Re: [CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-18 Thread Matthew Sherman
Thanks everyone, this helps.  I will certainly take more input anyone else
has for the next few weeks if anyone else has thoughts add, problems they
see one the horizon.  I know I am curious how we in the digital library
corner can deal with mobile devices but I have not seen much talking about
that problem.  Still, thanks again for the input.


On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 7:09 PM, Michael J. Giarlo <
leftw...@alumni.rutgers.edu> wrote:

> All,
>
> The link I shared is now accessible for anyone to view.  Since I have never
> made a mistake, I blame Google for this.
>
> -Mike
>
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 3:22 PM, Michael J. Giarlo <
> leftw...@alumni.rutgers.edu> wrote:
>
> > Hi Matt,
> >
> > I gave a related talk in late 2009 -- with an emphasis on the
> > repository/digital content side of the house -- and many of the slides
> are
> > still relevant.  Use as much or as little is helpful to you.  (FWIW, I
> was
> > hired for the position.)
> >
> >
> >
> https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/15mhwNfm-Ixv43uM5-68fAPIrxzy_BAPLWaVsLK6yp5w/present#slide=id.i0
> >
> > Good luck with the interview!  Look forward to seeing you in the
> trenches.
> >
> > -Mike
> >
> >
> > On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Matthew Sherman <
> matt.r.sher...@gmail.com
> > > wrote:
> >
> >> Hello all Code4Lib folk,
> >>
> >> I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends
> and
> >> issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am
> doing
> >> quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any
> of
> >> you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as
> emerging
> >> trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
> >> ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
> >> from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of
> >> interest
> >> to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.
> >>
> >> Matt Sherman
> >>
> >
> >
>


Re: [CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-17 Thread Michael J. Giarlo
All,

The link I shared is now accessible for anyone to view.  Since I have never
made a mistake, I blame Google for this.

-Mike



On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 3:22 PM, Michael J. Giarlo <
leftw...@alumni.rutgers.edu> wrote:

> Hi Matt,
>
> I gave a related talk in late 2009 -- with an emphasis on the
> repository/digital content side of the house -- and many of the slides are
> still relevant.  Use as much or as little is helpful to you.  (FWIW, I was
> hired for the position.)
>
>
> https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/15mhwNfm-Ixv43uM5-68fAPIrxzy_BAPLWaVsLK6yp5w/present#slide=id.i0
>
> Good luck with the interview!  Look forward to seeing you in the trenches.
>
> -Mike
>
>
> On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Matthew Sherman  > wrote:
>
>> Hello all Code4Lib folk,
>>
>> I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends and
>> issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am doing
>> quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any of
>> you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as emerging
>> trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
>> ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
>> from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of
>> interest
>> to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.
>>
>> Matt Sherman
>>
>
>


Re: [CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-17 Thread karim boughida
Hi Bess and all,
I would add that we need to strengthen open source governance models.
We have few in the field: Kuali, duraspace, koha-community, Sakai
Foundation, etc. and the ecosystem around it like custom support
Mediashelf, ByWater Solutions, Equinox, etc.

Karim Boughida

On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 3:35 PM, Bess Sadler  wrote:
> From where I'm standing one of the most important trends in digital libraries 
> right now is that more and more institutions are realizing:
>
> 1. Many digital library software needs exist for which there is no commercial 
> software that can be purchased, or it is prohibitively expensive
> 2. Software teams in libraries rarely have the resources to develop and 
> maintain digital library software on their own, and this is probably not a 
> good long-term strategy anyway.
>
> These realizations, hopefully, lead to the conclusion that,
>
> 3. It makes the most sense to sign onto a larger digital library software 
> strategy and pursue community based development.
>
> I observe massive growth in the number of institutions adopting Blacklight, 
> Hydra, Islandora, VuFind and similar broad-based coalitions that can resource 
> and staff large scale digital library development efforts. See as evidence 
> this year's code4lib talk proposals. The same trend is evident in talk 
> proposals for DLF and Open Repositories.
>
> Choosing community based open source development gives institutions immediate 
> access to a suite of free (free as in beer and free as in speech!) digital 
> library solutions, a community of support, training materials for staff, 
> skill development workshops, and ongoing improvements, bug fixes, upgrade 
> guides, and new features without having to bankroll those themselves. That 
> gives individual institutions the ability to focus on their core areas of 
> expertise, focusing their development efforts on local deployment, data 
> management, and putting effort into the parts of the software ecosystem that 
> make the most strategic sense for their patrons. Increasingly there are also 
> vendors serving this market, so institutions who feel more comfortable 
> purchasing support and/or hosting contracts can have that option as well.
>
> Additionally, developers who regularly submit their code to larger projects 
> where it is subject to review by developers at other institutions and (for 
> some projects) rules around required code testing, tend to up their software 
> engineering game and start applying higher standards of quality even to 
> unrelated development efforts. I have noticed that many libraries hire 
> developers without having anyone on staff who has a good handle on how to 
> supervise developers. Being part of a larger project can also be a way to 
> grow this skill set among managers.
>
> Good luck with your talk!
>
> Best wishes,
> Bess
>
> On Dec 17, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Matthew Sherman  
> wrote:
>
>> Hello all Code4Lib folk,
>>
>> I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends and
>> issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am doing
>> quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any of
>> you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as emerging
>> trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
>> ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
>> from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of interest
>> to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.
>>
>> Matt Sherman



-- 
Karim B Boughida
kbough...@gmail.com
kbough...@library.gwu.edu


Re: [CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-17 Thread Bess Sadler
>From where I'm standing one of the most important trends in digital libraries 
>right now is that more and more institutions are realizing:

1. Many digital library software needs exist for which there is no commercial 
software that can be purchased, or it is prohibitively expensive
2. Software teams in libraries rarely have the resources to develop and 
maintain digital library software on their own, and this is probably not a good 
long-term strategy anyway.

These realizations, hopefully, lead to the conclusion that, 

3. It makes the most sense to sign onto a larger digital library software 
strategy and pursue community based development. 

I observe massive growth in the number of institutions adopting Blacklight, 
Hydra, Islandora, VuFind and similar broad-based coalitions that can resource 
and staff large scale digital library development efforts. See as evidence this 
year's code4lib talk proposals. The same trend is evident in talk proposals for 
DLF and Open Repositories. 

Choosing community based open source development gives institutions immediate 
access to a suite of free (free as in beer and free as in speech!) digital 
library solutions, a community of support, training materials for staff, skill 
development workshops, and ongoing improvements, bug fixes, upgrade guides, and 
new features without having to bankroll those themselves. That gives individual 
institutions the ability to focus on their core areas of expertise, focusing 
their development efforts on local deployment, data management, and putting 
effort into the parts of the software ecosystem that make the most strategic 
sense for their patrons. Increasingly there are also vendors serving this 
market, so institutions who feel more comfortable purchasing support and/or 
hosting contracts can have that option as well. 

Additionally, developers who regularly submit their code to larger projects 
where it is subject to review by developers at other institutions and (for some 
projects) rules around required code testing, tend to up their software 
engineering game and start applying higher standards of quality even to 
unrelated development efforts. I have noticed that many libraries hire 
developers without having anyone on staff who has a good handle on how to 
supervise developers. Being part of a larger project can also be a way to grow 
this skill set among managers. 

Good luck with your talk! 

Best wishes,
Bess

On Dec 17, 2012, at 11:49 AM, Matthew Sherman  wrote:

> Hello all Code4Lib folk,
> 
> I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends and
> issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am doing
> quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any of
> you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as emerging
> trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
> ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
> from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of interest
> to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.
> 
> Matt Sherman


Re: [CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-17 Thread Michael J. Giarlo
Hi Matt,

I gave a related talk in late 2009 -- with an emphasis on the
repository/digital content side of the house -- and many of the slides are
still relevant.  Use as much or as little is helpful to you.  (FWIW, I was
hired for the position.)

https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/15mhwNfm-Ixv43uM5-68fAPIrxzy_BAPLWaVsLK6yp5w/present#slide=id.i0

Good luck with the interview!  Look forward to seeing you in the trenches.

-Mike


On Mon, Dec 17, 2012 at 2:49 PM, Matthew Sherman
wrote:

> Hello all Code4Lib folk,
>
> I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends and
> issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am doing
> quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any of
> you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as emerging
> trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
> ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
> from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of interest
> to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.
>
> Matt Sherman
>


[CODE4LIB] Thoughts on Digital Library Trends

2012-12-17 Thread Matthew Sherman
Hello all Code4Lib folk,

I am putting together a small presentation with the topic about trends and
issues in digital libraries for an interview next month.  While I am doing
quite a bit of searching and reading on my own, I wanted to see if any of
you would be willing to provide your thoughts on what you see as emerging
trends and issues in digital library, particularly as they deal with our
ability to serve our users.  I think it would be helpful to have insight
from those currently in the trenches.  Also this topic could be of interest
to others in the listserv.  Any thoughts are welcome and appreciated.

Matt Sherman