Issue 11 of the Code4Lib Journal is now available. The contents are as follows:

Editorial Introduction – A Cataloger’s Perspective on the Code4Lib Journal
Kelley McGrath
On the Code4Lib Journal, technology, and the universe of library cataloging and 
metadata.
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3950


Interpreting MARC: Where’s the Bibliographic Data?
Jason Thomale
The MARC data format was created early in the history of digital computers. In 
this article, the author entertains the notion that viewing MARC from a modern 
technological perspective leads to interpretive problems such as a confusion of 
“bibliographic data” with “catalog records.” He explores this idea through 
examining a specific MARC interpretation task that he undertook early in his 
career and then revisited nearly four years later. Revising the code that 
performed the task confronted him with his own misconceptions about MARC that 
were rooted in his worldview about what he thought “structured data” should be 
and helped him to place MARC in a more appropriate context.
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3832


XForms for Libraries, An Introduction
Ethan Gruber, Chris Fitzpatrick, Bill Parod, and Scott Prater
XForms applications can be used to create XML metadata that is well-formed and 
valid according to the schema, and then saved to (or loaded from) a datastore 
that communicates via REST or SOAP. XForms applications provide a powerful set 
of tools for data creation and manipulation, as demonstrated by some projects 
related to library workflows that are described in this paper.
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3916


Why Purchase When You Can Repurpose? Using Crosswalks to Enhance User Access
Teressa M. Keenan
The Mansfield Library subscribes to the Readex database U.S. Congressional 
Serial Set, 1817-1994 (full-text historic reports of Congress and federal 
agencies). Given the option of purchasing MARC records for all 262,000 
publications in the Serial Set or making use of free access to simple Dublin 
Core records provided by Readex, the library opted to repurpose the free 
metadata. The process that the Mansfield Library used to obtain the Dublin Core 
records is described, including the procedures for crosswalking the metadata to 
MARC and batch loading the bibliographic records complete with holdings 
information to the local catalog. This report shows that we successfully 
achieved our goals of dramatically increasing access to Serial Set material by 
exposing metadata in the local catalog and discusses the challenges we faced 
along the way. We hope that others tasked with the manipulation of metadata 
will be able to use what we learned from this project.
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3604


Hacking Summon
Michael Klein
When the Oregon State University Libraries selected Serials Solutions’ Summon 
as its discovery tool, the implementation team realized that they had an 
opportunity to implement a set of “hacks” that that would improve the overall 
user experience. This article will explore the space between Summon’s 
out-of-the-box user interface and full developer API, providing practical 
advice on tweaking configuration information and catalog exports to take full 
advantage of Summon’s indexing and faceting features. The article then 
describes the creation of OSUL’s home-grown open source availabilty service 
which replaced and enhanced the availability information that Summon would 
normally pull directly from the catalog. 
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3655


Automatic Aggregation of Faculty Publications from Personal Web Pages
Najko Jahn, Mathias Lösch, and Wolfram Horstmann
Many researchers make their publications available on personal web pages. In 
this paper, we propose a simple method for the automatic aggregation of these 
documents. We search faculty web pages for archived publications and present 
their full text links together with the author’s name and short content 
excerpts on a comprehensive web page. The excerpts are generated simply by 
querying a standard web search engine.
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3765


Managing Library IT Workflow with Bugzilla
Nina McHale
Prior to September 2008, all technology issues at the University of Colorado 
Denver’s Auraria Library were reported to a dedicated departmental phone line. 
A variety of staff changes necessitated a more formal means of tracking, 
delegating, and resolving reported issues, and the department turned to 
Bugzilla, an open source bug tracking application designed by Mozilla.org 
developers. While designed with software development bug tracking in mind, 
Bugzilla can be easily customized and modified to serve as an IT ticketing 
system. Twenty-three months and over 2300 trouble tickets later, Auraria’s IT 
department workflow is much smoother and more efficient. This article includes 
two Perl Template Toolkit code samples for customized Bugzilla screens for its 
use in a library environment; readers will be able to easily replicate the 
project in their own environments. 
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3814

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