Posts Tagged ‘libraries’

List of UK university libraries on Twitter

Posted on January 25th, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp

I couldn’t find an up-to-date list of dedicated UK academic library Twitter accounts, so I created one. It’s openly-editable in Google Docs, so if I’ve missed off a UK university library, please feel free to add it (or correct any mistakes).

View and edit the document here.

Alright, stop. Collaborate and LISN

Posted on November 17th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

(Yes, I’ve used this ‘hilarious‘ blog post title before. So sue me.)

I was at Lincoln Central Library on Free School Lane this morning for a meeting of LISN, the Lincolnshire Information Services Network.

Lincoln Central LibraryLISN (pronounced listen) has been in existence since August 1998 when a group of (mainly) college and university librarians decided to network on a formalised basis. The group has evolved considerably since then to welcome any Lincolnshire-based information provider/library wishing to exchange ideas and information to benefit the Lincolnshire community.

Every LISN meeting runs to a similar pattern: after the standard apologies-minutes-matters-arising bumf, we discuss at length a topic of interest to Lincolnshire libraries of all sectors (today’s topic was on the subject of online learning materials: “what we are doing in terms of providing online interactive learning materials to support the users of our collections and resources? Are we using learning materials provided by suppliers or creating our own?“). Then each member library provides an institutional update; AOB; end.

I’m meant to look after the LISN website (www.lisn.org.uk) – I’ve not always been terribly good at giving this job enough attention (colleagues from the UKCoRR committee will find that a depressingly familiar story), which is why I’m pleased that fellow LISN rep Rachael Adair from Lincoln College has offered to share that task with me.

The other interesting topic that came up at this morning’s meeting is the progress Bishop Grosseteste University College are making with their library extension – you can see the latest construction photos on their Facebook page, at: http://www.facebook.com/bishopglibrary

I’ve got to get to a library… fast!

Posted on October 11th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Here’s a lovely little hack for displaying the contact details of our 5 libraries, neatly in a web page:

Map of the geo-lookup areas (approximate)

It uses Alex Bilbie‘s implementation of a geolocation/IP-lookup script to try and determine the nearest library to the person viewing the page, according to the following rules:

  1. If you’re on campus, then choose the library for that campus.
  2. If you’re within 20 miles of one of our three campus libraries (Riseholme, Hull, or Holbeach) then choose the nearest library.
  3. If you’re actually inside Chad Varah House, choose the Theology Reading Room.
  4. If none of these rules apply, choose the main GCW University Library.

We’ll be tweaking these ‘library lookup’ rules to get the best results. I’d also like to look at overriding the geo-lookup settings for logged-in users (displaying instead the library for their campus of study as derived from their profile). And what about displaying information about SCONUL Access libraries for distance learners, perhaps making use of Owen Stephens’ SCONUL libraries lookup script?

The page then uses the jQuery ‘accordion‘ widget to display the contact details for the chosen library, in a nice expandable format (i.e. you can click on the headings to display the details for a different library). It all degrades gracefully for browsers with less-than-impeccable support for JavaScript.

Neat, no? The code is on Github if you want to have a look.

Screenshot of the library contact page

Let them tweet cake: why Library Camp was unconferencing done right

Posted on October 8th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’m on the way back from the first national Library Camp UK in Birmingham (a bit tired after a 4am start. Yep. 4am on a Saturday).

Here are 10 reasons why Library Camp made for a great unconference. In no particular order:

  1. Photo of Library Camp cakeThe people. There were around 200 folk there (at the weekend, remember!), from all sorts of library sectors; plus a really healthy sprinking of non-library folk – from graphic designers to poets. While the echo chamber wasn’t entirely destroyed, it at least cracked in a few places. The passion for libraries was tangible from the start. And it’s probably no coincidence that quite a few Voices for the Library people were in attendance.
  2. The unconferencing. There was no sop to traditional conference programmes, speakers, or presentations. Not a PowerPoint show in sight. All the workshop topics were ‘pitched’ by attendees on the day, scribbled onto post-it notes, and assembled into an impromptu programme on a whiteboard. Folk were free to attend whatever sessions they wanted to get stuck into. For my own part, I took the opportunity to leave my ‘day job’ subjects—open data, repositories, e-resources, etc.—to one side, and took part in some refreshingly non-technological library discussions.
  3. The venue. Etc Venues’ Maple House is <10 mins’ walk from Birmingham New Street station. They let people stick things up on the walls. I think nuff said.
  4. The topic. Mashed Library is about libraries and technology. Cycling for Libraries is about libraries and… er, cycling. Library Camp is about libraries, full stop. Whatever your pet library topic, it was up for discussion.
  5. The tweeting. I think this was the first event I’ve attended where very nearly everyone used Twitter. This was brilliant in building a sense of community in the run up to Library Camp, and on the day the hashtag #libcampuk11 pretty much owned the interwebs.
  6. The democracy. My favourite quote from the day: “leave your perceived status at the door”. I love that “perceived”! No-one was allowed to wear an ‘official’ / institutional badge of library rank. And the internal divisions within library & information work got a good kicking throughout the course of the day. Bravo.
  7. The organisation. Putting a whole new national event together in a few short months is impressive to say the least. Respect is due to @BhamLibrarian@libraryjmac@coralmusgrave@siwhitehouse@timmy666@shedsue, and the sponsors. They’d like to hand the baton on to a totally new group of organisers for Library Camp 2012, so that things are kept fresh and Library Camp is reinvented every year. Will anyone pick it up?
  8. Photo of the Library Camp ideas boardThe city. Alright, Birmingham is a bit of a pain to get to from the depths of rural Lincolnshire (hence my 4am start). But choosing a location in the Midlands did mean that most corners of the UK were represented.
  9. The cake. It was just… beautiful. A stunning variety and a frankly intimidating amount of cakey goodness: nearly all of it home baked with love by Library Camp attendees. And it wasn’t just for show – keeping everyone’s blood sugar levels high meant that people stayed engaged and enthusiastic until the very end of a long day.
  10. Did I mention the people? For a bunch of (according to the stereotype) meek library types*, people weren’t shy about getting stuck in. Without that shared enthusiasm: no unconference.

*Yeah, right. I know. ROFL.

Çhaghnoaylleeaght ayns y Lioar-hasht

Posted on July 5th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

RushenLaa Tinvaal Sonney Diu!

Shoh rolley lioarlannyn ayns Mannin:

Ta mee gynsaghey foast! Please accept my apologies for any mistakes I’ve made, especially with mutations. Corrections and suggestions for improvement will be gratefully received.

10 practical & accessible library technology blogs

Posted on June 17th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

Here are ten of the best practical library tech blogs that I follow. They’re all about technology (ish), but they’re not geeky or inaccessible. Most but not all, are written by people in of UK Higher Education libraries. In case you want to subscribe to them en masse, I’ve bundled them up into an OPML file which you should be able to import into a feed reader (e.g. Google Reader).

Q. Have you got a good library technology blog? Care to share?

  1. Copac Developments
    What’s happening behind the scenes at Copac
  2. Electronic Resources Blog
    Library Services, University of Huddersfield
  3. eLibrary
    eLibrary team, Birmingham City University
  4. Fulup’s blog
    A librarian at De Montfort University
  5. Musings around librarianship
    Aaron Tay, a librarian at the National University of Singapore
  6. NewT Bham – where technology and libraries meet
    New Technologies Group at the University of Birmingham Library
  7. Phil Bradley’s Weblog
    Internet consultant and (2011) CILIP Vice-president
  8. ResourceShelf ResourceBlog
    We find the sources; you get the credit!
  9. “Self-plagiarism is style” – Dave Pattern’s blog
    Library Systems Manager at the University of Huddersfield
  10. UoL Library Blog – develop, debate, innovate
    University of Leicester

Notes on IP authentication in libraries

Posted on May 20th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

This post follows on from my earlier authentication rant – here’s where I try and get a bit more constructive. Starting with the fundamentals:

IP authentication to electronic library resources… ‘s easy, innit? Nothing to worry about. We just give the details of our IP ranges to publishers, and they allow any computer with an address within that range (i.e., one of our on-campus computers or a mobile device connected via our wifi network) to access site content which is otherwise restricted: for example, a full-text PDF journal article.

Some notes:

(Thank you to Elif Varol for chasing down some of these details across the Internet, and to @aekins and others who supplied their expertise via Twitter and email.)

  1. There are a few different ways of expressing IP ranges (‘notations’); a publisher may specify we give them our IP range(s) using a particular notation:
    • The standard dotted quad notation a.k.a. dot-decimal notation, made up of four eight-bit numbers (octets), generally expressed as decimal numbers, separated by full stops:
      • Full range e.g. 204.245.240.0-204.245.240.255
      • Range within the last octet e.g. 204.245.240.0-255
      • Wild card within the last octet e.g. 204.245.240.* (N.B. these first three are all equivalent to each other.)
      • Ranges and wild cards within higher octets e.g. 204.245.[8-11].* (The square brackets aren’t always necessary.) Some publishers will not accept these more complex ways of expressing ranges, so we have to list each range separately using wild cards only in the last octet, i.e. 204.245.8.*; 204.245.9.*; 204.245.10.*; etc.
    • CIDR notation (much less frequently asked for):
      • e.g. 204.245.8.0/22 (Where /22 represents the number of most significant bits—i.e. counting from the left—which are common to both the top and bottom ends of the IP range. I’ve not expressed that very well, but that’s how my brain deals with it! In the above example, the range: 204.245.8.0-204.245.11.255 expressed in binary is: 11001100.11110101.00001000.00000000-11001100.11110101.00001011.11111111 (You can see that the 22 most significant bits [in red] are common to the top and bottom addresses of the range. There’s a useful IP-range-to-CIDR converter tool at: ip2cidr.com)
  2. But is it safe to hand out the details of our IP address ranges like this? I’ve certainly seen one ICT colleague’s eyelid twitch when I’ve mentioned this is what libraries do (and have been doing so for ages).
  3. Some university libraries route all of their web traffic through a small number of proxy servers, so that all users broadcast a handful of individual IP addresses – this reduces the complexity of the information they need to give out to publishers. Apparently (though no-one appears to want to give me a list), the University of Lincoln now has a single ‘apparent‘ external IP address for each University building (i.e. some 45+ buildings, not including agricultural buildings) and one for each wifi network. This ought to make it possible to associate usage with an individual building or group of buildings. Does anyone do this? Strikes me it would be very useful to be able to say, for instance, “X% of usage of ScienceDirect comes from within our Science building”. We have at least one resource where usage is restricted to within libraries only – luckily, we do know the ‘apparent’ IPs of our own buildings.
  4. Any change to a library’s IP addresses will have to be communicated to a large number of publishers. We have in our ERM spreadsheet an (almost-certainly incomplete) list of publishers who hold our IP ranges along with their contact details, so that we know who to inform if there’s a change… but this process worries me; it’s asking to have errors and inconsistencies introduced. I’d much rather register or publicise my IP ranges once and centrally (on the University’s own servers, or via a shared registry service like OCLC’s WorldCat Registry) and have all publishers pick them up from there.
  5. The vast majority of IP-authenticated resources perform this authentication automatically, but a tiny few oddities (including the handful of engineering journals we take via the IEEE, I think) seem to require that the user clicks on an explicit ‘authenticate via IP’ link first. Why?
  6. There’s an obvious problem for users who move between on-campus and off-campus computers (i.e., most users!); they will not get the same seamless access to restricted content, and some resources (e.g. Index to Theses) may only be available from within our IP range. How do libraries handle the transition between IP and other kinds of authentication for off-campus users? Through ‘user education’ (lovely phrase that, covers up all sorts of system difficulties!), or by trying to design a system that recognises the user’s location (“geoaware”) and routes accordingly to hide the transition? There was a useful JISC Publisher Interface Study (2009) which explored some of these issues
  7. Proxy tools such as the much-vaunted EZProxy or our own dear LibResProxy (which I’ve been informed are both actually ‘reverse’ proxies [edit: or possibly some other flavour of URL-writing proxy??] – my eyes started to glaze over at that point…) are a useful bodge for providing simple off-campus access on the same basis as on-campus IP lookup: effectively they ‘mask’ the user’s actual, off-campus, out-of-range IP with an in-range, institutional IP address by routing the user (who must log in to the proxy tool first) through a server on the campus network. Libraries that use EZProxy swear that it simplifies things greatly for the user, is very reliable, and reduces the number of support queries compared with e.g. Athens/Shibboleth… but at the same time, proxies seem to be looked down upon by the library/information ‘establishment’. I understand that they don’t offer the same opportunities as federated access for personalising the user experience; they can be slow, too. But my suspicion is that users will go for straightforward, predictable, reliable full-text access over personalisation, nearly every time.
  8. All of what I know about IP address authentication applies to IPv4. What, if anything needs to change to take account of IPv6?

Three quarks for Muster MARC!

Posted on April 21st, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

My esteemed, gracious and talented colleague Mr. Jackson is not happy.

He’s not happy because I’ve asked him to do something which he thinks is an awful, depressing, retrograde step. I’ve asked him to add a MARC export function to Jerome.

Nick’s argument in a nutshell (he won’t mind me paraphrasing):

  • MARC is awful: truly awful. It’s holding back humanity’s (and libraries’) progress. We shouldn’t be doing anything to prolong its life. #marcmustdie

My argument in a nutshell:

  • For better or worse, libraries still use MARC, and this will be a useful facility for libraries who want to consume our open data straight into their existing Library Management Systems.

What does the studio audience think? Should Jerome serve up MARC (actually, MARCXML. I’m not a monster.) because someone, somewhere might want to consume it, or should we take a stand and insist on providing only decent, sane data formats from now on?

For anyone who’s blissfully unaware of MARC (MAchine-Readable Cataloging) formats, read this. Then read this, this, and this. Then go and have a lie down in a darkened room.

I don’t love MARC. More than anything, I don’t really understand it (I have a cataloguer to do that for me). But it still has currency in libraries. #shouldmarcdie?

List of UK public libraries with downloadable e-books (mashup)

Posted on February 21st, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

This week, I spotted that my local public library service (Lincolnshire County Council) have launched an e-books service. Hooray for them – they’ve also recently upgraded all the PCs and introduced wifi in my local branch library.

With many local libraries being cut or placed under threat, and their technological relevance criticised (often ignorantly), even by the PM, it’s great to see investment going in to library technology in Lincolnshire.

The Lincolnshire county libraries e-books site is at: https://lincolnshire.libraryebooks.co.uk/

(It’s not obvious who provides this e-books platform, but it appears Warwickshire County Council—and possibly no-one else—has chosen the same provider.)

It got me wondering: how many UK public libraries currently provide an e-book download service?

To try and find out, I’ve created a (publicly-editable) Google spreadsheet wiki, containing the names of the 232 top-level local authorities in the UK, along with a column indicating whether or not they provide an e-book download service {1|0}, and columns for the URL and provider of that service.

At the time of writing, there are 48 public library e-book download services listed. If I’ve missed one that you know about, you can edit the spreadsheet yourself.

Screenshot of the public library downloadable e-books spreadsheet on Google Docs

I’ve then used a simple, 4-part Yahoo! Pipe to turn the CSV data output from that spreadsheet into an RSS feed containing only those councils that do provide downloadable e-books.

Screenshot of my public library e-book download Yahoo! Pipe

The finished RSS feed is at: http://bit.ly/e9U2GP

Screenshot of the RSS feed of public library e-book download services

Next, if I can remember my way round the GeoNames/Nearby.org.uk/Google Maps APIs, I’ll have a go at plotting the e-book-providing libraries on a map.

In the background (of self service)

Posted on December 23rd, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

Proposed new background images for the Library’s self-service machines, tailored for each campus library. We hope to start using these (or some very much like them)—alongside greatly-improved touch-screen routines for borrowing and returning books—early in 2011.

1. GCW University Library, Brayford Pool

totem_gcw

2. Theology Reading Room, Chad Varah House

(Notional – we don’t have self service machines at CVH [yet?].)
totem_chad

3. Riseholme Park Campus Library

totem_riseholme

4. Hull Campus Library

totem_hull

5. Holbeach Campus Library

totem_holbeach
Merry Christmas.