Re: [CODE4LIB] Hours of Operation on Website - management tool

2015-07-01 Thread Joel Marchesoni
It's not free or open source and it won't update your Google Places account but 
we've just started using LibCal and are pretty happy with it so far. It's easy 
to update, has the capability for hours, events, and room scheduling, and a 
decent API. 

Joel Marchesoni
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library, Western Carolina University
http://library.wcu.edu/
828-227-2860



-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Ken 
Irwin
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2015 09:01
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Hours of Operation on Website - management tool

Hi folks,

I'm hoping to find some sort of web-based app that can manage the library's 
hours of operations, including:

* Displaying today's hours

* Displaying an upcoming schedule of hours

* Updatable though a GUI interface by non-techy library staff

* Able to update our Google Places account hours (which, I note, 
currently lists our school-year hours as our open hours today), perhaps on a 
daily basis

* Preferably a stand-alone thing that can provide data on an ad hoc 
basis (as opposed to a CMS-specific thing like a WP plugin or a Drupal module)

* PHP preferred but not necessary

* OSS / free preferred but not necessary

I feel certain that someone else has already wanted this enough to create it. 
Anyone have a solution they're happy with?

Thanks
Ken


Re: [CODE4LIB] Hours of Operation on Website - management tool

2015-07-01 Thread Joel Marchesoni
It's actually limited to one location, which is what the calendars and hours 
are tied to. But, it's free!

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Laura 
Robbins
Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2015 10:11
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Hours of Operation on Website - management tool

There is a free version of LibCal that we use at Dowling that allows room 
scheduling and multiple calendars.  It's limited to 3 rooms, and it may be 
limited to three calendars as well.  But, the interface is pretty easy to use, 
and it will output the calendars as RSS feeds that can can be customized for 
events or closings, etc.  We've been very happy with it.

Laura Pope Robbins
Professor/Reference Librarian
Dowling College


 On Jul 1, 2015, at 9:42 AM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu wrote:

 It's not free or open source and it won't update your Google Places account 
 but we've just started using LibCal and are pretty happy with it so far. It's 
 easy to update, has the capability for hours, events, and room scheduling, 
 and a decent API.

 Joel Marchesoni
 Tech Support Analyst
 Hunter Library, Western Carolina University http://library.wcu.edu/
 828-227-2860



 -Original Message-
 From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Ken 
 Irwin
 Sent: Wednesday, July 01, 2015 09:01
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: [CODE4LIB] Hours of Operation on Website - management tool

 Hi folks,

 I'm hoping to find some sort of web-based app that can manage the library's 
 hours of operations, including:

 * Displaying today's hours

 * Displaying an upcoming schedule of hours

 * Updatable though a GUI interface by non-techy library staff

 * Able to update our Google Places account hours (which, I note, 
 currently lists our school-year hours as our open hours today), perhaps on a 
 daily basis

 * Preferably a stand-alone thing that can provide data on an ad hoc 
 basis (as opposed to a CMS-specific thing like a WP plugin or a Drupal module)

 * PHP preferred but not necessary

 * OSS / free preferred but not necessary

 I feel certain that someone else has already wanted this enough to create it. 
 Anyone have a solution they're happy with?

 Thanks
 Ken


Re: [CODE4LIB] Automating Windows Updates on Deep Freeze computers

2015-06-03 Thread Joel Marchesoni
We currently have a maintenance window set up once a week during a time when 
we're closed and have Windows Update set to run during that period with some 
padding time before and after.

For example, if the maintenance window is 2:30 am to 6:30 am we set Windows 
Update to run at 3:00 am. It works relatively well given that we close at 1:00 
am at the latest and open at 7:30 am at the earliest.

However, the auto-download set up by DeepFreeze looks promising!

FWIW we're running 7.21.

Joel Marchesoni
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library, Western Carolina University
http://library.wcu.edu/

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Lolis, 
John
Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2015 11:21
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Automating Windows Updates on Deep Freeze computers

This is one of those things that I've been meaning to tackle myself.  I guess 
it's time.

I just did a search on your subject and found this:
http://support.faronics.com/Knowledgebase/Article/View/297/8/how-are-windows-updates-handled-on-deep-freeze-protected-computers

With the latest version (v7.5), they added a nice feature that will download 
updates to a frozen system and retain them for updating when the system is 
thawed.


John Lolis
Coordinator of Computer Systems
White Plains Public Library
100 Martine Avenue
White Plains, NY  10601

tel: 1.914.422.1497
fax: 1.914.422.1452

http://whiteplainslibrary.org/

On Wed, Jun 3, 2015 at 11:03 AM, Kyle Breneman tomeconque...@gmail.com
wrote:

 Does anybody out there have a process in place that allows for 
 regular, automatic download and installation of Windows Updates on 
 computers that are running Deep Freeze?  Currently we manually thaw 
 the computers, then check for, download and install any updates, 
 before manually freezing the computers again.  With only 2 PCs, its 
 not a big deal, but it would be nice to know if there's a way to automate 
 this process.

 Regards,
 Kyle



Re: [CODE4LIB] looking for free hosting for html code

2015-05-22 Thread Joel Marchesoni
+1 for Dropbox, I use it a lot for prototyping pages. As long as the code is 
client-side (HTML, JavaScript, CSS) it works beautifully. As a bonus you don't 
have to do any uploading, just let it sync. It's easiest to just put it in the 
Public folder, that way you don't need to worry about setting up sharing on 
other folders.

Joel Marchesoni
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library, Western Carolina University
http://library.wcu.edu/


-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Charlie 
Morris
Sent: Friday, May 22, 2015 09:14
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] looking for free hosting for html code

I've never done this, but I've heard you can use DropBox in an unofficial 
capacity to host basic pages too:
http://www.dropboxwiki.com/tips-and-tricks/host-websites-with-dropbox

On Fri, May 22, 2015 at 8:59 AM, Joe Hourcle onei...@grace.nascom.nasa.gov
wrote:

 On Fri, 22 May 2015, Sarles Patricia (18K500) wrote:

 [trimmed]

  I plan to teach coding to my 6th and 12th grade students next school 
 year
 and our lab has a mixture of old (2008) and new Macs (2015) so I want 
 to make all the Macs functional for writing code in an editor.

 My next question is this:

 I am familiar with free Web creation and hosting sites like Weebly, 
 Wix, Google sites, Wikispaces, WordPress, and Blogger, but do you 
 know of any free hosting sites that will allow you to plug in your 
 own code. i.e. host your own html files?


 If it's straight HTML, and doesn't need any sort of text 
 pre-processing (SSI, ASP, JSP, PHP, ColdFusion, etc.), I think that 
 you can use Google Drive.  This help page seems to suggest that's true:

 https://support.google.com/drive/answer/2881970?hl=en

 With all static files it might also be possible to lay things out so 
 that you could serve it through github or similar.  (and teaching them 
 about version control isn't a bad idea, either)

 -Joe



Re: [CODE4LIB] Charlotte, NC Code4Lib Meeting

2013-11-13 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I'm in Cullowhee (I know, you're thinking CulloWHAT? - an hour west of 
Asheville) and would be interested in coming and probably would bring others.

Thanks,

Joel Marchesoni

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Riley 
Childs
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2013 18:35
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Charlotte, NC Code4Lib Meeting

Is anyone in Charlotte, NC (and surrounding areas) interested in starting a 
Code4Lib meeting?
Just kind of asking :{D!
*Riley Childs*
*Library Technology Manager at Charlotte United Christian Academy
http://cucawarriors.com/*
*Head Programmer/Manager at Open Library Management Projec 
http://openlibman.sf.net/t http://openlibman.sourceforge.net/*
*Cisco Certified Entry Network Technician * _

*Phone: +1 (704) 497-2086*
*email: ri...@tfsgeo.com ri...@tfsgeo.com*
*Twitter: @RowdyChildren http://twitter.com/rowdychildren*


Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

2013-10-17 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Thank you all for your replies. I'm thinking we'll go with one account (we 
already have a Google account for various other services) with multiple 
properties. One thing that has complicated matters is the property we currently 
use is not yet able to be upgraded to Universal Analytics, which is what 
CONTENTdm uses.

FYI I noticed in my own research that the property limit is 250,000. I don't 
see us hitting that ever...

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Josh 
Wilson
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2013 10:24
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

Hi Joel,
It usually ends up being easiest to go with one GA account, separating 
different sources by using different properties (e.g., UA-[acct number]-1 for 
CONTENTdm, UA-[acct number]-2 for LibGuides, etc.) rather than separate 
accounts entirely. Each property can have different users with different 
permissions levels so you can customize who has access to what. You can further 
refine each property into different profiles if you want to filter data from 
one source in different ways. Having everything under one account makes it easy 
to manage and apply common settings (like users, filters, or custom reports) 
between properties and profiles. If you add another user, you only have to add 
them to one account, too.

There are limits to the number of allowed properties (it's quite high and goes 
up occasionally; not sure what it is offhand), so if you bumped into that you 
could use another GA account. Google has made it easier in recent months to 
jump between accounts and properties, though.

(Sorry for delayed reply, catching up on listservs)



On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 2:36 PM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.eduwrote:

 Hello,

 We currently have Google Analytics on our main library pages and 
 digital collections pages on the same domain. Now that CONTENTdm has a 
 GA easy button we are going to add Analytics to it as well, and 
 while we're at it probably LibGuides and non-authenticated ILLiad 
 pages (I mainly want to see how big a percentage of mobile hits ILLiad 
 gets) as well. I was hoping to hear from the list whether you have all 
 service points in one GA account or a separate account for each one, and 
 why.

 Thanks,

 Joel Marchesoni
 Tech Support Analyst
 Hunter Library, Western Carolina University http://library.wcu.edu/
 828-227-2860
 ~Please consider the environment before printing this email~



Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

2013-10-17 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Oh wow, sorry, that's not right. I was thinking 25; not sure where the 4 zeros 
came from...

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Josh 
Wilson
Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2013 11:18
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

Wow, 250,000? I'm not sure that's right, though I'm prepared to believe 
anything. I checked the GA documentation, which says you can officially have 50 
profiles per account. Each property has at least one default profile, so that's 
probably the official limit of properties too, before you'd need to use an 
extra account. (In turn, you can evidently manage 25 GA accounts per Google 
user account.)

Not sure where the 250,000 figure comes from, but I've seen a number of 
scripting workarounds for the profile limit in various analytics blogs, so 
maybe you can sort of 'overclock' your accounts if you needed to.


On Thu, Oct 17, 2013 at 10:41 AM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.eduwrote:

 Thank you all for your replies. I'm thinking we'll go with one account 
 (we already have a Google account for various other services) with 
 multiple properties. One thing that has complicated matters is the 
 property we currently use is not yet able to be upgraded to Universal 
 Analytics, which is what CONTENTdm uses.

 FYI I noticed in my own research that the property limit is 250,000. I 
 don't see us hitting that ever...

 Joel

 -Original Message-
 From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf 
 Of Josh Wilson
 Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2013 10:24
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

 Hi Joel,
 It usually ends up being easiest to go with one GA account, separating 
 different sources by using different properties (e.g., UA-[acct 
 number]-1 for CONTENTdm, UA-[acct number]-2 for LibGuides, etc.) 
 rather than separate accounts entirely. Each property can have 
 different users with different permissions levels so you can customize 
 who has access to what. You can further refine each property into 
 different profiles if you want to filter data from one source in 
 different ways. Having everything under one account makes it easy to 
 manage and apply common settings (like users, filters, or custom 
 reports) between properties and profiles. If you add another user, you only 
 have to add them to one account, too.

 There are limits to the number of allowed properties (it's quite high 
 and goes up occasionally; not sure what it is offhand), so if you 
 bumped into that you could use another GA account. Google has made it 
 easier in recent months to jump between accounts and properties, though.

 (Sorry for delayed reply, catching up on listservs)



 On Mon, Oct 14, 2013 at 2:36 PM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu
 wrote:

  Hello,
 
  We currently have Google Analytics on our main library pages and 
  digital collections pages on the same domain. Now that CONTENTdm has 
  a GA easy button we are going to add Analytics to it as well, and 
  while we're at it probably LibGuides and non-authenticated ILLiad 
  pages (I mainly want to see how big a percentage of mobile hits 
  ILLiad
  gets) as well. I was hoping to hear from the list whether you have 
  all service points in one GA account or a separate account for 
  each one,
 and why.
 
  Thanks,
 
  Joel Marchesoni
  Tech Support Analyst
  Hunter Library, Western Carolina University http://library.wcu.edu/
  828-227-2860
  ~Please consider the environment before printing this email~
 



[CODE4LIB] Google Analytics on multiple systems

2013-10-14 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Hello,

We currently have Google Analytics on our main library pages and digital 
collections pages on the same domain. Now that CONTENTdm has a GA easy button 
we are going to add Analytics to it as well, and while we're at it probably 
LibGuides and non-authenticated ILLiad pages (I mainly want to see how big a 
percentage of mobile hits ILLiad gets) as well. I was hoping to hear from the 
list whether you have all service points in one GA account or a separate 
account for each one, and why.

Thanks,

Joel Marchesoni
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library, Western Carolina University
http://library.wcu.edu/
828-227-2860
~Please consider the environment before printing this email~


Re: [CODE4LIB] Minimal bibliographic record as filename

2013-05-22 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I like the idea of a master ISBN (one number to rule them all? Sorry, too easy) 
but I think failing that I'd stick with the Ebook's ISBN. Any search on it will 
give a user the title and author of the work. Plus, it gives you a unique 
number for each item.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Michael 
Lackhoff
Sent: Wednesday, May 22, 2013 02:30
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Minimal bibliographic record as filename

On 21.05.2013 20:14 Eric Lease Morgan wrote:

 The convention I have always used included the first word of the author's 
 last name, the first (non-stop) word of the title, and an integer (accession 
 number):
 
   plato-republic-105.epub

It has the advantage of being short but I would like a bit more info, at least 
publication year and a longer part of the title and the/a ISBN.
Perhaps I will just make something up myself.

Since I would also like to include the ISBN, is there such a thing like a 
main or master ISBN in case a work has more than one of them? I am looking 
for something like the ISSN-L, but of course for books instead of journals. 
Something like the reverse of the xISBN service: 'many to one' instead of 'one 
to many'.
If there is nothing like that I might just use the first one given in the book.

-Michael


Re: [CODE4LIB] Google Indoor Mapping

2012-10-30 Thread Joel Marchesoni
We were recently chosen to be a library pilot for the program. We're at the 
stage that our maps are somewhere in Google's process queue and we're waiting 
for them to come do a walkthrough for the walking directions.

So far I've seen two cons:

One, it takes a good while for the maps to be approved. I actually uploaded 
ours at the end of last year before they approached us about being a pilot 
library but I re-uploaded them once we started that process. The re-upload was 
in August and they're still pending. The site used to upload the maps to takes 
some getting used to but once you do one or two it's pretty easy.

Second, it only works on Android. I'm personally all Android but this is a huge 
downside for the program. Our contact tells me there is an iOS version in the 
works but with Google Maps being replaced by Apple in iOS6 it won't be out for 
a while. 

From what I understand the indoor mapping relies mostly on wifi triangulation 
but does also use GPS to some extent. The walking directions are optional (we 
have opted for it) and to produce them a team from Google will survey your 
building to get statistics for your wifi access point locations and I think 
(although I'm not positive) pictures. I don't think it's Street View quality 
as that has not been mentioned at all; however I've seen that Google recently 
developed backpack version of their Street View equipment for use in a project 
to map the Grand Canyon [1] so indoors can't be far behind. There is also an 
Android app called Google Maps Floor Plan Marker you can use to do your own 
walking survey [2].

[1] 
http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2012/10/trekking-grand-canyon-for-google-maps.html
[2] 
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.apps.insight.surveyorhl=en

Joel Marchesoni
Web Developer
Hunter Library @ Western Carolina University

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Al 
Matthews
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2012 16:48
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Google Indoor Mapping

Hello list.

I hope this finds you well and, dry, and with some power.

I'm recently aware of the existence of Google Indoor Mapping which, obviously 
enough, brings indoor locations (to Google Maps versioned 6.x and higher).

The project also offers indoor walking directions. I assume this works via a 
combination of fine-grained GPS and, some sort of integration with internal 
wireless.

Since a number of you will have had experience with this service, I am 
soliciting in open forum a discussion of pros, cons, and concerns.


Thank you.

Al Matthews, Software Dev,
Atlanta University Center
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Re: [CODE4LIB] Wikis

2012-07-25 Thread Joel Marchesoni
+1 to this!

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Cary 
Gordon
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2012 13:14
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Wikis

WYSIWYG editors are the bane of my existence.

Cary

On Wed, Jul 25, 2012 at 7:31 AM, Pottinger, Hardy J.
pottinge...@umsystem.edu wrote:
 I'll just say my experience with the Confluence WYSIWYG editor hasn't 
 been great. Now, partly, that might have been the fact that the one 
 page I tried using it on had been migrated from another wiki, so, to 
 be fair, the WYSIWYG editor was being presented with a challenge. But, 
 from a user's POV, I have to say, editing with a WYSIWYG editor on a 
 wiki is like a prank waiting for a punch line, and you, the 
 well-meaning user, are the punch line. If you don't want to be 
 embarrassed, I highly recommend going advanced mode. :-)

 That experience has lead me to approach most WYSIWYG editors with caution.
 Don't trust 'em.
 --
 HARDY POTTINGER pottinge...@umsystem.edu University of Missouri 
 Library Systems http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/
 https://MOspace.umsystem.edu/
 Time and accident are committing daily havoc on the originals of the 
 valuable historical and State papers deposited in our public offices. 
 The late war has done the work of centuries in this business. The last 
 cannot be recovered but let us save what remains not by vaults and 
 locks which fence them from the public eye and use in consigning them 
 beyond the reach of accident --Thomas Jefferson





 On 7/25/12 8:32 AM, Sean Hannan shan...@jhu.edu wrote:

As an administrator of a Confluence installation, I have to say that I 
hate it.

Confluence is fine if you are not going to be touching it or doing any 
kind of local customizations (hooking it into local auth, etc.). If 
that's the case, you should really be looking at the hosted version.

I've found that Atlassian is frustrating to deal with for support. I 
ran into a bug in Confluence that has been an open ticket in their 
issue tracker for 6 years. Years. I've found upgrades to be a pain, 
generally, and sometimes Atlassian will be fast and furious with them 
and it's hard to keep up. And the longer you wait, the more painful 
the upgrades become.

I don't deal with the money side of things, but I definitely think 
that we do not get what we pay for with Confluence.

-Sean

On 7/25/12 9:05 AM, Nathan Tallman ntall...@gmail.com wrote:

 That's what I'm worried about with MediaWiki. The syntax used when 
creating  and editing pages isn't intuitive and I'm afraid people 
won't want to use  it. I was hoping someone would recommend a wiki 
with more of a WYSIWYG type  of editing interface. Was also hoping to 
stick with FLOSS, but perhaps I  should at least peak at Confluence.

 Thanks for the input,
 Nathan

 On Wed, Jul 25, 2012 at 8:50 AM, Nate Vack njv...@wisc.edu wrote:

 If you're expecting everyone to create and edit pages, it will be 
 very hard to get widespread adoption with it.




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


Re: [CODE4LIB] barcode scanner with memory

2012-02-03 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I use QuickMark [1] for my scanning. The company has been around at least since 
I had a WinMo5 phone and used it on there. It does pretty much any code I've 
tried, shares to everything, and keeps a nice history. My only annoyance is 
that the free version doesn't start on the scanner. There's an in-app purchase 
to unlock that and other features. 

I have used one wireless but can't remember the name of it. A quick search on 
the Android market [2] pulls up a few; the first one by ID-SOFTWARE looks 
pretty nice and they claim it will scan to any OS.

[1] https://market.android.com/details?id=tw.com.quickmarkfeature=search_result
[2] https://market.android.com/search?q=wifi+barcode+scanner

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Simon 
Spero
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 13:15
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] barcode scanner with memory

Bluetooth might require rooting,  but building an android app that scans to  
wifi is fairly easy; they make it easy to use the scanner from your own apps -

See:
http://code.google.com/p/zxing/wiki/ScanningViaIntent

Simon

On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 12:53 PM, David Mayo pobo...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thanks; I think I just hit a bad run of ones that only did QR or 
 wouldn't save/send barcodes as text.  I swear I downloaded at least 
 three, and read the summaries for at least four others.

 What I'd really like is one that would make the phone pretend to be a 
 bluetooth barcode scanner, or pass the barcodes over wifi.  But I 
 think that might be asking a bit too much.

 - Dave

 On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 12:44 PM, Simon Spero s...@unc.edu wrote:

  Barcode Scanner?
 
 https://market.android.com/details?id=com.google.zxing.client.android;
 hl=en
 
  Simon
 
  On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 12:32 PM, David Mayo pobo...@gmail.com wrote:
 
   As a sort of side question, does anyone know of a halfway-decent
 Android
   app for scanning UPC-style barcodes?  QR scanners are pretty
 widespread,
   but worthless for my purposes, and I haven't found a decent 2D 
   barcode scanner yet.
  
   - Dave Mayo
  
   On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 3:03 PM, Michael B. Klein 
   mbkl...@gmail.com
   wrote:
  
This: http://www.keelog.com/hardware_keylogger.html
plus any USB power adapter wall plug would do the trick.
   
There's an 8MB flash drive version, and also a version with a 
WiFi interface so you can pull the log directly over the network 
instead
 of
having to do any hardware download.
   
Michael
   
On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 11:25 AM, Adam Wead aw...@rockhall.org
  wrote:
   
 huh.  neat idea.  certainly beats paying hundreds of dollars 
 for
 some
 other scanner.

 On Jan 30, 2012, at 2:15 PM, Michael B. Klein wrote:

  I think Kyle's point was that you could use a hardware 
  keylogger
 *without*
  the computer behind it. Just have it snoop on your barcode
  scanner
and
  then download the data from it daily. You'd still need to 
  feed it
  USB
  power, but that's not hard.
 
  On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 11:06 AM, Nate Vack 
  njv...@wisc.edu
  wrote:
 
  On Mon, Jan 30, 2012 at 1:03 PM, Kyle Banerjee 
   baner...@uoregon.edu
  wrote:
  Since a barcode scanner is just a keyboard wedge, a 
  hardware
keylogger
  would work well for this purpose. It'll cost you less than 
  $50
 
  It'll only work well if you don't mind your scanner 
  spamming keypresses to the rest of your apps all day.
 
  -n
 

 [http://donations.rockhall.com/Logo_WWR.gif]
 http://rockhall.com/exhibits/women-who-rock/
 This communication is a confidential and proprietary business 
 communication. It is intended solely for the use of the 
 designated recipient(s). If this communication is received in 
 error, please
   contact
 the sender and delete this communication.

 '

   
  
 



--


Re: [CODE4LIB] CSS Optimization/Minimization: Remove line breaks?

2011-01-17 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Everyone, thanks for the replies. I apologize, I can't remember where I read 
about line length being an issue, but I can't find it now so it must have been 
a specific case. I'm glad I asked, though, because those books look promising.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Tim 
Spalding
Sent: Friday, January 14, 2011 7:02 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] CSS Optimization/Minimization: Remove line breaks?

I recommend immersing yourself in Steve Souder's two books-High
Performance Websites, and Even Faster Websites. As it stresses again
and again, the killer isn't the length of your content, but the number
of files (only so many can be loaded in parallel), latency, expiry
checks and so forth. Positioning of JavaScript is also critical,
although putting it at the bottom can be a real pain. Sounders rules
are built into YSlow as most of you probably know.

LibraryThing's solution-a common one-is to use full CSS and JS on the
dev. server. But on the real server each page has only one CSS and one
JS file. And they have far-future expiry dates. The system changes
their names (which are nonsense hashes) if they change. They've been
compressed too, but that doesn't make much of a difference. Gzipping
them helps more for bandwidth bills than speed. We split up files
across two domains, www and static, because simultaneous download
limits are by domain.

We also toyed with CSS sprites a fair amount, to avoid multiple image
loads-our sprite is http://static.librarything.com/pics/c.png-but the
savings aren't that considerable.

Best,
Tim

On Fri, Jan 14, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Richard, Joel M richar...@si.edu wrote:
 I sort of agree with Mike on this, but I could play devil's advocate and 
 say...

 If you include comments in your CSS (which I'm sure you do, because we're all 
 conscientious developers and practice good coding standards. :), then 
 removing them and condensing the file down can make it significantly smaller. 
 It may be an extreme example, but YUI's base.css and base-min.css are 2.23 K 
 and 0.89 K respectively. My CSS files often weigh in at well over 15 K before 
 compression.

 Also, keep in mind that these days modern web pages depend heavily on the 
 stylesheet to render in a pretty manner. Therefore the smaller it is, the 
 faster the browser can make use of it.

 Just my two cents... This is also useful: 
 http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html

 --Joel (the other one)

 Joel Richard
 IT Specialist, Web Services Department
 Smithsonian Institution Libraries | http://www.sil.si.edu/
 (202) 633-1706 | (202) 786-2861 (f) | richar...@si.edu



 On Jan 14, 2011, at 11:30 AM, Mike Taylor wrote:

 On 14 January 2011 16:28, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu wrote:
 Hey Everyone,

 I'm working on optimizing our CSS files and can't find anything about this 
 on the web. I know that some browsers/systems have issues with really long 
 lines in files and wanted to get some opinions about removing all line 
 breaks from a CSS file to conserve space. I've seen some optimizers that 
 give the option NOT to remove them, but don't explain why.

 Why bother?  CSS files are tiny compared with the images you're no
 doubt also loading and literally negligible compared with video.  They
 get loaded once per session, then cached in the browser.  Messing with
 the whitespace will have absolutely no perceptible effect on
 efficiency for anyone who's not using a 300 baud modem.




-- 
Check out my library at http://www.librarything.com/profile/timspalding


--


Re: [CODE4LIB] marcxml

2010-11-11 Thread Joel Marchesoni
There actually is a version of MARCEdit for Linux now. I think (although I 
can't remember and can't find it on the site) that it relies on Mono.

MARCEdit download page: 
http://people.oregonstate.edu/~reeset/marcedit/html/downloads.html

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of 
J.D.Gravestock
Sent: Thursday, November 11, 2010 6:26 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] marcxml

I'd be interested to know if anyone is using a good marcxml to marc converter 
(other than marcedit, i.e. non windows).  I've tried the perl module marc::xml 
but having a few problems with the conversion which I can't replicate in 
marcedit. Are there any that I've missed?


Jill

**
Jill Gravestock
Open University Library
Milton Keynes




-- 
The Open University is incorporated by Royal Charter (RC 000391), an exempt 
charity in England  Wales and a charity registered in Scotland (SC 038302).


--


Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions

2010-08-06 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Honestly I try to switch to Chrome every month or so, but it just doesn't do 
what Firefox does for me. I've actually been using a Firefox mod called Pale 
Moon [1] that takes out some of the not so useful features for work (parental 
controls, etc) and optimizes for current processors. It's not a huge speed 
increase, but it is definitely noticeable.

Oh, and Chrome doesn't have Vimperator [2] :)

Joel

[1] http://www.palemoon.org/
[2] http://vimperator.org/

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of 
Richard, Joel M
Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2010 4:24 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions

If I remember correctly, the latest versions of Firefox had problems, but I 
don't know if it's related to performance necessarily. More like bloat. 
http://bit.ly/c1c3m1

Either way, I definitely find Firefox too slow to use after the switch to 
Chrome, which took all of 5 minutes to completely convert me. If Chrome were a 
drug, I'd be strung out and living on the streets. But what's to say it won't 
head the same way as Firefox in the future (bloat-wise.)

It's also a memory hog, especially when you load up Firebug. Chrome's debugging 
tools are like a dream come true.  That said, I'm not that kind of developer, 
so I won't be able to help port any extensions to Chrome or Safari. Testing, 
yes, porting, no. :)


--Joel

Joel Richard
IT Specialist, Web Services Division
Smithsonian Institution Libraries | http://www.sil.si.edu/
(202) 633-1706 | (202) 786-2861 (f) | richar...@si.edu




From: Raymond Yee y...@berkeley.edu
Reply-To: Code for Libraries CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Date: Thu, 5 Aug 2010 16:15:59 -0400
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions

Has anyone given thought to how hard it would be to port Firefox
extensions such as LibX and  Zotero to Chrome or Safari?  (Am I the only
one finding Firefox to be very slow compared to Chrome?)

-Raymond

On 8/5/10 1:10 PM, Godmar Back wrote:
 No, nothing beyond a quick read-through.

 The architecture is similar to Google Chrome's - which is perhaps not
 surprising given that both Safari and Chrome are based on WebKit -
 which for us at LibX means we should be able to leverage the redesign
 we did for LibX 2.0.

 A notable characteristic of this architecture is that content scripts
 that interact with a page are in a separate OS process from the main
 extensions' code, thus they have to communicate with the main
 extension via message passing rather than by exploiting direct method
 calls as in Firefox.

   - Godmar

 On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 4:04 PM, Eric Hellmane...@hellman.net  wrote:

 Has anyone played with the new Safari extensions capability? I'm looking at 
 you, Godmar.


 Eric Hellman
 President, Gluejar, Inc.
 41 Watchung Plaza, #132
 Montclair, NJ 07042
 USA

 e...@hellman.net
 http://go-to-hellman.blogspot.com/
 @gluejar




--


Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions

2010-08-06 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I tried Vimium and found it lacking, which actually led me to Vimperator. If I 
remember correctly, though, Vimium allows you to set your own bindings so 
perhaps the emacs bindings are already out there somewhere.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of David 
A. Faler
Sent: Friday, August 06, 2010 8:41 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions

Joel,
  You could try vimium [1] to get vi keybindings for Chrome.  I haven't used it 
(I'm waiting for emacs bindings), but it might help make it usable for you.




[1] http://github.com/philc/vimium


Thank you,

David Faler
IT Quality Control and Testing
The Library Corporation


- Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu wrote:

 Honestly I try to switch to Chrome every month or so, but it just
 doesn't do what Firefox does for me. I've actually been using a
 Firefox mod called Pale Moon [1] that takes out some of the not so
 useful features for work (parental controls, etc) and optimizes for
 current processors. It's not a huge speed increase, but it is
 definitely noticeable.
 
 Oh, and Chrome doesn't have Vimperator [2] :)
 
 Joel
 
 [1] http://www.palemoon.org/
 [2] http://vimperator.org/
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf
 Of Richard, Joel M
 Sent: Thursday, August 05, 2010 4:24 PM
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions
 
 If I remember correctly, the latest versions of Firefox had problems,
 but I don't know if it's related to performance necessarily. More like
 bloat. http://bit.ly/c1c3m1
 
 Either way, I definitely find Firefox too slow to use after the switch
 to Chrome, which took all of 5 minutes to completely convert me. If
 Chrome were a drug, I'd be strung out and living on the streets. But
 what's to say it won't head the same way as Firefox in the future
 (bloat-wise.)
 
 It's also a memory hog, especially when you load up Firebug. Chrome's
 debugging tools are like a dream come true.  That said, I'm not that
 kind of developer, so I won't be able to help port any extensions to
 Chrome or Safari. Testing, yes, porting, no. :)
 
 
 --Joel
 
 Joel Richard
 IT Specialist, Web Services Division
 Smithsonian Institution Libraries | http://www.sil.si.edu/
 (202) 633-1706 | (202) 786-2861 (f) | richar...@si.edu
 
 
 
 
 From: Raymond Yee y...@berkeley.edu
 Reply-To: Code for Libraries CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Date: Thu, 5 Aug 2010 16:15:59 -0400
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Safari extensions
 
 Has anyone given thought to how hard it would be to port Firefox
 extensions such as LibX and  Zotero to Chrome or Safari?  (Am I the
 only
 one finding Firefox to be very slow compared to Chrome?)
 
 -Raymond
 
 On 8/5/10 1:10 PM, Godmar Back wrote:
  No, nothing beyond a quick read-through.
 
  The architecture is similar to Google Chrome's - which is perhaps
 not
  surprising given that both Safari and Chrome are based on WebKit -
  which for us at LibX means we should be able to leverage the
 redesign
  we did for LibX 2.0.
 
  A notable characteristic of this architecture is that content
 scripts
  that interact with a page are in a separate OS process from the
 main
  extensions' code, thus they have to communicate with the main
  extension via message passing rather than by exploiting direct
 method
  calls as in Firefox.
 
- Godmar
 
  On Thu, Aug 5, 2010 at 4:04 PM, Eric Hellmane...@hellman.net 
 wrote:
 
  Has anyone played with the new Safari extensions capability? I'm
 looking at you, Godmar.
 
 
  Eric Hellman
  President, Gluejar, Inc.
  41 Watchung Plaza, #132
  Montclair, NJ 07042
  USA
 
  e...@hellman.net
  http://go-to-hellman.blogspot.com/
  @gluejar
 
 
 
 
 --


--


Re: [CODE4LIB] audio transcription software

2010-05-12 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Google Voice transcribes voicemails, but I don't think there is any api to use 
it outside of their system.  I also haven't used it much so I don't know how 
accurate it is.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Eric 
Lease Morgan
Sent: Wednesday, May 12, 2010 2:30 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] audio transcription software

On May 12, 2010, at 2:24 PM, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:

 Do you mean software to aid a human transcriber, or do you mean software 
 that can actually use voice recognition to turn audio to text all 
 automated?


I am interested in the later -- software that converts audio files in to text 
files.

-- 
Eric Lease Morgan


Re: [CODE4LIB] Van appreciation...

2010-02-26 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Hi Daniel (and everyone else),

WCU's Dean of Library Services is Dana Sally (dsa...@email.wcu.edu) and ASU's 
University Librarian is Mary Reichel (reiche...@appstate.edu).

Joel Marchesoni 
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library @ Western Carolina University
jma...@email.wcu.edu
828-227-2860
Please consider the environment before printing this email!

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Lovins, 
Daniel
Sent: Friday, February 26, 2010 12:38 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Van appreciation...

Hi Jill. I'm planning to write them now. Could you give their names (i.e., in 
addition to the email addresses below)?

 -Original Message-
 From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Jill 
 Ellern
 Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2010 12:07 PM
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: [CODE4LIB] Van appreciation...
 
  Code4Lib attendees,
 
 We have had many folks tell us how much they appreciate the Van service we
 provided from and to the airport. Many asked how they can thank us...  After 
 thinking
 about this, here is how you can show your appreciation and graditude..
 
 This service was provided through a generious donation of staff time and van 
 mileage
 from Western Carolina Univ and AppState Univ libraries.  So we were thinking 
 that you
 can thank us by sending an email to our directors thanking them for 
 supporting this
 conference this year.
 
 Here are their emails:
 dsa...@email.wcu.edu
 reiche...@appstate.edu
 
 
 Jill Ellern


Re: [CODE4LIB] image maps + lightbox/thickbox/ibox/etc -- SOLVED

2010-01-08 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I don't know if it's still the case, but links with a 0 font size used to 
penalize you with search engines. Probably not a concern but just fyi.

Joel Marchesoni
Hunter Library, Western Carolina Univesity
jma...@email.wcu.edu

-Original Message-
From: Ken Irwin kir...@wittenberg.edu
Sent: Thursday, January 07, 2010 11:56 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] image maps + lightbox/thickbox/ibox/etc -- SOLVED


Sometimes the answer is quit working, go home, and ask your sweetie.

My partner is a genius and had a very straightforward solution: get rid of the 
imagemap and replace it with some absolutely-positioned links that use regular 
anchor tags. Not only does this solve the problem in a lightbox-friendly way, 
it also improves accessibility -- the links are now text with a font-size of 
zero: usable for a screen-reader and invisible to others.

Simple demo here: http://www6.wittenberg.edu/lib/testbed/imagemap/

Tomorrow perhaps I'll write a little script to convert my image maps to 
absolutely positioned elements for the more complex real-life image maps.

Ken


Re: [CODE4LIB] Choosing development platforms and/or tools, how'd you do it?

2010-01-06 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I agree with Dan's last point about avoiding using a special IDE to develop 
with a language.  That can be expensive and/or hinder others supporting the 
application down the road.  I use vim for most of my development as well, 
although we officially use Dreamweaver at work mostly because of its Site 
features.

I also try to stick with languages that are cross-platform.  I use Linux at 
home and Windows at work, and I know that there are many developers in the same 
situation.  I like to know that if I write an application that with minimal 
tweaking it will be portable to any(ish) machine/environment.

Joel Marchesoni 
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library @ Western Carolina University
jma...@email.wcu.edu

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Dan 
Chudnov
Sent: Wednesday, January 06, 2010 8:17 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Choosing development platforms and/or tools, how'd you 
do it?

On Jan 5, 2010, at 10:13 PM, Ross Singer wrote:

 Dan Chudnov, for example, seems to think in Python.  When I tried
 Python, it never really clicked -- I muddled through a few projects
 but never really got it.

Actually, I think in Hoosier, but as the late Kurt Vonnegut might remind me, 
that's awfully silly.

I mostly agree with Ross, though - find something that fits your brain and lets 
you get your stuff done and stick with it.  It just might take a while.

I have used python as a main language for about seven years now and it pays off 
in many ways.  I didn't arrive at it quickly, though.  At my first regular job 
10-12 years ago I built stuff in perl, java, php, and vb, all of which turned 
into code I had to support for one user group or another for some period of 
time or another.  It's one thing to experiment with toy code, it's another 
thing to do an experiment that brings you hard data and experiences that can 
help to inform future decisions.

Here's how it went for me, but YMMV:  I knew perl first, and everything I wrote 
in perl worked quickly and was easy to install in our hosting environment but 
was hard to fix later when it broke because I couldn't read it after I'd 
forgotten what I'd done.  Java was just hard for me, period, and hard to 
install back then (tomcat wasn't particularly stable, yet, for one thing).  VB 
was super easy to develop with but meant desktop support in the long run when 
everything was moving to the web.  PHP was easy to write and install but I 
wrote a lot of bad code with holes all over the place, partly because of how 
easy it was.  After all of these experiences, and having gained some insights 
about what I preferred, I tried python, and it clicked immediately.  It wasn't 
so easy to install on a web server reliably back then, but it was doable, and 
it had all the other positives I was looking for:  I could get stuff done 
quickly, get it installed, it made sense when I went back to look a!
 
 t it again, and I tended to write things slightly more securely than I had in 
the past. I was hooked.  Seems like Ross is saying the same things about Ruby, 
for him.

None of the stuff I was building back then was intended to be widely-used or 
even depended-upon, which helped a lot, but some of it turned out to be one or 
both, and that shines a bright light on the positives and negatives of platform 
choices.  If I'd tried the languages in a different order maybe my experiences 
screwing up a lot of stuff early on would have led me to like a different fifth 
language; I definitely got better along the way.

These days I am spending more time in Java and JavaScript than I would have 
expected but find that they're both less hard than they were the last time I 
tried them both, partly because they've become easier to work with based on 
frameworks and such but also because I have more experience, period.

If you want help prioritizing which to choose first I could hardly argue with 
any of php, python, or ruby, for the same reasons others state, and as Ross 
said, building something with Solr is a great idea, because you can then try 
building follow-on apps with the same solr backend in different languages and 
see how they compare.  Also, using solr often means writing less original code 
yourself, which is a big win in any language.  I'd also suggest spending some 
time with javascript and a framework like jquery because it's applicable to 
anything you might do on the web. More than anything, though, build something 
you care about, and give it to real users, and then you'll start to see how you 
really feel about it. :)

One last note... I do all my development behind screen-wrapped ssh sessions 
using vim.  If I have to set up an IDE just to use a language, its happiness 
quotient drops immediately.  This approach isn't for everybody, but it works 
best for me, so platform choices that mesh well with this preference increase 
their happiness quotient.  Don't discount that factor

Re: [CODE4LIB] Choosing development platforms and/or tools, how'd you do it?

2010-01-06 Thread Joel Marchesoni
I should have worded my response differently.  I didn't mean one shouldn't use 
any IDE at all, but as Dan said if there is a special IDE *for that language* 
and otherwise one can't develop it I would stay away from it.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Bill 
Dueber
Sent: Wednesday, January 06, 2010 9:23 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Choosing development platforms and/or tools, how'd you 
do it?

On Wed, Jan 6, 2010 at 8:53 AM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.eduwrote:

 I agree with Dan's last point about avoiding using a special IDE to develop
 with a language.


I'll respectfully, but vehemently, disagree. I would say avoid *forcing*
everyone working on the project depend on a special IDE -- avoid lockin.
Don't avoid use.

There's a spectrum of how much an editor/environment can know about a
program. At one end is Smalltalk, where the development environment *is* the
program. At the other end is something like LISP (and, to an extent, Ruby)
where so little can be inferred from the syntax of the code that a smart
IDE can't actually know much other than how to match parentheses.

For languages where little can be known at compile time, an IDE may not buy
you very much other than syntax highlighting and code folding. For Java,
C++, etc. an IDE can know damn near everything about your project and
radically up your productivity -- variable renaming, refactoring,
context-sensitive help, jump-to-definition, method-name completion, etc. It
really is a difference that makes a difference.

I know folks say they can get the same thing from vim or emacs, but at that
level those editors are no less complex (and a good deal more opaque) than
something like Eclipse or Netbeans unless you already have a decade of
experience with them.

If you're starting in a new language, try a couple editors, too. Both
Eclipse and Netbeans are free and cross-platform, and have support for a lot
of languages. Editors like Notepad++, EditPlus, Textmate jEdit, and BBEdit
can all do very nice things with a variety of languages.



-- 
Bill Dueber
Library Systems Programmer
University of Michigan Library


Re: [CODE4LIB] Web analytics for POST data

2009-11-24 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Hi Yitzchak,

I was just looking at this yesterday on the Google Analytics site.  It's a way 
to define custom variables at either the page, session, or visitor level:

http://code.google.com/apis/analytics/docs/tracking/gaTrackingCustomVariables.html

Joel Marchesoni 
Tech Support Analyst
Hunter Library @ Western Carolina University
jma...@email.wcu.edu
828-227-2860
 Please consider the environment before printing this email!



-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of 
Yitzchak Schaffer
Sent: Monday, November 23, 2009 7:01 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Web analytics for POST data

Alejandro Garza Gonzalez wrote:
 1) You *can* use GA and some Javascript embedded in your III pages to 
 log events (as they´re called in GA lingo). The javascript (depending 
 on your coding wizardry level) could track anything from hovers over 
 elements, form submission, next page events, etc.

Hi Alejandro,

Thanks for a great suggestion.  I tried poking around at it; it seems to 
me like Events aren't built for what I'm really interested in doing, 
namely systematic exploration and analysis of the search sessions.  IOW, 
let's say a form looks like

t=finn
a=twain
l=circ,reserve

It looks like I could log this as three separate events, or one; but 
either way, how would one analyze this?  I'm not interested (solely) in 
how many times this particular query was entered.

I started looking at ways to funnel the params into my own tracking 
script, the prototype of which just writes a line to a text file with a 
JSON serialization of the form data; but I'm not a JS ninja, so I'm 
still trying to figure out how to get around the XSS problems.

Ruddy III turnkey...

-- 
Yitzchak Schaffer
Systems Manager
Touro College Libraries
33 West 23rd Street
New York, NY 10010
Tel (212) 463-0400 x5230
Fax (212) 627-3197
Email yitzchak.schaf...@tourolib.org


Re: [CODE4LIB] Limit EBSCO Search Box Builder by date

2009-11-18 Thread Joel Marchesoni
That does make sense, Michael.  I had tried using the cli and clv parameters 
but I had used just 'DT' instead of 'DT1' and it didn't work.  Thanks so much 
for this!

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Michael 
Gorrell
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 8:39 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Limit EBSCO Search Box Builder by date

Hi Joel,

We're updating our documentation/the Search Box Builder site to also include
these parameters.

Search Box Builder - a form to take in the user's query/limiters/etc is
essentially a way to build up what we call a persistent link.  Our link
syntax has a few basic parameters.  Look at this search for football from
the Academic Search Premier database (db code aph):

http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=truedb=aphbquery=(football)
cli0=FTclv0=Ycli1=DT1clv1=200901-200911type=0site=ehost-live

I've got 2 limiters in this search - Full Text and Date (200901-200911).

Our limiters are passed through cli{N} and cliv{N} key/value pairs.

So in the above - FT is the key for the full text limiter, and it's
Value is Y.  For date, DT1 is the key and the date range 200901-200911 is
the value.

Other limiters that might be used would be Peer Reviewed (RV=Y) or
References Available (FR=Y) or Publication/Source (SO=value).  These are
our Search Tags.  Note - that if you want to play around and see what the
URL looks like, you can use the UI, and click on the Alert/Save/Share link
- we show a permalink on the little popup - this (basically) is the same
persistent link you would build up through Search Box Builder.

I hope that makes sense.  If you have further questions, feel free to
contact our support team - ept...@ebscohost.com.

Thanks for pointing out this weakness in our documentation - and thanks for
using the feature!

-mdg
-
Michael Gorrell, m...@ebscohost.com
Senior VP and CIO
EBSCO


On 11/17/09 3:11 PM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu wrote:

 Hi Everyone,
 
 One feature missing from the EBSCO Search Box Builder is the ability to limit
 by date.  Does anyone know of a way to do this from the search box code?  I
 tried all the values from the results page with no success.
 
 I'm having a hard time finding any information about this online and was
 hoping a fellow coder has figured it out already.
 
 Thanks!
 
 Joel


Re: [CODE4LIB] Limit EBSCO Search Box Builder by date

2009-11-18 Thread Joel Marchesoni
My other problem is that I wasn't specifying the range correctly.  It seems 
that the range must be specified in the clvN field exactly in the  
'mm-mm' format.  Something I learned in asking through the website 
support is that it is possible to add a more flexible range by adding it to the 
ebscohostkeywords field as 'DT+' and then the range.  Doing it that way I was 
able to use '1999-' as the range and it worked just fine.  I'm guessing it 
could be added to the actual search terms as well as long as there is an 'AND' 
between the range and the actual query.

Joel

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Michael 
Gorrell
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 8:39 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Limit EBSCO Search Box Builder by date

Hi Joel,

We're updating our documentation/the Search Box Builder site to also include
these parameters.

Search Box Builder - a form to take in the user's query/limiters/etc is
essentially a way to build up what we call a persistent link.  Our link
syntax has a few basic parameters.  Look at this search for football from
the Academic Search Premier database (db code aph):

http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=truedb=aphbquery=(football)
cli0=FTclv0=Ycli1=DT1clv1=200901-200911type=0site=ehost-live

I've got 2 limiters in this search - Full Text and Date (200901-200911).

Our limiters are passed through cli{N} and cliv{N} key/value pairs.

So in the above - FT is the key for the full text limiter, and it's
Value is Y.  For date, DT1 is the key and the date range 200901-200911 is
the value.

Other limiters that might be used would be Peer Reviewed (RV=Y) or
References Available (FR=Y) or Publication/Source (SO=value).  These are
our Search Tags.  Note - that if you want to play around and see what the
URL looks like, you can use the UI, and click on the Alert/Save/Share link
- we show a permalink on the little popup - this (basically) is the same
persistent link you would build up through Search Box Builder.

I hope that makes sense.  If you have further questions, feel free to
contact our support team - ept...@ebscohost.com.

Thanks for pointing out this weakness in our documentation - and thanks for
using the feature!

-mdg
-
Michael Gorrell, m...@ebscohost.com
Senior VP and CIO
EBSCO


On 11/17/09 3:11 PM, Joel Marchesoni jma...@email.wcu.edu wrote:

 Hi Everyone,
 
 One feature missing from the EBSCO Search Box Builder is the ability to limit
 by date.  Does anyone know of a way to do this from the search box code?  I
 tried all the values from the results page with no success.
 
 I'm having a hard time finding any information about this online and was
 hoping a fellow coder has figured it out already.
 
 Thanks!
 
 Joel


[CODE4LIB] Limit EBSCO Search Box Builder by date

2009-11-17 Thread Joel Marchesoni
Hi Everyone,

One feature missing from the EBSCO Search Box Builder is the ability to limit 
by date.  Does anyone know of a way to do this from the search box code?  I 
tried all the values from the results page with no success.

I'm having a hard time finding any information about this online and was hoping 
a fellow coder has figured it out already.

Thanks!

Joel