Cab Vinton <[email protected]> > Boston University's British Programmes is on Koha -- > http://library.bu-london.co.uk/
The co-op supports that, as well as Florida State University in London which hasn't been mentioned yet. We've done many other ac.uk installations - the first was the Franciscan International Study Centre in Canterbury back on 2.0 or 2.2. There really have been quite a few of them now. > Marshall Breeding's lib-web-cats is an excellent source for answering > this type of question: http://www.librarytechnology.org/libwebcats/ If it was FOSS and could cope with multiple support providers, as often happens with Koha for us, it might be excellent. Last I saw, I couldn't list our libraries accurately. More detail http://lists.koha-community.org/pipermail/koha-devel/2011-November/036458.html and many other discussions over the year. Some list themselves as "Koha -- Independent" but most don't seem to feel it's worth it. I think there's a general attitude that doing something innovative is a bad thing for ac.uk librarians to do, so when they do it, they'd prefer it kept quiet. Ken Chad's wiki HELibTech is a bit better, but gets miscorrected more often than I edit it. Usual wiki problem ;-) Oh, and there's the "UK Core Spec" drawn up by Koha's competitors. :-) Hope that informs, -- MJ Ray (slef), member of www.software.coop, a for-more-than-profit co-op. http://koha-community.org supporter, web and library systems developer. In My Opinion Only: see http://mjr.towers.org.uk/email.html Available for hire (including development) at http://www.software.coop/ _______________________________________________ Koha mailing list http://koha-community.org [email protected] http://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha

