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October 30, 2006

415 - LCC browsing

I had forgotten about this - sorry. Leslie Burmeister reminded me that there is a

"more user-friendly way to browse the LC classification schedule online. If you're on Classification Web and are on the Main Menu page, there's a tiny link right below the "main" links ("Browse Classification Schedules, Classification Search, etc) called "Outline." This takes you to the broad A to Z outline of LCC. Each letter is hyperlinked. Selecting H, for example, takes one to an outline of all the subdivisions of Social Sciences. If I then wanted to cruise (the infamous) HD, selecting it would then bring me to all the subclassifications of Industries/Land Use/Labor. Etc etc -- you can continue narrowing once you find the path you think you want to take."

Thanks Leslie!

October 26, 2006

462 - Background documents

I have made a folder on the remote server, in Wunderly, called "Final Background Documents". Once your background document is finalized, could you please make it into a PDF and drop it in there. Give it some shorthand version of your committee name and -bkgr.pdf. Thanks

October 25, 2006

462 - Next PPT

Is in VISTA. See you tomorrow.

462 - This Thursday

The class that meets after us has an exam, and they need every minute they can get, so as a courtesy we are going to clear the room by 12:25. That means that we will wrap up discussion at 12:20. Therefore, so I can control it, I am changing the normal order. We will have presentations, then Committee, and then me (since I can always stop myself on time :-).

October 24, 2006

415 - Next PPT

There are two PowerPoint files in VISTA for Friday's class - one is the end of LCC, and the other is the beginning of Dewey.

October 23, 2006

New photos

I added about a dozen new photos to the Little Dig 3 site in flickr over the weekend. I chronicled the insertion of an LBE (load-bearing element), which was lots of fun. See http://www.flickr.com/photos/candy-s/sets/72157594168985567/. I see that Spinstah also has a cool group of photos of a big rebar cage going in - see http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=little%20dig%20rebar&w=18761417%40N00

lbe.jpg

October 19, 2006

415 - Several things

First, Assignment 4 has been created in VISTA.

Second, I am pleased to see more entries on the wiki - keep 'em coming.

October 18, 2006

462 - Next PPT

Tomorrow's piece on copyright et al. is in VISTA. The order will be presentations, me, DL meeting.

October 17, 2006

415 - Next PPT

The slides for this coming Friday (one set) are in VISTA. Next assignment to follow (oh noooo) as soon as I can. I am working on grading Assignment 2..

462 - Assignment 3

Assignment 3? What Assignment 3? Oh yeah - the paper. I have put details on Assignment 3 on the Assignments page.

October 10, 2006

415 - Food for thought

This posting by Michael Stephens might give you some sense of how quickly things have been changing in libraries, and "on the ground" so to speak. Also food for the wiki. As is the Karen Schneider posting that follows it. Also, there are some interesting presentations at Beyond the OPAC.

415 - Next PPT

The PPT file for this Friday is in VISTA.

October 08, 2006

Terry Pratchett

If you are a Terry Practhcett fan, e-mail me.

October 06, 2006

Robot librarians

While there is something a bit wierd (not sure why) about linking to a blog from another class - here is something cool from a student in Caryn's LIS 488.

If you're going to San Francisco ...

Position Title: Digital Collections Librarian (Assistant Librarian Rank)
Position Number 001021
Department: GleesonLibrary
Division: Academic Affairs
Requisition Number 0306
Salary Type: Salary Rank
Is this an Internal Posting? No

Job Description This position will have an important role in a team-oriented environment to develop and manage the Library's digital collections under the direction of the Head of Library Systems. Please use this link to apply: https://www.usfjobs.com/applicants/jsp/shared/frameset/Frameset.jsp?time=1158260298101
Online application is recommended--Choose "Create New Application" option.


Position duties include: Working with faculty and librarians in the identification of print materials to be transferred to digital media; coordination of workflow for digitizing and cataloging digital collections; cataloging and assignment of metadata to digital materials; identification of external funding sources and grant writing; coordination of marketing for digital collections; consultation with campus legal office on copyright, licensing and rights management issues related to digital collections; consultation with faculty and other producers of digital media in the creation of an anticipated institutional repository. The position will also include some bibliographic liaison and cataloging responsibilities and serve as back-up in some areas of library system administration. The position will support the teaching, learning and research needs of the University of San Francisco faculty and students.

Requirements: MLS from ALA-accredited program. One to two years of professional experience preferred with demonstrated aptitude for and interest in project planning and management, digitization standards, technical services, electronic resource management, or related areas. Preference will be given to candidates with experience using bibliographic utilities, such as OCLC; integrated Library systems, particularly Innovative Interfaces; content management systems such as CONTENTdm or DSpace; and metadata protocols. Knowledge of current trends in digital library development, digitization standards, long-term management and preservation, and rights management issues relating to digital materials. Demonstrated ability to work effectively in a team environment, working both independently and collaboratively, strong commitment to customer service, effective written and oral communication skills, demonstrated organizational ability and problem-solving skills. Interest in and potential for establishing a record of professional achievement and service is required.

415 - Next stuff

Sorry - I put this stuff up yesterday and forgot to put a notice here. Today's PPT and Assignment 3 are in VISTA.

October 05, 2006

462 - Agenda

The agenda for today's meeting is on the wiki - http://gslis.simmons.edu/mw/lis462/October_5%2C_2006.

October 04, 2006

462 - Tomorrow

We will do the three presentations, then I will do the metadata lecture from last week, and then a committee meeting.

462 - Reminder

The "who is assigned what pages" list is in the remote folder - see this entry from a while back - http://gslis.simmons.edu/blogs/candy-at-gslis/2006/09/462_remore_folder.html

462 - DLF workshops open to students

PREMIS Tutorial, Digital Library Federation Fall Forum Pre-conference Event

What: This 1.5 day tutorial provides an introduction to PREMIS, core metadata for digital preservation. It covers the PREMIS data model, the Data Dictionary, implementation considerations, and using PREMIS with METS. The tutorial includes hands-on exercises and an opportunity for participants to share their own implementation issues and experiences.

When: Tuesday November 7 (9:00 - 5:00) and Wednesday November 8 (9:00 - 12:00)
Where: Harvard Divinity School, Center for the Study of World Religions,
42 Francis Avenue, Cambridge, Mass. This is just a short subway ride from the DLF Fall Forum in Boston.

Where to stay: DLF participants may want to extend their stay at the Fairmont Copley Plaza. For hotels in Cambridge, see http://hotel-guides.us/massachusetts/cambridge-ma-hotels.html.

Who should attend: Librarians, archivists, IT staff and others working on digital preservation in the cultural heritage sector. Participants are expected to have some involvement in digital preservation and some familiarity with XML and METS.

Registration: To register, go to http://www.regonline.com/106878.

462 - DLF workshops open to students

THERE ARE STILL A FEW SPACES LEFT IN THIS WORKSHOP FOR THOSE INTERESTED IN ATTENDING

Workshop on developing a services framework for libraries, Tuesday, 7 November 2006
The Fairmont Copley Plaza, Boston, Massachusetts

During the past year, the DLF Services Framework Working Group (SFG) has worked through a number of issues in trying to define a basis for developing a services framework for libraries and digital libraries. Throughout this process, it became clear to the working group members that the framework must capture the business logic of what people do in libraries and how users interact with libraries. There is currently a lack of documentation in this area, but it is critical to understand if we are going to consider developing systems that are nimble and can easily adapt to the changing library environments in which we live.

Borrowing from principles that have been developed in Business Process Modeling (BPM) and in Service Oriented Architectures (SOA), the group has developed a light-weight approach for beginning to capture the business processes of the library and structuring them in a format that allows discreet business functions to be identified. These functions, emerging from various business areas of the library, are key to identifying activities that occur in multiple areas. Using a service oriented approach, it is then possible to look at a new way to develop systems to meet library needs. As stand-alone units of functionality take shape and can be translated to software components, these components can be developed once and reused many times, creating a plug-and-play architecture where new or better software components can be introduced without significant disruption.http://www.regonline.com/108299

This workshop will provide an overview of the work of the group to date and then focus on a hands-on approach to define various library/digital library activities. The workshop attendees will break into three small groups to work through the business logic for three library areas: Digitization, Storage of digital assets, and Discovery of digital assets. The output is expected to be a series of flow charts and a set of decomposed business processes and functions that will be included in the services framework. These will provide a basis for further systems analysis in the future as a SOA-based approach to library automated services is considered. Workshop attendees are expected to have experience with library IT management and/or technical development of digital library projects.

The workshop is limited to 25 attendees and will be held on Tuesday, 7 November 2006 from 9am – 5pm, prior to the start of the DLF Fall Forum on 8 November 2006. Lunch will be provided. Interested attendees should register by 9 October at http://www.regonline.com/108299. Priority will be given to those at DLF member institutions and individuals who are members of the SFG. For more information about the SFG’s work, participants are encouraged to read http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july06/lavoie/07lavoie.html.

Job description

I came across this in a job description today:

REQUIRED QUALIFICATIONS: MLS; at least 3 years of experience ...; must be able to work both independently and collaboratively; must be able to occasionally lift and/or move up to 30 pounds; must be able to tolerate normal library allergens.

Hey - it's good to be up front.

October 03, 2006

415 - Wiki

Don't forget to enter libraries onto the wiki pages. If each of you entered three libraries we would have almost 90 cool libraries on the wiki. For inspiration, try Googling things like "libraries that blog", or libraries and tagging, or whatever. Just in case I wasn't clear - it's no more that three entries per person per week, not just per week for the whole class. The wiki URL is http://gslis.simmons.edu/mw/lis415-cs/.

NEASIST Embedded library meeting - LibraryThing

The third speaker was Tim Spalding [corrected from Peter - see his comment - my mind must have been wandering at the time, inventor of LibraryThing. He exsplained how it came about, how it works, spent at least 15 minutes slagging off on LCSH (but mainly for fiction, which is a bit unfair), and a very short time on the downsides of tagging. I do admire LibraryThing, and I also like that it is shaking up libraries a bit. He really doesn't think it will replace OPACs, and he is very into partnering with libraries.

NEASIST Embedded library meeting - LibX

Annette Bailey & Godmar Back talked about LibX, their Firefox browser extension which brings library presence to a user's normal search space (what Lorcan Dempsey calls the ueser's "webflow"). They looked at similar projects (such as FASTJAck, HALbar, Library Lookup, and Wag the Dog), but found they were either system specific or had limited functionality. They used Firefox because it is easier to create extensions for Firefox than for IE - all you need is a bit of Javascript and some XML knowledge. Also, Firefox pushes updates to extensions easily.

NEASIST Embedded library meeting - Hennig

I am at the "Embedded library" meeting of the New England Chapter of ASIST&T. The speaker right now is Nicole Hennig, MIT Library webmistress and general tecchie cool woman (and our alum). She spearheaded an effort to find out how MIT students look for information (they used "keep a photo-journal" methods). Turns out (surprise) that almost all of them use primarily Google and ts various sub-applications (such as Scholar), plus Wikipedia, and a few favourite resources. They virtually ignore the library and its wide array of resources.

She cited a story of one student who spent hours and days trying to find one book, at academic libraries all over the world - when, of course, he could have just used Worldcat. Students felt that the OPAC interface, and other library information-seeking library services, were far too complex and cluttered. The general upshot of their study was that they needed to a) integrate search and discovery, and b) put themselves where the users are. To do a) they need to aggregate metadata, which is difficult for content they don't own but have licence to (they can use MetaLib X-server). They hope to present one search box and Endeca-style faceted navigation. To do b) they can use browser extensions. Nicole cites Karen Holtzblatt's Conetxtaul Design, in which she points out that successful products extend the work practice. They use LibX (Firefox toolbar extension), and want to develop a utility for sending a search from an OPAC record to services like amazon, Worldcat, and so on. They also provide RSS feeds, pod and vlod casts. They use FeedDigest to put blog entry snippets onto Web pages with a little bit of JavaScript. They will be part of iTunes U, they might use LibraryThing for their new book "browsery".