---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tod Olson <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 07:33:00 -0500
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Code4Lib Journal Issue 15 is now available!
To: [email protected]

It is my pleasure to announce that Issue 15 of the Code4Lib Journal
has been published.  Please go to
http://journal.code4lib.org/issues/issue-15 for these excellent
articles:

Editorial Introduction
        by Tod A. Olson
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5989
This Hallowe’en finds our contributors working away like (benign) mad
scientists, assembling and deploying their creations to bring services
and information in novel ways to their patrons and staff, approaching
their work with a vital sprit of invention and discovery.

Controlled Terms or Free Terms? A JavaScript Library to Utilize
Subject Headings and Thesauri on the Web
        by Shun Nagaya, Yutaka Hayashi, Shuhei Otani and Keizo Itabashi
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5994
There are two types of keywords used as metadata: controlled terms and
free terms. Free terms have the advantage that metadata creators can
freely select keywords, but there also exists a disadvantage that the
information retrieval recall ratio might be reduced. The recall ratio
can be improved by using controlled terms. But creating and
maintaining controlled vocabularies has an enormous cost. In addition,
many existing controlled vocabularies are published in formats less
suitable for programming. We introduce a JavaScript library called
“covo.js” that enables us to make use of controlled vocabularies as
metadata for the organization of web pages.

Best Practices for a University Laptop Lending Program
        by Pamela Buzzard and Travis Teetor
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5876
The University of Arizona Libraries currently circulates over three
hundred pieces of equipment including laptops, netbooks, projectors
and iPads. This article describes the best practices and workflows we
have developed since 2003 to create a laptop/equipment lending program
that is efficient and mindful of financial resources and that our
student body loves and continues to support.

Using Amazon Mechanical Turk to Transcribe Historical Handwritten Documents
        by Andrew S.I.D. Lang and Joshua Rio-Ross
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/6004
The developing “information age” is continually unraveling new ways of
discovering, presenting and sharing information. Most new academic
material is digitally formatted upon its creation and is thus easy to
find and query. However, there remains a good deal of material from
times prior to the “information age” that has yet to be converted to
digital form. Much of this material can be found in library
collections—whether academic, public or private—and thus remains
available only to a limited number of locals or willing-and-able
sojourners. Using OCR technology, most typeset documents can be
digitized and made available online; and there are several projects
underway to do exactly this. However, there remains little to be done
for handwritten materials. Those who own collections of handwritten
documents are increasingly wanting to make the content thereof
available to the general public. Unfortunately, traditional
transcription models typically prove to be expensive or ineff!
 icient and pdf snapshots are not searchable. We have developed a
model for digital transcription using Google Docs and Amazon’s
Mechanical Turk. Using this model, one can use an online workforce to
efficiently transcribe handwritten texts and perform quality control
at a cost much lower than professional transcription services. To
illustrate the model we used Amazon’s Mechanical Turk to transcribe
and then proofread the Frederick Douglass Diary which we have made
available on a public searchable wiki. The total cost of transcription
and proofreading for the 72 page diary was less than $25.00 with some
pages being transcribed and proofread for as little as $0.04. Our
results show that using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk holds great promise
for providing an affordable transcription method for hand-written
historical documents making them easily sharable and fully searchable.

Lessons in Public Touchscreen Development
        by Andreas K. Orphanides
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5832
In October 2010, the NCSU Libraries debuted its first public
touchscreen information kiosk, designed to provide on-demand access to
useful and commonly consulted real-time displays of library
information. This article presents a description of the hardware and
software development process, as well as the rationale behind a
variety of design and implementation decisions. This article also
provides an analysis of usage of the touchscreen since its debut,
including a numerical analysis of most popular content areas, and a
heatmap-based analysis of user interaction patterns with the kiosk's
interface components.

An Android/LAMP Mobile In/Out Board Based on Wi-Fi Fingerprinting
        by Keith Kelley, Karlis Kaugars, Scott Garrison
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5859
Library technology and other professionals with diverse skills must be
able to locate each other during the workday, in order to most
responsively serve their clients. While staff often carry cellular
phones, contact can be especially challenging given the constant,
highly mobile nature of library work, especially on larger campuses
with variable cellular phone service. Western Michigan University
(WMU) Libraries has developed an Android/LAMP application that library
staff may use on their increasingly prevalent Wi-Fi enabled mobile
devices to “check in” at various locations where they do work, so that
their colleagues may locate them as needed. The application takes
advantage of WMU’s widespread Wi-Fi network, a set of free platform
and software development tools and open standards, and methods from
the computer science literature, and overcomes GPS and telephony
limitations. This article describes the application, which is based on
Wi-Fi fingerprinting, and suggests how ot!
 her developers could use it and new methods from the computer science
literature as starting points to create their own applications.

Open Access Publishing with Drupal
        by Nina McHale
        http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/5913
In January 2009, the Colorado Association of Libraries (CAL) suspended
publication of its print quarterly journal, Colorado Libraries, as a
cost-saving measure in a time of fiscal uncertainty. Printing and
mailing the journal to its 1300 members cost CAL more than $26,000 per
year. Publication of the journal was placed on an indefinite hiatus
until the editorial staff proposed an online, open access format a
year later. The benefits to migrating to open access included:
significantly lower costs; a green platform; instant availability of
content; a greater level of access to users with disabilities; and a
higher level of visibility of the journal and the association. The
editorial staff chose Drupal, including the E-journal module, and
while Drupal is notorious for its steep learning curve—which
exacerbated delays to content that had been created before the
publishing hiatus—the fourth electronic issue was published recently
at coloradolibrariesjournal.org. This article will!
  discuss both the benefits and challenges of transitioning to an open
access model and the choice Drupal as a platform over other more
established journal software options.



Tod Olson
Coordinating Editor, Issue 15
Code4Lib Journal


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