Michael Beccaria said:
Thanks for the replies. To clarify, I am working with 2 (or more in the
future)
marc records outside of the ILS. I've tried using Marcedit but my usage did
vary...not much overlap with the control fields that were available to me. I
have a feeling they are a bit
Suma is the most practical and reliable way to do this right now, I think.
I've been investigating using a sensor network, but there are a lot of
limits on the accuracy of PIR, and trip-lasers are low enough and require
enough power that they'd be troublesome to maintain in a busy undergraduate
Hello everyone,
Who out there has a responsive library website or catalogue? I searched through
the listserv archives and came up with a few examples - Ithaca, Wisconsin
Madison, and Princeton finding aids - but thought I would check with the larger
group for some examples. Any one in Canada?
Kevin Gilbertson's done an awesome job with our main
sitehttp://zsr.wfu.eduand
catalog http://find.zsr.wfu.edu at Wake Forest. It's not responsive
across the entire domain, yet--we're considering a redesign from the ground
up.
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 9:57 AM, Lisa Gayhart
I remembered that Amy Deschenes had a great presentation on the Simmons library
catalog at last fall's code4libNE conference. Here are the slides -
http://www.library.yale.edu/newengland_code4lib/mobile-friendly-catalog.pdf
Best,
Junior Tidal
Assistant Professor
Web Services and Multimedia
Lisa,
Just want to clarify that our finding aids site is not responsive yet.
That's part of phase two ... ;)
-Shaun
On 8/16/13 9:57 AM, Lisa Gayhart wrote:
Hello everyone,
Who out there has a responsive library website or catalogue? I searched through
the listserv archives and came up
University of Alberta and UBC both have responsive websites
(http://www.library.ualberta.ca/ and http://www.library.ubc.ca/ ) but their
catalogues are not responsive. We're still in the process of making our site
responsive here at Carleton; it won't be ready for a while yet.
Looking forward
This website has links to college and academic library websites that use
responsive design:
http://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/hardinmd/2012/05/03/responsive-design-sites-higher-ed-libraries-notables/
A few of them have responsive catalogs. You'd have to do a catalog search in
the library websites to
Ours isn't responsive yet (moving the site to a RWD model is a battle I've
been fighting for awhile), but you may want to look at my smart links
script (see http://www.jasonbengtson.com/main/tut.html) . . . it can be
useful for responsive sites that link to still bifurcated resources. The
column
The Evergreen Indiana catalog will be responsive soon.
http://evergreen.lib.in.us
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 10:39 AM, Jason Bengtson j.bengtson...@gmail.comwrote:
Ours isn't responsive yet (moving the site to a RWD model is a battle I've
been fighting for awhile), but you may want to look at my
The Alvin Sherman Library, Research, and Information Technology Center [*gasp
of air*] is mobile-first responsive and has a squishy catalog [not responsive
down to mobile, however]. http://nova.edu/library/main
We are also in the process of a drastic ground-up redesign that will go live in
Thanks for the great feedback. Our responsive catalogue is currently available
in beta with a (quickly approaching) launch date of Aug. 27. Feel free to
check it out and provide your comments (either here or through the feedback
form in the cat).
http://go.utlib.ca/rwd
Looking forward to
I should clarify; we have a couple of good RWD solutions I've set up that
we could implement immediately. The battle is purely administrative. I'm
curious how many folks have run into a similar issue.
On Fri, Aug 16, 2013 at 9:20 AM, Lisa Gayhart lisa.gayh...@utoronto.cawrote:
Thanks for the
From a different list I learned of the following WorldCat metadata API
webinar, and I thought some of us over here maybe interested too. From the
description:
The WorldCat Metadata API supports a variety of cataloging
functionality for libraries to catalog their collections in
WorldCat.
On Aug 16, 2013, at 9:52 AM, Ian Walls wrote:
Suma is the most practical and reliable way to do this right now, I think.
I've been investigating using a sensor network, but there are a lot of
limits on the accuracy of PIR, and trip-lasers are low enough and require
enough power that they'd
Hi all ~
Registration for iPres 2013http://ipres2013.ist.utl.pt/index.html (September
2nd to 6th in Lisbon, Portugal) is still open!
As you are registering consider joining us for Workshop 5 - Preservation at
Scale (afternoon of September 5th and morning of September 6th). We have a
great
Join the Harvard Library IT team and play a leading role in transitioning
innovative prototypes of web-based library applications into a sustainable,
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Harvard University IT (HUIT) Library Technology Services is seeking a skilled
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Just install the callback with your singularity.
On 13-08-15 05:36 PM, Terrell, Trey wrote:
It's funny you mention this - we had some ECE students build this exact thing
for us for one of their projects. They ended up being $100/piece and required a
plugin. They used wifi (definitely some
Hi Tom,
It's nice to see Suma discussed on this thread, and I do think that it is a
pretty nice tool for collecting, managing, and analyzing a variety of
transactional and observational use data. We're using it at NCSU to collect
a fairly wide range of data, including head counts, service desk
Second reminder - Still time to submit - the deadline is August 25, 2013
~~~
The LITA Program Planning Committee (PPC) is now accepting innovative and
creative proposals for the 2014 Annual American Library Association Conference.
We're looking for full day
CFP for a journal special issue on semantic digital archives, deadline Nov
30th, details below and at
http://mt.inf.tu-dresden.de/sda2013/CfP_SI_Semantic_Digital_Archives.pdf
-Jodi
-- Forwarded message --
From: Livia Predoiu livia.pred...@googlemail.com
Date: Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at
We are currently seeking applications for a Senior Data Coordinator within the
Fisheries Data Group of Marine Scotland Science (MSS) based at the Marine
Laboratory, Aberdeen.
This post contributes towards [Scotland's National
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