I think my tweet yesterday may have been partially responsible for raising this 
question in Mark's mind. I wrote: "Debating registering for c4l since I'll be 
getting -- at most -- 50% reimbursement for costs &, well, I'm not a coder. 
Thoughts?" When I wrote this, I was using "coder" in the sense that Jonathan 
used it: "A coder is someone who writes code, naturally. :)" and also in the 
sense that Henry mentioned: sysadmin types who do a minimal amount of literal 
coding but self-identify as technologists.

I profess to be neither, yet many of the topics on this year's lineup are 
directly relevant to my work. My professional identity is, first, as an 
archivist. This belies a lot of tech-heavy activities that I'm involved with, 
however: management of born-digital materials, digital preservation, 
designing/building a digital repository, metadata management, interface design, 
process improvement and probably a few other things that just don't happen to 
be what I'm thinking about at this particular moment.

So although I'm not a "coder" in the sense that I defined above, it's essential 
for my work that I understand a lot about the technical work of libraries and 
that I can communicate and collaborate with the true "coders". As my tweet 
hinted at, this puts me in an odd place in terms of library financial support 
for attendance at technology-focused conferences. While the "coders" I work 
with (hi guys!) get fully funded to attend code4lib and similar conferences, I 
don't. 

If this were "training" in the sense of a seminar or a formal class on the 
exact same topics, I would be eligible for full funding, but since it's a 
"conference," it's funded at a significantly lower level. I'll gladly take 
suggestions anyone has for arguments about why attendance at these types of 
events is critical to successfully doing my work in a way that, say, attending 
ALA isn't -- and why, therefore, they should be supported at a higher funding 
rate than typical "library" conferences. Any non-coders successfully made this 
argument before?

Cheers,

Christie S. Peterson
Records Management Archivist
Johns Hopkins University
The Sheridan Libraries
4300 N. Charles Street
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.516.5898
Fax 410.516.7202
[email protected]

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