Kia ora koutou,

It occurs to me to wonder how other people keep track of which of your systems 
affect / require which others of your systems. Eg an institutional repository 
sourcing data from a research information management system; a database 
requiring Shibboleth to access; an opening hours page populated with data from 
a library system API etc etc.

When I was starting the job I diagrammed it as a network to make sense of it to 
myself, and later transferred this into Visio; I’ve kept it up-to-date over the 
years and it’s *really* handy when showing the scope of our job to outsiders, 
or explaining to ITS that if they do X then all these things will fall over, 
etc. But it’s increasingly difficult to emulate everything in 2-dimensions!

I still like the 2d printable overview, but would also like something a bit 
more interactive that lets me drill down to a particular product to see what it 
depends on, and what depends on it, and give a bit of detail of what precisely 
the dependency is. I’d especially like it to be practical to add smaller 
systems, like that one web-page I created as a bridge between a certain 
vendor’s API and our legacy Microsoft Access database – so they’re noted and 
don’t get forgotten, but also don’t clutter up the main overview: so I guess 
assigning degrees of importance to different systems. And, while I’m 
dreamining, I’d rather it not be Yet Another System itself requiring management 
and upgrades!

Semi-related, I’m also needing to track product upgrade cycles and have been 
pondering how best to do this.

Any thoughts appreciated!

Deborah Fitchett
Head of Department: Digital Services

Library, Teaching and Learning, Te Wharepūrākau
P O Box 85064
Lincoln University
Lincoln 7647
Canterbury
New Zealand

p +64 3 423 0358
e deborah.fitch...@lincoln.ac.nz | w 
ltl.lincoln.ac.nz<https://ltl.lincoln.ac.nz/>

Lincoln University, Te Whare Wānaka o Aoraki
New Zealand's Specialist Land-Based University


________________________________
P Please consider the environment before you print this email.
"The contents of this e-mail (including any attachments) may be confidential 
and/or subject to copyright. Any unauthorised use, distribution, or copying of 
the contents is expressly prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in 
error, please advise the sender by return e-mail or telephone and then delete 
this e-mail together with all attachments from your system."

Reply via email to