|
« April 20, 2005 | Main | April 22, 2005 » OPACs and XML and MapsSome days, the serendipity is almost too perfect. I woke up this morning to find the following email from Mike Copley waiting for me:
So of course the main reason I’m highlighting Mike’s email is that this is such a cool service from within the catalog! Imagine when RFID and GPS become embedded in everything and you can lead the patron by the ear to the exact location of the item! Until then, though, great job, Mike and NSL! So I’m smiling big as I’m reading his message, but then I get to the last paragraph of his message:
So, echoing the problems that Casey has encountered, the North Shore Libraries took a big step forward on their own but when they migrate to III, they’ll take a step backwards. That’s pretty difficult to swallow in 2005, isn’t it? In part, because I’m sure that like Casey, Mike has lots of great ideas for how to build even further on those cool maps. Which is what I was thinking when I read Lorcan Dempsey’s message to the WEB4LIB mailing list today that ended with the following:
That link he highlights does indeed fall into the “too-damn-cool” category and thanks to Mike’s work, you have a visual quickstart for how library catalogs might provide alternate views for browsing, visual locators, etc. (not through Google Maps itself, but using a similar interface). But in order to roll your own “Library Maps” service, you’ll need a more standard XML backend, which is why it’s so surprising to me that Innovative lacks such a beast. Hopefully this will change in 2005 (which I know is easy for someone on the outside of the company to say out loud, but I’m saying it anyway). And just for the record, in last night’s IM conversation, Casey and I both agreed that everyone we’ve met at Innovative is great. I pick on III because they’re the vendor for my consortium, but I still respect what they do. I just want them to do a few other things a little faster. ;-) Slides and RSS?I have a library that currently uses a large LCD screen on the wall next to the circ desk to display events, notices, etc. on Powerpoint slides that run continuously. They'd also like to display headlines at the bottom of the screen using RSS, but we're not sure how to accomplish this. Any ideas? TIA! We Don't Serve Your Kind HereRyanair Bans Work Phone Charging "Budget airline Ryanair has banned its staff from charging their phones at work, saying it is an inappropriate use of office time.... Regardless of whether anyone has "batted an eyelid" or not, this is a stupid policy that makes Ryanair sound like a stupid company headed by a clueless PHB. And guess what? Your library sounds the same way if you tell patrons (of any age) that they can't IM from your library because that's not a valid use of your public computers. You're basically telling people that their choice of communication channel isn't allowed and that they should go elsewhere because you won't be serving them today. |
Spreading the meme: Why You Should Fall to Your Knees and Worship a Librarian About Jenny Chicago Sun-Times article What Is a Shifted Librarian? A Shifted Reading List Presentations and Articles Ye Olde Shifted Librarian Moblog! TSL Disclaimer Virtual Jenny AIM Me at cybrarygal Email Me del.icio.us Jenny Facebook Jenny Flickr Jenny Furl Jenny Linked In Jenny Twitter Jenny Popular Pages What's on My Treo 600 Library Services on the Treo 600 Life in the Treo Lane On Being the Digital Job Radio 101 Docs My Past Life Jenny's Cybrary Librarians' Site du Jour (the original library blog!) Syndicate/Subscribe Subscribe to the RSS feed |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
