more | digg story.
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
Google Librarian Central
Sunday, July 22, 2007
What Some Successful CEOs are Reading (hint: not management books)
Saturday, July 21, 2007
Springshare Library Widgets
eXtensible Catalog (XC) Survey Results
According to the 10-page report, the Mellon-funded XC will be open source and freely-available to all interested libraries. Phase One of the project (2006-2007) has reviewed potential partners, complementary source code, and other environmental variables.
On page five is a table listing the most commonly desired OPAC enhancements (as selected from a large list, reproducced in the appendix). The top ranked feature is "Optional grouping of related works in search results". One feature listed here, not mentioned in our PIC document, is "Personal showcase pages for institutional/faculty-created content".
Debate Over Dewey
Friday, July 20, 2007
If Libraries had shareholders
Thursday, July 19, 2007
NEUG Annual Meeting
Schedule of Events:
8:30-9:00 Breakfast
9:00-9:15 Welcome Address Niebuhr Hall (N123) NEUG Officers
9:15-10:00 ExLibris Update - Company updates, Future of RUGs at ExLibris Niebuhr Hall (N123) Susan Stearns, VP Customer Services (ExLibris)
10:15-11:15 First Sessions
- Voyager Product Update Voyager 6.5 release, ILL 6.5 release, Voyager 7.0, Analyzer Niebuhr Hall (N123)
- Jenny Forbes, Customer Liaison (ExLibris)
- Querying Voyager with MS Access CANCELLED
- SFX at Yale University Library A look at the staff administrative module of SFX and local practice at YUL Niebuhr Hall (N123) Nisa Bakkalbasi (Yale)
1:00-2:00 Primo and Verde Product Updates Niebuhr Hall (N123) Susan Pastore, VP Sales (ExLibris)
2:00-3:00 Third Sessions
- Enhancing Your OPAC without Losing Your Mind Enhance your Voyager OPAC using: book covers from different sources, Google Books, and other customizations. Source code for all the enhancements will be provided as well as a few tips and tricks regarding general issues with the OPAC. J. Edwards Dining Hall (N126) Julia E. Allen (FLO- WIT)
- Panel: A Look at the Aleph ILS and a Discussion on the Future of the ExLibris ILS An overview of managing the Aleph ILS followed by a group discussion on the future of Aleph and Voyager at ExLibris Niebuhr Hall (N123) Jan Jourdain (Amherst College), Tania Fersenheim (Brandeis University)
- DIGITool Discussion of the different ExLibris products, including various Voyager modules Library Seminar Room (L104) Rodney G. Obien (WPI)
- Acquisitions J. Edwards Dining Hall (N126) Lora Brueck (WPI)
- Cataloging Niebuhr Hall (N123) Catherine Touhy (Emmanuel)
- Systems Library Seminar Room (L104) TBA
- Circulation Common Room (N226) TBA
VuFind
Since demo included only 10,000 records, Casey Durfee recommends testing against larger set, e.g., LC MARC records provided through archive.org as he had done with the Seattle Public Library HELIOS catalog. Durfee adds, "Solr faceting performance scales pretty linearly with the number of records, so things that work fine on even 500,000 records can be unusably slow on 5 million +."
"Future of Librarians" interview archive
Wednesday, July 18, 2007
Open Library (Aaron Swartz)
Tuesday, July 17, 2007
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics: Librarians
Wireless Networking
Attempt to link wirelessly new Mac Powerbook to Linksys WRT54GS router (hardware version 6; firmware v1.50.6) so far unsuccessful. Even though I enter correct password when prompted, the Mac says there is a "problem joining the selected network". New 1.52.2 firmware available as of 7/2/2007. Tried to install, but formatted as .bin file, which I don't seem able to open or execute. Someone named Larry_Kahan on Linksys forum thread, says "Do not expand the .bin file. Just start the update routine and point the router at the downloaded .bin file." and provides specific steps.
One suggestion offered on linksys forum is to insert $ before one of the alternate WEP key (i.e., as alternative to entering password?).
Apple Discussions has a similar thread.
Personal install disk designed for Windows O.S. only. Able to patch to router with physical cable. Also, O.S. X recognizes suzukinet signal, but not correct password. Trying to diagnose problem at local unit address, i.e., http://192.168.1.1.
If all else fails, install Bootcamp, and access the router via Windows XP.
[2005-12-13]
Motorola Surfboard FAQs
Online rebate form
www.rebatestatus.com - Results
Comcast New Haven service packages
New Haven Service Center:
630 Chapel Street
M - T 8:00-5:00; F - 8:00-6:00 PM;
SAT - 8:00 - 12:00
[2005-12-03]
Per Zoom Tech Support: Windows 2000 and XP Users: You must install the software before installing the PC Card. Software not yet tested with Windows XP logo, according to installer/OS. And then: "Unable to initiate HotSync operation because the port is in use by another application".
Unable to get Model 4312 Zoom Bluetooth PC Card Adapter to talk with Tungsten E2. Purchased card through Amazon for $54.99 on Dec. 23, Order #: 103-0127648-1186243 .
Telephone: (561) 997-9686
Fax: (561) 997-2163
E-mail: Personal Assistance
(8:30 AM - 11:00 PM ET, Monday-Friday)
(9:00 AM - 5:00 PM ET, Saturday)
[2004-01-04]
Walking through WEP steps with Linksys tech support.
At first, new setting worked with intermittent disconnects, but after disabling IEEE 802.1x authentication, it seemed to be all right. Earlier, I had been trying to set up the WPA (Wireless Protected Access) to my Linksys WRT54G wireless router. I found what appears to be a set of instructions for this procedure on the 10 most frequently asked questions on the Linksys Support Page. I'm also waiting on the phone for a tech support person, since I'm finding the instruction a bit vague.
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
U. of Rochester Ethnographic Study
Sunday, July 08, 2007
Planet Cataloging
Evergreen Milestone
Equinox can help with server hosting local implementations.
The Space
Wednesday, July 04, 2007
Testing AAC 128 vs. 256 kbps sound quality
David Swanson on the Case for Impeachment
James Madison added that "if the President be connected, in any suspicious manner, with any person, and there be grounds to believe he will shelter him, the House of Representatives can impeach him; they can remove him if found guilty."
So this seems like a pretty clear case:
Libby Scooter was found guilty of obstructing justice. His motive was to protect his boss Cheney, who, along with Bush, had authorized the disclosure of Valerie Plame's secret CIA identity. Plame's cover was blown, in turn, in order for Cheney and Bush to discredit Plame's husband, Joseph Wilson, after he exposed the bogus intelligence they used to justify war with Iraq.
Bush's interference in the legal system at this point represents a profound conflict of interest and abuse of power. If there were ever a time for impeachment, therefore, it would appear to be now.
Monday, July 02, 2007
Saturday, June 30, 2007
Washington Post on the "Modern Librarian"
Men in tuxes and women in gowns smartly walk the red carpet at the Washington Convention Center, to the "woo-hoo!" of adoring fans. A cameraman records the procession, photographers angle for close-ups. One carpet-walker, a woman in blue sequins, strikes a come-hither pose, and a security guard taps a female spectator on the shoulder.
"Are they famous?" he asks.
"No," she replies. "They're librarians."
Thursday, June 28, 2007
I-751
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Monday, June 11, 2007
ALA 2007 Washington D.C.
Here's the agenda for the Subject Analysis Committee (but most of the meeting times conflict with CCDA). Some items of potential interest:
- 2.2.1 Vote to approve the revised charge of the SAC Subcommittee on the Future of Subject Headings.
- 2.9.1 Discuss Encore product http://www.iii.com/encore ; http://youtube.com/watch?v=Qj_tMDbCs9M
Improving the SFX menu
Friday, June 08, 2007
De Lange Conference on Emerging Libraries
Summary:
The traditional concept of a library has been rendered obsolescent by the unprecedented confluence of the Internet, changes in scholarly publication models, increasing alliances between the humanities and the sciences, and the rise of large-scale digital library projects. The old ways of organizing and preserving knowledge to transmit our cultural and intellectual heritage have converged with the most advanced technologies of science and engineering and research methodologies. Such rapid and overwhelming changes to a millennia-old tradition pose significant challenges not only to university research libraries, but to every citizen. If the traditional library is undergoing a profound metamorphosis, it is not clear what new model will take its place. More information has been produced in the last several years than in the entire previous history of humanity, and most of this has been in digital format. Libraries are not storage places any more; they are less and less a place. The critical issues now include: How can that information be efficiently accessed and used? How do we extract knowledge from such an abundance of often poorly organized information? How might these enormous digital resources affect our concept of identity, our privacy, and the way we conduct business in the new century? Insight from many disciplines and perspectives is requisite to begin to understand this phenomenon to identify ways to help chart a future course.
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
AJL 2007
Thursday, May 31, 2007
Wednesday, May 30, 2007
O'Reilly Radar
seems like excellent source for late-breaking IT news. Someone just posted here an announcement about a new feature of Google maps: Streetside View based ImmersiveMedia technology, where you can get a human-scale view of walking down the street as featured in a Google map̮
Monday, May 28, 2007
OPAC 2.0 discussion at Yale
Google Gadgets, Cold Fusion, and Adam Brin
Sunday, May 27, 2007
Saturday, May 26, 2007
Steve Ettlinger Deconstructs the Twinki

Cited by LIS News, Steve Ettlinger interviewed by Moira Gunn at IT Conversations. Ettlinger is author of Twinkie, Deconstructed.
Friday, May 25, 2007
Monday, April 30, 2007
Friday, April 27, 2007
Karen Coyle on Library in Digital Universe
Me listening to podcast on April 1 .... Libraries as early implementers of standards and semantic markup. LC, for example, started distributing standardized catalog cards in 1901.
Major advantages ... libraries accustomed to working as collective. Also (and this comes up later in conversation), because expertise always has context, and libraries have defined constituencies, easier for libraries to set boundaries on authoritative information. Wikipedia, trying to be all things to all people, lacks such context.
Disadvantage, not used to working with entities outside the library world.
Google Book project a mixed blessing. Open Content Alliance in part designed to remedy lack of transparency (i.e., difficulty sharing Google's digital files among different libraries).
Importance of OpenURL technology, dynamic linking of global Web content with local library holdings.
NISO migrating from heavy to less-formal light-weight standards development. In current environment, things move to quickly to build elaborate standards.
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
Laptops
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Libraries as educational, technological hubs
Public Library Geeks and Web 2.0
"Essential" Knowledge Management sites
Digital Preservation funding cut at LC
Open Content aggregator (Index Data)
Steven Bell on RSS Aggregators
Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Friday, March 23, 2007
MyLibrary 3.0
Sunday, March 18, 2007
LJ Movers & Shakers
Saturday, March 17, 2007
Asakawa Conference at Yale
S. Yabuki delivered a paper entitled: "K. Askawa's View on History: Science Prefers the White Light of Truth". He begins by recounting the "legend of the Asakawa Cherry Tree" as reported by Dartmouth 1899 classmate G. G. Clark: "K would memorize two pages of the English-English dictionary daily, then literally 'devour' the pages, a practice in those days not uncommon. When the last pages were gone and only the covers were left they were buried by K at the foot of a cherry tree on the school campus. The tree was known as the Asakawa Cherry Tree." In the first section of the paper, Yabuki maintains that Asakawa's research on the village of Iriki "debunked the concept of serf and serfdom in medieval Japan". [What does the term 'medieval' even mean in a country like Japan? Doesn't it come from the European experience of losing Greco-Roman civilization and then recovering it with the Reformation and Renaissance?]. In the second section, Yabuki explores Asakawa's role in negotiations following the Russo-Japanese war in 1905. The upshot of these negotiations was the Portsmouth Peace Treaty, (for his contributions to which Theodore Roosevelt would received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1906). Asakawa was teaching (nearby?) at Dartmouth at the time, and was able to observed the entire conference at the Wentworth Hotel.
Yale was involved in the negotiations even though Asakawa hadn't yet joined the faculty (though he'd already been a graduate student there). Barnaba Tokutaro Sakai, sent to the U.S. on a public relations mission, had written a letter to his friend Anson Phelps Stokes , Secretrary of Yale University ,on Oct. 3, 1904, asking "What is the feeling or sentiment among the learned scholars in New Haven as to what terms of peace Japan should make, etc.?" Stokes in turn consulted Yale's international law professor Theodore Woolsey and oriental history professor Frederic W. Williams (son of Commodore Perry's interpreter Samuel Wells Williams), and provided a set of recommendations. Asakawa had already published his book the Russia-Japan Conflict and a highly-regarded pieced in the May 1904 issue of the Yale Review, and was therefore well-known and respected at Yale, and a major influence on their recommendations.
Naoyuki Agawa spoke on "Asakawa Kan'ichi's American Journey: Its Time and Place in the History of Japan-U.S. Relations". Some highlights: Asakawa was born into a samurai family that had been loyal to the Shogun. For this reason, he was among the disenfranchised after the civil war of 1868-69 and the Meiji restoration. The winners of that struggle were disproportionately Satsuma, Choshu, and other samurai provinces that lost to Tokugawas in Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. Those on losing side this time around had special incentive to travel to U.S.
Asakawa came to U.S. in 1895, same year as China ceded Taiwan following Sino-Japanese war, and 3 years before Spain handed Philippines to U.S. following Spanish-American War. "As a result of these respective territorial acquisitions," Naoyuki notes, "Japan and the United States suddenly found themselves physically facing each other across a relatively narrow strait, a reality that transformed the nature of the bilateral relationship."
In 1905 Asakawa married Mirriam. This was the same year as Japan's victory in Russo-Japanese war, and two years before he returned to Yale as an instructor. In 1921 Asakawa wrote letter to Japan's Deputy Foreign Minister Masanao Haniwara and U.K. ambassasor Gonsuke Hayashi, that widespread anti-Japanese feeling in West was largely due to a vast Jewish conspiracy. He cited the Protocols, which he acknowledged were fake, but still somehow illuminating.
In November 1941 he drafted a concilliatory letter for FDR to send to Hirohito; it arrived too late to do any good.
Asakawa died in 1947, 2 years after WWII ended and 4 years before Japan regained independence.