Re: [CODE4LIB] Puppet module for EZproxy on Ubuntu

2011-08-26 Thread Cary Gordon
Thanks!

Cary

On Wed, Aug 24, 2011 at 7:23 PM, Yitzchak Schaffer
yitzchak.schaf...@gmx.com wrote:
 Hello all,

 For your sys-adminning enjoyment, a Puppet module for administering one or
 more instances of EZproxy on Ubuntu. Modular config.txt entries. Should be
 easy enough to mod for other *Nix flava's. BSD 3-clause license.

 https://github.com/yitznewton/puppet-ezproxy

 --
 Yitzchak Schaffer
 Systems Manager
 Touro College Libraries
 212.742.8770 ext. 2432
 http://www.tourolib.org/

 Access Problems? Contact systems.libr...@touro.edu




-- 
Cary Gordon
The Cherry Hill Company
http://chillco.com


Re: [CODE4LIB] Survey on Uses of Cloud Computing and Virtualization in Libraries

2011-08-26 Thread Jason Stirnaman
Hey, Erik. I'd be to happy to complete the survey but I feel I should let you 
know that it doesn't jibe with our environment and we're probably not the only 
ones. We have a mix of support staffing scenarios. Nearly everything is 
virtualized now. In some cases, campus IT spins up a virtual server 
specifically for our use and we manage it from there. In other cases, the web 
site for example, they manage it completely. In other cases, we have things 
hosted in the cloud with varying levels of management responsibility. As I 
began the survey I got stuck immediately and question what value and how 
accurate my response would be.  
It's just not as clear-cut as the survey assumes.  

Regards, 
Jason


Jason Stirnaman
Biomedical Librarian, Digital Projects
A.R. Dykes Library, University of Kansas Medical Center
jstirna...@kumc.edu
913-588-7319


 On 8/25/2011 at 02:04 PM, in message 
 camgfwb97+xemuvwvjepcke0sjffvnsz8c+-ygpou0m2g254...@mail.gmail.com, Erik 
 Mitchell mitch...@gmail.com wrote:


Please forgive cross posting

This research study is about cloud computing and virtualization
adoption in libraries.  It asks questions about the level of adoption
and  factors that enable or inhibit the use of these technologies in
library environments.

The survey is open to anyone who works with IT related to libraries
(e.g., systems departments, desktop support, campus IT department
supporting the library, etc.).

Even if your library does not use cloud computing or virtualization
technologies your input is still valuable for understanding the
landscape of this technology adoption in libraries.

To take the survey please follow this link
https://uncodum.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_6mmaLbFa2El3trK

Erik Mitchell
Assistant Professor
College of Information Studies
University of Maryland College Park


Re: [CODE4LIB] Survey on Uses of Cloud Computing and Virtualization in Libraries

2011-08-26 Thread Erik Mitchell
Hi Jason -

Thanks for your feedback.  I agree, it is difficult to boil down
complex IT systems into a simple matrix but I tried to design the
question in a way that would be accessible to the widest population.

Please do complete the survey as much as you can and I would love to
connect with you to follow up if you are willing.

Thanks,

Erik

On Fri, Aug 26, 2011 at 10:25 AM, Jason Stirnaman jstirna...@kumc.edu wrote:
 Hey, Erik. I'd be to happy to complete the survey but I feel I should let you 
 know that it doesn't jibe with our environment and we're probably not the 
 only ones. We have a mix of support staffing scenarios. Nearly everything is 
 virtualized now. In some cases, campus IT spins up a virtual server 
 specifically for our use and we manage it from there. In other cases, the web 
 site for example, they manage it completely. In other cases, we have things 
 hosted in the cloud with varying levels of management responsibility. As I 
 began the survey I got stuck immediately and question what value and how 
 accurate my response would be.
 It's just not as clear-cut as the survey assumes.

 Regards,
 Jason


 Jason Stirnaman
 Biomedical Librarian, Digital Projects
 A.R. Dykes Library, University of Kansas Medical Center
 jstirna...@kumc.edu
 913-588-7319


 On 8/25/2011 at 02:04 PM, in message 
 camgfwb97+xemuvwvjepcke0sjffvnsz8c+-ygpou0m2g254...@mail.gmail.com, Erik 
 Mitchell mitch...@gmail.com wrote:


 Please forgive cross posting

 This research study is about cloud computing and virtualization
 adoption in libraries.  It asks questions about the level of adoption
 and  factors that enable or inhibit the use of these technologies in
 library environments.

 The survey is open to anyone who works with IT related to libraries
 (e.g., systems departments, desktop support, campus IT department
 supporting the library, etc.).

 Even if your library does not use cloud computing or virtualization
 technologies your input is still valuable for understanding the
 landscape of this technology adoption in libraries.

 To take the survey please follow this link
 https://uncodum.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_6mmaLbFa2El3trK

 Erik Mitchell
 Assistant Professor
 College of Information Studies
 University of Maryland College Park



[CODE4LIB] Invitation to DC-2011 pre-conference tutorials

2011-08-26 Thread DCMI Announce
***Please excuse cross-posting***

---
DC-2011 Pre-conference Tutorials
TUTORIAL ABSTRACTS:
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/index/pages/view/tutorials-2011
DATE: 21 September 2011
TIME: 9:00 - 17:00
PLACE: National Library of the Netherlands, The Hague
REGISTRATION:
http://dcevents.dublincore.org/index.php/IntConf/index/pages/view/registration-2011
   [Registration is available for this special day-long session only or for
the full conference]
--

We are writing to invite you to participate in Dublin Core tutorials planned
for DC-2011 at The Hague. Registration for the pre-conference includes all
four tutorials.  The topics of the tutorials range from an introduction to
Dublin Core through migration of an XML/HTML encoded Dublin Core metadata
application to a linked data version. The following four tutorials are
programmed:

TUTORIAL TITLE: An Introduction to Dublin Core
PRESENTER: Stephanie Taylor
ABSTRACT: This tutorial will provide a basic introduction to the Dublin Core
(DC) metadata set, starting with a brief overview of how and why DC began
and how it has developed to the present day. Simple DC and Qualified DC will
be explained, with practical examples of real-life usage to illustrate the
application of DC in different working environments. The tutorial will have
a 'hands on' approach, giving participants an opportunity to explore the
elements through group work and to use both Simple and Qualified DC to
describe objects.

TUTORIAL TITLE: Even More Dublin Core
PRESENTER: Emma Tonkin
ABSTRACT: Dublin Core, like many things in life, is many things to many
people. This tutorial starts by taking a quick tour through the conceptual
landscape of the DCMI. We then move on to practical exploration,
demonstrating the role of Dublin Core as a helpful Swiss Army knife in a
well-stocked metadata toolbox. Using the vocabularies, schemas, concepts and
processes behind Dublin Core—such as the Singapore Framework, we work
through practical examples of: describing a set of resources; developing an
application profile for a given purpose; building metadata records on the
basis of a newly constructed application profile; and marking up web-based
data with microformats. Finally, the tutorial takes a look at how Dublin
Core fits in with the world of Linked Data.

TUTORIAL TITLE: SKOS (Simple Knowledge Organization System)
PRESENTER: Antoine Isaac
ABSTRACT: SKOS is a data model to represent and network knowledge
organization systems (thesauri, classification systems, etc) in RDF. SKOS is
meant to be as easy of use as possible, fitting existing practices while
keeping general enough to fit a high number of use cases and KOS
configurations. In this tutorial, an introduction to the various features of
SKOS will be given, illustrating how they can be used to represent existing
KOS data. The tutorial will present how the vision of leveraging existing
KOS on the web of data is being adopted in a number of projects, in the
Cultural Heritage sector and beyond. Available tooling and methods for
creating and publishing SKOS as well as porting legacy KOS data to SKOS will
also be discussed.

TUTORIAL TITLE: From Dublin Core to Linked Data
PRESENTER: Paul Hermans
ABSTRACT: In this tutorial we will learn in a concrete way how to migrate an
XML/HTML encoded Dublin Core metadata application to a linked data version
hereof. We cover all the needed steps to:
define the identifiers (URI's) of the resources choose the right models,
vocabularies generate links to different datasets convert to the needed
representations (RDF/XML, turtle, HTML) and publish the data as
dereferenceable linked data. We will also address also some FAQ's: reusing
vocabularies or building your own, SKOS (concepts) or OWL (classes), how to
model temporal constraints, how to apply closed world constraints. In
closing, we give an overview of the tools and technologies which can be
used.

We very much hope some or all of you may be able to attend what we expect to
be a very useful event.

Cordially,

Muriel Foulonneau, Henri Tudor Research Centre
Seth van Hooland, Université Libre de Bruxelles