Posts Tagged ‘social networking’

UKCoRR are getting social

Posted on July 15th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

This is a copy of a post that I wrote for the UKCoRR (UK Council of Research Repositories) blog, at: http://ukcorr.blogspot.com/

While UKCoRR’s “official” web presence is in the shop for repairs, we’ve been taking tentative steps to securing UKCoRR a space on some of the big social websites. In no particular order, we now have profiles on:

Rather than obsess and worry about whether to engage with these (or any other social sites: Google+, anyone?), the committee are taking the time-honoured “just do it” approach, and assuming hoping that our fellow UKCoRR members—inherently social creatures all!—will naturally gravitate to using those sites with which they’re most comfortable.

…none of this is intended to replace in any way the existing tools for UKCoRR networking which have already proved themselves so useful: the events and the members’ mailing list.

Q. Where else on the open web should UKCoRR plant its flag?

Next up: news of what we have planned for the main UKCoRR web site.

Paul Stainthorp
UKCoRR Web & Publicity Officer

If you don’t tweet, you don’t eat.

Posted on June 11th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve been told that asking questions is a good idea, so here goes:

Q. Why is the use of email compulsory for staff in universities, while Twitter/blogging is optional?

Taking the register

Posted on May 23rd, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

In talking about authentication issues, the notion kept coming up that single, central, shared registries of information about libraries (e.g. the WorldCat Registry) could be valuable in helping publishers to make it easier for users to navigate to subscribed content via their own institution’s login option(s).

This spurred me to thinking: in what central/shared registries are our library details held, and what use can I [and our students/staff] make of this information?

This’ll be one of those blog posts that I’m still adding to in a year’s time, as I remember more stuff. I’ve(And a passing thought – wouldn’t it be cool if there was a single über-registry for libraries that brought all of these details together using a single API? Anyone?)

The University of Lincoln has library information registered with:

1. ISIL – International Standard Identifier for Libraries

An ISIL is like an ISBN or ISSN for an entire library: a way of uniquely and unambiguously identifying “an organization, or one of its subordinate units, throughout its life“. We have an ISIL for each of our five libraries, assigned to us a year ago by the British Library (the UK national agency for the ISIL). We use them for RFID stock control; to associate a copy of a book with its home library. The ISIL standard is ISO 15511:2009. Our five ISILs are:

GB-UkLiUGCW University of Lincoln: Great Central Warehouse University Library
GB-UkLiUTRR University of Lincoln: Theology Reading Room, Chad Varah House
GB-UkLiURPC University of Lincoln: Riseholme Park Campus Library
GB-UkSnHOC University of Lincoln: Holbeach Campus Library
GB-UkHlHUC University of Lincoln: Hull Campus Library

2. LibraryThing local

LibraryThing local (www.librarything.com/local) is a user-maintained directory and “gateway to thousands of local bookstores, libraries and book festivals“. LibraryThing users can create and edit entries for individual libraries, browse libraries by geographical area (including via a nice Google Maps display), add libraries to a list of favourites, and subscribe to RSS feeds of library events in their area (e.g.). We don’t really make use of these features – we don’t run a lot of ‘public’ events at the moment.

We’ve had directory entries since 2009 for four out of our five libraries, which I’ve “claimed” using my own LT account – writing this, I’ve noticed that the Theology Reading Room doesn’t have an entry.

  1. University of Lincoln – GCW University Library
  2. University of Lincoln – Theology Reading Room [no entry]
  3. University of Lincoln – Riseholme Park Campus Library
  4. University of Lincoln – Hull Campus Library
  5. University of Lincoln – Holbeach Campus Library

3. OpenURL registry

Our OpenURL link resolver (EBSCO LinkSource) is registered with the OpenURL Router service, maintained by EDINA for all UK HE and FE institutions. The registry holds details of our base URL for constructing links, our preferred link resolver button image Find it @ Lincoln, and our authentication details (UK Federation scope and IP ranges).

Registry entry at:

Service providers can construct OpenURLs for our users with the base URL: http://openurl.ac.uk/

4. Talis Silkworm Directory

We have (had?) entries in the Talis Silkworm Directory (directory.­talis.­com) for all five of our libraries. This is (was?) a community-driven open directory of information about libraries, that powers (powered?) mashups like Philip Adams’ SCONUL Access libraries maps on the De Montfort University library website.

As you can probably tell from my present/past tense confusion above, I don’t know if this directory is still operational. I’d heard it was defunct some time ago, and it now appears that the directory.talis.com subdomain has been switched off.

5. Social networking websites

The GCW University Library has a page on Foursquare, the “location-based mobile platform that makes cities easier to use and more interesting to explore”. An interesting one this – it’s not a library-focused service, and not one we ‘control’ (though the official @unilincoln Twitter account is listed as ‘staff’), but probably the site that most of our users will interact with.

We also have a Flickr profile: I used it to upload a set of (mainly) historical photos of the GCW building, back in October/November 2008. I haven’t used it since. We’ve never bothered with specific Library accounts on Twitter or Facebook*.

6. UK Access Management Federation

We’re a member of the UK Access Management Federation: this controls all sorts of authentication to third-party electronic resources and comes with its own set of jargon:

7. WorldCat Registry

This is the newest one on me: although I think I remember someone from OCLC (Mark Allcock?) talking about it at the first UK Mashed Library event in 2008; it was only a Twitter conversation last week that promopted me to look at it in earnest.

Again, four out of our five libraries already have profiles (which I’ve now “claimed”). I’m still exploring the site, and I haven’t yet updated/registered all of our details, so I’m not entirely sure what benefits we can get from it – I’d appreciate any advice from WorldCat Registry old hands. I don’t understand how the WorldCat Registry relates to the WorldCat Affiliate Tools—if at all—either.

  1. University of Lincoln, GCW University Library
  2. University of Lincoln, Theology Reading Room [no entry]
  3. University of Lincoln, Riseholme Park Campus Library
  4. University of Lincoln, Hull Campus Library
  5. University of Lincoln, Holbeach Campus Library

8. Document supply (added 23 May 2011)

Owen Stephens suggested this one. We’re listed in the British Library’s Directory of Library Codes for document supply, where we have our own identifier (it’s HL/C-3). I’m sure my colleagues in inter-library loans won’t hit me for not knowing that off the top of my head.

I’m all about the Web

Posted on January 13th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve started to use the links feature of this WordPress site to keep a record of my presence on a whole range of other external websites, blogs, wikis, and social networking sites, which I’ll add to as I register a new account (or remember existing registrations).

You should be able to view the list of links on the right-hand side of http://paulstainthorp.com/

Screenshot of my links

22 links and counting. I’ve tried (and been reasonably successful so far) to use the same account name (pstainthorp) for all my registrations.

Q. Where are you on the Web? How do you keep track?

Why I’m giving up on Facebook (again)

Posted on October 12th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve suspended my Facebook account because I’ve been finding it increasingly (a) difficult to keep on top of its ever-changing privacy settings; (b) redundant: I get far better mileage from Twitter et al.; and (c) an irritating intrusion instead of a pleasure.

These messages—which I saw when I tried to deactivate my account—only confirmed that I’m right to switch off (click on the image for a bigger view).

Facebook screenshot: all my friends will miss me, apparently

I know it’s a ‘joke’, but emotional blackmail from a social networking website, I don’t need.

I’ve set myself a calendar reminder: if I’ve not felt the need to reinstate my account by this time next year (i.e. 12 October 2011), I’m going to set about deleting my Facebook presence completely and permanently.

LibraryThings (can only get better)

Posted on September 8th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

I’ve recently rekindled my relationship with LibraryThing. Enough to pay the $25 suggested fee for lifetime membership.

I’ve commented in the past that I don’t understand why more library people—even those who don’t ‘get’ general social networking—aren’t into LibraryThing in a big way.

“From a personal profile displaying your own book collections (complete with cover images, tagging, and full bibliographic detail), via recommendations based on the similarity of your collections with others’, to a range of APIs (including free book cover images) by way of group forums and a worldwide library directory… there’s a lot here that libraries can use to enhance their services.”

So, I’ve populated my profile; a bit po-faced it is:

“I’m the electronic resources librarian at the University of Lincoln, UK. I like to read books on popular science / history of science, technology & engineering, biology/ecology (especially aquatic biology and entomology), languages, local history, railways, and some science fiction. I live in Lincolnshire.”

…and I’ve started adding, tagging and rating my books. (I haven’t got into writing reviews yet, and I don’t expect I ever will: I haven’t got the patience or the attention span.) I’ve used it as an opportunity to weed my bookshelf quite severely, too; I don’t really fetishize books-as-objects and—with a few exceptions—I don’t really care about keeping books once I’ve read them, so a lot of stuff is now boxed up to go [back] to the charity shops.

Screenshot of my LibraryThing profile page

I’ve organised my books into collections (a great improvement to LibraryThing it was when they came along):

If you want to browse my books or connect with me, I’m “pstainthorp” on LibraryThing (as I am in most places).

Old site, new site

Posted on July 22nd, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp

Screenshot of a page from my old websiteI’ve decided to start maintaining again my personal website, mainly as a register of all the little bits of work I get involved in. This does mean it might not always make fascinating reading (unless you’re transfixed by digital library management and development…), but at least I’ll have a permanent record of things to refer back to.

My original website was a series of plain HTML documents; now instead of maintaining my own installation of WordPress I’m using the University of Lincoln’s (i.e. my employer’s) WordPress MU / BuddyPress server at blogs.lincoln.ac.uk, but mapped to my own domain. This way I can participate in the social-networking features of BuddyPress, while still maintaining my own, personal online presence outside the University.