'You've found it, now what?!' Extended Services in Next Generations Catalogs: 
LITA Next Generation Catalog IG session at ALA Annual on Monday, June 28, 2010, 
1:30-3:30pm, HIL-Columbia 8

Discovery is not the only problem to be solved.  Patrons need other services 
and tools to use the information they find, such as assisting users with 
capturing, storing, manipulating, and sharing information. There will be 
presentations and discussion on a variety of extended applications to the 
catalog, such as the Social Online Public Access Catalog (SOPAC).  A brief IG 
business meeting will precede the presentations.

Eric Lease Morgan - Services Against Texts: The Next Next-Generation Library 
Catalog

With the advent of the Internet and wide-scale availability of full-text 
content, people are overwhelmed with the amount of accessible data and  
information. Library catalogs can only go so far when it comes to delimiting 
what is relevant and what is not.  Even when the most exact searches return 
100's of hits what is a person to do? Services against texts -- digital 
humanities computing techniques -- represent a possible answer. Whether the  
content is novels, works of literature, or scholarly journal articles the 
methods of the digital humanities can provide ways to compare & contrast, 
analyze, and make more useful any type of content. This presentation elaborates 
on these ideas and describes how they can be integrated into the "next,   
next-generation library catalog".

John Blyberg - SOPAC 2.1: Digital Strategy for the New Library

The Social Catalog Application Suite, SOPAC, is not just another next-gen 
discovery interface.  It is a comprehensive approach to designing the digital 
library user experience.  By integrating the discovery layer with the content 
management system, Drupal, SOPAC effectively put the control over user 
experience design back in the hands of librarians while providing a solution 
that is designed for users.  Find out what SOPAC is, how it works, and what's 
new in the latest version, 2.1. 

Tim Spalding - LibraryThing After Discovery

LibraryThing, the social cataloging website for book lovers, is a great way to 
find new books, but most of the interesting stuff happens after you get the 
book and put it in your personal library. Tim will show LibraryThing's 
post-discovery features, including a just-released ground breaking new way to 
discuss books with other readers.


Ray Schwartz, Systems Specialist Librarian         [email protected]
David and Lorraine Cheng Library                       Tel: +1 973 720-3192
William Paterson University                                 Fax: +1 973 720-2585
300 Pompton Road                                            Mobile: +1 201 
424-4491
Wayne, NJ 07470-2103 USA                                
http://euphrates.wpunj.edu/faculty/schwartzr2/

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