I wonder if it would be good to add a discussion list dedicated to lower level installation/configuration issues which might be too technical for the general list but not technical/sophisticated enough for the heavy duty developer group who are working on groundbreaking research and development? In other words, it would be a group for amateurs like me to discuss installation issues without taking away from the critical discussions going on regarding the long-term development of the open ILS system. It would also make the group archives easier to search to find if technical issues have been resolved by others.
Robert ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karen G. Schneider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Date: Friday, July 25, 2008 9:20 am Subject: [OPEN-ILS-GENERAL] Monthly welcome message to open-ils* readers To: [email protected] > Hi, I'm Karen, Community Librarian for Equinox Software Inc., the > supportand development company for Evergreen open-source library > software. This > is a monthly reminder about Evergreen's discussion lists--what they > are,who they are for, and a little administrivia (list archives, > signing off > and on, etc.) > > ** What lists are available and what are they for? > > See: http://open-ils.org/listserv.php > > * open-ils-general is for questions, comments, feature requests and > discussions, community announcements, events, and other issues of a > general nature (hence the name?). If you aren't sure where to start, > open-ils-general is a good list to begin with. If you are new to > open-ils-general, or haven't posted in a while, why not share a little > about your interest in Evergreen? > > * open-ils-dev is a more technically-oriented list for developers > workingwith Evergreen code (or thinking of working with it, curious > about it, > etc.). > > * open-ils-documentation is a list for people writing or revising > Evergreen documentation (end-user, technical, training, etc.). > > * open-ils-commits provides real-time, technically-oriented > announcementsof the most recent "commits" (that is, the permanent > changes to Evergreen > software). Note: all significant changes to Evergreen are > summarized on > our roadmap and posted to the Evergreen blog and discussion lists. > > ** Why are these lists named "open-ils" and not "Evergreen"? > > Open-ILS was the original name for Evergreen software. > > ** I?d like to see another Evergreen list. > > Propose one on the lists! > > ** Which list do I use for suggesting new Evergreen features? > > Please post feature requests to open-ils-general so we can all see and > discuss them. If the Evergreen community approves a feature, it is > thenmoved to a list maintained by the core developers so it can > enter the > Evergreen production pipeline. Approved features will also appear > on the > Evergreen roadmap, http://open-ils.org/roadmap.php > > ** How do I change my subscription options? > > To sign off, suspend, or change your list options from separate > messagesto digest, see the mailing list pages, at http://open- > ils.org/listserv.php > ** How can I read the list archives? > > See http://open-ils.org/listserv.php . Each list has a URL linked > underits description. Those URLs lead to list archives (as well as to > subscription options). > > ** Who?s using Evergreen? > > Evergreen is currently in use (and was first put into production in > September, 2006) by Georgia Library PINES, a consortium of over 270 > publiclibraries. British Columbia has a growing Evergreen-powered > 18-library > consortium named SITKA, with seven libraries already in production. > TheRobertson Library at the University of Prince Edward Island is > the first > academic library to use Evergreen in production. Kent County (Md.) > PublicLibrary is also running Evergreen in production and has > become the first > public library in Maryland to use an open source automation system. > Marshall (Mo.) Public Library will be the first single-site hosted > Evergreen library when it migrates to Evergreen in 2008. > > Laurentian University is also committed to Evergreen and is > collaboratingwith GPLS, British Columbia, McMaster University, and > the University of > Windsor on an Acquisitions/Serials module. The Michigan Library > Consortiumand Grand Rapids Public Library are working together to > develop a shared > library system using Evergreen. And now the Indiana State Library > and the > Hussey Mayfield Memorial Public Library (Zionsville) have announced > theIndiana Open Source ILS Initiative, which will use Evergreen. > The King > County Library System has also put out an RFP for Evergreen > development,implementation, and support. > > ** How can I find out more about Evergreen? > > Subscribe to one of these mailing lists, see our project website > (http://open-ils.org ), stop by the Freenode IRC network for real-time > chat on channel #OpenILS-Evergreen, openils-evergreen (its history is > logged ), or email our core developers at [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > ** What?s your favorite Evergreen feature? > > Bookbags. Can?t get enough of them! > > Thanks for reading this far... remember, these are your lists; use > them in > good health! > > -- > | Karen G. Schneider > | Community Librarian > | Equinox Software Inc. "The Evergreen Experts" > | Toll-free: 1.877.Open.ILS (1.877.673.6457) x712 > | E-Mail/AIM: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > | Web: http://www.esilibrary.com > > > > This E-mail contains privileged and confidential information intended only for the individual or entity named in the message. If the reader of this message is not the intended recipient, or the agent responsible to deliver it to the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this communication is prohibited. If this communication was received in error, please notify the sender by reply E-mail immediately, and delete and destroy the original message.
