Ideas….

a blog for me to record thoughts and ideas

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EZ Proxy Config File

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Today I had a friend ask me about EZ Proxy. In trying to help answer her question I came across this lovely wiki page that describes the set up of the file. Its quite useful if i do say so:
http://www2.potsdam.edu/ezproxy/wiki/index.php/EZproxy.cfg

I also noticed that good old Ben Noeske (who I used to work with at Ex Libris) contributed to the page; and knowing what I know about Ben, I feel its quite trustworthy.

Anyway I’m filing it away because one day I hope to have an EZ Proxy Server of my very own.

NE Code4Lib

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Currently in some lightening talks at NECode4Lib

Tim Spalding (Library Thing)

Socail Cataloging…using users to tag books.  Added a section called Common Knowledge.  Essentially things that libraries don’t keep track of or don’t keep track of well.  Not just for books but also for Authors.  This section is a fielded wiki.

Jay “Hussein” Luker (Ex Libris Inc)

URL2Cite http://reallywow.com:5000/slideshow.html

CiteULike.  Bookmark URL and the Plugins scrape metadata from the webpages. Idea is that CiteULike scrapes the metadata and then URL2Cite would take that metadata and put it into a citation format.  Claims that he will blog about it…

Jean Rainwater said that Brown is doing something like this http://freecite.library.brown.edu (they are hoping to get more money from Mellon to expand it)

Also Jay has a cool RDF plugin called tabulator.

WGBH (Courtney Michael, Dov Frede, Chris Beer)

OpenVault — raw interviews, footage, etc from WGBH.  They are trying to tag the information and make it more searchable.  Scholars are concerned about tagging (think librarians and their scholars are the only ones that know anything).  So they allow you to choose LCSH based on the words that you type, however you don’t have to use LCSH.

Jodi Schneider (Amherst College)

Zotero — brief demo of it and how it works.  Zotero is being sued by Thomson http://dltj.org/?s=zotero&searchsubmit=Search

Cassey Bisson (Plymouth State)

Scriblio a way of representing catalogs elsewhere. (works with III without the XML Server!) http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/scriblio/

He also has instructions for the III importer plugin

The documentation is lagging behind the code, but…

After installing Scriblio activate the Scriblio III Importer plugin. Go to Manage > Import > Scriblio III Importer. And follow the steps as they appear in these screenshots: http://flickr.com/photos/scriblio/sets/72157603031251442/

Additionally there is a public library http://collingswoodlib.org/library/60280/welcome/ that is also a consortium using it.  Hmmmmm….

You can also use it for archives.  Beyond Brown Paper (http://beyondbrownpaper.plymouth.edu) uses flickr for the original cataloging, but Haystack (http://archives.colby-sawyer.edu) is entirely self-contained.  Casey hacked it so that there is a data entry screen for the archives to enter data.  Its an interesting way for archives to display their collections.

Michael Klein (BPL)

Solr and Xforms.  Uses them as a way to populate the BPL’s digital library.  He uses Solr to pull information from LC Thesaurus for Graphic Materials (a subject heading system).  Pretty cool…he customized so that Solr doesn’t return a simple list but creates a dynamic list (broader, narrower subject terms).

Jay “Hussein” Luker (Ex Libris Inc)

unAPI.org — quick demo of it.  there is a wordpress plugin that essentially lets you pull xml data from your wordpress blog.  might be useful in conjunction with scriblio.

off to the next meeting (darn it!)

EZProxy and LDAP

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I’ve been dealing with a lot of off-campus access problems and dreaming of having my own ezproxy server.  I was thinking that the best way to sell it is as part of single sign-on (ie students only have to use one login).  So I found an OCLC page on using EZProxy with LDAP.  That reminded me that OCLC is trying to take over the library world (they just purchased the rights to EZProxy.  I hope they don’t try to make users pay for it.