On 2/22/06, Andrew Nagy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry if this was already stated. This sounds like the textualize site
which has what appears to be drupal and then trac/svn. I think
something could be done with just the trac/svn as it has wiki,
bugtracking and source control. The scope of the
On Feb 23, 2006, at 9:09 AM, Ross Singer wrote:
I think a more important question, however, is What is it about
Code4Lib that attracts you/makes you desire a published output of it?
I believe that Code4Lib serves an otherwise under-served audience:
The growing numbers of librarians who are
My point yesterday was not just about the dangers of the small group
(although that's true too), but more that if you go down the path of
starting a journal it makes sense to be really clear about your goals,
and the audience you expect to serve. Which in turn drives the format
and content.
At code4lib last week a good-sized group with insane combinations of
expertise in OAI-PMH, SRU, and OpenURL helped to nail down revision one of
unAPI. Its background and objectives are:
unAPI is a simple website API convention. There are many wonderful APIs
and protocols for
In addition to a proposal to start a journal around code4lib, there has
also been talk about code4lib as a school (something that I heard Dan
Chudnov bring up at the conference). A lot of interest has been
expressed in finding further mechanisms for members of the code4lib
community to learn
On Feb 23, 2006, at 5:03 PM, Raymond Yee wrote:
* Do you perceive a need for mechanisms beyond what we already
have for the code4lib community for learning/teaching each other or
those outside the community?
Yes! The code4lib community as it exists is great for people who
already have a
One question is certainly, Who will this journal serve?
The more I think about it, the more I think the main justification for a
code4lib journal is to get our stuff noticed more. There are too many
enthusiastic Library 2.0 bloggers who spend their time talking about
non-library Web 2.0
+1
I know there has been a lot of sentiment toward simply hacking on our
web site, but as useful as that might be, it is still preaching to
the choir. As Peter and others have said, if we want to broaden our
reach we will most likely need to produce something that will get
much wider notice --
I have mirrored 50 GB of journal data from the open access journal
literature, and I'm curious to know, what indexer would you use to
index this data?
--
Eric Lease Morgan
University Libraries of Notre Dame
On 2/23/06, Eric Lease Morgan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have mirrored 50 GB of journal data from the open access journal
literature, and I'm curious to know, what indexer would you use to
index this data?
For what purpose?
Is it plain text?
Lucene?
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