Posts Tagged ‘tools’
Posted on January 31st, 2013 by Paul Stainthorp
A new version of “Linking You” (lncn.eu), our home-grown URL shortener, has just been launched by ICT services/LNCD.
Features of the new lncn.eu include:
- Links can now only be created by University of Lincoln staff and students – you have to be signed in to create short URLs. (The links themselves remain publicly accessible.) This change has been made to prevent misuse of the service. There are plenty of public URL shorteners if you can’t sign in to use lncn.eu.
- Once you’re signed in, you can see a list of all the short URLs you’ve already created.
- If you’re using the lncn.eu API to create short URLs, or using lncn.eu in a Twitter client (e.g. Twitterfeed) you now need to use an API key to validate your requests.
- You can now easily specify a custom URL when you minify a URL (e.g. http://lncn.eu/ezproxy). Click on the “Options” button to access this feature.
- It’s still possible to minify URLs including a wildcard – this is a bit of a hidden feature, but very useful. To use this feature, replace the wildcard part of the original URL with {{x}} – for example, you could minify the long Amazon search URL:
- http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=sr_adv_b?search-alias=stripbooks&unfiltered=1&__mk_en_GB=%C5M%C5Z%D5%D1&field-keywords=&field-author=&field-title=&field-isbn={{x}}&field-publisher=&node=&field-binding_browse-bin=&field-subject=&emi=&field-dateop=&field-datemod=&field-dateyear=&sort=&Adv-Srch-Books-Submit.x=0&Adv-Srch-Books-Submit.y=0
- …it would then be possible to link to books on Amazon, by ISBN, using the URL format: http://lncn.eu/dmvx/XXXXXXXXXXXXX – where the Xs are any ISBN. Examples:
- Finally, there’s an upgraded browser bookmarklet for the service. The look and feel of lncn.eu has also been updated to the newest version of the University’s Common Web Design (CWD).
From the ‘old’ lncn.eu:

To the new:

Tags: Amazon, API, LNCD, lncn.eu, tools, Twitterfeed, URL shortener, wildcard
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Posted on May 17th, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp
Last week I attended a free ‘
licensing clinic‘ in Birmingham, organised by the
Discovery programme – mainly as a means of kick-starting my brain into considering the copyright/licensing issues around the CLOCK project. Here are my notes.
- The Jerome project addressed licensing in April, 2011, and the situation hasn’t really changed for us: we’re still intending to expose as much of our bibliographic data as possible using a properly open licence such as CC0.
- “The licensing of data is an interesting one, since we run into a whole bunch of questions around who actually owns the information in our catalogue. Since it’s all factual information (and you can’t copyright a fact) then surely it’s a free for all – except that EU law introduces a curve ball in the form of database right. Broadly speaking this provides specific protection for collections of records, but not the records themselves.”
- Ed Chamberlain and the COMET project also addressed licensing and the ownership of MARC records: work that we should revisit.
- The JISC Open Bibliographic Data Guide (obd.jisc.ac.uk) provides very clear advice and information useful in creating an open data business case. E.g.:
- “[…]if we presume that the rationale for publication is to ensure the widest possible dissemination then adoption of a generic open data license (such as Open Data Commons or CC0) is the most effective way to make the set of potential uses unambiguous. Restrictive licenses are counter-productive[…]“
- There is some very helpful guidance coming out of the Discovery project around building a business case for open discovery. This was summarised at the recent Discovery programme meeting (also in Birmingham) by David Kay –
- N.B. I’ll revisit this in a future blog post. I’m getting almost surprisingly interested in the problem of ‘selling’ the idea of open bib data to an institution, and I’ve found the Discovery work on business cases increasingly useful.
- At Lincoln in March, 2012, we had a very useful visit from Sander van der Waal of OSS Watch where we discussed the University of Lincoln’s approach to openness (Open Source, Open Access, as well as Open Data). Joss Winn is following this work up with the University’s IP manager with a view to writing a University policy on open licensing of our IP.
- Related to the ‘business case’ aspect is the work of LNCD (and also discussions I’ve had with Ed Chamberlain recently) about how to ensure sustainability of open services in a technical sense – what sort of systems architecture and processes do we need in place, and how do we work with university ICT support departments to ensure that projects become institutionally-supported services when it’s important for them to do so?
- At this, Birmingham event, Chris Banks of the University of Aberdeen presented about the benefits and challenges of sharing from a library director’s perspective. I was particularly interested in the metaphor of “metadata as currency”: how are aggregators creating value based on the mass accumulation of metadata, and how are they selling that value back to libraries? See Chris’s blog for more. Aberdeen are clearly doing a lot around the analysis of e-resources usage and relating it back to their library strategy / information literacy, etc.
- Paul Miller (Cloud of Data): one key quote “amateurs tend to do a better job of aggregating content than institutions” (e.g. collections of images on Flickr). This may be in part because individuals don’t have the same risk-averse approach, but whatever the reason
- Barrister Frances Davey gave us a quick run-through of IP law as it relates to data. Key quote: “the legal repercussions of publishing data openly are pretty much nil“. Fear and uncertainty poisons initiative! Frances also touched on the business / reputation-management arguments for having an active approach to open data: people might well be getting bad copies of your data already (via screenscraping) – release it yourself and take control of the quality. Example of the British Library choosing a CC0 licence precisely because of the lack of an attribution clause – then any subsequent re-use is “nothing more to do with us”.
- Then, after lunch, copyright consultant Naomi Korn ran a workshop on the practical aspects of choosing a licence for your data. Naomi spoke about the need to start by deciding how open you want to be as an institution (noting that institutions with a dedicated © person tend to have a greater appetite for risk) – then consider whether you have the resources in place to get where you want to be. Key quote: “Let’s do some attribution mapping!” Some link from Naomi’s workshop:
- At the Birmingham clinic we also discussed the risks (including the risk of doing nothing) and benefits of taking an open approach. My contribution: open bibliographic data enables high-level services to be sold back to universities (c.f. Chris Banks’ notes on metadata aggregation, above). We shouldn’t be scared of this or see it as a reason to not open up our data (we can’t compete with those companies; we want their services and we’re prepared to pay for them!); but we can build lower-level, locally-relevant services as a result of releasing our own open data, and play on the web by web rules – if we don’t make our data open for re-use on the web, we can’t even have the conversation. Lincoln’s approach is entirely around open data as a means to an end: it’s the best and most natural way of sparking off new, innovative services based on unexpected combinations of our own and other people’s data.
- The best example of this so far are the new data-driven staff profiles at Lincoln: but we’re going to need more and more convincing examples if we’re going to make a convincing business case.
- Final overall quote of the day: “Writing your own open licence is an unpleasant form of vanity“.
Tags: #ukdiscovery, benefits, Birmingham, Chris Banks, clinic, CLOCK, COMET, David Kay, discovery, Ed Chamberlain, Frances Davey, IP, IWM, Jerome, Joss Winn, law, licence, licensing, LNCD, Naomi Korn, open data, OSS Watch, Paul Miller, profile, Sander van der Waal, staff profiles, tools, University of Aberdeen
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Posted on March 9th, 2012 by Paul Stainthorp
I’ve been wondering for a while why [national] aggregated/cross-repository search services haven’t really taken off – why aren’t they as well-known as union library catalogue services (e.g. Copac, which is part of the standard librarian’s armoury)?
Is it because aggregated search of repository-only content wouldn’t be particularly useful to researchers; perhaps because Google [Scholar] provides them with what they already need? Is it because no subset of all the repositories in the world would really meet researchers’ needs; i.e., they aren’t interested in finding articles just from one ‘showcase’, country-specific repo search tool? Because it’s too difficult? (Can’t believe that; not compared to the aggregation of catalogue data.) Or because OA is too far off 100% to make it a worthwhile exercise?
It’s certainly not for the want of initiatives and projects to build ‘em. A presentation at the recent UKCoRR members’ meeting made me realise just how many there are.
Here’s a list of ten eleven websites, tools and projects which relate to inter-repository search:
- Google Scholar (scholar.google.com), “a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature” – the de facto cross-repository search tool. Google’s inclusion guidelines for webmasters (inc. of repositories). A journal article about finding repository content via Google (doi:10.1177/0961000606070587).
- Institutional Repository Search (IRS) demonstrator from Mimas (irs.mimas.ac.uk/demonstrator), retrieves content “across 130 UK academic repositories”, from a project completed in 2009.
- KMi CORE (COnnecting REpositories) Portal (core.kmi.open.ac.uk/search), a newer project with its own project website and blog. “The CORE project aims to make it easier to navigate between relevant scientific papers stored in Open Access repositories. ” Recently extended by the ServiceCORE project
- OAIster (oaister.worldcat.org), developed by the library at the University of Michigan and adopted by OCLC in 2009. “More than 23 million records representing digital resources from more than 1,100 contributors.”
- OpenDOAR search (www.opendoar.org/search.php) – using Google’s Custom Search Engine (CSE) to search the full-text of material held in open access repositories listed in the OpenDOAR directory of repositories. At the time of writing this blog post, the service had been temporarily withdrawn since 25 January 2012.
- RepUK (repuk.ukoln.ac.uk), a project to build a central cache of metadata from institutional repositories in the UK (currently harvesting from 159 repositories).
- RIAN (rian.ie), a national portal to the contents of the institutional repositories of the seven university libraries in Ireland; “your route to Open Access Irish research publications” – this is the kind of thing I had in mind: why isn’t there one for the UK?
- ROAR (roar.eprints.org/content.html) – also uses Google’s Custom Search Engine across all 2000-odd repositories registered in ROAR.
- Subject and discipline-specific repositories including such venerable initiatives as arXiv (arxiv.org) and PubMed Central (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc): offering different approaches to aggregating content that—for the most part—ignore the role of the institution and work directly with authors and publishers, respectively.
- Mendeley (www.mendeley.com)… not searching repositories, but achieving much the same result, and, sez Les Carr, spanning the public/institutionalised (OA) and private/social (peer-to-peer) methods of providing access to papers.
- BASE (base.ub.uni-bielefeld.de/en/); “BASE is one of the world’s most voluminous search engines especially for academic open access web resources. BASE is operated by Bielefeld University Library.” (Added at the suggestion of John Murtagh, 12 April 2012)
Any others I’ve missed?
Now let us “thank” OAI-PMH (and quite possibly SWORD, too), for making all of this possible… other shared repository tools and projects include: AEIOU, JULIET, Names, OA-RJ, ORCID, Open Depot, OpenDOAR, ORI, PIRUS2, RoMEO, and about 9,997½ more.
Tags: aggregation, arXiv, CORE, Custom Search Engine, Gopgle Scholar, Ireland, IRS, KMi, Les Carr, Mendeley, Mimas, OAISter, OCLC, OpenDOAR, projects, PubMed Central, repositories, RepUK, RIAN, search, ServiceCORE, tools, union catalogues, University of Michigan
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Posted on December 1st, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
This week sees the formal two-day launch event for the JISC Managing Research Data programme 2011–2013 (the programme which is funding Orbital). It’s being held in the National College for School Leadership, next to the University of Nottingham’s Jubilee Campus.
Unfortunately, after schlepping it from the furthest fringes of Lincolnshire (and then having to go back home for the evening), I was only able to attend a couple of hours of day 1. But it was worth it.
I arrived just in time for a workshop about a number of research data management tools developed/provided by the Digital Curation Centre (DCC). Dr Mansur Darlington, who’s acting as external assessor/consultant to the Orbital project, was also in this workshop and contributed greatly to the discussions. (My Orbital colleagues Joss Winn and Nick Jackson attended the [parallel] workshop on various JANET, Eduserv and UMF SaaS/cloud storage services.)
Slides from this workshop will be posted online. When they’re available I’ll link to them here.
The tools being discussed were:
1. DAF – the Data Asset Framework (www.data-audit.eu)
- A methodology for identifying gaps in an institution’s data management practices; designed to help institutions ‘clarify their thinking’ around how they manage research data.
- N.B. We are already planning to use this methodology within the user requirements analysis workpackage of the Orbital project.
- DAF arose out of recommendations made in the JISC/UKOLN Dealing with Data report (2007): initially the Data Audit Framework, the name was changed because ‘Audit’ was felt to be off-putting, and not an accurate reflection of what DAF is for – now DAF = Data Asset Framework.
- “It’s worth looking at the four DAF pilot implementation projects” (carried out in 2008), because there’s likely to be one that has subject-relevance to your #jiscmrd project. The pilot projects found that most HEIs were at a very early stage (lack of RDM infrastructure; an emphasis on needs-scoping).
- (N.B. the ERIM project at the University of Bath [engineering] used DAF but found it rather daunting and “stopped halfway down the page”(!): since then it has been condensed from a 60-page handbook into a shorter implementation guide. However the Dublin Core-based metadata requirements for datasets in DAF are still rather complex – one suggestion is to “ask fewer questions about more things”: the University of Northampton did something like this; running their own tailored ‘mini-DAF’: broadly following the DAF methodology, but tweaking it to meet their own end and the available resources.)
- Key points:
- Speak to lots of people in as many different roles as possible.
- Use a variety of datagathering techniques (desk research, questionnaires, shadowing researchers, etc.)
- Ask the DCC for tips!
- A freely-available benchmarking tool, designed to help institutions assess strengths and weaknesses in their RDM infrastructure. Developed out of the IDMP: Integrated Data Management Planning toolkit and support project.
- Based on a ‘three legged stool’ model’; i.e. a successful RDM infrastructure will be based on three stable ‘legs’: technical infrastructure, appropriate resources (e.g. staff & skills), and commitment from the institution. An imbalance in any of these ‘legs’ leads to unstable RDM. The tool helps institutions to identify short ‘legs’ and plan to improve them. Identifying these imbalances can also be helpful in providing evidence to your institution that further investment needs to be made in a particular area.
- CARDIO is still effectively in beta, with some tweaks still to make (and perhaps a lack of documentation?) – however some institutions have already found it useful.
- How it works… a co-ordinator registers with the system and initiates the CARDIO assessments. (“If the scale and nature of your research data holdings isn’t known, run a DAF assessment first.”) CARDIO emails participants and asks them to rate a series of statements relating to their institution’s RDM infrastructure. Only once someone has entered their own ratings are they able to view what other people have put. Takes from 30-60 minutes for a full assessment, though it is possible to target shorter sets of questions at particular groups. CARDIO then automatically generates a [customisable] PDF report complete with charts/visualisations of the data.
- A shorther, nine-question ‘mini-CARDIO’ is also available: see the latest issue of JISC Inform.
- A practical, browser-based tool which allows researchers to create and store Data Management Plans (DMPs) for research projects – increasingly, research funders explicity require a DMP (e.g. the Wellcome Trust’s policy on data management).
- Funder- and institution-specific guidance is provided through the website, along with help (“pointers”) on filling in a DMP. Completed plans can be exported in a number of formats.
- Researchers may also be interested in the JISC guidance document, How to develop a Data Management and Sharing Plan – complementary to DMP Online.
- The impression I get is that DMP Online is a tool which will be of practical, day-to-day utility to researchers/groups engaged in funded projects (and to the research offices that support them), whereas the other two tools (DAF/CARDIO) are perhaps aimed more at institutions starting out on the road to developing institutional RDM policies & systems, and/or looking to improve on current practice.
- Some interesting discussions in the workshop:
- Can DMP Online be ‘scaled up’ to work at the level of the institution, rather than the individual researcher? (A couple of projects—at UCL and Oxford—are already looking at extending the toolkit to form a more institutional service.)
- If DMP Online (or other similar tools) make it easier for academics to routinely create DMPs by copying/pasting boilerplate text, is there a danger that writing a DMP becomes a box-ticking exercise (less meaningful/less useful for funders if less consideration given by the researcher)?
- “Who is qualified to peer-review DMPs!?”
More information and help on using all three of these tools can be got by emailing: info@dcc.ac.uk
Then: a cup of tea, a quick catch-up with some colleagues, and to the road/rails again. I’ll be back tomorrow for day 2.
Tags: #jiscmrd, asset, audit, CARDIO, DAF, data management, DCC, Dealing with Data, DMP, DMP Online, Dublin Core, engineering, ERIM, events, IDMP, JISC, JISC Inform, Joss Winn, Jubilee Campus, launch, Liz Lyon, Mansur Darlington, National College for School Leadership, Nick Jackson, Nottingham, Orbital, pilot, programme, projects, research data, research funding, tools, UKOLN, University of Bath, Wellcome Trust
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Posted on May 17th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
From a recent post on Joss Winn’s blog; with no apologies for the cut-and-paste job:
“In January, I [Joss] wrote about how I had written a paper for the university about the role of technology in the context of Student as Producer. The paper included a recommendation that a new team be convened to “further the research, development and support of technology” at the university [...] This was approved.
“I was pleased with the outcome as it means that our current work is being recognised as well as the strategic direction we wish to go in. In terms of resourcing, we will have at least one more full-time (Intern) post and hold a £20K annual budget which will be used to provide grants and bursaries to staff and students, pay for hardware and software as needed and pay for participants to go to conferences to discuss their work and learn from the EdTech community at large. This doesn’t include any external income that we hope to generate.”
The new, as yet unnamed group will include staff from CERD, ICT, the Library, and elsewhere, and will act as a locus for development and support for the use of technology in teaching and learning. We have a timetable for development over this summer (I’ll be writing about that development here). By September…
“…we’ll have a website that offers clear information on what we do, what we’re working on, how to get involved and the ways we can support staff and students at the university. The site will allow you to review all aspects of our projects as well as propose new projects which can be voted up and down according to staff and students’ priority. There will be an application form for you to apply for funding from us and a number of ways for you discuss your ideas on and offline. We’ll be continuing our current provision of staff training, but will be looking to re-develop the sessions into short courses that are useful to both staff and students.”
An important(ish) aspect of the work of the new group will be the way we organise our own work, and the tools we’ll use to plan, manage and document projects in a distributed environment where most of us work in different parts of the university campuses.
“For the Geeks, you might be interested to know that we’ve decided upon a set of tools for managing our work online in a distributed environment where most of us work in different parts of the university campuses [...] We won’t be prescriptive with the tools we adopt, using whatever is appropriate, but with an emphasis on those that offer decent APIs, data portability and good usability.”
Tags: distributed, edutech, funding, groups, Joss Winn, pedagogy, projects, Student as Producer, technology, tools
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Posted on May 4th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
Our first test installation of open-source ‘team collaboration tool’ Open Atrium is at: http://openatrium.online.lincoln.ac.uk/. It’s limited access at the moment. We’re evaluating it as one potential platform for a University of Lincoln VRE.

Tags: collaboration, evaluation, installation, Open Atrium, open source, test, tools, VRE, VRE blog
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Posted on April 20th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
We’re using a free, preview version of a web-based mind mapping tool called MindMeister to plan and make notes for Jerome. Each week, the notes are copied across to our project tracking app (Pivotal Tracker) to form the development iteration for the week.
It’s very rough and ready, but you’re more than welcome to take a look at the Jerome mind map at: http://www.mindmeister.com/92308610/jerome
Tags: applications, iterative development, Jerome blog, mind map, mind mapping, MindMeister, notes, planning, rough, tools
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Posted on February 24th, 2011 by Paul Stainthorp
We’re putting together a few tools to help us to manage our electronic library resources (in particular, the 130+ e-journal packages to which we provide access for our users). It’s electronic resources management without using a dedicated Electronic Resources Management System.
Specifically, we’re introducing:
- A shared Google spreadsheet to store information about each package (authentication method, usage, etc.)
- A list on the University Portal to log and review problems and errors with particular e-resources
- Flowcharts, produced using Microsoft Visio, to help us to develop and fix procedures for dealing with new and changed e-journal packages
- Biannual (April & September) usage/VfM reports for subject librarians and Library SMT
Tags: authentication, e-journals, e-Library, e-resources, electronic resources, ERM, Google Docs, Microsoft Visio, Portal, reporting, tools, usage, VfM
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Posted on December 15th, 2010 by Paul Stainthorp
I’m blogging from the balcony of the Cotton Room, overlooking the atrium of the British Library at St Pancras. (I’ve been attending a meeting in London today, and to save money I booked two single, off-peak train tickets: leaving me with plenty of time to explore the BL.)
I’ve based myself here for the day because:
- “The British Library is committed to making information of all kinds as widely available as possible.” Translation: good, reliable, free wifi FTW.
- I particularly wanted to visit the BL’s “Growing Knowledge: the evolution of research” exhibition (hashtag:#blgk), which is all about innovative tools for digital research. It’s worth a look (you don’t have to visit the smart, white digital exhibition suite at St Pancras; you can register online and explore many of the tools over the Web). There’s some good stuff here: some of the services and discussions could be useful additional material for our own ‘Working on the Web‘ staff workshops, and I’m particularly interested in the Research Information Centre (a still-in-development BL/Microsoft Research project to build a scientific VRE [Virtual Research Environment]): of obvious relevance to the University of Lincoln’s own VRE project work (more about which soon). Register/log in, and you can watch a video about the RIC. I also filled in their evaluation survey for Growing Knowledge.
- The other exhibition on at the moment is Evolving English; a trawl through the historical, social and cultural roots of the English language. It’s fantastic. If you’re at all interested in languages, and you’re in London before April 2011, you should go. I sat in a booth and recorded myself reading a Mr Tickle story, for their English dialect/accent map. (Hashtag:#evolvingenglish)
Tags: #blgk, #evolvingenglish, BL, British Library, research, tools, VRE
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