https://wiki.code4lib.org/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Wickr&feedformat=atomCode4Lib - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T14:54:27ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.26.2https://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=48125MediaWiki:Sidebar2023-03-28T22:13:45Z<p>Wickr: </p>
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<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** https://2023.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2023<br />
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** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=47849MediaWiki:Sidebar2022-04-06T21:52:28Z<p>Wickr: </p>
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<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** https://2022.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2022<br />
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** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=47572MediaWiki:Sidebar2020-11-30T22:23:26Z<p>Wickr: </p>
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<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** https://2021.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2021<br />
** https://2020.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2020<br />
** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=47571Main Page2020-11-30T22:20:20Z<p>Wickr: /* Code4Lib 2021 Conference */</p>
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<!-- PORTAL LIST ON RIGHT-HAND SIDE --><br />
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| style="width:20%; font-size:95%;vertical-align:top; " |<br />
* [[#About Code4Lib|About Code4Lib]]<br />
* [[#Software Usage and Documentation|Software Usage and Documentation]]<br />
* [[#Current topics|Current topics]]<br />
* [[#Other Code4Lib Sites|Other Code4Lib Sites]]<br />
| style="width:13%; font-size:95%;" |<br />
* [[#Code4Lib 2021 Conference|2021 Conference]]<br />
* [[#Local / Regional Groups|Local / Regional Groups]]<br />
* [[#Interest Groups|Interest Groups]]<br />
* [[#Earlier Conferences and events|Earlier Conferences and events]]<br />
|}<br />
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<!-- ABOUT --><br />
{| id="mp-upper" style="width: 100%; margin:4px 0 0 0; background:none; border-spacing: 0px;"<br />
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{| id="mp-left" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:#f5fffa;"<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== About Code4Lib ==<br />
<br />
* [[About Code4Lib]] - Background and history of the community<br />
* [[A Guide for the Perplexed]] - Building skills for working with library technologies<br />
* [[How to hack code4lib]] - For those newer to the community<br />
* [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m-9VtL7L_fUxl2hTF_YZSdFRfucaLtmHvLSzom6XPVM/edit?pli=1 Code4Lib Indoctrination] (This is a Google doc open to all including anonymous feedback.)<br />
**"How do we make code4lib a more inclusive place for newcomers? <br/> Or, how do we quickly indoctrinate newbies to our values and ways of doing things?" <br />
**Suggestions, ideas, and follow-up actions solicited.<br />
* [[One recommended tool/resource for n00bs]] - For new coding librarians/library Coders<br />
* [[Mentorship Program]]<br />
* [[Skill Sharing Clubs]] - Find people with similar interests in your field.<br />
* [[Zoia or the Code4Lib IRC bot]]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Software Usage and Documentation ==<br />
<br />
* [[Umlaut]] - OpenURL link resolving middleware<br />
* [[:Category:Patterns|Patterns for Collaborative Code]] - Patterns to make your open source 'more open', more amenable to distributed development and use at multiple institutions without forking. <br />
* [[ILS Documentation]]<br />
* [[OSS Directory]]<br />
* [[Working with MARC]]<br />
* [[Rogue]] - principles for standards creation<br />
* [[ProjectManagement]] - list of project management and issue tracking software that are frequently mentioned on the Code4Lib mailinglist<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Current topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Code4Lib Regional Meeting Streaming]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib Website Update]]<br />
* [[OCLC Policy Change]]<br />
* [[SirsiDynix: Integrated Library System Platforms on Open Source]]<br />
* [[Parsing Library Data]]<br />
* [[Robots Are Our Friends]]<br />
* [[Libraries Sharing Code]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib Tagline brainstorm]]<br />
* [[Fiscal Continuity]]<br />
** [[Fiscal Sponsorship Working Group]]<br />
* [[Accessibility]]<br />
* [[Teaching beginners]] <br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Other Code4Lib Sites ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/ code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://planet.code4lib.org planet.code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org journal.code4lib.org]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Code4Lib Journal ==<br />
<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib Journal|Code4Lib Journal]] - information and working documents<br />
<br />
|}<br />
| style="border:1px solid transparent;" |<br />
| class="MainPageBG" style="width:45%; border:1px solid #cedff2; background:#f5faff; vertical-align:top;"|<br />
<br />
{| id="mp-right" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:#f5faff;"<br />
<br />
==Code4Lib 2021 Conference==<br />
{{Category:Code4Lib2021}}<br />
* [[How_To_Plan_A_Code4LibCon|How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Local / Regional Groups ==<br />
<br />
=== United States ===<br />
* [[Colorado|code4libcolorado]] - Colorado state and surrounding areas<br />
* [[NEC4L|New England Code4lib]] - New England<br />
* [[NYC|Code4LibNYC]] - NYC and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Code4lib_Mid-Atlantic|Code4Lib Mid-Atlantic]] - Philadelphia and the Greater Tri-State Area<br />
* [[MDC|Code4libMDC]] - Maryland, Washington D.C, Virginia, and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Southeast|Code4LibSE]] - North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, Well, you get the idea<br />
* [[Midwest|Code4Lib Midwest]] - Wherever that is...<br />
* [[Code4Lib_Chicago|Chicago]] - Chicago is a city in the Midwest<br />
* [[South_Central|Code4Lib South Central]] - Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, New Mexico<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/pnwcode4lib?hl=en PNWCode4Lib] - Pacific Northwest<br />
* [[Western|Code4Lib West]] - California North and South<br />
<br />
=== Canada ===<br />
<br />
* [[GreatEastern|Code4Lib Great Eastern]] - Atlantic Provinces<br />
* [[North|Code4lib North]] - Ontario and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Edmonton|Code4LibYEG]] - Edmonton, Alberta<br />
* [[BC|Code4Lib BC]] - British Columbia<br />
<br />
=== Europe ===<br />
* [[NL|Code4Bib]] - Dutch Code4Bib<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/ikr-fejlesztok/ Code4lib.hu] - Group of Hungarian library developers<br />
<br />
=== Asia/Pacific ===<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.jp/ Code4Lib Japan]<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/code4glam Code4GLAM Australia] - coders, hackers, developers and technologists in the Australian GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums) sector.<br />
<br />
=== Middle East ===<br />
* [[Qatar|Code4Lib Qatar]] - Doha ''(new in 2018)''<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Interest Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[ILS_Interop|ILS Interoperability]] - A group working to develop an infrastructure for interoperating between discovery layers and integrated library systems.<br />
* [[Open_Source_Book_Widgets|Open Source Book Widgets]] - A list of open source book widgets<br />
* [[Discovery|Open Source Discovery]] - Open Source application to enhance and support "discovery" in libraries<br />
* [[Mobile_Apps|Mobile Applications]] - A group interested in mobile web and native application development for libraries<br />
* [[Sources_Of_Metadata|Sources Of Metadata]] - list of api's and sources of interest to libraries<br />
* [[Fiscal_Continuity|Fiscal Continuity]] - A group that explored from 2016 to 2017 whether and how to make long-term fiscal arrangements for conferences (and perhaps other activities)<br />
* [[Fiscal_Sponsorship_Working_Group|Fiscal Sponsorship Working Group]] - A group formed to implement a fiscal sponsorship agreement per the results of the [[Fiscal_Continuity#Fiscal_Options_Vote|fiscal options vote]] in late 2017<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Earlier Conferences and events ==<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2020|Code4Lib 2020]] Pittsburgh, PA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2019|Code4Lib 2019]] San Jose, CA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2018|Code4Lib 2018]] Washington, DC<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2017|Code4Lib 2017]] Los Angeles, CA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2016|Code4Lib 2016]] Philadelphia, PA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2015|Code4Lib 2015]] Portland, OR<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2014|Code4Lib 2014]] Raleigh, NC<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2013|Code4Lib 2013]] Chicago, IL<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2012|Code4Lib 2012]] Seattle, WA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2011|Code4Lib 2011]] Bloomington, IN<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2010|Code4Lib 2010]] Asheville, NC<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2009|Code4Lib 2009]] Providence, RI<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2008|Code4Lib 2008]] Portland, OR<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2007|Code4Lib 2007]] Athens, GA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2006|Code4Lib 2006]] Corvallis, OR<br />
[[Conference Financial History At A Glance]]<br />
<br />
=== Older Conference T-Shirt Designs ===<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/node/235 2008 (Portland, Oregon)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/code4lib08.gif winning design]<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/node/146 2007 (Athens, Georgia)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/code4lib2007-7.jpg winning design]<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/tshirts 2006 (Corvalis, Oregon)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/t-shirt.png winning design]<br />
<br />
=== Other workshops ===<br />
* [http://barcamp.org/SearchCampDC SearchCampDC] - barcamp style event in DC with usual suspects from code4lib<br />
* [[code4lib/elag2010]] - 1-day code4lib preconference at elag2010<br />
<br />
== Archived topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Logo Design Process]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[AdminToDo]] - ideas and tasks for maintaining the Code4Lib sites</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Category:Code4Lib2021&diff=47570Category:Code4Lib20212020-11-30T22:13:34Z<p>Wickr: add year</p>
<hr />
<div>{{Conference<br />
|URL=https://2021.code4lib.org/<br />
|Start Date=March 22 2021<br />
|End Date=March 26 2021<br />
|Location=Virtual<br />
|Contact=[[Code4Lib_2021_Conference_Committees#Planning_Committee|2021 Planning Committee]]<br />
}}<br />
* [[Code4Lib_2021_Conference_Committees | 2021 Conference Committees]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Conferences]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2020_Code4Lib_T-Shirt_Design_Competition&diff=473462020 Code4Lib T-Shirt Design Competition2020-01-24T17:39:25Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>Starting Friday, January 10, 2020, we are issuing a two week long open call for a logo design that will be featured on the front of the Code4Lib 2020 Conference t-shirt. The winning logo will be based on a popular vote, which will commence after the submission process closes. <br />
<br />
Please submit your high-quality image to the [[#Submissions|Submissions]] section of this wiki page. You can host the image yourself or use the [[Special:Upload|Upload file]] feature of the wiki. Be sure to include your name and email address!<br />
<br />
'''SUBMISSIONS WILL CLOSE AT MIDNIGHT EASTERN TIME ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 24'''<br />
<br />
== Details ==<br />
<br />
* Along with your image, name, and email address, you can add a line or two of explanatory text, color specifications, etc., which will be included with your design when voting begins.<br />
* Place a horizontal rule (----) on a separate line after your submission.<br />
* Original art only, please!<br />
* Maximum 2 colors<br />
* The screen-printers generally need vector art files (ai, .cdr, .eps & .pdf). <br />
<br />
The t-shirt color will (probably) be black, but we can look into changing the color depending on the design that is ultimately selected. If the winning design's assumed color is something other than the traditional black, we will try to get the t-shirts in the requested color. If that color is not feasible, the logo will default to white or gray, depending on the requested design contrast, on a black t-shirt. <br />
<br />
(Please stick to a color scheme that folks who are colorblind will be able to see.)<br />
<br />
==Sample Submission==<br />
Joe Ouroboros, joe@loopback.edu :<br />
<br />
[[Image:Reset-200.png]]<br />
<br />
This is my awesome design. It'll win one of these years.<br />
-----<br />
Not sure how to submit your image? Check out https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Editing_pages for more information about editing a page! Here's a template for what the wikitext should look like when you submit your image:<br />
Name, email address :<br />
<nowiki>[[Image:Name of image file you uploaded]]</nowiki><br />
Explanatory text<br />
<nowiki>-----</nowiki><br />
== Submissions ==<br />
<br />
Jenny Brandon, jbrandon@msu.edu :<br />
[[Image:Code4liblogo_brandonThumb.png]]<br />
<br />
Image is reminiscent of the smelting of steel, which Pittsburgh is known for.<br />
I have the Illustrator file, wouldn't allow upload of .ai file.<br />
<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
<br />
Scott Carlson, scottythered@gmail.com:<br />
<br />
[[Image:Scottcarlsondesign.png|500px]] [[Image:Scottcarlsonshirt.png|500px]]<br />
<br />
A love-letter to Pittsburgh, cultural home of the modern zombie.<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
Jon McIntire, mcintire@andrew.cmu.edu:<br />
<br />
[[Image:Code4lib warhol soup pittsburgh.jpg|500px]]<br />
<br />
An homage to Pittsburgh's very own, Andy Warhol.<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
Jon McIntire, mcintire@andrew.cmu.edu:<br />
<br />
[[Image:Code4lib pittsburgh yellow.jpg|500px]]<br />
<br />
What's more Pittsburgh than an aerial view of downtown in black and yellow? The steelmark has also been incorporated into the code4lib logo.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2020_Code4Lib_T-Shirt_Design_Competition&diff=473382020 Code4Lib T-Shirt Design Competition2020-01-23T20:14:04Z<p>Wickr: Added Jon's Warhol design</p>
<hr />
<div>Starting Friday, January 10, 2020, we are issuing a two week long open call for a logo design that will be featured on the front of the Code4Lib 2020 Conference t-shirt. The winning logo will be based on a popular vote, which will commence after the submission process closes. <br />
<br />
Please submit your high-quality image to the [[#Submissions|Submissions]] section of this wiki page. You can host the image yourself or use the [[Special:Upload|Upload file]] feature of the wiki. Be sure to include your name and email address!<br />
<br />
'''SUBMISSIONS WILL CLOSE AT MIDNIGHT EASTERN TIME ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 24'''<br />
<br />
== Details ==<br />
<br />
* Along with your image, name, and email address, you can add a line or two of explanatory text, color specifications, etc., which will be included with your design when voting begins.<br />
* Place a horizontal rule (----) on a separate line after your submission.<br />
* Original art only, please!<br />
* Maximum 2 colors<br />
* The screen-printers generally need vector art files (ai, .cdr, .eps & .pdf). <br />
<br />
The t-shirt color will (probably) be black, but we can look into changing the color depending on the design that is ultimately selected. If the winning design's assumed color is something other than the traditional black, we will try to get the t-shirts in the requested color. If that color is not feasible, the logo will default to white or gray, depending on the requested design contrast, on a black t-shirt. <br />
<br />
(Please stick to a color scheme that folks who are colorblind will be able to see.)<br />
<br />
==Sample Submission==<br />
Joe Ouroboros, joe@loopback.edu :<br />
<br />
[[Image:Reset-200.png]]<br />
<br />
This is my awesome design. It'll win one of these years.<br />
-----<br />
Not sure how to submit your image? Check out https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Editing_pages for more information about editing a page! Here's a template for what the wikitext should look like when you submit your image:<br />
Name, email address :<br />
<nowiki>[[Image:Name of image file you uploaded]]</nowiki><br />
Explanatory text<br />
<nowiki>-----</nowiki><br />
== Submissions ==<br />
<br />
Jenny Brandon, jbrandon@msu.edu :<br />
[[Image:Code4liblogo_brandonThumb.png]]<br />
<br />
Image is reminiscent of the smelting of steel, which Pittsburgh is known for.<br />
I have the Illustrator file, wouldn't allow upload of .ai file.<br />
<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
<br />
Scott Carlson, scottythered@gmail.com:<br />
<br />
[[Image:Scottcarlsondesign.png|500px]] [[Image:Scottcarlsonshirt.png|500px]]<br />
<br />
A love-letter to Pittsburgh, cultural home of the modern zombie.<br />
<br />
--------------------------<br />
<br />
Jon McIntire, mcintire@andrew.cmu.edu:<br />
<br />
[[Image:Code4lib warhol soup pittsburgh.jpg|500px]]<br />
<br />
An homage to Pittsburgh's very own, Andy Warhol.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=47266MediaWiki:Sidebar2019-11-26T01:11:09Z<p>Wickr: Update for 2020 site</p>
<hr />
<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** https://2020.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2020<br />
** https://2019.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2019<br />
** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Category:Code4Lib2020&diff=47265Category:Code4Lib20202019-11-26T01:04:41Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>{{Conference<br />
|URL=https://2020.code4lib.org<br />
|Start Date=March 8 2020<br />
|End Date=March 11 2020<br />
|Location=Pittsburgh, PA<br />
|Contact=[[Code4Lib_2020_Conference_Committees#Local_Planning_Committee|2020 Local Planning Committee]]<br />
}}<br />
* [https://code4lib2020.library.cmu.edu 2020 Hosting Proposal]<br />
* [[Code4Lib_2020_Conference_Committees | 2020 Conference Committees]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Conferences]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=46382MediaWiki:Sidebar2018-09-12T18:29:38Z<p>Wickr: Added 2019 conf site</p>
<hr />
<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** http://2019.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2019<br />
** http://2018.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2018<br />
** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=46028Main Page2018-05-30T00:32:00Z<p>Wickr: Removed hardcoded pixel widths for better mobile sizing</p>
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{| id="mp-topbanner" style="width:100%; background:#f9f9f9; margin:1.2em 0 6px 0; border:1px solid #ddd;"<br />
| style="width:54%; color:#000;" |<br />
<!-- "WELCOME TO WIKIPEDIA" AND ARTICLE COUNT --><br />
{| border:none; background:none;"<br />
| text-align:center; white-space:nowrap; color:#000;" |<br />
<div style="font-size:162%; border:none; margin:0; padding:.1em; color:#000;">Welcome to the Code4Lib wiki</div><br />
|}<br />
<br />
<!-- PORTAL LIST ON RIGHT-HAND SIDE --><br />
__NOTOC__<br />
| style="width:20%; font-size:95%;vertical-align:top; " |<br />
* [[#About Code4Lib|About Code4Lib]]<br />
* [[#Software Usage and Documentation|Software Usage and Documentation]]<br />
* [[#Current topics|Current topics]]<br />
* [[#Other Code4Lib Sites|Other Code4Lib Sites]]<br />
| style="width:13%; font-size:95%;" |<br />
* [[#Code4Lib 2018 Conference|2018 Conference]]<br />
* [[#Local / Regional Groups|Local / Regional Groups]]<br />
* [[#Interest Groups|Interest Groups]]<br />
* [[#Earlier Conferences and events|Earlier Conferences and events]]<br />
|}<br />
<br />
<!-- ABOUT --><br />
{| id="mp-upper" style="width: 100%; margin:4px 0 0 0; background:none; border-spacing: 0px;"<br />
<!-- TODAY'S FEATURED ARTICLE; DID YOU KNOW --><br />
| class="MainPageBG" style="width:55%; border:1px solid #cef2e0; background:#f5fffa; vertical-align:top; color:#000;" |<br />
{| id="mp-left" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:#f5fffa;"<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== About Code4Lib ==<br />
<br />
* [[About Code4Lib]] - Background and history of the community<br />
* [[A Guide for the Perplexed]] - Building skills for working with library technologies<br />
* [[How to hack code4lib]] - For those newer to the community<br />
* [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m-9VtL7L_fUxl2hTF_YZSdFRfucaLtmHvLSzom6XPVM/edit?pli=1 Code4Lib Indoctrination] (This is a Google doc open to all including anonymous feedback.)<br />
**"How do we make code4lib a more inclusive place for newcomers? <br/> Or, how do we quickly indoctrinate newbies to our values and ways of doing things?" <br />
**Suggestions, ideas, and follow-up actions solicited.<br />
* [[One recommended tool/resource for n00bs]] - For new coding librarians/library Coders<br />
* [[Mentorship Program]]<br />
* [[Skill Sharing Clubs]] - Find people with similar interests in your field.<br />
* [[Zoia or the Code4Lib IRC bot]]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Software Usage and Documentation ==<br />
<br />
* [[Umlaut]] - OpenURL link resolving middleware<br />
* [[:Category:Patterns|Patterns for Collaborative Code]] - Patterns to make your open source 'more open', more amenable to distributed development and use at multiple institutions without forking. <br />
* [[ILS Documentation]]<br />
* [[OSS Directory]]<br />
* [[Working with MARC]]<br />
* [[Rogue]] - principles for standards creation<br />
* [[ProjectManagement]] - list of project management and issue tracking software that are frequently mentioned on the Code4Lib mailinglist<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Current topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Code4Lib Regional Meeting Streaming]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib Website Update]]<br />
* [[OCLC Policy Change]]<br />
* [[SirsiDynix: Integrated Library System Platforms on Open Source]]<br />
* [[Parsing Library Data]]<br />
* [[Robots Are Our Friends]]<br />
* [[Libraries Sharing Code]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib Tagline brainstorm]]<br />
* [[Fiscal Continuity]]<br />
** [[Fiscal Sponsorship Working Group]]<br />
* [[Accessibility]]<br />
* [[Teaching beginners]] <br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Other Code4Lib Sites ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/ code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://planet.code4lib.org planet.code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org journal.code4lib.org]<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Code4Lib Journal ==<br />
<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib Journal|Code4Lib Journal]] - information and working documents<br />
<br />
|}<br />
| style="border:1px solid transparent;" |<br />
| class="MainPageBG" style="width:45%; border:1px solid #cedff2; background:#f5faff; vertical-align:top;"|<br />
<br />
{| id="mp-right" style="width:100%; vertical-align:top; background:#f5faff;"<br />
<br />
==Code4Lib 2019 Conference==<br />
{{:Category:Code4Lib2019}}<br />
* [[How_To_Plan_A_Code4LibCon|How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
==Code4Lib 2018 Conference==<br />
{{:Category:Code4Lib2018}}<br />
<br />
* [[How_To_Plan_A_Code4LibCon|How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
* [[2018_Conference_Volunteers|2018 Conference Volunteers]]<br />
* [[2018_Social_Activities|2018 Social Activities]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib2018_Posters|2018 Poster Presentations]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib2018_Breakout_Sessions|2018 Breakout Sessions]]<br />
* [[Code4Lib2018_Lightning_Talks|2018 Lightning Talks]]<br />
<br />
== Local / Regional Groups ==<br />
<br />
=== United States ===<br />
* [[NEC4L|New England Code4lib]] - New England<br />
* [[NYC|Code4LibNYC]] - NYC and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Code4lib_Mid-Atlantic|Code4Lib Mid-Atlantic]] - Philadelphia and the Greater Tri-State Area<br />
* [[MDC|Code4libMDC]] - Maryland, Washington D.C, Virginia, and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Southeast|Code4LibSE]] - North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Virginia, Well, you get the idea<br />
* [[Midwest|Code4Lib Midwest]] - Wherever that is...<br />
* [[Code4Lib_Chicago|Chicago]] - Chicago is a city in the Midwest<br />
* [[South_Central|Code4Lib South Central]] - Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Arkansas, New Mexico<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/pnwcode4lib?hl=en PNWCode4Lib] - Pacific Northwest<br />
* [[Western|Code4Lib West]] - California North and South <br />
<br />
=== Canada ===<br />
<br />
* [[GreatEastern|Code4Lib Great Eastern]] - Atlantic Provinces<br />
* [[North|code4lib North]] - Ontario and surrounding areas<br />
* [[Edmonton|Code4LibYEG]] - Edmonton, Alberta ''(also new in 2013)''<br />
* [[BC|Code4Lib BC]] - British Columbia ''(new in 2013)''<br />
<br />
=== Europe ===<br />
* [[NL|Code4Bib]] - Dutch Code4Bib<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/ikr-fejlesztok/ Code4lib.hu] - Group of Hungarian library developers<br />
<br />
=== Asia/Pacific ===<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.jp/ Code4Lib Japan] - ''(new in 2010!)'', see also [http://twitter.com/yesonline/statuses/28561046501 tweet from Jerry Lee]<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/code4glam Code4GLAM Australia] - coders, hackers, developers and technologists in the Australian GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums) sector.<br />
<br />
=== Middle East ===<br />
* [[Qatar|Code4Lib Qatar]] - Doha ''(new in 2018)''<br />
|-<br />
<br />
== Interest Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[ILS_Interop|ILS Interoperability]] - A group working to develop an infrastructure for interoperating between discovery layers and integrated library systems.<br />
* [[Open_Source_Book_Widgets|Open Source Book Widgets]] - A list of open source book widgets<br />
* [[Discovery|Open Source Discovery]] - Open Source application to enhance and support "discovery" in libraries<br />
* [[Mobile_Apps|Mobile Applications]] - A group interested in mobile web and native application development for libraries<br />
* [[Sources_Of_Metadata|Sources Of Metadata]] - list of api's and sources of interest to libraries<br />
* [[Fiscal_Continuity|Fiscal Continuity]] - A group that explored from 2016 to 2017 whether and how to make long-term fiscal arrangements for conferences (and perhaps other activities)<br />
* [[Fiscal_Sponsorship_Working_Group|Fiscal Sponsorship Working Group]] - A group formed to implement a fiscal sponsorship agreement per the results of the [[Fiscal_Continuity#Fiscal_Options_Vote|fiscal options vote]] in late 2017<br />
|-<br />
<br />
|}<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Earlier Conferences and events ==<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2017|Code4Lib 2017]] Los Angeles, CA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2016|Code4Lib 2016]] Philadelphia, PA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2015|Code4Lib 2015]] Portland, OR<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2014|Code4Lib 2014]] Raleigh, NC<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2013|Code4Lib 2013]] Chicago, IL<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2012|Code4Lib 2012]] Seattle, WA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2011|Code4Lib 2011]] Bloomington, IN<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2010|Code4Lib 2010]] Asheville, NC<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2009|Code4Lib 2009]] Providence, RI<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2008|Code4Lib 2008]] Portland, OR<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2007|Code4Lib 2007]] Athens, GA<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib2006|Code4Lib 2006]] Corvallis, OR<br />
[[Conference Financial History At A Glance]]<br />
<br />
=== Older Conference T-Shirt Designs ===<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/node/235 2008 (Portland, Oregon)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/code4lib08.gif winning design]<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/node/146 2007 (Athens, Georgia)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/code4lib2007-7.jpg winning design]<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/tshirts 2006 (Corvalis, Oregon)] - [http://code4lib.org/files/t-shirt.png winning design]<br />
<br />
=== Other workshops ===<br />
* [http://barcamp.org/SearchCampDC SearchCampDC] - barcamp style event in DC with usual suspects from code4lib<br />
* [[code4lib/elag2010]] - 1-day code4lib preconference at elag2010<br />
<br />
== Archived topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Logo Design Process]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[AdminToDo]] - ideas and tasks for maintaining the Code4Lib sites</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=45310MediaWiki:Sidebar2017-06-18T06:36:58Z<p>Wickr: Changed 2017 to 2018</p>
<hr />
<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** http://2018.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2018<br />
** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Sidebar&diff=44582MediaWiki:Sidebar2016-11-16T01:31:35Z<p>Wickr: Changed conference page link to 2017</p>
<hr />
<div>* SEARCH<br />
* navigation<br />
** mainpage|mainpage-description<br />
** http://2017.code4lib.org|Code4Lib 2017<br />
** recentchanges-url|recentchanges<br />
** randompage-url|randompage<br />
** helppage|help<br />
* TOOLBOX</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=File:Reset-200.png&diff=44499File:Reset-200.png2016-10-17T23:50:26Z<p>Wickr: Wickr uploaded a new version of File:Reset-200.png</p>
<hr />
<div>reset-200</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Conference_Committees&diff=435122015 Conference Committees2015-09-14T19:31:47Z<p>Wickr: Protected "2015 Conference Committees": Protecting so signups for 2016 don't get added here by mistake ([Edit=Allow only administrators] (indefinite) [Move=Allow only administrators] (indefinite))</p>
<hr />
<div>= Code4Lib 2015 Committees =<br />
<br />
If you are interested in helping out with a particular part of the Code4Lib 2015 conference, create an account on this wiki and sign-up for one or more of the groups below (called 'committees' for lack of a better term). Each committee should select a committee lead that will coordinate the activities of the committee and its work with the hosting site. Discussions of a non-sensitive nature should take place on the Code4LibCon mailing list for transparency and future reference. Please feel free to improve the summary statements for each of the committees. When adding your name, please indicate 'v' if you are a veteran on the committee so that we ensure committees are not made up entirely of newbies.<br />
<br />
We will assign a local contact to each committee.<br />
<br />
== Location and Dates ==<br />
<br />
(more details at [http://code4lib.org/conference/2015 http://code4lib.org/conference/2015])<br />
* Location: Hilton Portland and Executive Tower, Portland, Oregon<br />
* Dates: <br />
** Pre-conferences - February 9th, 2015<br />
** Main meeting - February 10th - 12th, 2015<br />
** Post conference activities?<br />
<br />
== Book Give-Away Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits books and other prizes to be given away in raffles during the conference. This committee is responsible for identifying some means of performing the actual raffle (aka, a random picker app or other tool for selecting winners). Drawing names out of a hat could be low-tech entertaining.<br />
<br />
Need about 2 months to get books shipped to the conference location.<br />
<br />
* [[User:JasonMichel|Jason Paul Michel]]<br />
* [[User:TerrellT|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Keynote Speakers Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans who to invite for the keynote speakers. They gather possibilities (including soliciting from the community), organize voting, and work with the speakers to arrange their travel.<br />
<br />
* [[User:Phette23|Eric Phetteplace]]<br />
* Heidi Dowding<br />
<br />
== Onsite Volunteer Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits volunteers to do whatever tasks are needed in person at the conference. Could be a help to the program committee to solicit MCs, timers, mike runners (if needed), IRC volunteers, registration helpers (if needed), etc.<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Dre<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] - Local Contact<br />
* Bojana Skarich - Local Contact<br />
* Bobbi Fox<br />
* Christina Salazar<br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the pre-conference day. It keeps strong lines of communications open with the Program Committee. It also helps shepherd events on the day itself.<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:LauraKrier|Laura Krier]]<br />
* [[User:aaroncollie|Aaron Collie]]<br />
* [[ericleasemorgan|Eric Lease Morgan]]<br />
* [[User:AndyWeidner|Andy Weidner]]<br />
* [[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Program Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the structure of the program, arranges the voting on presentations, etc. This includes soliciting regular talks. These folks will also manage the flow of the program at the conference -- introducing speakers or soliciting other volunteers to MC.<br />
<br />
* mx matienzo<br />
* cbeer<br />
* Tod Olson<br />
* [[User:Cynthia|Arty]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* [[User:DataGazetteer|Peter Murray]] - v<br />
<br />
== Scholarships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee works with funding institutions to arrange the scholarships offered. They solicit submissions and select winners of the scholarship(s). They also work with the winners to plan their travel and arrangements.<br />
<br />
* Ruth Kitchin Tillman<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Mairelys Lemus-Rojas<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Social Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
The committee plans, proposes, and organizes the evening activities.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose - v(committee member 4 life)<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* [[User:eatonml|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Childcare Committee ==<br />
<br />
Committee to evaluate needs and explore possibilities for on-site child care at the conference. Will implement whatever is determined to be possible this year and develop guidelines for future conferences.<br />
<br />
* Sara Amato (lead)<br />
* Christina Salazar<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Sponsorships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the sponsorship activities. Usually it includes people within the Code4Lib community who think their institution or company might be interested in sponsoring the conference. These folks may not be the decision makers at the sponsors, but they are Code4Lib's contacts. See the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/images/4/42/Code4LibProspectus.pdf Prospectus] for potential sponsors.<br />
<br />
* Roy Tennant, OCLC, firstnamelastname@gmail.com<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] - Local Contact<br />
* [[User:Terrellt|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Streaming Video Committee ==<br />
<br />
*[[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] has equipment, experience and domain knowledge to share.<br />
*[[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] can help, but will not be attending conf<br />
*[[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== T-Shirt Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the t-shirt contest, collecting submissions, and putting out the call for votes. This committee is also responsible for helping the local planning committee identify a vendor that will fit within the budget constraints for the conference. User sizes and preferences will be obtained as part of the registration process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
*[[User:Eatonm|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Voting Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the voting process and works with the other committees that involve voting (keynote, program, T-shirt) to ensure a relatively smooth process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
*[[User:Wickr|Sheila Yeh]]<br />
<br />
== Whatever Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee does whatever the organizers can't talk anyone else into doing.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Becky Yoose (will do things for mortgage payment assistance)<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Sarah Park<br />
* [[User:KimPham|Kim Pham]]<br />
* Bojana Skarich - Local Contact<br />
* Ryan Wick - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Wifi / Electrical / IRC ==<br />
<br />
This committee is responsible for working with local planners to ensure that wifi will be able to support the needs of the code4lib community.<br />
<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com<br />
* [[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] is able to assist with Wireless planning and IRC stuffs, rchilds@cucawarriors.com<br />
* [[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
= Documentation =<br />
To help with documention, no need to sign up, just start editing.<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Documentation Interest Group ==<br />
Promote ongoing documentation efforts.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Voting&diff=43446Voting2015-09-01T21:30:45Z<p>Wickr: Added voting site link and a bit of info</p>
<hr />
<div>Voting website: http://vote.code4lib.org<br />
<br />
Approved user accounts on http://code4lib.org (not the wiki) are required in order to login to the voting system and vote.<br />
<br />
'Elections' are a voting event, and 'Events' group those together, usually around the national conferences.<br />
<br />
'''Past practice'''<br />
* One week is needed to set up voting between end of call for proposal and opening of voting<br />
* Voting is usually open during two-week windows<br />
* Chris Beer is point of contact to add questions/options to Diebold-o-Tron and open/close voting<br />
* Listserv is used for voting announcements and reminders<br />
* Reminders are sent weekly and a few days before close of vote<br />
* Code for voting: https://github.com/code4lib/diebold-o-tron<br />
<br />
'''Votes'''<br />
* [[ProgramCommittee|Programming]]<br />
** [[Keynote_Committee_Duties|Keynote]]<br />
** [[ProgramCommittee#Program_Voting|Pre-conference]] (if necessary)<br />
* [[T-ShirtCommittee|T-shirt design]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4LibCon Planning]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_During_the_Conference_Volunteers&diff=424762015 During the Conference Volunteers2015-01-22T21:49:57Z<p>Wickr: /* Preconference Setup Help */</p>
<hr />
<div>code4lib 2015 During the Conference Volunteers<br />
<br />
<!--== Hospitality Suite Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee makes arrangements for any hospitality suite amenities (technology, snacks, games, icebreakers...) we may want.<br />
--><br />
<br />
== Preconference Setup Help ==<br />
<br />
Help manage preconference sessions, setting up projectors, etc.<br />
<br />
* <br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
<br />
== Welcome Wagon Committee ==<br />
<br />
Offers conference newcomers an opportunity to self-identify; offers oldtimers an opportunity to meet newcomers. May also want to constitute a year-round variation for #code4lib.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose (b.yoose at google)<br />
<br />
== Social Networking ==<br />
Responsible for non-IRC social networking presence.<br />
<br />
1-2 person(s) to take questions for sessions (assuming there's time during the session) via Twitter/IRC, and adding resources to lanyrd schedule (slides, notes, resources mentioned, etc.) Make a note if you can only do one or both.<br />
<br />
Consider directing people with questions to presenter on twitter/IRC (if applicable) if there is no time for questions.<br />
<br />
== Beverage Share Setup/Teardown ==<br />
<br />
Help set up and clean up after the Tuesday event at the Ebay offices.<br />
<br />
== IRC Helpers ==<br />
Demonstrate how to get onto #code4lib during Registration. Offer support for newcomers in #code4lib during the conference.<br />
<br />
One of the easiest ways to participate is to [http://webchat.freenode.net/ Go here] with your web browser. Choose a nickname (anything works so long as it is unique; if you want to be anonymous pick appropriately). Enter "code4lib" as the "Channel".<br />
<br />
If you've managed to get into the channel without help, type "@helpers" (without the quotes) to see a list of #code4lib helpers.<br />
<br />
== IRC Access ==<br />
Look into technology/procedures to make connecting to, and maintaining a connection to, IRC less painful. i.e. make sure wifi will allow connection, and someone needs to contact freenode about the sudden influx of people<br />
<br />
* Mx Matienzo (anarchivist)<br />
<br />
==Registration Desk Volunteers==<br />
<br />
'''Monday'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday'''<br />
<br />
==MCs==<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday AM'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday AM'''<br />
*Becky, destroyer of last names, singer of badly adapted show tunes <br />
<br />
'''Wednesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Thursday AM'''<br />
<br />
<br />
== Session Timer Volunteers ==<br />
<br />
People who volunteer to sit up front, keep time (and bring timer equipment - i.e. a laptop with a stopwatch program). It's good to have two people in each slot to back each other up in case of machinery failure.<br />
<br />
'''Schedule for Session Timers'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday AM'''<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa (Mr. Sweetie Poo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xAnVNXaa5oA)<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday AM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Thursday AM'''<br />
<br />
== Raffles ==<br />
<br />
<br />
== Whatever Else Needs to be Done ==<br />
<br />
[[Category: Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_During_the_Conference_Volunteers&diff=424752015 During the Conference Volunteers2015-01-22T21:49:17Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>code4lib 2015 During the Conference Volunteers<br />
<br />
<!--== Hospitality Suite Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee makes arrangements for any hospitality suite amenities (technology, snacks, games, icebreakers...) we may want.<br />
--><br />
<br />
== Preconference Setup Help ==<br />
<br />
Help manage preconference sessions, setting up projectors, etc.<br />
<br />
* <br />
*<br />
<br />
== Welcome Wagon Committee ==<br />
<br />
Offers conference newcomers an opportunity to self-identify; offers oldtimers an opportunity to meet newcomers. May also want to constitute a year-round variation for #code4lib.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose (b.yoose at google)<br />
<br />
== Social Networking ==<br />
Responsible for non-IRC social networking presence.<br />
<br />
1-2 person(s) to take questions for sessions (assuming there's time during the session) via Twitter/IRC, and adding resources to lanyrd schedule (slides, notes, resources mentioned, etc.) Make a note if you can only do one or both.<br />
<br />
Consider directing people with questions to presenter on twitter/IRC (if applicable) if there is no time for questions.<br />
<br />
== Beverage Share Setup/Teardown ==<br />
<br />
Help set up and clean up after the Tuesday event at the Ebay offices.<br />
<br />
== IRC Helpers ==<br />
Demonstrate how to get onto #code4lib during Registration. Offer support for newcomers in #code4lib during the conference.<br />
<br />
One of the easiest ways to participate is to [http://webchat.freenode.net/ Go here] with your web browser. Choose a nickname (anything works so long as it is unique; if you want to be anonymous pick appropriately). Enter "code4lib" as the "Channel".<br />
<br />
If you've managed to get into the channel without help, type "@helpers" (without the quotes) to see a list of #code4lib helpers.<br />
<br />
== IRC Access ==<br />
Look into technology/procedures to make connecting to, and maintaining a connection to, IRC less painful. i.e. make sure wifi will allow connection, and someone needs to contact freenode about the sudden influx of people<br />
<br />
* Mx Matienzo (anarchivist)<br />
<br />
==Registration Desk Volunteers==<br />
<br />
'''Monday'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday'''<br />
<br />
==MCs==<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday AM'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday AM'''<br />
*Becky, destroyer of last names, singer of badly adapted show tunes <br />
<br />
'''Wednesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Thursday AM'''<br />
<br />
<br />
== Session Timer Volunteers ==<br />
<br />
People who volunteer to sit up front, keep time (and bring timer equipment - i.e. a laptop with a stopwatch program). It's good to have two people in each slot to back each other up in case of machinery failure.<br />
<br />
'''Schedule for Session Timers'''<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday AM'''<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa (Mr. Sweetie Poo https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xAnVNXaa5oA)<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday AM'''<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday PM'''<br />
<br />
'''Thursday AM'''<br />
<br />
== Raffles ==<br />
<br />
<br />
== Whatever Else Needs to be Done ==<br />
<br />
[[Category: Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Social_Activities&diff=423562015 Social Activities2015-01-03T20:19:27Z<p>Wickr: /* Saturday and Sunday, February 7 and 8 */</p>
<hr />
<div>The Social Activities Group is working on several events and social opportunities for after conference hours. We will be adding more events as they come along. Watch this page!<br />
<br />
Also, if you find a cool event to go to, and want to share the wealth with others, feel free to add the event to the page. :)<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Monday, February 9th ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>XML</strike> <strike>EZProxy</strike> LibGuides alternatives.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Monday, February 9th<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
**Some restaurants can hold multiple groups of six. It is up to you to investigate the venue to see if this is possible.<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
*See a restaurant that's not listed? Feel free to add one, '''but please make sure that it is open that Monday evening.'''<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants - To be announced in January'''<br />
<br />
'''Under .5 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
<!-- On hold until January. Please do not remove or modify<br />
[http://www.littlebirdbistro.com Little Bird Bistro] (French)<br /><br />
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Reservation — the only one available — is for 6 PM so we will leave the hotel at 5:45 PM.<br />
# Cary Gordon - v (leader)<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
--><br />
'''.5 to 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
'''More than 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
=== Craft Brew Drinkup, Tuesday February 10th ===<br />
<br />
When: Tuesday, February 10th - 7pm - 10pm (ish)<br />
<br />
Where: eBay Offices - 1400 SW 5th Ave, Portland, OR 97201<br />
<br />
The Craft Brew Drinkup at Code4lib 2015 is all about sharing and enjoying good beer with fellow conference attendees. The idea is to bring bottles of your favorite beers or non-alcoholic drinks.<br />
<br />
While you're not obligated to bring local brews from wherever you're from, participants are definitely encouraged to bring brews that you think is special and might be somewhat hard for others outside your area to find. Homebrew is especially welcome as are non-alcoholic beverages. <br />
<br />
This year, eBay has agreed to host the Code4Lib Drinkup at their offices in downtown Portland, a 6 block walk from the conference hotel. Attendees should expect to bring something to share. A wiki page will be set up for folks to share the brews and bottles you're thinking of bringing along and special requests can be made, but don't expect that your wishes will be granted. <br />
<br />
'''Please Note''': The space must be cleaned up and all folks gone no later than 11pm. <br />
<br />
'''Space is limited to the first 200 people who register.'''<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
<br />
== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
''Add your own ideas here''<br />
* Game night?<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
<br />
=== Restaurants ===<br />
<br />
=== Desserts ===<br />
<br />
=== Coffee ===<br />
<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
<br />
=== Bars ===<br />
<br />
=== Breweries ===<br />
* [http://basecampbrewingco.com/ Base Camp Brewing Co.]<br />
* [http://www.bridgeportbrew.com/home Bridgeport Brewing]<br />
* [http://www.burnsidebrewco.com/ Burnside Brewing Co.]<br />
* [http://www.cascadebrewingbarrelhouse.com/ Cascade Brewing Barrel House]<br />
* [http://www.deschutesbrewery.com/locations/portland Deschutes Brewery and Pub]<br />
* [http://hairofthedog.com/ Hair of the Dog Brewing Co.]<br />
* [http://www.rockbottom.com/ Rock Bottom Restaurant and Brewery]<br />
* [http://www.rogue.com/roguemeetinghalls/ Rogue Distillery and Pub]<br />
* [http://widmerbrothers.com/ Widmer Brothers Brewing]<br />
<br />
The breweries listed above are a few blocks' walk from [http://trimet.org/index.htm Tri-Met MAX] or the [http://www.portlandstreetcar.org/node/4 Portland Streetcar] lines- which are easily accessible from the host hotel.<br />
<br />
=== Bottle Shops and Taprooms ===<br />
* [http://www.baileystaproom.com/ Bailey's Taproom] (Downtown)<br />
* [http://www.johnsmarketplace.com/ John's] (SW)<br />
* [http://www.belmont-station.com/ Belmont Station] (SE)<br />
* [http://bazipdx.com/ Bazi Bierbrasserie] (SE)<br />
* [http://thebeermongers.com/ Beer Mongers] (SE)<br />
* [http://www.apexbar.com/ APEX Bar] (SE)<br />
* [http://www.saraveza.com/ Saraveza] (N)<br />
<br />
== Portland Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Saturday and Sunday, February 7 and 8 ===<br />
<br />
* [https://listserv.nd.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=CODE4LIB;4c26a341.1412 PBCore RDF ontology hackathon]<br />
* [[PBCore RDF Hackathon]]<br />
<br />
=== Monday, February 9 ===<br />
* [http://tickets.orsymphony.org/single/eventDetail.aspx?p=2523 Carmina Burana], 8:00 pm, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall<br />
<br />
=== Tuesday, February 10 ===<br />
* [http://www.portland5.com/keller-auditorium/events/carmen Carmen], 7:30 pm, Keller Auditorium<br />
<br />
=== Wednesday, February 11 ===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.portland5.com/arlene-schnitzer-concert-hall/events/nederlands-dans-theater-2 Nederlands Dans Theater at Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall], 7:30 pm; contact Andy Mardesich <Andy.Mardesich at ucop.edu> if interested (trying to get group ticket rates)<br />
* [https://seatgeek.com/lakers-at-trail-blazers-tickets/2-11-2015-portland-oregon-moda-center-at-the-rose-quarter/nba/2285800/ LA Lakers @ Portland TrailBlazers NBA Basketball], 7:00PM Moda Center As I understand it, it's on the train line - not many stops from our nearby station. I haven't purchased my ticket yet. Don't plan to break the bank, probably the $60 tix (sections 301 or 318 etc) Andrew Pasterfield <ampaster at ucalgary.ca><br />
<br />
=== Thursday, February 12 ===<br />
* [http://www.portland5.com/keller-auditorium/events/carmen Carmen], 7:30 pm, Keller Auditorium<br />
* [http://www.mississippistudios.com/event/724141-catfish-bottlemen-portland/ Catfish and The Bottlemen], 9:00 pm, Mississippi Studios<br />
<br />
=== All days ===<br />
* [http://www.nwfilm.org/festivals/piff/ Portland International Film Festival]<br />
* [http://portlandartmuseum.org/exhibitions/masterworks-portland-el-greco/ Masterworks | Portland: El Greco], Portland Art Museum<br />
<br />
==Getting Around==<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=420342015 Prepared Talk Proposals2014-11-08T01:03:34Z<p>Wickr: Protected "2015 Prepared Talk Proposals": Proposal deadline hit ([Edit=Allow only administrators] (indefinite) [Move=Allow only administrators] (indefinite))</p>
<hr />
<div>Code4lib 2015 is a loosely-structured conference that provides people working at the intersection of libraries/archives/museums/cultural heritage and technology with a chance to share ideas, be inspired, and forge collaborations. For more information about the Code4lib community, please visit http://code4lib.org/about/. <br />
The conference will be held at the Portland Hilton & Executive Tower in Portland, Oregon, from February 9-12, 2015.<br />
<br />
'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
We encourage everyone to propose a talk.<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
* Projects you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* Tools and technologies – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* Technical issues - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* Relevant non-technical issues – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
Proposals can be submitted through Friday, November 7, 2014 at 5pm PST (GMT−8). Voting will start on November 11, 2014 and continue through November 25, 2014. The URL to submit votes will be announced on the Code4Lib website and mailing list and will require an active code4lib.org account to participate. The final list of presentations will be announced in early- to mid-December.<br />
<br />
'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Log in to the Code4lib wiki and edit this wiki page using the prescribed format. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist voters in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
Please follow the formatting guidelines:<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
== Talk Title: ==<br />
<br />
* Speaker's name, email address, and (optional) affiliation<br />
* Second speaker's name, email address, and affiliation, if second speaker<br />
<br />
Abstract of no more than 500 words.<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
== Zines + Gamification = Awesomest Metadata Literacy Outreach Event Ever! ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.JenniferHecker.info Jennifer Hecker], jenniferraehecker@gmail.com, [http://www.lib.utexas.edu/subject/zines University of Texas Libraries] & [http://www.AustinFanzineProject.org Austin Fanzine Project]<br />
* [http://anomalily.net/ Lillian Karabaic], librarian@iprc.org, [http://www.iprc.org/ Independent Publishing Resource Center] (Portland)<br />
<br />
In academic libraries, and elsewhere, the popularity of zine (a magazine produced for love, not profit) collections is on the rise. At the same time, metadata literacy is becoming an increasingly important skill, helping people navigate and understand digital environments and interactions. We have found a way to teach metadata literacy to the general public that isn’t super-boring – in fact, we’ve made it downright fun!<br />
<br />
First, volunteer zine librarian Lillian Karabaic of Portland’s Independent Publishing Resource Center facilitated the creation of a gamified cataloging interface for the IPRC’s annual Raiders of the Lost Archives backlog-busting 24-hour volunteer cataloging event.<br />
<br />
Then, archivist Jennifer Hecker facilitated the adaptation of the IPRC’s game for use in a similar, but also very different context – promoting UT Libraries newly-acquired zine collections. The main goal of the academic-library-based event was increasing excitement around the collections, but with the side goal of building metadata literacy, and introducing an understanding of library cataloging issues.<br />
<br />
The Texas modification also conforms to the xZINECOREx metadata schema developed by the national [http://zinelibraries.info/ Zine Librarians Interest Group], and triggered interesting conversations with the Libraries’s cataloging department about evolving metadata standards and how to incorporate the products of crowd-sourcing projects into existing workflows.<br />
<br />
Both games will be demoed.<br />
<br />
We have never presented at Code4lib.<br />
<br />
== Do the Semantic FRBRoo ==<br />
* Rosie Le Faive, rlefaive@upei.ca, University of Prince Edward Island<br />
<br />
[http://www.islandora.ca Islandora] is great for creating repositories of any data type, but how can you model meaningful relationships between digital objects and use them to tell a story?<br />
<br />
At UPEI, I’m assembling an ethnography of Prince Edward Island’s traditional fiddle music that includes musical clips, video clips, oral histories, musical notation, images, and ethnographic commentaries. In order to present an exhibition-style site, I’m tying these digital objects together via the people, places, events, tunes and topics that they share or describe. <br />
<br />
To describe the relationships, I’m extending Islandora to use [http://www.cidoc-crm.org/frbr_inro.html FRBRoo], a vocabulary that combines the FRBR model with CIDOC-CRM, the the object-oriented museum documentation ontology. These modules being developed will allow other researchers to create a structured, navigable digital repository of diverse object types, that uses Islandora as an exhibition platform. <br />
<br />
== Our $50,000 Problem: Why Library School? ==<br />
* Jennie Rose Halperin, jhalperin@mozilla.com, Mozilla Corporation<br />
<br />
57 library schools in the United States are churning out approximately 100 graduates per year, many with debt upwards of $50,000. According to ONet, [http://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2011/is-the-united-states-training-too-many-librarians-or-too-few-part-1/ 84% of library jobs in the US require an MLS.] The library profession is [http://dpeaflcio.org/programs-publications/issue-fact-sheets/library-workers-facts-figures/) 92% white and 82% female and entry-level librarians can expect to make $32,500 per year.]<br />
<br />
Contrasted with developers, who are almost [http://www.ncwit.org/blog/did-you-know-demographics-technical-women 90% male] and can expect to make [http://www.forbes.com/sites/jennagoudreau/2011/06/01/best-entry-level-jobs/ $70,000 in an entry-level position,] these numbers are dismal.<br />
<br />
According to a recent survey, the top skill that outgoing library students want to know is “programming” and yet many MLS programs still consider Microsoft Word an essential technology skill.<br />
<br />
What is going on here? Why do we accept this fate, where mostly female debt-burdened professionals continue to be thrown onto the work force without the education their expensive degrees promised?<br />
<br />
As a community we need to come together to stop this cycle. We need to provide better support and mentorship to diversify and keep the profession relevant and help librarianship move into the future it deserves.<br />
<br />
This talk will walk through the challenges of navigating a hostile employment environment as well as present models for better development and future state imagining.<br />
<br />
== No cataloging software? Need more than Dublin Core? No problem!: Experiences with CollectiveAccess ==<br />
* [[User:SeanHendricks|Sean Q. Hendricks]], sqhendr@clemson.edu, Clemson University<br />
* Rachel Wittmann, rwittma@clemson.edu, Clemson University<br />
<br />
Clemson University Libraries has implemented the open-source software CollectiveAccess for customized digital collection needs. CollectiveAccess is an open-source project with the goal of providing a flexible way to manage and publish museum and archival collections. There are several applications associated with the projects; most used are: Providence (for cataloging and entering metadata) and Pawtucket (for displaying objects in a collection for the public). It has many profiles readily available for installing with existing library standards, such as Dublin Core, and there is a robust syntax for creating your own profiles to fit custom tailored metadata schemas. Plus, the user interface allows you to modify the metadata profile quickly and easily.<br />
<br />
In this talk, we will discuss:<br />
* Our experiences with installing Providence and creating an installation profile that satisfies the needs of many of the Clemson Libraries digital archiving processes. <br />
* The stumbling blocks experienced in that process and how they were resolved.<br />
* The available plugins sourcing widely used authorities, such as Library of Congress thesauri and GeoNames.org, and how they have been used by our projects. <br />
* A brief overview of the export and import functions and also current workflow practices within Providence.<br />
* Future plans & the role of CollectiveAccess at Clemson University Libraries<br />
<br />
== Getting ContentDM and Wordpress to Play Together ==<br />
* [[User:SeanHendricks|Sean Q. Hendricks]], sqhendr@clemson.edu, Clemson University<br />
<br />
Clemson University Libraries has a very strong program for digitizing and archiving photographs, and the Digital Imaging team processes many hundreds of photographs every month. These images are managed using different methods, including ContentDM, a digital collection manager.<br />
<br />
ContentDM provides various methods for searching and displaying photographs, along with their metadata. However, recent initiatives have resulted in the need to leverage those collections into exhibits displayed on other library-related websites, such as our Special Collections unit. The Clemson Libraries has invested heavily in Wordpress as our content management system of choice, and it seemed most efficient not to have to export and import images into our Wordpress sites in order to provide exhibited images.<br />
<br />
Fortunately, ContentDM has provided an API to many of their functions, allowing the extraction of metadata and even rescaled images through URLs. This project has been developing a plugin for Wordpress that integrates with ContentDM through shortcodes that Wordpress editors can easily include in their content. These shortcodes allow editors to choose how many images, which images from which collections, thumbnail sizes, etc. to display in different gallery styles. Plans are for it to allow integration with different plugins such as Fancybox and Masonry.<br />
<br />
In this presentation, I will demonstrate the current state of the plugin and discuss future plans. <br />
<br />
==Refinery — An open source locally deployable web platform for the analysis of large document collections==<br />
<br />
* [[User:DaeilKim|Daeil Kim]], The New York Times, daeil.kim@nytimes.com<br />
<br />
Refinery is an open source web platform for the analysis of large unstructured document collections. It extracts meaningful semantic themes within documents also known as "topics" which can be thought of as word clouds composed of terms that highly co-occur with one another. Once this semantic index is formed, one can extract relevant documents related to these topics and further refine their contents through a summarization process that allows users to search for phrases that are relevant to them within the corpus. The goal of Refinery is to make this whole process easier and to provide some of the latest scalable versions of these learning algorithms in an intuitive web-based interface. Refinery is also meant to be run locally, thus bypassing the need for securing document collections over the internet. The talk will go through some of the technologies involved and a demo of the app.<br />
<br />
For more info check out http://www.docrefinery.org.<br />
<br />
==Drupal 8 — Evolution & Revolution==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Drupal 8 is in beta and nearing release. Among its many features, it notably has become more developer friendly through its adoption of the Symfony PHP framework along with Symfony's outstanding set of libraries (like Guzzle) and tools (like Composer). And, in implementing the Twig theming system, it is can begin to escape PHPtemplate. These moves also make it easier to create headless systems that uses Angular.js and other systems for presentation, or even forgo presentation entirely.<br />
<br />
From the site-builder's perspective, Drupal 8 provides a much smother experience and makes it easier to build and implement site recipes.<br />
<br />
==Using GameSalad to Build a Gamified Information Literacy Mobile App for Higher Education==<br />
<br />
* [[User:StanBogdanov|Stanislav 'Stan' Bogdanov]], stan@stanrb.com, Adelphi University and [http://bogliollc.com Boglio LLC]<br />
<br />
GameSalad is a popular tool for developing mobile and desktop games with little actual programming. In this presentation, Stan Bogdanov breaks down the development process he followed while building [https://github.com/stanrb/mobiLit mobiLit], a mobile app with the goal of being the first open-source gamified information literacy app to be used as part of a college-level information literacy curriculum. He will go through the basics of using GameSalad to create an app that can be easily customized by non-programmers and the instructional principles used to teach the material in a mobile medium. Stan will also go through two qualitative design studies he did on the app and discuss their results and the lessons learned from building mobiLit. The session will conclude with an overview of the next steps for the [https://github.com/stanrb/mobiLit mobiLit project].<br />
<br />
==The Impossible Search: Pulling data from multiple unknown sources==<br />
<br />
* Riley Childs, no official affiliation (currently a Senior in High School at Charlotte United Christian Academy), rchilds (AT) cucawarriors.com <br />
<br />
It's easy to search data you know the structure of, but what if you need to pull in data from sources that don't have a standard structure. The ability to search community events along with your standard catalog search results is an example, but often the only way to pull these events is through XML, JSON, (Insert structured format here), or even just raw html. But how do you get that structure? That simple question is what makes this impossible. The process to define and process this structure takes a lot of manual labor, especially if the data you are pulling is just HTML, and then every time you add data to the index you have to run all the data through a script to pull in data in a format Solr or an other index can use. This talk will focus on Solr, but the principles explained will apply to many other indexes.<br />
<br />
==What! You're Not Using Docker?==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Boring part: Docker[1] is a container system that provides benefits similar to virtualization with only a fraction of the overhead. Scintillating part: Docker can host between four to six times the number of service instances than systems such as Xen or VMWare on a given piece of hardware. But thats not all! Docker also makes it simple(r) to create transportable instances, so you can spin up development servers on your laptop.<br />
<br />
*[1]https://www.docker.com/<br />
<br />
== Video Accessibility, WebVTT, and Timed Text Track Tricks ==<br />
<br />
* Jason Ronallo, jronallo@gmail.com, NCSU Libraries<br />
<br />
Video on the Web presents new challenges and opportunities. How do you make your video more accessible to those with various disabilities and needs? I'll show you how. This presentation will focus on how to write and deliver captions, subtitles, audio descriptions, and timed metadata tracks for Web video using the WebVTT W3C standard. Encoding timed text tracks in this way opens up opportunities for new functionality on your websites beyond accessibility. The presentation will show some examples of the potential for using timed text tracks in creative ways. I'll cover all the HTML and JavaScript you will need to know as well as some of the CSS and other bits you could probably do without but are too fun to pass up.<br />
<br />
== Categorizing Records with Random Forests ==<br />
<br />
* Geoffrey Boushey, geoffrey.boushey@ucsf.edu, UCSF Library<br />
Academic libraries are increasingly responsible for providing ingest, search, discovery, and analysis for data sets. Emerging techniques from data science and machine learning can provide librarians and developers with an opportunity to generate new insights and services from these document collections. This presentation will provide a brief overview of common machine learning classification techniques, then dive into a more detailed example using a random forest to assign keywords to research data sets. The talk will emphasize the insight that can be gained from machine learning rather than the inner workings of the algorithms. The overall goal of this presentation is to provide librarians and developers with the context to recognize an opportunity to apply machine learning categorization techniques at their home campuses and organizations. <br />
<br />
== Data Science in Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Devon Smith, smithde@oclc.org, OCLC<br />
<br />
Data Science is increasing in buzz and hype. I'll go over what it is, what it isn't, and how it fits in libraries.<br />
<br />
== PDF metadata extraction for academic literature == <br />
<br />
* Kevin Savage, kevin.savage at mendeley.com, Mendeley<br />
* Joyce Stack, joyce.stack at mendeley.com, Mendeley<br />
<br />
Mendeley recently added a, "document from file," endpoint to its API which attempts to extract metadata such as title and authors directly from PDF files. This talk will describe at a high level the machine learning methods we used including how we measured and tuned our model. We will then delve more deeply into our stack, the tools we used, some of the things that didn't work and why PDFs are the worst thing ever to compute over.<br />
<br />
== Giving Users What They Want: Record Grouping in VuFind ==<br />
<br />
* Mark Noble, mark@marmot.org, [//www.marmot.org Marmot Library Network]<br />
<br />
In 2013, Marmot did extensive usability studies with patrons to determine what was difficult in the catalog. Many patrons had problems sifting through all of the various formats and editions of a title. In 2014 we developed a method for [//mercury.marmot.org/Union/Search?lookfor=divergent grouping records] so only a single work is shown in search results and all formats and editions are listed under that work. We will discuss our definition of a 'work' based on FRBR principles; combining meta data from MARC records with metadata from other sources like OverDrive; the technical details of Record Grouping; the design decisions made during implementation; and the reaction from users and staff.<br />
<br />
== Topic Space: a mobile augmented reality recommendation app ==<br />
<br />
* Jim Hahn, jimhahn@illinois.edu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign<br />
<br />
The Topic Space module (http://minrvaproject.org/modules_topicspace.php ) was developed with an IMLS Sparks! Grant to investigate augmented reality technologies for in-library recommendations. The funding allowed for sustained university community collaboration by the University Library, the Graduate School of Library and Information Science, as well as graduate student programmers sourced from the Department of Computer Science. Collaborators designed app functionality and identified relevant open source libraries that could power optical character recognition (OCR) functionality from within the mobile phone.<br />
<br />
Topic space allows a user to take a picture of an item's call number in the book stacks. The module will show the user other books that are relevant but that are not shelved nearby. It can also show users books that are normally shelved here but that are currently checked out. Recommendations are based on Library of Congress subject headings and ILS circulation data which indicate recommendation candidates based on total check-outs. <br />
<br />
Research questions included development of back end (server-side) pattern matching algorithms for recommendations, and a rapid formative evaluation of interface design that would provide optimal user experience for navigation of the book stacks as a context to recommendations.<br />
<br />
Along with the Topic Space native app, grant collaborators prototyped web based recommendations which could serve as a new way of providing readers advisory and “more like this” recommendations from discovery interfaces accessed through desktop browsers. Outcomes of the grant include the availability of the [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=edu.illinois.ugl.minrva Topic Spaces module within Minrva app on the Android Play store] and an experimental [http://backbonejs.org/ Backbone.js] based [http://minrva-dev.library.illinois.edu Topic Space web app].<br />
<br />
== Leveling Up Your Git Workflow ==<br />
<br />
* Megan Kudzia, moneill@albion.edu, Albion College Library<br />
* Kate Sears, eks11@albion.edu, Albion College Library<br />
<br />
Have you started experimenting with Git on your own, but now you need to include others in your projects? Learn from our mistakes! Transitioning from a one-person git workflow and repo structure, to a structure that includes multiple people (including student workers), is not for the faint of heart. We'll talk about why we decided to work this way, our path to developing a git culture amongst ourselves, conceptual and technical difficulties we've faced, what we learned, and where we are now. Also with pretty pictures (aka workflow drawings).<br />
<br />
== Drone Loaning Program: Because Laptops are so last century ==<br />
<br />
* Uche Enwesi, uenwesi@umd.edu, University of Maryland Libraries<br />
* Francis Kayiwa, fkayiwa@umd.edu, University of Maryland Libraries<br />
<br />
At Univ. Maryland we are in the very early stages of looking into allowing our student body get their hands on a drone. Yes that's right we will let students take out a drone for n amount of hours to work on projects of their choosing. The talk will talk about the logistics of getting a program of this sort from concept to "Is the drone available?". If people sign waivers we will also promise not to crash the drone into code4lib attendees.<br />
<br />
== Got Git? Getting More Out of Your GitHub Repositories ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, twb27@georgetown.edu, Georgetown University Library<br />
<br />
This presentation will discuss how librarians, developers, and system administrators at Georgetown University are maximizing their use of the public and private GitHub repositories. <br />
<br />
In additional to all of the great benefits of using Git for code management, the GitHub interface provides a powerful set of tools to showcase a project and to keep your users informed of developments to your project. These tools can assist with marketing and outreach - turning your code repository into a focus of conversation!<br />
<br />
* [http://georgetown-university-libraries.github.io/File-Analyzer/ Style-able Project Pages]<br />
* [https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer/wiki Project Wikis]<br />
* [https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/Georgetown-University-Libraries-Code/releases Project Release Notes/Portfolios]<br />
* [https://rawgit.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/Georgetown-University-Libraries-Code/master/samples/GoogleSpreadsheetFilter.html Web Resources That Can Be Directly Requested]<br />
* Gists for code sharing<br />
* Private Repositories and Organizational Groups<br />
* Pull Request Conversation Tracking<br />
* Customized Issue management<br />
<br />
== Quick Wins for Every Department in the Library - File Analyzer! ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, twb27@georgetown.edu, Georgetown University Library<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Library has customized workflows for nearly every department in our library with a single code base.<br />
* Analyzing Marc Records for the Cataloging department<br />
* Transferring ILS invoices for the University Account System for the Acquisitions department <br />
* Delivering patron fines to the Bursar’s office for the Access Service department<br />
* Summarizing student worker timesheet data for the Finance department<br />
* Validating COUNTER compliant reports for the Electronic Resources department<br />
* Generating ingest packages for the Digital Services department<br />
* Validating checksums for the Preservation department<br />
<br />
Learn how you can customize the [http://georgetown-university-libraries.github.io/File-Analyzer/ File Analyzer] to become a hero in your library!<br />
<br />
==The Geospatial World is Moving from Maps *on* the Web to Maps *of* the web. Libraries can too==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Copystar|Mita Williams]], mita@uwindsor.ca, User Experience Librarian, University of Windsor<br />
<br />
The transition from paper maps to digital ones changed much more than the maps themselves; it changed the very foundation of how we work and how we find each other. Now maps are transforming again. The Geospatial World is moving from GIS systems that are institutionally-focused, expensive, feature-burdened, and binds data into a complicated and demanding user-hostile interface. From this transition from digital to web-based digital geospatial tools has come growth and development in new forms of map-based investigative journalism, activism, scholarship, and business ventures. This talk will highlight the conditions and strategies that made these changes possible as a means to draw a path by which librarians through our own work may follow, dragons notwithstanding. <br />
<br />
== Building Your Own Federated Search ==<br />
<br />
* Rich Trott, Richard.Trott@ucsf.edu, UC San Francisco<br />
<br />
Advances in modern browsers have created some interesting possibilities for federated search. This presentation will cover common techniques and pitfalls in building a federated search. We will discuss what principles guided our decisions when implementing our own federated search. We will show tools we've built and our findings from building and using experimental prototypes.<br />
<br />
Your higher education institution likely offers dozens of online resources for educators, students, researchers, and the public. And each of these online resources likely has its own search tool. But users can't be expected to search in dozens of different interfaces to find what they're looking for. A typical solution for this issue is federated search. <br />
<br />
== Indexing Linked Data with LDPath ==<br />
<br />
* Chris Beer, cabeer@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
LDPath [1] is a simple query language for indexing linked open data, with support for caching, content negotiation, and integration with non-RDF endpoints. This talk will demonstrate the features and potential of the language and framework to index a resource with links into id.loc.gov, viaf.org, geonames.org, etc to build an application-ready document.<br />
<br />
[1] http://marmotta.apache.org/ldpath/language.html<br />
<br />
== Show Me the Money: Integrating an LMS with Payment Providers ==<br />
<br />
* Josh Weisman, Josh.Weisman@exlibrisgroup.com, Development Director-Resources Management, Ex Libris Group<br />
<br />
In order to provide an easy and convenient way for patrons to pay fines, we are exploring ways to integrate the library management system with online payment providers such as PayPal. With many LMS systems being designed and developed for the cloud, we should be able to provide the frictionless user experience our patrons have come to expect from online transactions. In this session we'll discuss strategies for integration and review a sample application which uses REST APIs from a library management system to integrate with PayPal.<br />
<br />
== Shibboleth Federated Authentication for Library Applications: ==<br />
<br />
* Scott Fisher, scott.fisher@ucop.edu, California Digital Library<br />
* Ken Weiss, ken.weiss@ucop.edu, California Digital Library<br />
<br />
Shibboleth is the most widely-used method to provide single-sign-on authentication to academic applications where users come from many different institutions. Shibboleth, the InCommon education and research trust framework, and the SAML protocol comprise a very powerful - but very complicated - solution to this very complicated problem. Scott and Ken have implemented Shibboleth for multiple library applications. They will share their understanding of the good, the bad, and the underlying spaghetti that makes it all work. Ken will discuss some of the technical aspects of the solution, touching on optimal and non-optimal use cases, administrative challenges, and authorization concerns. Scott will describe the implementation pattern for multi-institution single-sign-on that the California Digital Library has evolved, using the recently released Dash application (http://dash.cdlib.org) as an example.<br />
<br />
==Scientific Data: A Needs Assessment Journey==<br />
<br />
*[[User:VickySteeves| Vicky Steeves]], vsteeves@amnh.org, American Museum of Natural History<br />
<br />
While surveying digital research and collections data in the research science divisions at the American Museum of Natural History in NYC (as a part of my [http://ndsr.nycdigital.org/ National Digital Stewardship Residency] project), I have come across the big data hogs (genome sequencing and CT scanning) and the little pieces of data (images, publications), all equally important to not only scientific discovery, but as nodes in the history of science. <br />
<br />
In this session, I will discuss the development of my needs assessment surveys for scientific datasets and the interview process with Museum curators and researchers as background, seguing into an explanation of the results. I will then combine my findings into preliminary selection criteria to choose tools for digital preservation and management unique to scientific datasets. This will brooke a discussion on emerging standards, tools, and technologies in big data, specific to research science. <br />
<br />
I will conclude with preliminary findings on emerging technology that can be used to answer concerns surrounding the management and digital preservation of these data. I am hoping the Q&A session can be used to both answer questions about my project, and function as a way for you (the larger tech-savy library community) to discuss the tools I’ve touched on in this talk. <br />
<br />
== Feminist Human Computer Interaction (HCI) in Library Software ==<br />
<br />
* Bess Sadler, bess@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
Libraries are not neutral repositories of knowledge. Library classification systems and search technologies tend to reflect the inequalities, biases, ethnocentrism, and power imbalances of the societies in which they are built [1]. How might we better resist these tendencies in the library software we create? This talk will examine some qualities of feminist HCI (pluralism, self-disclosure, participation, ecology, advocacy, and embodiment) [2] through the lens of library software. <br />
<br />
[1] Olson, Hope A. (2002). The Power to Name: Locating the Limits of Subject Representation in Libraries. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.<br />
<br />
[2] Bardzell, Shaowen. Feminist HCI: Taking Stock and Outlining an Agenda for Design. CHI 2010: HCI For All. http://dmrussell.net/CHI2010/docs/p1301.pdf<br />
<br />
== Heiðrún: DPLA's Metadata Harvesting, Mapping and Enhancement System ==<br />
<br />
* Audrey Altman, audrey at dp.la, Digital Public Library of America<br />
* Gretchen Gueguen, gretchen at dp.la, Digital Public Library of America<br />
* Mark Breedlove, mb at dp.la, Digital Public Library of America<br />
<br />
The Digital Public Library of America aggregates metadata for over 8 million objects from more than 24 direct partners, or Hubs, using its Metadata Application Profile (MAP), an RDF metadata application profile based on the Europeana Data Model. After working with the initial system for harvesting, mapping and enhancing our Hub’s metadata for a year, we realized that it was inadequate for working with data at this scale. There were architectural issues; it was opaque to non-developer and partner staff; there were inadequate tools for quality assurance and analysis; and the system was unaware that it was working with RDF data. As the network of Hubs expanded and we ingested more metadata, it became harder and harder to know when or why a harvest, a mapping task, or an enrichment went wrong because the tools for quality assurance were largely inadequate. <br />
<br />
The DPLA Content and Technology teams decided to develop a new system from the ground up to address those problems. Development of Heidrun, the internal version of the new system, started in October 2014. Heidrun’s goals are to make it easier for us to harvest and map metadata from various sources and in variety of schemas to the DPLA MAP, to better enrich that metadata using external data sources, and to actively involve our partners in the ingestion process through access to better QA tools. Heidrun and its componentry are built on Ruby on Rails, Blacklight, and ActiveTriples. Our presentation will give some background on our design principles and processes used during development, the architecture of the system, and its functionality. We plan to release a version of Heidrun and its components as a generalized metadata aggregation system for use by DPLA Hubs and others working to aggregate cultural heritage metadata.<br />
<br />
== OS or GTFO: Program or Perish ==<br />
*Tessa Fallon, tessa.fallon@gmail.com<br />
<br />
Description TBD<br />
<br />
== Creating Dynamic— and Cheap!— Digital Displays with HTML 5 Authoring Software ==<br />
* Chris Woodall, cmwoodall@salisbury.edu, Salisbury University Libraries<br />
Would your library like to have large digital signage that displays dynamic information such as library hours, weather, room availability, and more? Have you looked into purchasing large digital signage, only to be turned off by the high price tag and lack of customization available with commercial solutions? Our library has developed a cheap and effective alternative to these systems using HTML 5 authoring software, a large TV, and freely-available APIs from Google, Springshare, and others. At this session, you’ll learn about the system that we have in place for displaying dynamic and easily-updatable information on our library’s large digital display, and how you can easily create something similar for your library.<br />
<br />
== REPOX: Metadata Blender ==<br />
<br />
* John Mignault, jmignault@metro.org, Empire State Digital Network<br />
<br />
With the growth in the number of hubs providing metadata to the Digital Public Library of America, many of them are using REPOX, a tool originally created for the Europeana project, to aggregate disparate metadata feeds and transform them into formats suitable for ingest into DPLA. The Empire State Digital Network, the forthcoming DPLA service hub for NY state, is using it to prepare for our first ingest into DPLA in early 2015. We'll take a look at REPOX and its capabilities and how it can be useful for ingesting and transforming metadata, and also discuss some things we've learned in massaging widely varied metadata feeds.<br />
<br />
== Beyond Open Source ==<br />
<br />
* Jason Casden, jmcasden@ncsu.edu, NCSU Libraries<br />
* Bret Davidson, bddavids@ncsu.edu, NCSU Libraries<br />
<br />
The Code4Lib community has produced an increasingly impressive collection of open source software over the last decade, but much of this creative work remains out of reach for large portions of the library community. Do the relatively privileged institutions represented by a majority of Code4Lib participants have a professional responsibility to support the adoption of their innovations?<br />
<br />
Drawing from old and new software packaging and distribution approaches (from freeware to Docker), we will propose extending the open source software values of collaboration and transparency to include the wide and affordable distribution of software. We believe this will not only simplify the process of sharing our applications within the Code4Lib community, but also make it possible for less well resourced institutions to actually use our software. We will identify areas of need, present our experiences with the users of our own open source projects, discuss our attempts to go beyond open source, and make an argument for the internal value of supporting and encouraging a vibrant library ecosystem.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]] <br />
[[Category:Talk Proposals]]<br />
<br />
== Making It Work: Problem Solving Using Open Source at a Small Academic Library ==<br />
<br />
* Adam Strohm, astrohm@iit.edu, Illinois Institute of Technology<br />
* Max King, mking9@iit.edu, Illinois Institute of Technology<br />
<br />
The Illinois Institute of Technology campus was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2005, and contains a building, Mies van der Rohe's S.R. Crown Hall, that was named a National Historic Landmark in 2001. Creating a digital resource that can adequately showcase the campus and its architecture is challenge enough in and of itself, but doing so as a two-person team of relative newcomers, at a university library without dedicated programmers on staff, ups the ante considerably.<br />
The challenges of technical know-how, staff time, and funding are nothing new to anyone working on digital projects at a university library, and are amplified when doing so at a smaller institution. This talk covers the conception, development, and design of the campus map site that was built, concentrating on the problem-solving strategies developed to cope with limited technical and financial resources.<br />
We'll talk about our approach to development with Open Source software, including Omeka, along with the Neatline and Simile Timeline plugins. We'll also discuss the juggling act of designing for mobile mapping functionality without sacrificing desktop design, weighing the costs of increased functionality versus our ability to time-effectively include that functionality, and the challenge of building a site that could be developed iteratively, with an eye towards future enhancement and sustainability. Finally, we’ll provide recommendations for other librarians at smaller institutions for their own efforts at digital development.<br />
<br />
== Recording Digitization History: Metadata Options for the Process History of Audiovisual Materials ==<br />
<br />
* Peggy Griesinger, peggy_griesinger@moma.org, Museum of Modern Art<br />
<br />
The Museum of Modern Art has amassed a large collection of audiovisual materials over its many decades of existence. In order to preserve these materials, much of the audiovisual collection has been digitized. This is a complex process involving numerous steps and devices, and the methods used for digitization can have an effect on the quality of the file that is preserved. Therefore, knowing exactly how something was digitized is critical for future stewards of these objects to be able to properly care for and preserve them. However, detailed technical information about the processes involved in the digitization of audiovisual materials is not defined explicitly in most metadata schemas used for audiovisual materials. In order to record process history using existing metadata standards, some level of creativity is required to allow existing standards to express this information.<br />
<br />
This talk will detail different metadata standards, including PBCore, PREMIS, and reVTMD, that can be implemented as methods of recording this information. Specifically, the talk will examine efforts to integrate this metadata into the Museum of Modern Art’s new digital repository, the DRMC. This talk will provide background on the DRMC as well as MoMA’s specific institutional needs for process history metadata, then discuss different metadata implementations we have considered to document process history.<br />
<br />
== Pig Kisses Elephant: Building Research Data Services for Web Archives ==<br />
<br />
* Jefferson Bailey, jefferson@archive.org, Internet Archive<br />
* Vinay Goel, vinay@archive.org, Internet Archive<br />
<br />
More and more libraries and archives are creating web archiving programs. For both new and established programs, these archives can consist of hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of born-digital resources within a single collection; as such, they are ideally suited for large-scale computational study and analysis. Yet current access methods for web archives consist largely of browsing the archived web in the same manner as browsing the live web and the size of these collections and complexity of the WARC format can make aggregate analysis difficult. This talk will describe a project to create new ways for users and researchers to access and study web archives by offering extracted and post-processed datasets derived from web collections. Working with the 325+ institutions and their 2600+ collections within the Archive-It service, the Internet Archive is building methods to deliver a variety of datasets culled from collections of web content, including extracted metadata packaged in JSON, longitudinal link graph data, named entities, and other types of data. The talk will cover the technical details of building dataset production pipelines with Apache Pig, Hadoop, and tools like Stanford NER, the programmatic aspects of building data services for archives and researchers, and ongoing work to create new ways to access and study web archives.<br />
<br />
== Awesome Pi, LOL! ==<br />
<br />
* Matt Connolly, mconnolly@cornell.edu, Cornell University Library<br />
* Jennifer Colt, jrc88@cornell.edu, Cornell University Library<br />
<br />
Inspired by Harvard Library Lab’s “Awesome Box” project, Cornell’s Library Outside the Library (LOL) group is piloting a more automated approach to letting our users tell us which materials they find particularly stunning. Armed with a Raspberry Pi, a barcode scanner, and some bits of kit that flash and glow, we have ventured into the foreign world of hardware development. This talk will discuss what it’s like for software developers and designers to get their hands dirty, how patrons are reacting to the Awesomizer, and LOL’s not-afraid-to-fail philosophy of experimentation.<br />
<br />
== You Gotta Keep 'em Separated: The Case for "Bento Box" Discovery Interfaces ==<br />
<br />
* Jason Thomale, jason.thomale@unt.edu, University of North Texas Libraries<br />
<br />
I know, I know--proposing a talk about Resource Discovery is like, ''so'' 2010.<br />
<br />
The thing is, practically all of us--in academic libraries at least--have a similar set up for discovery, with just a few variations, and so talking about it still seems useful. Stop me if this sounds familiar. You've got a single search box on the library homepage as a starting point for discovery. And it's probably a tabbed affair, with an option for searching the catalog for books, an option for searching a discovery service for articles, an option for searching databases, and maybe a few others. Maybe you have an option to search everything at once--probably the default, if you have it. And, if you're a crazy hepcat, maybe you ''only'' have your one search that searches everything, with no tabs.<br />
<br />
Now, the question is, for your "everything" search, are you doing a combined list of results, or are you doing it bento-box style, with a short results list from each category displayed in its own compartment?<br />
<br />
At UNT, we've been holding off on implementing an "everything" search, for various reasons. One reason is that the evidence for either style hasn't been very clear. There's this persistent paradox that we just can't reconcile: users tell us, through word and action, that they prefer searching Google, yet, libraries aren't Google, and there are valid design reasons why we shouldn't try to oversimplify our discovery interfaces to be like Google. And there's user data that supports both sides.<br />
<br />
Holding off on making this decision has granted us 2 years of data on how people use our tabbed search interface that does ''not'' include an "everything" search. Recently I conducted a thorough analysis of this data--specifically the usage and query data for our catalog and discovery system (Summon). And I think it helps make the case for a bento box style discovery interface. To be clear, it isn't exactly the smoking gun that I was hoping for, but the picture it paints I think is telling. At the very least, it points away from a combined-results approach.<br />
<br />
I'm proposing a talk discussing the data we've collected, the trends we've seen, and what I think it all means--plus other reasons that we're jumping on the "bento box" discovery bandwagon and why I think "bento box" is at this point the path that least sells our souls.<br />
<br />
== Don’t know about you, but I’m feeling like SHA-2!: Checksumming with Taylor Swift ==<br />
<br />
* Ashley Blewer!, ashley.blewer@gmail.com<br />
<br />
Checksum technology is used all over the place, from git commits to authenticating Linux packages. It is most commonly used in the digital preservation field to monitor materials in storage for changes that will occur over time or used in the transmission of files during duplication. But do you even checksum, bro? I want this talk to move checksums from a position of mysterious macho jargon to something everyone can understand and want to use. I think a lot of people have heard of checksum but don’t know where to begin when it comes to actually using it at their institution. And cryptography is hella intimidating! This talk will cover what checksums are, how they can be integrated into a library or archival workflow, protecting collections requiring additional levels of security, algorithms used to verify file fixity and how they are different, and other aspects of cryptographic technology. Oh, and please note that all points in this talk will be emphasized or lightly performed through Taylor Swift lyrics. Seriously, this talk will consist of at least 50% Taylor Swift. Can you, like, even?<br />
<br />
== Level Up Your Coding with Code Club (yes, you can talk about it) ==<br />
<br />
* Coral Sheldon-Hess, coral@sheldon-hess.org<br />
<br />
Reading code is a necessary part of becoming a better developer. It gives you more experience and more insight into How Things Are (or Aren't) Done; it builds your intuition about how to solve problems with code; and it increases your confidence that you, too, can tackle whatever technological problems you're facing.<br />
<br />
But you don't have to read code alone! (Which is good. It's really not fun to read code alone.) <br />
<br />
In late 2014, a group of librarians formed two Code Clubs, inspired by [http://bloggytoons.com/code-club/ this talk by Saron] (of Bloggytoons fame). I'd like to tell you about how we've structured our Code Clubs, what has gone well, what we've learned, and what you need to do to form your own Code Club. I'll share a list of the codebases we've looked at, too, to help you get your own Code Club off the ground! <br />
<br />
== The Growth of a Programmer ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:jgo | Joshua Gomez]], Getty Research Institute, jgomez@getty.edu<br />
<br />
Just like other creative endeavors, software developers can experience periods of great productivity or find themselves in a rut. After contemplating the alternating periods in my own career I've noticed several factors that have effected my own professional growth and happiness, including: mentorship, structure, community, teamwork, environment, formal education, etc. Not all of the factors need to be present at all times; but some mixture of them is critical for continued growth. In this talk, I will articulate these factors, discuss how they can effect a developer's career, and how they can be sought out when missing. This talk is aimed at both new developers looking to strike their own path as well as the veterans that lead or mentor them.<br />
<br />
== Developing a Fedora 4.0 Content Model for Disk Images ==<br />
<br />
* Matthew Farrell, matthew.j.farrell@duke.edu, Duke University Libraries<br />
* Alexandra Chassanoff, achass@email.unc.edu, BitCurator Access Project Manager<br />
<br />
As the acquisition of born-digital materials grows, institutions are seeking methods to facilitate easy ingest into their repositories and provide access to disk images and files derived or extracted from disk images. In this session, we describe our development of a Fedora 4.0 Content model for disk images, including acceptable image file formats and the rationale behind those choices. We will also discuss efforts to integrate the disk image content model into the BitCurator Access environment. Unlike generalized, format-agnostic content models which might treat the disk image as a generic bitstream, a content model designed for disk images enables expression of relationships among associated content in the collection such as files extracted from images and other born-digital and digitized material associated with the same creator. It also enables capture of file-system attributes such as file paths, timestamps, whether files are allocated/deleted, etc. Further, a disk image content model suggests further steps repositories can take in order to transform and re-use associated metadata generated during the creation and forensic analysis of the disk image.<br />
<br />
== Data acquisition and publishing tools in R ==<br />
<br />
* Scott Chamberlain, scott@ropensci.org, rOpenSci/UC Berkeley - first-time presenter<br />
<br />
R is an open source programming environment that is widely used among researchers in many fields. R is powerful because it's free, increasingly robust, and facilitates reproducible research, an increasingly sought after goal in academia. Although tools for data manipulation/visualization/analysis are well developed in R, data acquisition and publishing tools are not. rOpenSci is a collaborative effort to create the tools necessary to complete the reproducible research workflow. This presentation discusses the need for these tools, including examples, including interacting with the repositories Mendeley, Dryad, DataONE, and Figshare. In addition, we are building tools for searching scholarly metadata and acuiring full text of open access articles in a standarized way across metadata providers (e.g., Crossref, DataCite, DPLA) and publishers (e.g., PLOS, PeerJ, BMC, Pubmed). Last, we are building out tools for data reading and writing in Ecologial Metadata Language (EML).<br />
<br />
== SPLUNK: Log File Analysis ==<br />
<br />
* Jim LeFager, jlefager@depaul.edu, DePaul University Library<br />
DePaul University Library recently took over monitoring and maintaining of the library EZproxy servers this past year and using Splunk, a machine data analysis tool, we are able to gather information and statistics on our electronic resource usage in addition to monitoring the servers. Splunk is a tool that can collect, analyze, and visualize log files and other machine data in real time and this has allowed for gathering realtime usage statistics for our electronic resources allowing us to filter by multiple facets including IP Range, Group Membership (student, faculty), so that we can see who is accessing our resources and from where. Splunk allows our library to query our data and create rich custom dashboards as well as create alerts that can be triggered when certain conditions are met, such as error codes, which can send an email alert to a group of users. We will be leveraging Splunk to monitor all library web applications going forward. This talk will review setting up Splunk and best practices in using the available features and customizations available including creating queries, alerts, and custom dashboards. <br />
<br />
== Your code does not exist in a vacuum ==<br />
* Becky Yoose, yoosebec at grinnell dot edu, Grinnell College (Done a lightning talk, MC duties, but have not presented a prepared talk)<br />
<br />
“If you have something to say, then say it in code…” - Sebastian Hammer, code4lib 2009<br />
<br />
In its 10 year run, code4lib has covered the spectrum of libtech development, from search to repositories to interfaces. However, during this time there has been little discussion about this one little fact about development - code does not exist in a vacuum. <br />
<br />
Like the comment above, code has something to say. A person’s or organization’s culture and beliefs influences code in all steps of the development cycle. What development method you use, tools, programming languages, licenses - everything is interconnected with and influenced by the philosophies, economics, social structures, and cultural beliefs of the developer and their organization/community.<br />
<br />
This talk will discuss these interconnections and influences when one develops code for libraries, focusing on several development practices (such as “Fail Fast, Fail Often” and Agile) and licensing choices (such as open source) that libtech has either tried to model or incorporate into mainstream libtech practices. It’ll only scratch the surface of the many influences present in libtech development, but it will give folks a starting point to further investigate these connections at their own organizations and as a community as a whole.<br />
<br />
tl;dr - this will be a messy theoretical talk about technology and libraries. No shiny code slides, no live demos. You might come out of this talk feeling uncomfortable. Your code does not exist in a vacuum. Then again, you don’t exist in a vacuum either.<br />
<br />
== The Metadata Hopper: Mapping and Merging Metadata Standards for Simple, User-Friendly Access ==<br />
<br />
* Tracy Seneca, tjseneca@uic.edu, University of Illinois at Chicago<br />
* Esther Verreau: verreau1@uic.edu, University of Illinois at Chicago<br />
<br />
The Chicago Collections Consortium: 15 institutions and growing! 8 distinct EAD standards! At least 3 permutations of MARC, and we lost count of the varieties of custom CONTENTdm image collections. Not to mention the 14,730 unique subject terms, nearly all of which lead our poor end-users to exactly one organization's content. <br />
<br />
All large content aggregation projects have faced this challenge, and there are a few emerging tools to help us wrangle disparate metadata into new contexts. The Metadata Hopper is one such tool. The Metadata Hopper enables archivists to map their local metadata standards to standardized deposit records, and tags those materials using a shared vocabulary, integrating them into a user-friendly portal without disrupting local practices. In last year's Code4Lib lightning talk we described the challenges that the Chicago Collections Consortium faces in creating shared, in-depth access to archival and digital collections about Chicago history and culture across CCC member organizations. This year, thanks to the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, we have a working Django application to demonstrate. In this talk we'll discuss the design that enables multiple layers of flexibility, from the ability to accept a variety of metadata standards to designing for an open source audience.<br />
<br />
http://chicagocollectionsconsortium.org<br />
<br />
== Programmers are not projects: lessons learned from managing humans ==<br />
<br />
* Erin White, erwhite@vcu.edu, Virginia Commonwealth University - first-time presenter<br />
<br />
Managing projects is one thing, but managing people is another. Whether we’re hired as managers or grow “organically” into management roles, sometimes technical people end up leading technical teams (gasp!). I’ll talk about lessons I’ve learned about hiring, retaining, and working long-term and day-to-day with highly tech-competent humans. I’ll also talk about navigating the politics of libraryland, juggling different types of projects, and working with constrained budgets to make good things and keep talented people engaged.<br />
<br />
== Practical Strategies for Picking Low-Hanging Fruits to Improve Your Library's Web Usability and UX ==<br />
<br />
* Bohyun Kim, bkim@hshsl.umaryland.edu, University of Maryland, Baltimore<br />
<br />
Have you ever tried to fix an obvious (to you at least!) problem in Web usability or UX (user experience) only to face strong resistance from the library staff? Are you a strong advocate for making library resources, systems, services, and space as usable as possible, but do you often find yourself struggling to get the point across and/or obtain the crucial buy-in from colleagues and administrators? <br />
<br />
There is no shortage of Web usability and UX guidelines. But applying them to a library and implementing desired changes often involve a long and slow process. To tackle this issue, this talk will focus on how to utilize the 'expert review' process (aka 'heuristic evaluation') as a preliminary or even preparatory step before embarking on more time-and-labor-intensive usability testing and user research. Several examples from simple fixes to more nuanced usability and UX issues in libraries will be discussed to your heart's content. The goal of this talk is to provide practical strategies for picking as many low-hanging fruits as possible to make a real (albeit small) difference to your library's Web usability and UX effectively and efficiently.<br />
<br />
== A Semantic Makeover for CMS Data ==<br />
<br />
* Bill Levay, wjlevay@gmail.com, Linked Jazz Project<br />
<br />
How can we take semi-structured but messy metadata from a repository like CONTENTdm and transform it into rich linked data? Working with metadata from Tulane’s Hogan Jazz Archive Photography Collection, the Linked Jazz Project used Open Refine and Python scripts to tease out proper names, match them with name authority URIs, and specify FOAF relationships between musicians who appear together in photographs. Additional RDF triples were created for any dates associated with the photos, and for those images with place information we employed GeoNames URIs. Historical images and data that were siloed can now interact with other datasets, like Linked Jazz’s rich set of names and personal relationships, and can be visualized [[http://linkedjazz.org/tulane/ see prototype visualization]] or otherwise presented on the web in any number of ways. I have not previously presented at a Code4Lib conference.<br />
<br />
== Taking User Experience (UX) to new heights ==<br />
<br />
* Kayne Richens, kayne.richens@deakin.edu.au, Deakin University<br />
<br />
User Experience, or "UX", is for more than just websites. At Deakin University Library we're exploring ways to improve the user experience inside our campus library spaces, by putting new technologies front and centre in the overall experience for our students. How are we doing this? We’re collaborating with the University's IT department and exploring the following Library-changing opportunities:<br />
<br />
- Augmented Reality for Way-finding: We’re tackling that infamous thing that all Libraries can't get right – way-finding. We're enhancing library tour information and way-finding experiences by introducing augmented reality solutions.<br />
<br />
- Heat mapping the library with wi-fi: We’re using our existing wi-fi infrastructure to present "heat maps" of library space utilisation, allowing our users to easily locate the space that best suits their needs, whether it be busy spaces to collaborate, or quiet spaces to study. And by overlaying computer usage and group study room bookings, users can quickly locate the space they need.<br />
<br />
- Video chat library service: We’re piloting video-conferencing facilities in our group study rooms and spaces, connecting users and librarians and other professionals.<br />
<br />
This talk will look at how these different technologies will be brought together to provide improved user experiences, as well some of the evidence and reasons that helped us to identify our needs, so you can too.<br />
<br />
==How to Hack it as a Working Parent: or, Should Your Face be Bathed in the Blue Glow of a Phone at 2 AM?==<br />
<br />
*Margaret Heller, Loyola University Chicago, mheller1@luc.edu<br />
*Christina Salazar, California State University Channel Islands, christina.salazar@csuci.edu<br />
*May Yan, Ryerson University, may.yan@ryerson.ca<br />
<br />
Modern technology has made it easier than ever for parents employed in technical environments to keep up with work at all hours and in all locations. This makes it possible to work a flexible schedule, but also may lead to problems with work/life balance and furthering unreasonable expectations about working hours. Add to that shifting gender roles and limited paid parental leave in the United States and you have potential for burnout and a certainty for anxiety. It raises the additioal question of whether the “always connected” mindset puts up a barrier to some populations who otherwise might be better represented in open source and library technology communities. <br />
<br />
This presentation will address tools that are useful for working parents in technical library positions, and share some lessons learned about using these tools while maintaining a reasonable work/life balance. We will consider a question that Karen Coyle raised back in 1996: <br />
“What if the thousands of hours of graveyard shift amateur hacking wasn't really the best way to get the job done? That would be unthinkable.” <br />
<br />
For those who are able to take an extended parental leave, we will present strategies for minimizing the impact to your career and your employer. For those (particularly in the United States) who are only able to take a short leave will require different strategies. Despite different levels of preparation, all are useful exercises in succession planning and making a stronger workplace and future ability to work a flexible schedule through reviewing workloads, cross-training personnel, hiring contract replacements, and creative divisions of labor. Such preparation makes work better for everyone, kids or no kids or caretakers of any kind.<br />
<br />
==Making your digital objects embeddable around the web==<br />
<br />
* Jessie Keck, jkeck@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
* Jack Reed, pjreed@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
With more and more content from our digital repositories making their way into our discovery environments we quickly realize that we’re repeatedly re-inventing the wheel when it comes to creating “Viewers” for these digital objects. With various different types of viewers necessary (books, images, audio, video, geospatial data, etc) the burden of getting these viewers into various environments (topic guides, blogs, catalogs, etc) becomes exponential.<br />
<br />
In this talk we’ll discuss how Stanford University Libraries implemented an oEmbed service to create an extensible viewer framework for all of its digital content. Using this service we’ve been able to easily integrate viewers into various discovery applications as well as make it easy for end users who discover our objects to easily embed customized versions into their own websites and blogs.<br />
<br />
==So you want to make your geospatial data discoverable==<br />
<br />
* Jack Reed, pjreed@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
Finding data for research or coursework can be one of the most time intensive tasks for a scholar or student. We introduce GeoBlacklight, an open source, multi-institutional software project focused on solving these common challenges at institutions across the world. GeoBlacklight prioritizes user experience, integrates with many GIS tools, and streamlines the use and organization of geospatial data. This talk will provide an introduction to the software, demonstrate current functionality, and provide a road map for future work.<br />
<br />
== Clueless-Driven Development: How I learned to migrate to Fedora 4 ==<br />
<br />
* Adam Wead, awead@psu.edu, Penn State University<br />
<br />
Recently I was tasked with migrating the content from our Fedora3 repository to the new Fedora4 repository architecture.<br />
Despite a wealth of community support, I had no idea how to approach, or even begin to solve this problem. I knew I<br />
wanted to follow best practices and use test-driven development to build my solution, but had no idea where to start.<br />
Despite this initial setback, I was able to start writing tests with only a vague understanding of the problem. As my<br />
tests exposed where my understanding of the problem was flawed, my code evolved, and within a week I had arrived at a<br />
working solution that exhibited all the hallmarks of good testing and software design.<br />
<br />
This talk recounts the process I went through from starting with practically nothing, to arriving at a working solution.<br />
You can follow the rules of test-driven development, but you can write tests in an expressive way to describe the<br />
problem instead of just describing what the code should do. It was also essential to begin testing from an integration<br />
viewpoint as opposed to a unit one, because at the outset the units were unknown and were later realized through further<br />
development. For the presentation, I will be demonstrating using RSpec and Ruby. All the code examples will be related<br />
to the Hydra software stack; however, I hope to show that the processes at work will be applicable in any context.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Designing and Leading a Kick A** Tech Team ==<br />
<br />
* Sibyl Schaefer, sschaefer@rockarch.org, Rockefeller Archive Center<br />
<br />
New managers are often promoted without receiving management training, yet management is not something you just figure out. The experience of being expected to know how to manage, yet not being trained to do so often results in new managers feeling isolated and unsure how to move from making to managing. In this talk I’ll focus on my own managerial experience of designing and leading an archival tech team in a small independent archives. Topics covered will include hiring, delegating, creating a team culture, and leading people whose specialized knowledge exceeds your own. The talk take-aways should be applicable to managers and employees at large and small institutions alike.<br />
<br />
<br />
==American (Archives) Horror Story: LTO Failure and Data Loss ==<br />
<br />
* Rebecca Fraimow, rebecca_fraimow@wgbh.org, NDSR Resident, WGBH<br />
* Casey Davis, casey_davis@wgbh.org, Project Manager, American Archive of Public Broadcasting, WGBH<br />
<br />
Here’s a story to send shivers down archival spines: when transferring video files off LTO for the American Archive project, WGBH got an initial failure rate of 57%. After repeat tries, the rates improved; still, an unnervingly large percentage of files were never able to be transferred successfully. Even more unnerving, going public with our horror story got a big response from other archives using LTO -- it seems like many institutions are having similarly scary results. What are the real risks with LTO tape? Are there steps that archives should be taking to better circumvent those risks? This presentation will share information about LTO storage failures across archives world and discuss the process of investigating the problem at WGBH by testing different methods of data retrieval from LTO (direct and networked downloads, individual file retrieval and bulk data dump, use of LTO 4 and LTO 6 decks) and using checksum comparisons and file analysis and characterization tools such as ffprobe, mediainfo and exiftool to analyze failed files. We'll also present whatever results we’ve managed to turn up by the time of Code4Lib!<br />
<br />
== PBCore in Action: Three Words, Not Two! ==<br />
<br />
* Casey E. Davis, casey_davis@wgbh.org, Project Manager, American Archive of Public Broadcasting, WGBH<br />
* Andrew (Drew) Myers, andrew_myers@wgbh.org, Supervising Developer, WGBH<br />
<br />
In 2001, public media representatives developed the PBCore XML schema to establish a common language for managing metadata about their analog and digital audio and video. Since then, PBCore has been adopted by a number of organizations and archivists in the moving image archival community. The schema has also undergone a few revisions, but on more than one occasion it was left orphaned and with little to no support.<br />
<br />
Times have changed. You may have heard the news that PBCore is back in action as part of the American Archive of Public Broadcasting initiative and via the Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA) PBCore Advisory Subcommittee. A group of archivists, public media stakeholders, and engaged users have come together to provide necessary, sustaining support for the standard and to see to its further development. <br />
<br />
At this session, we'll discuss the scope and uses of PBCore in digital preservation and access, report on the progress and goals of the PBCore Advisory Subcommittee, and share how the group (by the time of the conference) will have transformed the XML schema into an RDF ontology, bringing PBCore into the second decade of the 21st century. #PBHardcore<br />
<br />
==Collaborating to Avert the Digital Graveyard==<br />
<br />
* Harish Nayak, hnayak@library.rochester.edu, University of Rochester Libraries <br />
* Sean Morris, smorris@library.rochester.edu, University of Rochester Libraries <br />
<br />
In 1995, the Robbins Library at the University of Rochester created a digital collection of Arthurian texts, images, and bibliographies. Together with medieval scholars, we recently completed the redesign and development of an interface for this collection. Using FRBR concepts, we re-conceptualized organization and editing workflow from the ground up in a mobile-first Drupal-based project. <br />
<br />
In this talk we will describe the project as well as how we utilized the techniques of work practice study and user centered design to maintain engagement with reluctant stakeholders, nontechnical scholars, and VERY meticulous graduate students. Neither of us have previously presented at a Code4Lib conference.<br />
<br />
==Docker? VMs? EC2? Yes! With Packer.io==<br />
<br />
* Kevin S. Clarke, ksclarke@gmail.com, Digital Library Programmer, UCLA<br />
<br />
There are a lot of exciting ways to deploy a software stack nowadays. Many of our library systems are fully virtualized. Docker is a compelling alternative, and there are also cloud options like Amazon's EC2. This talk will introduce Packer.io, a tool for creating identical machine images for multiple platforms (e.g., Docker, VMWare, VirtualBox, EC2, GCE, OpenStack, et al.) all from a single source configuration. It works well with Ansible, Chef, Puppet, Salt, and plain old Bash scripts. And, it's designed to be scriptable so that builds can be automated. This presentation will show how easy it is to use Packer.io to bring up a set of related services like Fedora 4, Grinder (for stress testing), and Graphite (for charting metrics). As an added value, all the buzzwords in this proposal will be defined and explained!<br />
<br />
== Technology on your Wrist: Cross-platform Smartwatch Development for Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:sanderson|Steven Carl Anderson]], sanderson@bpl.org, [http://www.bpl.org Boston Public Library] (no previously accepted prepared talks but have done lightning talks in the past)<br />
<br />
I'll be the first to admit: smartwatches are unlikely to completely revolutionize how a library provides online services. But I believe they still represent an opportunity to further enhance existing library services and resources in a unique way.<br />
<br />
At the Boston Public Library (BPL), we're in the initial phases of designing a modest smartwatch app to provide notifications for circulation availability and checked-out-material due-date alerts by the end of current year. We're starting small, but we plan to evolve the concept over time as we see what (if any) traction such an application gets with potential users. For example, we plan to explore the possibility of adding "nearest branch to my current location" functionality to this app.<br />
<br />
Despite the "development phase" of this application as of this writing, this talk is not being given by a novice. As a technology enthusiast, I've released [http://www.phdgaming.com/smartwatch_projects/ five smartwatch applications] and have had two of those be finalists in a [http://www.phdgaming.com/samsung_challenge/ Samsung sponsored development challenge]. This experience not only will allow for the BPL to avoid many beginner mistakes in its smartwatch app development but also gives a much more complete understanding of the smartwatch development ecosystem.<br />
<br />
This talk will explore the following questions:<br />
<br />
* What kinds of online library services could potentially be transformed or translated into the smartwatch/wearable domain? What kinds of services are better left alone? These questions are currently being explored and I'll talk about our plans and experiences. Included will be any statistical information from our application launch along with statistics from my personal development.<br />
<br />
* How to support all the different operating systems these devices run without painful modifications to your codebase. (There's Tizen that is used by Samsung's Gear 2 and Gear S, Android Wear that is used by most other non-Apple manufacturers, then there is Apple's upcoming smartwatch itself, etc.)<br />
<br />
* How to support different screen resolutions on such a small device. From round to rectangular to perfectly square, smartwatches come in all different shapes these days.<br />
<br />
* What are the app stores like on these platforms? As I support multiple applications through different distribution networks, a guide to navigating how to distribute one's app is included and I'll reveal how these systems work “behind the curtain.”<br />
<br />
* What are common issues and pitfalls to avoid when doing development? Tips on broken APIs and how to cope or optimizing your code will be included.<br />
<br />
==Seeing the Forest From the Trees: The Art of Creating Workflows for Digital Projects ==<br />
<br />
* Jen LaBarbera, j.labarbera@neu.edu, NDSR Resident, Northeastern University<br />
* Joey Heinen, joseph_heinen@harvard.edu, NDSR Resident, Harvard University<br />
* Rebecca Fraimow, rebecca_fraimow@wgbh.org, NDSR Resident, WGBH<br />
* Tricia Patterson, triciap@mit.edu, NDSR Resident, MIT<br />
<br />
We have to "turn projects into programs" in order to create a solid and sustainable digital preservation initiative...but what the heck does that even mean? What does that look like?<br />
<br />
In this talk, members of the inaugural Boston cohort of the National Digital Stewardship Residency will discuss one piece of our digital preservation test kitchen: our stabs at creating digital workflows that will (hopefully) help our institutions turn digital preservation projects into programs. Specifically, we will talk about how difficult it is to create a general and overarching workflow for digital preservation tasks (e.g. ingest into repositories, format migrations, etc.) that incorporates various technical tools while also taking into account the myriad and unending list of possible exceptions or special scenarios. Turning these complicated, specific processes into a simplified and generalized workflow is an art. We haven't necessarily perfected that art yet, but in this talk, we'll share what has worked for us -- and what hasn't. We’ll also touch on the importance of documentation, and achieving that delicate balance of adequately thorough documentation that doesn’t pose the risk of information avalanche. These processes often create more questions than answers, but we'll share the answers that we (and our mentors) have found along the way!<br />
<br />
== Annotations as Linked Data with Fedora4 and Triannon (a Real Use Case for RDF!) ==<br />
<br />
* Rob Sanderson, azaroth@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
* Naomi Dushay, ndushay@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
Annotations on content resources allow users to contribute knowledge within the digital repository space. W3C Open Annotation provides a comprehensive model for web annotation on all types of content, using Linked Data as a fundamental framework. Annotation clients generate instances of this model, typically using a JSON serialization, but need to store that data somewhere using a standard interaction pattern so that best of breed clients, servers, and data can be mixed and matched.<br />
<br />
Stanford is using Fedora4 for managing Open Annotations, via a middleware component called Triannon. Triannon receives the JSON data from the annotation client, and uses the Linked Data Platform API implementation in Fedora4 to create, retrieve, update and delete the constituent resources. Triannon could be easily modified to use other LDP implementations, or could be modified to work with linked data other than annotations.<br />
<br />
== Hydras in the Wild: A survey of current projects ==<br />
<br />
* Mark Bussey, mark@curationexperts.com, Data Curation Experts<br />
<br />
You've seen the tutorials, but [https://github.com/projecthydra/hydra/wiki/Dive-into-Hydra Dive Into Hydra] seems to leave something wanting. What can you really do using the Hydra Framework? This talks looks at a number of current Hydra projects and highlights the design and functional features unique to each. Compare and contrast UX, design and functional capabilites from a range of hydra-based repositories including:<br />
* Avalon for media discovery and distribution (Indiana and Northwestern Univiersities) <br />
* HydraDam for media archive management(WGBH)<br />
* HyHull for general Institutional Repository needs (University of Hull)<br />
* T-DIL for slide library functions (Tufts University)<br />
* Sufia & Scholarsphere as a bundled self-deposit IR solution (Pennsylvania State University)<br />
* Curate & Worthwhile as general purpose repository platforms (Multiple Insititutions)<br />
This will be a whirlwind tour aimed at providing ideas and inspiration for your own repository development project.<br />
<br />
== Hydra Makeovers! ==<br />
<br />
* Alicia Cozine, alicia@curationexperts.com, Data Curation Experts<br />
* Patrick Feeley, pgf8@case.edu, Case Western Reserve University<br />
<br />
Compare two Hydra-based applications with the systems they replaced. Marvel at the Before and After snapshots of functionality, speed, and look & feel. <br />
* '''Digital Case 2.0''' is an institutional repository, complete with administrative tools, derivatives transcoding, flexible XML metadata storage, embargo and lease capability, faceted searching, and content viewers for texts/TEI, images, audio recordings, and videos. Digital Case 2.0 is based on worthwhile, an open-source IR starter gem. <br />
* '''The Tufts Digital Image Library''' is a specialized tool for art and art history resources, offering image collections with user access controls, image ordering, collection nesting, drag-and-drop organization, slideshows, and export capability. <br />
Both new systems are built on hydra, the open-source Ruby-on-Rails repository solution that incorporates Fedora for storage, Solr for indexing, and Blacklight for search optimization. Their beauty is not just skin-deep!<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
== Helping Google (and scholars, researchers, educators, & the public) find archival audio ==<br />
<br />
* Anne Wootton, anne@popuparchive.org, Pop Up Archive (www.popuparchive.org)<br />
<br />
Culturally significant digital audio collections are hard to discover on the web. There are major barriers keeping this valuable media from scholars, researchers, and the general public:<br />
<br />
Audio is opaque: you can’t picture sound, or skim the words in a recording. <br />
Audio is hard to share: there’s no text to interact with. <br />
Audio is not text: but since text is the medium of the web, there’s no path for audiences to find content-rich audio.<br />
Audio metadata is inconsistent and incomplete.<br />
<br />
At Pop Up Archive, we're helping solve this problem making the spoken word searchable. We began as a UC-Berkeley School of Information Master's thesis to provide better access to recorded sound for audio producers, journalists, and historians. Today, Pop Up Archive processes thousands of hours of sound from all over the web to create automatic, timestamped transcripts and keywords, working with media companies and institutions like NPR, KQED, HuffPost Live, Princeton, and Stanford. We're building collections of sound from journalists, media organizations, and oral history archives from around the world. Pop Up Archive is supported by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and 500 Startups.<br />
<br />
== Digital Content Integrated with ILS Data for User Discovery: Lessons Learned ==<br />
<br />
* Naomi Dushay, ndushay@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
* Laney McGlohon, laneymcg@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries (first-time presenter)<br />
<br />
So you want to expose your digital content in your discovery interface, integrated with the data from your ILS? How do you make the best information user searchable? How do you present complete, up to date search results with a minimum of duplicate entries?<br />
<br />
At Stanford, we have these cases and more:<br />
* digital content with no metadata in ILS<br />
* digital content for metadata in ILS<br />
* digital content with its own metadata derived from ILS metadata.<br />
<br />
We will describe our efforts to accommodate multiple updatable metadata sources for materials in the ILS and our Digital Object Repository while presenting users with reduced duplication in SearchWorks. Included will be some failures, some successes, and an honest assessment of where we are now.<br />
<br />
== Show All the Things: Kanban for Libraries == <br />
<br />
* Mike Hagedon, mhagedon@email.arizona.edu, University of Arizona Libraries (first-time presenter)<br />
<br />
The web developers at the University of Arizona Libraries had a problem: we were working on a major website rebuild project with no clear way to prioritize it against our other work. We knew we wanted to follow Agile principles and initially chose Scrum to organize and communicate about our work. But we found that certain core pieces of Scrum did not work for our team. Then we discovered Kanban, an Agile meta-process for organizing work (team or individual) that treats the work more as a flow than as a series of fixed time boxes. I’ll be talking about our journey toward finding a process that works for our team and how we’ve applied the principles of Kanban to better get our work done. Specifically, I'll discuss principles like how to visualize all your work, how to limit how much you’re doing (to get more done!), and how to optimize the flow of your work.<br />
<br />
== DIY Catalog ==<br />
<br />
* Wayne Schneider, wschneider at [//www.hclib.org hclib.org], [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library]<br />
* Amy Drayer, adrayer at [//www.hclib.org hclib.org], [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library]<br />
<br />
With so many discovery layers being made available that didn’t quite fit user needs but still came with substantial costs, Hennepin County Library determined it would develop one that could handle its customizations. So they built their own ILS API, Web services, and an interface that provides all the features (and existing custom features) of the old catalog, with new features planned, all within a responsive layout. Get a look at the system architecture, how the front end communicates through the layers back to the databases, and how to manage the infrastructure.<br />
<br />
== OverDrive: Full Integration ==<br />
<br />
* Amy Drayer, adrayer at [//www.hclib.org hclib.org], [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library]<br />
* Wayne Schneider, wschneider at [//www.hclib.org hclib.org], [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library]<br />
<br />
How do you increase usage of your ebooks? Seamless integration in the catalog certainly helps. Users can search for digital titles, limit to just those that are available, place a request, borrow, and manage all their digital titles from the library website alongside all the other physical titles the library has. Get a quick demo and learn how this was all made possible.<br />
<br />
The [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library] is ranked one of [//www.thedigitalshift.com/2014/10/ebooks/overdrive-api-usage-indicates-growth-ebook-checkouts-via-opac/ the top users of OverDrive and OverDrive’s API] and is looking to more fully integrate 3M Cloud, OneClickDigital, and other digital resources.<br />
<br />
== Dynamic Indexing: a Tragic Solr Story ==<br />
<br />
* Wayne Schneider, wschneider at [//www.hclib.org hclib.org], [//www.hclib.org Hennepin County Library]<br />
<br />
Loading data from an ILS into Solr isn’t so hard, unless it needs to be dynamic, fast, and hold more data than what can be found in 1.5 million MARC records. Some additional information we’ve incorporated are from Syndetics, ILS circulation, and OverDrive. We’ll share the nitty gritty details and what we learned about dynamic Solr indexing, including how to get good performance, how to deal with indexing failures, how to schedule it all to keep the data up-to-date, and some things you can do with that data such as popularity ratings.<br />
<br />
== Fedora 4, Survey of Core Capabilities and External Modules: == <br />
* Andrew Woods, awoods@duraspace.org, DuraSpace<br />
<br />
Now that the production release of Fedora 4.0 is out, the time is right to take a step back and review the core capabilities offered by Fedora:<br />
* Basic CRUD<br />
* Versioning<br />
*- Transactions<br />
* etc<br />
<br />
...and take a closer look at the supported external modules:<br />
* Authorization<br />
* Solr integration<br />
* Triplestore integration<br />
* Camel integration<br />
* etc<br />
<br />
In addition to clarifying specific implementation details, this is an opportunity to surface community requirements which may have not been addressed in the initial release.<br />
<br />
== Bleeding edge beacons: redesign of a library tour with new technology ==<br />
<br />
* Neal Henshaw, Virginia Tech <br />
* Somiah Lattimore, Straight Up Creative<br />
* Keith Gilbertson, keith.gilbertson@vt.edu, Virginia Tech<br />
<br />
This group has not yet presented at Code4Lib<br />
<br />
A technology liaison, a designer, and a developer are working together to update a mobile audio tour of an academic library.<br />
<br />
The walking tour was originally conceived of and created by the technology liaison to provide an orientation experience for incoming students. In its current version, patrons visit several stations in the library and activate an audio description of each station by scanning a QR barcode with a mobile device.<br />
<br />
We are building a prototype to test with focus groups so that we can launch a new version of the tour in early 2015. The tour has been reimagined with a professional and communicative user interface that presents students with learning goals for each location in the library. The new version of the tour is a mobile application with integrated support for micro-location technology provided through Bluetooth low energy beacon devices, known informally as iBeacons, installed throughout the building. As a touring student walks through the library, her location is noted by the app so that an appropriate video segment is automatically played according to the current location.<br />
<br />
We will discuss perspectives on the design of the project, including<br />
<br />
* Designing with technology to achieve learning goals<br />
* Designing graphical elements, interaction, and user experience<br />
* Designing to maintain compatibility with older technologies<br />
<br />
We’ll explain our efforts to make the application usable by those with hearing impairments and mobility impairments, reactions from our first users, and challenges in working with the relatively new beacon technology.<br />
<br />
== Distributed Remediation: Small tools for big problems: ==<br />
<br />
* Matt Miller, matthewmiller@nypl.org, New York Public Library, NYPL Labs<br />
<br />
Remediation of legacy data can be automated only so much. Certain essential cleanup tasks, such as aligning a name with the correct authorized version, is very difficult for a computer yet trivial for a person. While it is these types remediations that will allow an institution to take advantage and participate in the web of Linked Open Data, a wholly manual approach is unrealistic. However, by augmenting automated remediation with a light human touch we can quickly and efficiently reach our goals. This talk will look at tools and methods being developed at NYPL Labs to empower library staff and the public to help clean up our legacy metadata through collaborative remediation.<br />
<br />
==VuFind + WorldCat: Open Source Discovery Meets Big Library Data==<br />
<br />
* Karen A. Coombs, coombsk@oclc.org, OCLC<br />
* Demian Katz, demian.katz@villanova.edu, Villanova University<br />
<br />
Good collaboration is crucial to any integration. Our project, to integrate the open source discovery tool, VuFind, with results from the new WorldCat Discovery API, is no different. We want to exploit the flexibility of VuFind and add the depth and breadth of WorldCat and central index content. Plus, the project has the potential to eliminate the hurdle of exporting and indexing MARC records for 32 VuFind libraries.<br />
<br />
While we are really excited about the UI enhancements, we are also curious to see how we can share our domain expertise between our two organizations to get the project done quickly. How will different perspectives shape our existing code bases? How will we adjust to working on the same code base simultaneously? And how can we best incorporate what we learn along the way?<br />
<br />
There is also new territory to explore using the API: integrating bibliographic and article data into a single results set. And the overarching question: will we be able to take advantage of Linked Data in the WorldCat Discovery API to create some “glue” between records in existing VuFind indexes and third-party data providers?<br />
<br />
This presentation will discuss our adventures in the OCLC WorldShare Platform/VuFind collaboration: the opportunities, challenges and results. You’ll learn what worked, what didn’t and how you can improve your own discovery interface integration project—no matter what provider or APIs you use.<br />
<br />
== Book Reader Bingo: Which Page-Turner Should I Use? ==<br />
<br />
* Eben English, eenglish [at] bpl.org, Boston Public Library<br />
<br />
Another day, another library reinventing the book-viewer wheel. When will the madness end? This talk will explore the current landscape of book-viewer/page-turner applications for digital library systems with an eye towards helping you make the right decision for your project. We'll look at some the major players on the market (such as Internet Archive BookReader, Wellcome Player, Mirador, and WDL-Viewer to name a few) and compare them based on a number of criteria: feature sets, mobile/tablet friendliness, ease of integration, code health, test coverage, "market share" (number of implementers), and other important factors. We'll look at the results of ACTUAL USABILITY TESTS to see what features users REALLY want in a book-viewer, and how each app measures up. <br />
<br />
We'll also discuss important recent trends (such as the IIIF Presentation API, ReadersFirst, and NYPL's Library Simplified initiative) that have the potential to shape the book-viewer development landscape in the immediate future. Which page-turner applications are best poised to adopt/integrate/leverage these emerging standards? Which will become obsolete? This talk has the answers you need.<br />
<br />
== Rich Citations ==<br />
<br />
* Adam Becker, abecker@plos.org, Public Library of Science<br />
* Erik Hetzner, ehetzner@plos.org, Public Library of Science<br />
<br />
Citations should connect you to the research you need. They should<br />
link directly to the relevant papers and data. They should tell you<br />
everything you need to know about how and where two pieces of research<br />
are connected. They should be easy to use and they should never get in<br />
the way of the reading experience. In short, citations should not<br />
clumsily point to a mere chunk of plain undifferentiated text sitting<br />
in a static list at the end of the paper. But with almost no<br />
exceptions, citations in scientific papers do just that.<br />
<br />
PLOS Labs has been working on a project to capture extra information<br />
about citations. To this end, we have designed a metadata structure<br />
describing the context of a paper's citations, called rich citations.<br />
This structured information includes complete bibliographic<br />
information for the cited items, location and context of the in-text<br />
citation, co-citations, reference license and status (updated,<br />
retracted, etc.), and more.<br />
<br />
We have processed the complete PLOS corpus to extract this rich<br />
citation metadata, and made this data available in an API located at<br />
http://api.richcitations.org/.<br />
<br />
We have also developed a JavaScript overlay to enhance a paper's view<br />
using rich citations (http://alpha.richcitations.org). This overlay<br />
uses the underlying rich citation metadata to allow the user to view<br />
information about an in-text citation, quickly navigate between<br />
citations, and sort and filter the paper's reference list.<br />
<br />
In this talk, we will describe the rich citation metadata that we are<br />
capturing. We will demonstrate how this metadata can enhance a<br />
reader's experience of an article and how it can be used by<br />
researchers to better understand how citations are used in the<br />
scientific community. We will also discuss our ongoing plans to extend<br />
this project to the wider literature beyond PLOS, and how interested<br />
members of the community can help.<br />
<br />
== Scriptaloging with ArchivesSpace and NodeJS ==<br />
<br />
* Brian Hoffman, brianjhoffman@gmail.com<br />
<br />
ArchivesSpace is a new web application for managing archival collections. It has a browser-based interface for entering and editing metadata, and can import data serialized as EAD, MARC, and several other formats. But there may be situations where neither of these are quite what you want. For instance, you may have a large folder of images that each need a digital object record; or you may want to export an EAD for every collection in your repository; or calculate the total extent of your collection; or execute a global search and replace; or batch-update barcodes, etc. You could write a plugin using ArchivesSpace’s plugin API, but that requires facility with Ruby as well as access to the environment where the application is running. A more lightweight approach is to access your data through ArchivesSpace’s powerful REST API, and process it using whatever scripting language you prefer. This talk will present some simple “scriptaloging” solutions that a moderately skilled programmer can use to automate data entry or import tasks using an extendable command line tool written in NodeJS (https://www.npmjs.org/package/as-cli) and loosely inspired by Drupal’s drush utilitly.<br />
<br />
== Consuming Big Linked Open Data in Practice: Authority Shifts and Identifier Drift ==<br />
<br />
* Kathryn Stine, katstine@berkeley.edu, UC Berkeley (first-time presenter)<br />
* Stephanie Collett, stephanie.collett@ucop.edu, California Digital Library, UC (c4l 2012 presenter)<br />
<br />
Increasingly, authoritative datasets of interest to libraries (subjects, names, classifications, etc.) are are available in bulk, exposed as linked open data. Unfettered access can allow libraries to aggregate, connect, and augment data in new ways that will benefit users. This talk will describe our exploratory experience integrating bulk data from the Virtual International Authority File (VIAF) into HathiTrust metadata to improve discovery and collection management.<br />
<br />
Authoritative data is not static - datasets change with new contributions and re-clustering, resulting in new identifier relationships. We will describe the challenges this presents with accessing, processing, and syncing our metadata with a massive, complex linked dataset. We will talk about our technical approach to navigating an ecosystem of identifiers and mitigating cached identifier drift between systems as authority data shifts. We aim to spark conversation about data accessibility and the relationships between local, consortial, and authoritative metadata as the library community moves beyond “Hello, world” linked data examples to integrating this data at scale into existing systems.<br />
<br />
== Your Chocolate is in My Peanut Butter! Mixing up Content and Presentation Layers to Build Smarter Books in Browsers with RDFa, Schema.org, and Linked Data Topics ==<br />
<br />
* Jason A. Clark [@jaclark], Head, Library Informatics & Computing, Montana State University, jaclark@montana.edu<br />
* Scott W. H. Young [@hei_scott], Digital Initiatives Librarian, Montana State University, swyoung@montana.edu<br />
<br />
Common methods of publishing book content have focused on various implementations of existing technologies such as LaTeX, Markdown, and .epub. A common theme within this development has been the separation of presentation layers and content layers. What if there was another way? In responding to that question, we’ll look at our local @msulibrary prototype software funded by an IMLS Sparks! Innovation grant for presenting books inside of web browsers (https://github.com/jasonclark/bib-template). Our talk will focus on the tools and technologies of open web publishing. We’ll consider the strange and wonderful benefits of integrating the presentation layer and content layer using semantic RDFa HTML5 markup, and we’ll demonstrate how describing and displaying books within an open web model impacts discovery, eBook production, and machine-readability.<br />
<br />
Our session will include:<br />
* The benefits of using RDFa, Schema.org, and linked data models for book production<br />
* How structured data models for book content can turn your webpage into your API<br />
* Analyze the effects of this practice for machine-understanding, SEO, and UX<br />
* Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of this model as it applies to a range of book genres, including web book prototypes for fiction and poetry.<br />
<br />
Chocolate/Peanut Butter... RDFa/HTML5... Linked Data/Dbpedia Topics... "Great tastes that go great together."<br />
<br />
== Integration/Collaboration: Playing Well With Others ==<br />
<br />
* Sarah Romkey, sromkey@artefactual.com, Artefactual Systems<br />
* Justin Simpson, jsimpson@artefactual.com, Artefactual Systems<br />
<br />
There are many different software applications and systems being used in collecting institutions to handle all aspects of managing their digital collections. Within a single institution, it is possible to have several tools with overlapping functionality. Sometimes the biggest gains in functionality and productivity come from a focus on connecting these systems together. <br />
<br />
In this talk we will present several examples of integration and collaboration that we have been involved in while working on the Archivematica project. Examples of integrations with both open source and proprietary systems, as well as examples of collaborative development processes.<br />
<br />
== BYOB: Build Your Own Bootstrap ==<br />
<br />
* Axa Mei Liauw, aliauw@princeton.edu, Princeton University Library<br />
* Kevin Reiss, kr2@princeton.edu, Princeton University Library<br />
<br />
Bootstrap is awesome! It allows for quick and easy front-end development without demanding too much time with the design of the user interface. A framework like Bootstrap can also help libraries address one of our top usability problems: wild inconsistency of styles and layouts across our own in-house applications and websites.<br />
<br />
However, what if you do not want to compromise your creativity and make your project visually stand out? With enough Sass or Less knowledge it is possible to highly customize Bootstrap to fit your needs, but in the end you still end up with your design and code buying into Bootstrap's markup and design conventions, which are not always what you want. Sometimes you simply want to start with a clean slate and not fight the framework and use only the components and features you need.<br />
<br />
In that case, build your own Bootstrap! In this talk we will discuss techniques for using some of the emerging tools from the front-end development and design communities to create a maintainable, modular in-house Sass toolkit that we are implementing within a variety of tools including Drupal, Rails applications, in house PHP applications, as well as within vendor solutions like Libguides and ILLiad. Some specific tools we will discuss are Grunt, Bower, and Sass tools like Singularity, Breakpoint, and Bourbon.<br />
<br />
== Plz to let me download this ebook: an idea for better leisure reading access ==<br />
<br />
* Lauren Ajamie, lajamie@nd.edu, University of Notre Dame<br />
<br />
(I haven't presented at Code4Lib before)<br />
<br />
The landscape of finding and getting fiction (and non-fiction for leisure reading) has changed dramatically in the past few years, and one of the most disruptive new developments could turn out to be Oyster, a "Netflix for books" ebook subscription. While somewhat expensive and with a developing selection of materials, the platform is amazingly easy to use, and makes finding and reading ebooks a two step process: find a book, start reading. Compare this to getting ebooks (or even print books) from your library, a process which could take multiple user names and up to a dozen steps. For both the future of libraries, and my own selfish desires, I want to make this better! This speculative talk will discuss an idea I have (that I will need help with) to make finding and borrowing leisure reading materials less frustrating, and will hopefully result in a library-wide conversation about the discovery of, and access to, leisure reading materials.<br />
<br />
== Formats For All! The Future of the Archivematica Format Policy Registry ==<br />
<br />
* Misty De Meo, mdemeo@artefactual.com, Artefactual Systems (first-time talk submitter)<br />
<br />
Archivematica's Format Policy Registry (FPR) is an open-source preservation planning tool. The FPR is designed to abstract away many of the challenges involved in identifying file formats, as well as picking the right tools to use to perform tasks like metadata extraction, format transformation and normalization.<br />
<br />
The first part of this talk will focus on the FPR's structure and its capabilities, but this isn't just a vendor pitch. The current version of the registry is only designed around Archivematica's usecases, but we want to bring the FPR to the world and make it work great for other software too. Share your format policies between Archivematica, Islandora, and Hydra! Share your file IDs between applications so you never misidentify a file again! Build new software without having to worry about the details of how to run external tools on files! The second part of the talk will focus on possible future developments, how the FPR might change, and what a community effort to bring the FPR forward might look like.<br />
<br />
== PeerLibrary – Facilitating the global conversation on academic literature ==<br />
<br />
* Timothy Quach, UC Berkeley<br />
* Rachel Wolfsohn, UC Berkeley, rachel at peerlibrary.org<br />
* Mitar Milutinovic, UC Berkeley, mitar.code4lib at peerlibrary.org<br />
* Not presented or attended code4lib before<br />
<br />
We present [https://peerlibrary.org/ PeerLibrary] as an example of how to intertwine various tools and methods to spread the conversation about academic publications. PeerLibrary is unique because of our collaborative annotation and discussions layer integrated with the in-browser PDF viewer. PeerLibrary provides tools to annotate and comment directly on the works. Users can highlight important information and take notes in the margins online, just as how one would mark up a physical research paper.<br />
<br />
Our vision is a virtual space spans the horizontal of all academic knowledge, where individuals across the globe can connect and learn things only another human can help teach. PeerLibrary can be used as a system for depositing original work, archive navigation, to help organize conferences and journals, as a reference manager, a social network to follow what others are doing, for proposing/recommending connections, collaboration, reading, commenting, organizing or sharing papers. PeerLibrary is a platform that synthesizes an online repository and those who utilize it. Our longer-term goal is for PeerLibrary to become a web-first standards-based publication platform. We believe that all stages of research should be collaborative, from the idea, to experiments, conclusions and publication (constant feedback).<br />
<br />
To achieve this vision we are working with partners. Such as [http://www.contentmine.org/ ContentMine], to push facts they mine in academic publications into commons available through PeerLibrary. We use Internet Archive to permanently store open access publications and public annotations for future generations. We are using code developed at projects [http://hypothes.is/ Hypothes.is] and [http://annotateit.org/ Annotator] to ensure compatibility with other annotation projects and platforms. We are also using the [http://meteor.com/ Meteor framework], [http://lens.elifesciences.org/ eLife Lens], [https://github.com/guardian/scribe The Guardian Scribe] and [https://github.com/mozilla/pdf.js Mozilla PDF.js]. Our presentation will be an exploration of how these organizations are contributing to the Open Scholarship initiative. <br />
<br />
With no subscription or registration needed, anybody can easily access the annotations in PeerLibrary. By eliminating the need to print files, the research process is contained in one online medium, creating a greater sense of organization. Furthermore, note-taking tools encourage active analysis, a recording of insights and questions while reading. Users can choose to keep their highlights and annotations private, or they can make them public to engage in an open online discussion. We believe that the collection of tools provided in PeerLibrary will make education more inclusive.<br />
<br />
See it live here: https://peerlibrary.org/<br />
<br />
Project presentation: https://vimeo.com/93085636<br />
<br />
Screencast: https://vimeo.com/109787685</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=418872015 Prepared Talk Proposals2014-11-03T17:33:54Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>Code4lib 2015 is a loosely-structured conference that provides people working at the intersection of libraries/archives/museums/cultural heritage and technology with a chance to share ideas, be inspired, and forge collaborations. For more information about the Code4lib community, please visit http://code4lib.org/about/. <br />
The conference will be held at the Portland Hilton & Executive Tower in Portland, Oregon, from February 9-12, 2015.<br />
<br />
'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
We encourage everyone to propose a talk.<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
* Projects you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* Tools and technologies – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* Technical issues - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* Relevant non-technical issues – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
Proposals can be submitted through Friday, November 7, 2014 at 5pm PST (GMT−8). Voting will start on November 11, 2014 and continue through November 25, 2014. The URL to submit votes will be announced on the Code4Lib website and mailing list and will require an active code4lib.org account to participate. The final list of presentations will be announced in early- to mid-December.<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Log in to the Code4lib wiki and edit this wiki page using the prescribed format. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist voters in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
Please follow the formatting guidelines:<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
== Talk Title: ==<br />
<br />
* Speaker's name, email address, and (optional) affiliation<br />
* Second speaker's name, email address, and affiliation, if second speaker<br />
<br />
Abstract of no more than 500 words.<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
==Refinery — An open source locally deployable web platform for the analysis of large document collections==<br />
<br />
* [[User:DaeilKim|Daeil Kim]], The New York Times, daeil.kim@nytimes.com<br />
<br />
Refinery is an open source web platform for the analysis of large unstructured document collections. It extracts meaningful semantic themes within documents also known as "topics" which can be thought of as word clouds composed of terms that highly co-occur with one another. Once this semantic index is formed, one can extract relevant documents related to these topics and further refine their contents through a summarization process that allows users to search for phrases that are relevant to them within the corpus. The goal of Refinery is to make this whole process easier and to provide some of the latest scalable versions of these learning algorithms in an intuitive web-based interface. Refinery is also meant to be run locally, thus bypassing the need for securing document collections over the internet. The talk will go through some of the technologies involved and a demo of the app.<br />
<br />
For more info check out http://www.docrefinery.org.<br />
<br />
==Drupal 8 — Evolution & Revolution==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Drupal 8 is in beta and nearing release. Among its many features, it notably has become more developer friendly through its adoption of the Symfony PHP framework along with Symfony's outstanding set of libraries (like Guzzle) and tools (like Composer). And, in implementing the Twig theming system, it is can begin to escape PHPtemplate. These moves also make it easier to create headless systems that uses Angular.js and other systems for presentation, or even forgo presentation entirely.<br />
<br />
From the site-builder's perspective, Drupal 8 provides a much smother experience and makes it easier to build and implement site recipes.<br />
<br />
==Using GameSalad to Build a Gamified Information Literacy Mobile App for Higher Education==<br />
<br />
* [[User:StanBogdanov|Stanislav 'Stan' Bogdanov]], stan@stanrb.com, Adelphi University and [http://bogliollc.com Boglio LLC]<br />
<br />
GameSalad is a popular tool for developing mobile and desktop games with little actual programming. In this presentation, Stan Bogdanov breaks down the development process he followed while building [https://github.com/stanrb/mobiLit mobiLit], a mobile app with the goal of being the first open-source gamified information literacy app to be used as part of a college-level information literacy curriculum. He will go through the basics of using GameSalad to create an app that can be easily customized by non-programmers and the instructional principles used to teach the material in a mobile medium. Stan will also go through two qualitative design studies he did on the app and discuss their results and the lessons learned from building mobiLit. The session will conclude with an overview of the next steps for the [https://github.com/stanrb/mobiLit mobiLit project].<br />
<br />
==The Impossible Search: Pulling data form unknown sources==<br />
<br />
* Riley Childs, no official affiliation (currently a Senior in High School at Charlotte United Christian Academy), rchilds (AT) cucawarriors.com <br />
<br />
It's easy to search data you know the structure of, but what if you need to pull in data from sources that don't have a standard structure. The ability to search community events along with your standard catalog search results is an example, but often the only way to pull these events is through XML, JSON, (Insert structured format here), or even just raw html. But how do you get that structure? That simple question is what makes this impossible. The process to define and process this structure takes a lot of manual labor, especially if the data you are pulling is just HTML, and then every time you add data to the index you have to run all the data through a script to pull in data in a format Solr or an other index can use. This talk will focus on Solr, but the principles explained will apply to many other indexes.<br />
<br />
==What! You're Not Using Docker?==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Boring part: Docker[1] is a container system that provides benefits similar to virtualization with only a fraction of the overhead. Scintillating part: Docker can host between four to six times the number of service instances than systems such as Xen or VMWare on a given piece of hardware. But thats not all! Docker also makes it simple(r) to create transportable instances, so you can spin up development servers on your laptop.<br />
<br />
*[1]https://www.docker.com/<br />
<br />
== Video Accessibility, WebVTT, and Timed Text Track Tricks ==<br />
<br />
* Jason Ronallo, jronallo@gmail.com, NCSU Libraries<br />
<br />
Video on the Web presents new challenges and opportunities. How do you make your video more accessible to those with various disabilities and needs? I'll show you how. This presentation will focus on how to write and deliver captions, subtitles, audio descriptions, and timed metadata tracks for Web video using the WebVTT W3C standard. Encoding timed text tracks in this way opens up opportunities for new functionality on your websites beyond accessibility. The presentation will show some examples of the potential for using timed text tracks in creative ways. I'll cover all the HTML and JavaScript you will need to know as well as some of the CSS and other bits you could probably do without but are too fun to pass up.<br />
<br />
== Categorizing Records with Random Forests ==<br />
<br />
* Geoffrey Boushey, geoffrey.boushey@ucsf.edu, UCSF Library<br />
Academic libraries are increasingly responsible for providing ingest, search, discovery, and analysis for data sets. Emerging techniques from data science and machine learning can provide librarians and developers with an opportunity to generate new insights and services from these document collections. This presentation will provide a brief overview of common machine learning classification techniques, then dive into a more detailed example using a random forest to assign keywords to research data sets. The talk will emphasize the insight that can be gained from machine learning rather than the inner workings of the algorithms. The overall goal of this presentation is to provide librarians and developers with the context to recognize an opportunity to apply machine learning categorization techniques at their home campuses and organizations. <br />
<br />
== Data Science in Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Devon Smith, smithde@oclc.org, OCLC<br />
<br />
Data Science is increasing in buzz and hype. I'll go over what it is, what it isn't, and how it fits in libraries.<br />
<br />
== PDF metadata extraction for academic literature == <br />
<br />
* Kevin Savage, kevin.savage at mendeley.com, Mendeley<br />
* Joyce Stack, joyce.stack at mendeley.com, Mendeley<br />
<br />
Mendeley recently added a, "document from file," endpoint to its API which attempts to extract metadata such as title and authors directly from PDF files. This talk will describe at a high level the machine learning methods we used including how we measured and tuned our model. We will then delve more deeply into our stack, the tools we used, some of the things that didn't work and why PDFs are the worst thing ever to compute over.<br />
<br />
== Giving Users What They Want: Record Grouping in VuFind ==<br />
<br />
* Mark Noble, mark@marmot.org, [//www.marmot.org Marmot Library Network]<br />
<br />
In 2013, Marmot did extensive usability studies with patrons to determine what was difficult in the catalog. Many patrons had problems sifting through all of the various formats and editions of a title. In 2014 we developed a method for [//mercury.marmot.org/Union/Search?lookfor=divergent grouping records] so only a single work is shown in search results and all formats and editions are listed under that work. We will discuss our definition of a 'work' based on FRBR principles; combining meta data from MARC records with metadata from other sources like OverDrive; the technical details of Record Grouping; the design decisions made during implementation; and the reaction from users and staff.<br />
<br />
== Topic Space: a mobile augmented reality recommendation app ==<br />
<br />
* Jim Hahn, jimhahn@illinois.edu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign<br />
<br />
The Topic Space module (http://minrvaproject.org/modules_topicspace.php ) was developed with an IMLS Sparks! Grant to investigate augmented reality technologies for in-library recommendations. The funding allowed for sustained university community collaboration by the University Library, the Graduate School of Library and Information Science, as well as graduate student programmers sourced from the Department of Computer Science. Collaborators designed app functionality and identified relevant open source libraries that could power optical character recognition (OCR) functionality from within the mobile phone.<br />
<br />
Topic space allows a user to take a picture of an item's call number in the book stacks. The module will show the user other books that are relevant but that are not shelved nearby. It can also show users books that are normally shelved here but that are currently checked out. Recommendations are based on Library of Congress subject headings and ILS circulation data which indicate recommendation candidates based on total check-outs. <br />
<br />
Research questions included development of back end (server-side) pattern matching algorithms for recommendations, and a rapid formative evaluation of interface design that would provide optimal user experience for navigation of the book stacks as a context to recommendations.<br />
<br />
Along with the Topic Space native app, grant collaborators prototyped web based recommendations which could serve as a new way of providing readers advisory and “more like this” recommendations from discovery interfaces accessed through desktop browsers. Outcomes of the grant include the availability of the [https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=edu.illinois.ugl.minrva Topic Spaces module within Minrva app on the Android Play store] and an experimental [http://backbonejs.org/ Backbone.js] based [http://minrva-dev.library.illinois.edu Topic Space web app].<br />
<br />
== Leveling Up Your Git Workflow ==<br />
<br />
* Megan Kudzia, moneill@albion.edu, Albion College Library<br />
* Kate Sears, eks11@albion.edu, Albion College Library<br />
<br />
Have you started experimenting with Git on your own, but now you need to include others in your projects? Learn from our mistakes! Transitioning from a one-person git workflow and repo structure, to a structure that includes multiple people (including student workers), is not for the faint of heart. We'll talk about why we decided to work this way, our path to developing a git culture amongst ourselves, conceptual and technical difficulties we've faced, what we learned, and where we are now. Also with pretty pictures (aka workflow drawings).<br />
<br />
== Drone Loaning Program: Because Laptops are so last century ==<br />
<br />
* Uche Enwesi, uenwesi@umd.edu, University of Maryland Libraries<br />
* Francis Kayiwa, fkayiwa@umd.edu, University of Maryland Libraries<br />
<br />
At Univ. Maryland we are in the very early stages of looking into allowing our student body get their hands on a drone. Yes that's right we will let students take out a drone for n amount of hours to work on projects of their choosing. The talk will talk about the logistics of getting a program of this sort from concept to "Is the drone available?". If people sign waivers we will also promise not to crash the drone into code4lib attendees.<br />
<br />
== Got Git? Getting More Out of Your GitHub Repositories ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, twb27@georgetown.edu, Georgetown University Library<br />
<br />
This presentation will discuss how librarians, developers, and system administrators at Georgetown University are maximizing their use of the public and private GitHub repositories. <br />
<br />
In additional to all of the great benefits of using Git for code management, the GitHub interface provides a powerful set of tools to showcase a project and to keep your users informed of developments to your project. These tools can assist with marketing and outreach - turning your code repository into a focus of conversation!<br />
<br />
* [http://georgetown-university-libraries.github.io/File-Analyzer/ Style-able Project Pages]<br />
* [https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer/wiki Project Wikis]<br />
* [https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/Georgetown-University-Libraries-Code/releases Project Release Notes/Portfolios]<br />
* [https://rawgit.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/Georgetown-University-Libraries-Code/master/samples/GoogleSpreadsheetFilter.html Web Resources That Can Be Directly Requested]<br />
* Gists for code sharing<br />
* Private Repositories and Organizational Groups<br />
* Pull Request Conversation Tracking<br />
* Customized Issue management<br />
<br />
== Quick Wins for Every Department in the Library - File Analyzer! ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, twb27@georgetown.edu, Georgetown University Library<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Library has customized workflows for nearly every department in our library with a single code base.<br />
* Analyzing Marc Records for the Cataloging department<br />
* Transferring ILS invoices for the University Account System for the Acquisitions department <br />
* Delivering patron fines to the Bursar’s office for the Access Service department<br />
* Summarizing student worker timesheet data for the Finance department<br />
* Validating COUNTER compliant reports for the Electronic Resources department<br />
* Generating ingest packages for the Digital Services department<br />
* Validating checksums for the Preservation department<br />
<br />
Learn how you can customize the [http://georgetown-university-libraries.github.io/File-Analyzer/ File Analyzer] to become a hero in your library!<br />
<br />
==The Geospatial World is Moving from Maps *on* the Web to Maps *of* the web. Libraries can too==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Copystar|Mita Williams]], mita@uwindsor.ca, User Experience Librarian, University of Windsor<br />
<br />
The transition from paper maps to digital ones changed much more than the maps themselves; it changed the very foundation of how we work and how we find each other. Now maps are transforming again. The Geospatial World is moving from GIS systems that are institutionally-focused, expensive, feature-burdened, and binds data into a complicated and demanding user-hostile interface. From this transition from digital to web-based digital geospatial tools has come growth and development in new forms of map-based investigative journalism, activism, scholarship, and business ventures. This talk will highlight the conditions and strategies that made these changes possible as a means to draw a path by which librarians through our own work may follow, dragons notwithstanding. <br />
<br />
== Building Your Own Federated Search ==<br />
<br />
* Rich Trott, Richard.Trott@ucsf.edu, UC San Francisco<br />
<br />
Advances in modern browsers have created some interesting possibilities for federated search. This presentation will cover common techniques and pitfalls in building a federated search. We will discuss what principles guided our decisions when implementing our own federated search. We will show tools we've built and our findings from building and using experimental prototypes.<br />
<br />
Your higher education institution likely offers dozens of online resources for educators, students, researchers, and the public. And each of these online resources likely has its own search tool. But users can't be expected to search in dozens of different interfaces to find what they're looking for. A typical solution for this issue is federated search. <br />
<br />
== Indexing Linked Data with LDPath ==<br />
<br />
* Chris Beer, cabeer@stanford.edu, Stanford University Libraries<br />
<br />
LDPath [1] is a simple query language for indexing linked open data, with support for caching, content negotiation, and integration with non-RDF endpoints. This talk will demonstrate the features and potential of the language and framework to index a resource with links into id.loc.gov, viaf.org, geonames.org, etc to build an application-ready document.<br />
<br />
== Show Me the Money: Integrating an LMS with Payment Providers ==<br />
<br />
* Josh Weisman, Josh.Weisman@exlibrisgroup.com, Development Director-Resources Management, Ex Libris Group<br />
<br />
In order to provide an easy and convenient way for patrons to pay fines, we are exploring ways to integrate the library management system with online payment providers such as PayPal. With many LMS systems being designed and developed for the cloud, we should be able to provide the frictionless user experience our patrons have come to expect from online transactions. In this session we'll discuss strategies for integration and review a sample application which uses REST APIs from a library management system to integrate with PayPal.<br />
<br />
[1] http://marmotta.apache.org/ldpath/language.html<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]] <br />
[[Category:Talk Proposals]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Preconference_Proposals&diff=418342015 Preconference Proposals2014-10-20T18:41:43Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>== Instructions ==<br />
Thank you for considering proposing a pre-conference! Here are a few details:<br />
<br />
* We will be taking pre-conference proposals until '''November 7, 2014'''<br />
* If you cannot or do not want to edit this wiki directly, you can email your proposals to cmh2166@columbia.edu or collie@msu.edu<br />
* Examples from the 2014 pre-conference proposals can be found at [[2014 preconference proposals|http://wiki.code4lib.org/2014_preconference_proposals]]<br />
* If you are interested in ''attending'' a particular pre-conference, please append your name below that proposal (indicating interest in more than one proposal is fine!)<br />
* If you have an idea for a pre-conference, but cannot facilitate yourself please post the idea below and email cmh2116@columbia.edu or collie@msu.edu<br />
* '''NOTE:''' Pre-conferences are NOT included in the Code4Lib Conference price and will be held on Monday, February 9, 2015 as either full day or half day sessions<br />
* Please use the template for proposals provided in the pre-formatted block below<br />
<br />
=== Proposal formatting guidelines: ===<br />
<br />
<pre><br />
<br />
=== Preconference Title: ===<br />
<br />
One of:<br />
'''"Full Day"''' <br />
'''"Half Day [Morning]"''' <br />
'''"Half Day [Afternoon]"''' <br />
<br />
* Facilitator's name, affiliation, and email address<br />
* Second facilitator's name, affiliation, email address, if second speaker<br />
<br />
Abstract<br />
<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Proposals ==<br />
<br />
Post your ideas here!<br />
<br />
=== Delivering and Preserving GIS Data ===<br />
<br />
'''Half Day [Morning]'''<br />
<br />
* Darren Hardy, Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
* Jack Reed, Stanford University, pjreed@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
We will discuss how to set up a spatial data infrastructure (SDI) to deliver GIS data, to manage GIS content in a Fedora repository for preservation, and to establish metadata requirements for good spatial discovery. By the end of the workshop you will have a working SDI! This workshop is a compliment to the GeoBlacklight workshop in the afternoon.<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
=== A hand's on introduction to GeoBlacklight ===<br />
<br />
'''Half Day [Afternoon]'''<br />
<br />
* Darren Hardy, Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
* Jack Reed, Stanford University, pjreed@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
GeoBlacklight is a discovery solution for geospatial data that builds on the successful Blacklight platform. Many libraries have collections of GIS data that aren’t easily discoverable. This will be a hands-on workshop, focused on installing and running GeoBlacklight which builds on the morning workshop "Delivering and Preserving GIS Data".<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
===RailsBridge: Intro to programming in Ruby on Rails===<br />
'''"Half-Day" [morning]'''<br />
* Contact Carolyn Cole, Penn State University, carolyn@psu.edu<br />
* Additional instructors welcome<br />
<br />
Interested in learning how to program? Want to build your own web application? Never written a line of code before and are a little intimidated? There's no need to be! [http://www.railsbridge.org/ RailsBridge] is a friendly place to get together and learn how to write some code.<br />
<br />
RailsBridge is a great workshop that opens the doors to projects like [http://projectblacklight.org/ Blacklight] and [http://projecthydra.org/ Hydra] and [https://github.com/traject-project/traject Traject].<br />
<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
# Maura Carbone<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
=== Replace yourself with a painfully complex bash script...or try Ansible ===<br />
'''Half Day [Morning]'''<br />
<br />
* Chad Nelson, chad dot nelson @ lyrasis dot org<br />
* Blake Carver, Blake dot carver @lyrasis dot org<br />
<br />
Abstract: <br />
<br />
[http://www.ansible.com Ansible] is an open source automation and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Configuration_management configuration management] tool that focuses on simplicity to help make your life as a developer, or a sysadmin, or even a full on devops-er, easier. This workshop will cover the basic building blocks used in Ansible as well as some best practices for maintaining your Ansible code. We will start by working through a simple example together, and then participants will be given time to work on their own projects with instructors providing guidance and troubleshooting along the way. By the end of the session, participants will have a working knowledge of Ansible and be able to write a working [http://docs.ansible.com/playbooks.html playbook] to meet local needs.<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
=== Intro to Docker ===<br />
'''Half Day [Whenever]'''<br />
<br />
* John Fink, McMaster University, john dot fink at gmail dot com<br />
* Francis Kayiwa, Kayiwa Consulting , francis dot kayiwa at gmail dot com<br />
<br />
Abstract:<br />
<br />
[http://docker.io Docker] ([http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/9669 jbfink code4lib journal article]) is an open source Linux operating system-level virtualization framework that has seen great uptake over the past year. This workshop will take you through the basic features of Docker, including setup, importing of containers, development workflows and deploying. Knowing when Docker is useful and when it isn't will also be covered. Ideally, every attendee will have ample experience creating and running their own Docker instances by the end.<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
=== Code Retreat ===<br />
'''Full Day'''<br />
<br />
* Jeremy Friesen, University of Notre Dame, jfriesen at nd dot edu<br />
* Additional facilitators welcome; Especially if you have CodeRetreat experience.<br />
<br />
Abstract:<br />
<br />
"Coderetreat is a day-long, intensive practice event, focusing on the fundamentals of software development and design.<br />
By providing developers the opportunity to take part in focused practice, away from the pressures of 'getting things done', the coderetreat format has proven itself to be a highly effective means of skill improvement.<br />
Practicing the basic principles of modular and object-oriented design, developers can improve their ability to write code that minimizes the cost of change over time." [http://coderetreat.org/about About Code Retreat]<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
=== Presentations workshop ===<br />
<br />
'''"Half Day [Afternoon]"''' (but could be expanded based on interest)<br />
<br />
* Chris Beer, Stanford University, cabeer@stanford.edu<br />
* Additional facilitators welcome.<br />
<br />
This is a preconference session intended for first time Code4Lib speakers, habitual procrastinators, experienced speakers, those thinking about offering lightning talks, etc. If you're preparing a talk for this year's Code4Lib, this workshop is an opportunity to rehearse your presentation, get feedback from peers, get familiar with the presentation technology, etc.<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
=== Dive into Hydra ===<br />
<br />
One of:<br />
'''"Half Day [Afternoon]"''' <br />
<br />
* Justin Coyne, Data Curation Experts, justin@curationexperts.com<br />
* Bess Sadler, Stanford University, bess@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
Hydra is a collaboration of over 30 educational institutions who work together to solve their repository needs by building open-source software. Dive into Hydra is a course that bootstraps you into the Hydra software framework. We'll start at the basics and walk you through the various layers of the Hydra stack. We'll conclude by installing the Worthwhile gem, enabling every participant to walk away with their own Institutional Repository. Participants who have prior exposure to web programming will get the most out of this course. It's recommended (but not required) that you attend "RailsBridge" prior to this workshop.<br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
# Maura Carbone<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
=== code4lib/Write The Docs barcamp ===<br />
<br />
One of:<br />
'''"Full Day"''', with options for jumping in for half a day<br />
<br />
* code4lib wrangler: Becky Yoose, yoosebec at grinnell dot edu<br />
* Write the Docs contacts: TBA<br />
<br />
Abstract<br />
<br />
''Placeholder for now - more information will be available before the proposal deadline''. More information about Write the Docs at http://docs.writethedocs.org/<br />
<br />
There will be a nominal fee (t/b/d) for non-Code4LibCon attendees (subject to organizer approval). <br />
<br />
''Interested in Attending''<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
'''Full day'''<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
'''Morning'''<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
'''Afternoon'''<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
=== Linked Data Workshop ===<br />
<br />
One of:<br />
'''"Full Day"''' <br />
<br />
* Karen Estlund, University of Oregon, kestlund@uoregon.edu<br />
* Tom Johnson, DPLA, tom@dp.la<br />
<br />
Abstract:<br />
<br />
Developer-focused linked data workshop. More info to come.<br />
<br />
If you would be interested in attending, please indicate by adding your name (but not email address, etc.) here<br />
<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Conference_Committees&diff=418242015 Conference Committees2014-10-17T20:22:32Z<p>Wickr: /* Whatever Committee */</p>
<hr />
<div>= Code4Lib 2015 Committees =<br />
<br />
If you are interested in helping out with a particular part of the Code4Lib 2015 conference, create an account on this wiki and sign-up for one or more of the groups below (called 'committees' for lack of a better term). Each committee should select a committee lead that will coordinate the activities of the committee and its work with the hosting site. Discussions of a non-sensitive nature should take place on the Code4LibCon mailing list for transparency and future reference. Please feel free to improve the summary statements for each of the committees. When adding your name, please indicate 'v' if you are a veteran on the committee so that we ensure committees are not made up entirely of newbies.<br />
<br />
We will assign a local contact to each committee.<br />
<br />
== Location and Dates ==<br />
<br />
(more details at [http://code4lib.org/conference/2015 http://code4lib.org/conference/2015])<br />
* Location: Hilton Portland and Executive Tower, Portland, Oregon<br />
* Dates: <br />
** Pre-conferences - February 9th, 2015<br />
** Main meeting - February 10th - 12th, 2015<br />
** Post conference activities?<br />
<br />
== Book Give-Away Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits books and other prizes to be given away in raffles during the conference. This committee is responsible for identifying some means of performing the actual raffle (aka, a random picker app or other tool for selecting winners). Drawing names out of a hat could be low-tech entertaining.<br />
<br />
Need about 2 months to get books shipped to the conference location.<br />
<br />
* [[User:JasonMichel|Jason Paul Michel]]<br />
* [[User:TerrellT|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Keynote Speakers Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans who to invite for the keynote speakers. They gather possibilities (including soliciting from the community), organize voting, and work with the speakers to arrange their travel.<br />
<br />
* [[User:Phette23|Eric Phetteplace]]<br />
* Heidi Dowding<br />
<br />
== Onsite Volunteer Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits volunteers to do whatever tasks are needed in person at the conference. Could be a help to the program committee to solicit MCs, timers, mike runners (if needed), IRC volunteers, registration helpers (if needed), etc.<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Dre<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the pre-conference day. It keeps strong lines of communications open with the Program Committee. It also helps shepherd events on the day itself.<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:LauraKrier|Laura Krier]]<br />
* [[User:aaroncollie|Aaron Collie]]<br />
* [[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Program Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the structure of the program, arranges the voting on presentations, etc. This includes soliciting regular talks. These folks will also manage the flow of the program at the conference -- introducing speakers or soliciting other volunteers to MC.<br />
<br />
* mx matienzo<br />
* cbeer<br />
* Tod Olson<br />
* [[User:Cynthia|Arty]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* [[User:DataGazetteer|Peter Murray]] - v<br />
* Bojana Skarich<br />
<br />
== Scholarships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee works with funding institutions to arrange the scholarships offered. They solicit submissions and select winners of the scholarship(s). They also work with the winners to plan their travel and arrangements.<br />
<br />
* Ruth Kitchin Tillman<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Mairelys Lemus-Rojas<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Social Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
The committee plans, proposes, and organizes the evening activities.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose - v(committee member 4 life)<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* [[User:eatonml|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Childcare Committee ==<br />
<br />
Committee to evaluate needs and explore possibilities for on-site child care at the conference. Will implement whatever is determined to be possible this year and develop guidelines for future conferences.<br />
<br />
* Sara Amato (lead)<br />
* Christina Salazar<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Sponsorships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the sponsorship activities. Usually it includes people within the Code4Lib community who think their institution or company might be interested in sponsoring the conference. These folks may not be the decision makers at the sponsors, but they are Code4Lib's contacts. See the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/images/4/42/Code4LibProspectus.pdf Prospectus] for potential sponsors.<br />
<br />
* Roy Tennant, OCLC, firstnamelastname@gmail.com<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] - Local Contact<br />
* [[User:Terrellt|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Streaming Video Committee ==<br />
<br />
*[[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] has equipment, experience and domain knowledge to share.<br />
*[[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] has Knowledge as well, and can help were needed ;)<br />
*[[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== T-Shirt Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the t-shirt contest, collecting submissions, and putting out the call for votes. This committee is also responsible for helping the local planning committee identify a vendor that will fit within the budget constraints for the conference. User sizes and preferences will be obtained as part of the registration process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
*[[User:Eatonm|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Voting Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the voting process and works with the other committees that involve voting (keynote, program, T-shirt) to ensure a relatively smooth process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
*[[User:Wickr|Sheila Yeh]]<br />
<br />
== Whatever Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee does whatever the organizers can't talk anyone else into doing.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Becky Yoose (will do things for mortgage payment assistance)<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Sarah Park<br />
* Bojana Skarich<br />
* Ryan Wick - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Wifi / Electrical / IRC ==<br />
<br />
This committee is responsible for working with local planners to ensure that wifi will be able to support the needs of the code4lib community.<br />
<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com<br />
* [[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] is able to assist with Wireless planning and IRC stuffs, rchilds@cucawarriors.com<br />
* [[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
= Documentation =<br />
To help with documention, no need to sign up, just start editing.<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Documentation Interest Group ==<br />
Promote ongoing documentation efforts.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Conference_Committees&diff=417222015 Conference Committees2014-09-11T20:53:00Z<p>Wickr: Added more local contacts</p>
<hr />
<div>= Code4Lib 2015 Committees =<br />
<br />
If you are interested in helping out with a particular part of the Code4Lib 2015 conference, create an account on this wiki and sign-up for one or more of the groups below (called 'committees' for lack of a better term). Each committee should select a committee lead that will coordinate the activities of the committee and its work with the hosting site. Discussions of a non-sensitive nature should take place on the Code4LibCon mailing list for transparency and future reference. Please feel free to improve the summary statements for each of the committees. When adding your name, please indicate 'v' if you are a veteran on the committee so that we ensure committees are not made up entirely of newbies.<br />
<br />
We will assign a local contact to each committee.<br />
<br />
== Location and Dates ==<br />
<br />
(more details at [http://code4lib.org/conference/2015 http://code4lib.org/conference/2015])<br />
* Location: Hilton Portland and Executive Tower, Portland, Oregon<br />
* Dates: <br />
** Pre-conferences - February 9th, 2015<br />
** Main meeting - February 10th - 12th, 2015<br />
** Post conference activities?<br />
<br />
== Book Give-Away Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits books and other prizes to be given away in raffles during the conference. This committee is responsible for identifying some means of performing the actual raffle (aka, a random picker app or other tool for selecting winners). Drawing names out of a hat could be low-tech entertaining.<br />
<br />
Need about 2 months to get books shipped to the conference location.<br />
<br />
* [[User:JasonMichel|Jason Paul Michel]]<br />
* [[User:TerrellT|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Keynote Speakers Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans who to invite for the keynote speakers. They gather possibilities (including soliciting from the community), organize voting, and work with the speakers to arrange their travel.<br />
<br />
* [[User:Phette23|Eric Phetteplace]]<br />
* Heidi Dowding<br />
<br />
== Onsite Volunteer Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits volunteers to do whatever tasks are needed in person at the conference. Could be a help to the program committee to solicit MCs, timers, mike runners (if needed), IRC volunteers, registration helpers (if needed), etc.<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Dre<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the pre-conference day. It keeps strong lines of communications open with the Program Committee. It also helps shepherd events on the day itself.<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:LauraKrier|Laura Krier]]<br />
* [[User:aaroncollie|Aaron Collie]]<br />
* [[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Program Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the structure of the program, arranges the voting on presentations, etc. This includes soliciting regular talks. These folks will also manage the flow of the program at the conference -- introducing speakers or soliciting other volunteers to MC.<br />
<br />
* mx matienzo<br />
* cbeer<br />
* Tod Olson<br />
* [[User:Cynthia|Arty]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* [[User:DataGazetteer|Peter Murray]] - v<br />
* Bojana Skarich<br />
<br />
== Scholarships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee works with funding institutions to arrange the scholarships offered. They solicit submissions and select winners of the scholarship(s). They also work with the winners to plan their travel and arrangements.<br />
<br />
* Sarah Shealy - v<br />
* Ruth Kitchin Tillman<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Mairelys Lemus-Rojas<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Social Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
The committee plans, proposes, and organizes the evening activities.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose - v(committee member 4 life)<br />
* Sarah Shealy<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Rachel Vacek<br />
* [[User:eatonml|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Childcare Committee ==<br />
<br />
Committee to evaluate needs and explore possibilities for on-site child care at the conference. Will implement whatever is determined to be possible this year and develop guidelines for future conferences.<br />
<br />
* Sara Amato (lead)<br />
* Christina Salazar<br />
* [[User:zhanghu|Hui Zhang]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Sponsorships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the sponsorship activities. Usually it includes people within the Code4Lib community who think their institution or company might be interested in sponsoring the conference. These folks may not be the decision makers at the sponsors, but they are Code4Lib's contacts.<br />
<br />
* Roy Tennant, OCLC, firstnamelastname@gmail.com<br />
* [[User:evviva|Evviva Weinraub Lajoie]] Oregon State University Libraries - evviva.weinraub@oregonstate.edu - Local Contact<br />
* [[User:Terrellt|Trey Terrell]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Streaming Video Committee ==<br />
<br />
*[[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] has equipment, experience and domain knowledge to share.<br />
*[[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] has Knowledge as well, and can help were needed ;)<br />
*[[User:wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== T-Shirt Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the t-shirt contest, collecting submissions, and putting out the call for votes. This committee is also responsible for helping the local planning committee identify a vendor that will fit within the budget constraints for the conference. User sizes and preferences will be obtained as part of the registration process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
*[[User:Eatonm|Mike Eaton]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
== Voting Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the voting process and works with the other committees that involve voting (keynote, program, T-shirt) to ensure a relatively smooth process.<br />
<br />
*[[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
<br />
== Whatever Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee does whatever the organizers can't talk anyone else into doing.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Becky Yoose (will do things for mortgage payment assistance)<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Sarah Park<br />
* Bojana Skarich<br />
<br />
== Wifi / Electrical / IRC ==<br />
<br />
This committee is responsible for working with local planners to ensure that wifi will be able to support the needs of the code4lib community.<br />
<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com<br />
* [[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] is able to assist with Wireless planning and IRC stuffs, rchilds@cucawarriors.com<br />
* [[User:Wickr|Ryan Wick]] - Local Contact<br />
<br />
= Documentation =<br />
To help with documention, no need to sign up, just start editing.<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Documentation Interest Group ==<br />
Promote ongoing documentation efforts.<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Conference_Committees&diff=414722015 Conference Committees2014-08-14T21:45:04Z<p>Wickr: /* Sponsorships Committee */</p>
<hr />
<div>= Code4Lib 2015 Committees =<br />
<br />
If you are interested in helping out with a particular part of the Code4Lib 2015 conference, create an account on this wiki and sign-up for one or more of the groups below (called 'committees' for lack of a better term). Each committee should select a committee lead that will coordinate the activities of the committee and its work with the hosting site. Discussions of a non-sensitive nature should take place on the Code4LibCon mailing list for transparency and future reference. Please feel free to improve the summary statements for each of the committees. When adding your name, please indicate 'v' if you are a veteran on the committee so that we ensure committees are not made up entirely of newbies.<br />
<br />
We will assign a local contact to each committee.<br />
<br />
== Location and Dates ==<br />
<br />
(more details at [http://code4lib.org/conference/2015 http://code4lib.org/conference/2015])<br />
* Location: Hilton Portland and Executive Tower, Portland, Oregon<br />
* Dates: <br />
** Pre-conferences - February 9th, 2015<br />
** Main meeting - February 10th - 12th, 2015<br />
** Post conference activities?<br />
<br />
== Book Give-Away Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits books and other prizes to be given away in raffles during the conference. This committee is responsible for identifying some means of performing the actual raffle (aka, a random picker app or other tool for selecting winners). Drawing names out of a hat could be low-tech entertaining.<br />
<br />
Need about 2 months to get books shipped to the conference location.<br />
<br />
* [[User:JasonMichel|Jason Paul Michel]]<br />
<br />
== Keynote Speakers Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans who to invite for the keynote speakers. They gather possibilities (including soliciting from the community), organize voting, and work with the speakers to arrange their travel.<br />
<br />
* [[User:Phette23|Eric Phetteplace]]<br />
* Heidi Dowding<br />
<br />
== Onsite Volunteer Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits volunteers to do whatever tasks are needed in person at the conference. Could be a help to the program committee to solicit MCs, timers, mike runners (if needed), IRC volunteers, registration helpers (if needed), etc.<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Dre<br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the pre-conference day. It keeps strong lines of communications open with the Program Committee. It also helps shepherd events on the day itself.<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:LauraKrier|Laura Krier]]<br />
* [[User:aaroncollie|Aaron Collie]]<br />
<br />
== Program Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the structure of the program, arranges the voting on presentations, etc. This includes soliciting regular talks. These folks will also manage the flow of the program at the conference -- introducing speakers or soliciting other volunteers to MC.<br />
<br />
* mx matienzo<br />
* cbeer<br />
* Tod Olson<br />
* [[User:Cynthia|Arty]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* [[User:DataGazetteer|Peter Murray]] - v<br />
<br />
== Scholarships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee works with funding institutions to arrange the scholarships offered. They solicit submissions and select winners of the scholarship(s). They also work with the winners to plan their travel and arrangements.<br />
<br />
* Sarah Shealy - v<br />
* Ruth Kitchin Tillman<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Mairelys Lemus-Rojas<br />
<br />
== Social Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
The committee plans, proposes, and organizes the evening activities.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose - v(committee member 4 life)<br />
* Sarah Shealy<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
<br />
== Sponsorships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the sponsorship activities. Usually it includes people within the Code4Lib community who think their institution or company might be interested in sponsoring the conference. These folks may not be the decision makers at the sponsors, but they are Code4Lib's contacts.<br />
<br />
* Evviva Weinraub, Oregon State University Libraries, evviva.weinraub@oregonstate.edu - local contact<br />
* Roy Tennant, OCLC, firstnamelastname@gmail.com<br />
<br />
== Streaming Video Committee ==<br />
<br />
*[[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] has equipment, experience and domain knowledge to share.<br />
*[[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] has Knowledge and the YouTube Account credentials (he will consult but conf attendance is iffy)<br />
<br />
== T-Shirt Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the t-shirt contest, collecting submissions, and putting out the call for votes. This committee is also responsible for helping the local planning committee identify a vendor that will fit within the budget constraints for the conference. User sizes and preferences will be obtained as part of the registration process.<br />
*[[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
<br />
== Voting Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the voting process and works with the other committees that involve voting (keynote, program, T-shirt) to ensure a relatively smooth process.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Whatever Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee does whatever the organizers can't talk anyone else into doing.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Becky Yoose (will do things for mortgage payment assistance)<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Sarah Park<br />
<br />
== Wifi / Electrical / IRC ==<br />
<br />
This committee is responsible for working with local planners to ensure that wifi will be able to support the needs of the code4lib community.<br />
<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com<br />
* [[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] is able to assist with Wireless planning and IRC stuffs, rchilds@cucawarriors.com (he will consult but conf attendance is iffy)<br />
<br />
= Documentation =<br />
To help with documention, no need to sign up, just start editing.<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Documentation Interest Group ==<br />
Promote ongoing documentation efforts.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2015_Conference_Committees&diff=414662015 Conference Committees2014-08-13T17:12:55Z<p>Wickr: /* Location and Dates */</p>
<hr />
<div>= Code4Lib 2015 Committees =<br />
<br />
If you are interested in helping out with a particular part of the Code4Lib 2015 conference, create an account on this wiki and sign-up for one or more of the groups below (called 'committees' for lack of a better term). Each committee should select a committee lead that will coordinate the activities of the committee and its work with the hosting site. Discussions of a non-sensitive nature should take place on the Code4LibCon mailing list for transparency and future reference. Please feel free to improve the summary statements for each of the committees. When adding your name, please indicate 'v' if you are a veteran on the committee so that we ensure committees are not made up entirely of newbies.<br />
<br />
We will assign a local contact to each committee.<br />
<br />
== Location and Dates ==<br />
<br />
(more details at [http://code4lib.org/conference/2015 http://code4lib.org/conference/2015])<br />
* Location: Hilton Portland and Executive Tower, Portland, Oregon<br />
* Dates: <br />
** Pre-conferences - February 9th, 2015<br />
** Main meeting - February 10th - 12th, 2015<br />
** Post conference activities?<br />
<br />
== Book Give-Away Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits books and other prizes to be given away in raffles during the conference. This committee is responsible for identifying some means of performing the actual raffle (aka, a random picker app or other tool for selecting winners). Drawing names out of a hat could be low-tech entertaining.<br />
<br />
Need about 2 months to get books shipped to the conference location.<br />
<br />
* [[User:JasonMichel|Jason Paul Michel]]<br />
<br />
== Keynote Speakers Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans who to invite for the keynote speakers. They gather possibilities (including soliciting from the community), organize voting, and work with the speakers to arrange their travel.<br />
<br />
* [[User:Phette23|Eric Phetteplace]]<br />
* Heidi Dowding<br />
<br />
== Onsite Volunteer Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee solicits volunteers to do whatever tasks are needed in person at the conference. Could be a help to the program committee to solicit MCs, timers, mike runners (if needed), IRC volunteers, registration helpers (if needed), etc.<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Dre<br />
<br />
== Pre-conference Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the pre-conference day. It keeps strong lines of communications open with the Program Committee. It also helps shepherd events on the day itself.<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
<br />
== Program Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee plans the structure of the program, arranges the voting on presentations, etc. This includes soliciting regular talks. These folks will also manage the flow of the program at the conference -- introducing speakers or soliciting other volunteers to MC.<br />
<br />
* mx matienzo<br />
* cbeer<br />
* Tod Olson<br />
* [[User:Cynthia|Arty]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* [[User:DataGazetteer|Peter Murray]] - v<br />
<br />
== Scholarships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee works with funding institutions to arrange the scholarships offered. They solicit submissions and select winners of the scholarship(s). They also work with the winners to plan their travel and arrangements.<br />
<br />
* Sarah Shealy - v<br />
* Ruth Kitchin Tillman<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Mairelys Lemus-Rojas<br />
<br />
== Social Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
The committee plans, proposes, and organizes the evening activities.<br />
<br />
* Becky Yoose - v(committee member 4 life)<br />
* Sarah Shealy<br />
* Bohyun Kim<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
<br />
== Sponsorships Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the sponsorship activities. Usually it includes people within the Code4Lib community who think their institution or company might be interested in sponsoring the conference. These folks may not be the decision makers at the sponsors, but they are Code4Lib's contacts.<br />
<br />
* Roy Tennant, OCLC, firstnamelastname@gmail.com<br />
<br />
== Streaming Video Committee ==<br />
<br />
*[[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] has equipment, experience and domain knowledge to share.<br />
*[[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] has Knowledge and the YouTube Account credentials (he will consult but conf attendance is iffy)<br />
<br />
== T-Shirt Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the t-shirt contest, collecting submissions, and putting out the call for votes. This committee is also responsible for helping the local planning committee identify a vendor that will fit within the budget constraints for the conference. User sizes and preferences will be obtained as part of the registration process.<br />
*[[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
<br />
== Voting Activities Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee organizes the voting process and works with the other committees that involve voting (keynote, program, T-shirt) to ensure a relatively smooth process.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Whatever Committee ==<br />
<br />
This committee does whatever the organizers can't talk anyone else into doing.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa<br />
* Becky Yoose (will do things for mortgage payment assistance)<br />
* [[User:ChristinaHarlow|Christina]]<br />
* [[User:Ssimpkin|Sarah Simpkin]]<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Whitni Watkins<br />
* Sarah Park<br />
<br />
== Wifi / Electrical / IRC ==<br />
<br />
This committee is responsible for working with local planners to ensure that wifi will be able to support the needs of the code4lib community.<br />
<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com<br />
* [[User:RileyChilds|Riley Childs]] is able to assist with Wireless planning and IRC stuffs, rchilds@cucawarriors.com (he will consult but conf attendance is iffy)<br />
<br />
= Documentation =<br />
To help with documention, no need to sign up, just start editing.<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
<br />
== Documentation Interest Group ==<br />
Promote ongoing documentation efforts.<br />
<br />
[[Category: Code4Lib2015]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Working_with_MARC&diff=41202Working with MARC2014-05-12T17:25:08Z<p>Wickr: /* MARC Programming Libraries */ Added links by request</p>
<hr />
<div>MARC stands for Machine Readable Cataloging, and many folks in the code4lib community find themselves working with MARC records at some point. This page is meant to be a round-up of the tools for working with MARC. If you want a general introduction to the standard, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MARC_standards the Wikipedia article] is a good place to start. MARC data is usually expressed either in ISO 2709 ("binary") form or MARCXML form.<br />
<br />
__TOC__<br />
<br />
<br />
== Reference information ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.loc.gov/marc/ Library of Congress MARC Standards Pages] (covers MARC21; formerly USMARC)<br />
* [http://www.bl.uk/bibliographic/ukmarc.html British Library UKMARC Pages]<br />
* [http://archive.ifla.org/VI/3/p1996-1/sec-uni.htm IFLA UNIMARC Pages]<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/content/bibformats/en.html OCLC MARC Pages]<br />
<br />
== Desktop tools ==<br />
<br />
* [http://people.oregonstate.edu/~reeset/marcedit/html/index.php MarcEdit]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.auto-graphics.com/download/SHOWMARC.EXE Showmarc]: is a DOS program that will show all the MARC fields used and how many times each is used.<br />
<br />
* [http://rossjohnson.homemail.com.au/MARCRTP/ MARC Record Translation Program] (MARC RTP) is a command line utility that shows fields and subfields used in a collection of MARC records and then converts, and selectively imports, into databases built with general-purpose applications.<br />
<br />
* The [http://www.loc.gov/marc/marc-functional-analysis/tool.html FRBR Display Tool] takes a file of MARC records and creats XML and HTML files arranged using the Functional Requirements for Bibliographic Records principles.<br />
<br />
* [http://mysite.du.edu/~ttyler/freeware/marcxgen.htm MarcXGen] is a Marc URL extractor and HTML generator. Useful for link checking MARC records.<br />
<br />
* [http://www.loc.gov/marc/makrbrkr.html MARCMaker and MARCBreaker] are DOS programs by the Library of Congress for converting MARC records to a text format and back.<br />
<br />
* [http://www.bl.uk/bibliographic/usemarcon.html USEMARCON] is a multi-platform rule-based MARC record manipulation program. It is a command-line utility but there is also a GUI for it.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Getting Marc Indexed for Search Engines ==<br />
<br />
=== MARC in Solr ===<br />
<br />
* SolrMarc http://code.google.com/p/solrmarc/<br />
<br />
* Solr http://lucene.apache.org/solr<br />
<br />
* Catmandu http://librecat.org (provides also loading into ElasticSearch, MongoDB and others)<br />
<br />
=== MARC in Zebra ===<br />
<br />
* Getting Started with Zebra http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Getting_Started_with_Zebra<br />
<br />
* Zebra http://www.indexdata.com/zebra<br />
<br />
<br />
== MARC Programming Libraries ==<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
! Project !! Language !! class="unsortable" | Links !! class="unsortable" | Notes<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MARC4J || Java || http://marc4j.tigris.org/ || <br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| javamarc || Java || http://github.com/billdueber/javamarc || Fork of MARC4J<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MARC/Perl || Perl || http://marcpm.sf.net || Umbrella project; see also [http://search.cpan.org/search?query=marc&mode=all CPAN]<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| pymarc || Python || http://github.com/edsu/pymarc/ || <br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| File_MARC || PHP || http://pear.php.net/package/File_MARC/ || PEAR package; sanctioned fork of PHP-MARC<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| PHP-MARC || PHP || http://www.emilda.org/index.php?q=php-marc || Abandoned(?); served as basis for File_MARC<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| ruby-marc || Ruby || http://rubyforge.org/projects/marc/ <br/> http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Ruby-marc ||<br />
|-valign="top" <br />
| enhanced-marc || Ruby || http://github.com/rsinger/enhanced-marc || Convenience methods for ruby-marc<br />
|-valign="top" <br />
| marc21 || Scheme || http://code.google.com/p/marc21 ||<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| marcerl || Erlang || svn://pubserv.oclc.org/marcerl|| Very alpha code<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| Scala-MARC || Scala || http://github.com/achelous/Scala-MARC || <br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MARC Library (SobekCM) || C# || http://sourceforge.net/projects/marclibrary/ || Implemented in .NET 4.0 with LINQ and streams with Z39.50 support<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| CSharp MARC || C# || http://csharpmarc.net || Based upon File_MARC Pear packaged for PHP, but restyled for use in .NET<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MARC.NET || C# || http://github.com/willkurt/MARC.NET || basic start, not thoroughly 'real world' tested<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| marc_record.js || JavaScript || http://www.pusc.it/bib/mel/marc_record.js (dead link) || Part of [http://www.pusc.it/bib/mel/ MARC Editor Lite] (dead link)<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| marcjs || JavaScript (node) || https://github.com/fredericd/marcjs || <br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| USEMARCON || C++ || http://www.nationallibrary.fi/libraries/format/usemarcon.html || A rule-based MARC record conversion library<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| clj-marc || Clojure || http://github.com/phochste/clj-marc || Basic MARC21 and Aleph500 sequential export parser<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MARC4J.Net || C# || https://github.com/mxurshid/MARC4J.Net || https://www.nuget.org/packages/MARC4J.Net<br />
|}<br />
<br />
A feed of commit messages and release announcements from many of the projects listed above can be found at http://pipes.yahoo.com/gmcharlt/marctoolchanges.<br />
<br />
== Utilities and Frameworks ==<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
! Project !! Language !! class="unsortable" | Links !! class="unsortable" | Notes<br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| MarcXimiL || Python || http://marcximil.sourceforge.net/ || Bibliographic Similarity Analysis Framework <br />
|-valign="top"<br />
| Catmandu || Perl || http://librecat.org || An ETL-framework to extract, transform and load MARC (and other formats) from/to various databases, indexes<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Getting Sample Data ==<br />
<br />
One common question is where to get sample MARC records for testing or playing around with. If you work at a library, chances are good that you can get some records out of your ILS (go ask your systems librarian if you don't know how to do this yourself). If you don't work in a library, you can get [http://www.archive.org/details/ol_data MARC bibliographic records from the Internet Archive].<br />
<br />
You can also get [http://www.hathitrust.org/data MARCXML data for titles in HathiTrust through OAI-PMH].<br />
<br />
There is a nascent movement within the code4lib community to establish a test set of problematic MARC records, especially records that are representative of the kinds of weirdness that is encountered in real libraries. It is hoped that this could eventually become a test corpus against which to run various MARC processing implementations. For more information, watch [http://www.archive.org/details/MARCTHULU Simon Spero's excellent talk from Code4LibCon 2010].<br />
<br />
MARC records for authority data are more common. The [http://www.getty.edu/research/conducting_research/vocabularies/download.html Getty Vocabularies] makes both the The Art & Architecture Thesaurus (AAT) and The Union List of Artist Names (ULAN) freely available. The [http://www.library.northwestern.edu/public/gsafd/ Guidelines On Subject Access To Individual Works Of Fiction, Drama, Etc.] records are available from Northwestern University. The [http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/filelist.html Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)] are available in many formats, one of them being MARC.<br />
<br />
== Reporting on How MARC Has Been Used ==<br />
<br />
[http://experimental.worldcat.org/marcusage/ MARC Usage in WorldCat] - A site that reports on how MARC has been used within the 300 million record WorldCat database</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Breakout_II_(Wednesday)&diff=409402014 Breakout II (Wednesday)2014-03-26T19:53:14Z<p>Wickr: added notes for Digital Preservation breakout</p>
<hr />
<div>==UX==<br />
<br />
''Notes by @erinrwhite again. Y'all cannot escape me''<br />
<br />
NCSU's UX department is cross-functional and has members from across departments. Looking at creating cross-channel experiences from digital to real life. Working on consistency across experiences. Expanded on UMich's UX department to create a UX research team.<br />
<br />
Research: the NCSU does a research project every month. NCSU is also training new library fellows to infuse User Experience work into their projects. Growing the culture of UX within the organization.<br />
<br />
===Process===<br />
<br />
How do you work in harmony with a dev team when sometimes the UX team can be the roadblock to development? Need to get a workflow that works so that everyone can move quickly. <br />
<br />
UXing web pages vs. entire web applications: they're totally different experiences so need different approaches to user experience evaluation.<br />
<br />
===Research===<br />
<br />
Guerrilla research: go out into the public spaces of your library to test prototypes or design ideas. Make it quick. User research doesn't have to be a huge deal. <br />
<br />
If you can't give money as remuneration, give 'em candy bars. But make the candy bars full-size, not the minis. <br />
<br />
===Librarians are users too...right?===<br />
<br />
How do we push back against librarians' assertions that pages/interfaces should look a certain way?<br />
<br />
Research with users can *sometimes* help.<br />
<br />
Need to communicate your evidence to your library. UT hired someone last year just to do IT communication (!). <br />
<br />
Numbers don't always work. Need a visual tool if possible (i.e. a heatmap). If you can compile a video or audio of user interviews or usability testing, that can be very powerful.<br />
<br />
===Resources===<br />
<br />
Recommendation: 37Signals' book [https://gettingreal.37signals.com/ Getting Real] on helping choose things that are/aren't important and moving on.<br />
<br />
===Publish your damn work!===<br />
<br />
As a community, we need to get better about sharing our work with each other so we don't have to keep reinventing the wheel.<br />
<br />
==Securing EZproxy==<br />
Mag II<br />
<br />
==Tech service==<br />
Pine Oak<br />
<br />
==AngularJS==<br />
Capitol<br />
<br />
==BIBFRAME 2 & Linked Data==<br />
in Ballroom<br />
<br />
==Unusual searches & long searches==<br />
Willow Oak<br />
<br />
==ResCarta==<br />
in ballroom<br />
<br />
==OCLC institution RDF project==<br />
in ballroom<br />
<br />
<br />
== Digital Preservation ==<br />
<br />
Cost issues, billing departments, charging grant projects one-time vs. multiple<br />
<br />
Internal vs. external hosting<br />
<br />
Trusted Digital Repository, TRAC, ISO standard<br />
<br />
Geographic distribution, what does that actually mean<br />
<br />
? who is using checksums and how often they are verifying<br />
<br/>UNC - make sure checksums checked every quarter, throttle/stagger checking<br />
<br />
? Has anyone had checksum checks fail? <br />
<br/>only time is user error, checking wrong one, files are changed after initial checksum<br />
<br />
video - frame-level checksum, part of ffmpeg, make frame level information and checksum that<br />
<br />
? how much code/time is done to check on problems with checksums? <br />
<br/>manual vs. auto repair, prefer manual intervention<br />
<br />
how often to check tapes, without further damaging tape<br />
<br />
for testing, there's a tool that will flip bits<br />
<br/>disaster recovery testing<br />
<br/>hesitance to test/break files on production <br />
<br />
ZFS, self-healing filesystem, replication (worried about replicating checksum errors)<br />
<br />
? about viruses, malicious scripts<br />
<br/>UNC runs ClamAV on everything, does make sure everyone is authorized user<br />
<br />
AV Artifact Atlas - visual glossary of damage types to a/v files<br />
<br />
tape backup of everything can take too long to run (days)<br />
<br/>rely on multiple copies of objects on disk<br />
<br />
format migrations - no one has really done it yet<br />
<br/>archivematica wiki is great resource<br />
<br />
normalization on ingest<br />
<br/>emulation as a service - possible collaboration in community<br />
<br/>internet archive emulation service using javascript/jsmess<br />
<br />
=== Major issues for Digital Preservation ===<br />
* storage (terabytes coming in each year, no cost-effective solutions for growing needs)<br />
* staffing (for smaller institutions)<br />
* funding model/sustainability (some charge for services, some funding by Campus IT)<br />
** research data, grants, data management planning tool<br />
** how long can we offer to store files<br />
** trying to convince Provost that library storage is like library shelf space and needs to be funded<br />
** split funding, from graduate schools or president's office<br />
* some work on service level agreements, tiers of service<br />
* file retrievals may not be tracked anywhere, if so can't tell what hasn't been retrieved<br />
<br />
NDSA Levels of Preservation - http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/ndsa/activities/levels.html</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Social_Activities&diff=408162014 Social Activities2014-03-24T02:25:21Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 */</p>
<hr />
<div>The Social Activities Group is working on several events and social opportunities for after conference hours. We will be adding more events as they come along. Watch this page!<br />
<br />
Also, if you find a cool event to go to, and want to share the wealth with others, feel free to add the event to the page. :)<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>XML</strike> EZProxy alternatives.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Monday 3/24<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
**Some restaurants can hold multiple groups of six. It is up to you to investigate the venue to see if this is possible.<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
*See a restaurant that's not listed? Feel free to add one, '''but please make sure that it is open that Monday evening.'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
'''Under .5 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ bu ku] (Global street food)<br />
# Bohyun Kim - v (leader) Reservation at 6:15; Meet at the hotel lobby at 6pm (Twitter: [http://twitter.com/bohyunkim @bohyunkim] if u need to get in touch)<br />
# Junior Tidal - n<br />
# Brian Rogers - n<br />
# Vanessa Lucas - n<br />
# Ashley Blewer - n<br />
# Paula Gray-Overtoom - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.oxfordraleigh.com/ The Oxford] (Gastropub)<br />
# Roy Tennant - v (leader) 6:30 reservation set - please email roytennant on Google mail to provide contact info<br />
# David Bass - n<br />
# Dan Moore - n<br />
# Jack Reed - n<br />
# Sean Hendricks - n<br />
# Lauren Magnuson -v (ish - only been once before)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.sonoraleigh.com/index.php Sono] (Japanese)<br />
# Ryan Wick - v (leader) - Reservations made at 6:30. '''Meet in hotel lobby at 6:15''' email: ryanwick@gmail<br />
# Paul Ruderman - n<br />
# Sharon Clapp - v<br />
# Robin Dean - v<br />
# Tommy Ingulfsen - n<br />
# Stephen Patton - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.lavoltarestaurant.com/ La Volta] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's] (Local food)<br />
# Jean Rainwater - v (leader) - they don't take reservations - email me contact info at Jean_Rainwater-at-brown-dot-edu<br />
# Cynthia (Arty) Ng<br />
# Catelynne Sahadath -n<br />
# Maura Carbone -n<br />
# Kate Hill -n<br />
# Martin Haye - v (twice at c4l)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera Empanada & Tequila Bar] (Empanada)<br />
<br />
[http://bigeasync.com/ The Big Easy] (New Orleans/Creole) <br />
# Robert Haschart - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:30pm. email me contact info at rh9ec-at-virginia-dot-edu<br />
# Xiaoming Wang<br />
# Michael Durbin - v<br />
# Sue Richeson -n<br />
# Ed Fugikawa -n<br />
# Tao You - n<br />
# '''full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://postatuscangrille.com/ Posta Tuscan Grille] (Italian)<br />
<br />
# Julia Bauder - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:15pm. Please e-mail me your contact info at bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
# Brian Riley - n<br />
# Mark Mounts - v<br />
# Birkin James Diana - v<br />
# Walter Stine - n<br />
# Michael Levy - v(ish; I attended once, in 2011)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ The Mecca] (Diner/Southern)<br />
<br />
[http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] (American)<br />
# Ken Varnum - v (leader) -- reservation for 6 people at 6:15. Send me your contact info at varnum umich edu.<br />
# Josh Wilson - v(ish, as in: once)<br />
# Kristen Wilson - n<br />
# Michael Blake - n<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n (I'm landing later that evening and will join if you are still out at around 8:30/9)<br />
# Emily Reynolds - n <br />
# Wendy Hagenmaier - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' (I'll take 7 names, since one of us will be joining us later if we're still there)<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken + Honey] (Southern)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Rosalyn Metz - v (leader)<br />
# Chad Nelson - v (insubordinator)<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield - v<br />
# Aaron Coburn - n<br />
# Arcadia Falcone -n<br />
# Mike Beccaria - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2<br />
# Matt Zumwalt - v (leader)<br />
# Chris Sharp - v<br />
# Joe Ferrie - n<br />
# Logan Cox - n<br />
# Jerry Nugent - n<br />
# Joe Atzberger - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/chucks/ Chuck's] (Burgers)<br />
<br />
[http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] (Tapas vegan options)<br />
<br />
[http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's Osteria and Bar] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] (Laotian)<br />
# Dre - v (leader) -- Reservations at 6:15, meet at hotel lobby at 5:45. No, it won't take us half an hour to get there. Dre looks like [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/akorphan/ this handsome fella]. My e-mail address is on that page if you'd like to exchange contact info.<br />
# Heather Rayl - n<br />
# Ranti Junus - v<br />
# Jennifer Kishi - n<br />
# Nabil Kashyap - n<br />
# Laura Wrubel - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://sitti-raleigh.com/index1.php Sitti] (Lebanese) - Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm; look for the short woman in the big brown hat<br />
# Becky Yoose - v (benevolent dictator/leader) contact me at b.yoose at the google machine in case you might run late<br />
# Michael Gibney - n<br />
# Steven Holloway - n<br />
# Jeffrey Mudge - n<br />
# Arie Nugraha - n<br />
# Lisa Rabey - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit Authentic Barbecue] (BBQ)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Joshua Gomez - v (leader) (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: gomezjn_AT_usc_DOT_edu)<br />
# Andrew Darby - v<br />
# Tammy Allgood Wolf - n<br />
# Jim LeFager - n<br />
# Michael Daul - n<br />
# Natasha Nunn - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2 (Can we keep this mostly newbies, please?) - '''Reservations at 6:15 PM; depart hotel lobby at 6 PM'''<br />
# Mx Matienzo - v (leader)<br />
# Cary Gordon - v<br />
# Mark Breedlove - n<br />
# Coral Sheldon-Hess - n (pumpkin cornbread!?!?!)<br />
# Violeta Ilik<br />
# Robin Taylor - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 3 (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: justin@curationexperts.com)<br />
# Justin Coyne - v (leader)<br />
# Rachel Vacek- n<br />
# Devin Higgins - n<br />
# John Rees - n<br />
# Andrew Gordon - n<br />
# Bobbi Fox -v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 4 (Riley made reservations for 6:15)<br />
# Jon Stroop - v (leader, but Riley did the work. Contact: jpstroop@gmail.com)<br />
# [[Riley Childs]] - n<br />
# David Lacy - v<br />
# Shaun Ellis - v<br />
# William Hicks<br />
# Eleanor Dickson - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
Group V (Declan made reservations for 6 at 6p. Contact: declan@declan.net We'll leave the lobby at 5:45 and saunter over to The Pit.)<br />
# Declan Fleming - v (leader)<br />
# Mike Giarlo - v<br />
# Carolina Garcia - v<br />
# Jefferson Bailey - n<br />
# Laura Akerman - n<br />
# Lauren Work - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
[http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://theboroughraleigh.com/ The Borough] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.theremedydiner.com/ The Remedy Diner] (Diner (lots of Veg*n options))<br />
# Erin White - v (leader)<br />
# Linda Ballinger - v(ish)<br />
# Terry Brady - v (been one other time)<br />
# Gabe Ormsby - n<br />
# Eric James - v<br />
# Jenny Gubernick - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters Bar and Grill] (Brewpub)<br />
# Esmé Cowles - v (leader)<br />
# Christina Salazar - v/n<br />
# Francis Kayiwa - v (follower)<br />
# Megan Kudzia - v<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n <br />
# David Drexler - v (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
'''.5 to 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.518west.com/ 518 West Italian Cafe] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (Brewpub)<br />
# Carolyn Cole v (leader) We will meet in in the lobby around 5:30ish and walk over (its about a 20 minute walk). If you are not meeting us in the lobby let me know so we do not wait for you (cam156 at psu) <br />
# Justin Simpson - n<br />
# Christian Sarason - v (3rd times a charm?)<br />
# Scott Bacon - n<br />
# Andy Weidner - n<br />
# David Malone - n (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.mantraindiancuisinebar.com/ Mantra] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mtfujinc.com/SushiO/ Sushi O] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://zakyrestaurant.com/ Zaky Restaurant] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://sullivanssteakhouse.com/raleigh/ Sullivan's Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://bia-restaurant.com/ Bia ] (New American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.18seaboard.com/index.html 18 Seaboard] (Contemporary American)<br />
<br />
[http://sushibluescafe.com Sushi Blues Cafe] (Japanese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.therockfordrestaurant.com/About.aspx Rockford] (American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Restaurant and Taproom] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://bluemangoraleigh.com/ Blue Mango] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mellowmushroom.com/store/raleigh Mellow Mushroom] (Pizza)<br />
<br />
[http://tascabrava.com/index2.html Tasca Brava] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
[http://clockworkraleigh.com/index.html Clockwork] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://dostaquitosnc.com/ Dos Taquitos] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://nappertandysraleighnc.com/ Napper Tandy's Irish Pub] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiphoonbistro.com/ Thaiphoon bistro] (Thai)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''More than 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.peacechinanc.com/ Peace China] (Chinese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling and Noodle Bar] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abyssinia Ethiopian Restaurant] (Ethiopian)<br />
<br />
=== James B. Hunt Library Reception and Tour, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
A reception and tour of the James B. Hunt Library on NCSU's Centennial Campus will take place on Tuesday, March 25, 5:00-7:30 PM. The library, which opened in January 2013, was recently [http://library.stanford.edu/projects/stanford-prize-innovation-research-libraries-spirl/2014-prizes winner] of the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries, and has been recognized for it's [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/technology advanced technology and hi-tech spaces]. See the library through the eyes of the students in the over 3,000 Instagram photos in the [http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/myhuntlibrary My #HuntLibrary] project. The furniture alone has generated interest, as shown on the [http://chairsofhuntlibrary.tumblr.com/ Chairs of Hunt Library] Tumbler site.<br />
<br />
'''Travel to Hunt'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin loading at the Sheraton at 5:00 PM after the day's sessions have concluded. The last bus will leave the Sheraton at 5:45 PM, but attendees are encouraged to join the earlier buses if possible. Please note that the Hunt Library is 4 miles from the Sheraton and is not directly accessible via public transit from downtown.<br />
<br />
'''Reception'''<br />
<br />
Pizza and light snacks will be made available in the Multipurpose Room, along with soft drinks, and beer from the [http://www.ncsu.edu/foodscience/Sheppard/NCSU-12004%20Brewery%20Brochure1.pdf NC State Brewery]. Food and drink will be available until 7:00 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Tour'''<br />
<br />
Attendees will be welcome to embark on a self-guided tour of the library. Library staff will be on hand at selected locations, including hi-tech spaces such as the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/bookBot bookBot] robotic book delivery system, the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/ipearl-immersion-theater iPearl Immersion Theater], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/teaching-and-visualization-lab Teaching & Visualization Lab], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/creativity-studio Creativity Studio], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/game-lab Game Lab], and the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/makerspace Makerspace].<br />
<br />
'''Travel back to the Sheraton'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin to load for the return trip at 6:45 PM. The last bus will leave the Hunt Library at approximately 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
=== #libtechwomen meetup, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
An informal meetup for women and their friends in library technology for networking and fun. Come join us! Learn more about #libtechwomen at [http://libtechwomen.org/about.html].<br />
<br />
'''Where''': [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ The Raleigh Times Bar] 14 E Hargett St Raleigh, NC 27601. 7 minute walk from the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
'''When''': Evening after the tour :c) (Starting at 730P on)<br />
<br />
'''Cost''': No drink minimum.<br />
<br />
'''Contact''': Lisa Rabey [http://twitter.com/pnkrcklibrarian @pnkrcklibrarian]<br />
<br />
'''Signup''': Everyone welcome. Just show up!<br />
<br />
=== A/V Geeks Present: When Computers Were Young, Wednesday 3/26 ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/ A/V Geeks] maintains a collection of over 23,000 old 16mm educational films from various decades of the 20th century, including such classics as [http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/library-story-the-1952/ The Library Story (1952)], many obtained from school and government auctions. Media archaeologist [http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/skip-elsheimer/Content?oid=1183990 Skip Elsheimer] holds themed showings of selected films at events around the Triangle and in other states. <br />
<br />
This event, [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/26/av-geeks-present-when-computers-where-young/ When Computers Were Young], will include "Actual 16mm school films that introduce us to the wonderful world of computers and their potential future -- all before Google!" Films will include Disney's Ethics in the Computer Age and more. This showing is an all ages, public event that is part of a series of monthly shows held at [http://kingsbarcade.com/ Kings Barcade], but the event has been scheduled and themed with the Code4Lib crowd in mind.<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Doors open at 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Located two blocks from the Sheraton, Kings is a 250-capacity live music venue with a full bar and several local beers on tap. Kings is directly connected with the [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour], a cocktail lounge with classic arcade games, pinball, and nightly DJ's. The new [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian restaurant, operated by the same owners, is also downstairs.<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' The event is free with a suggested $5 donation. <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please add your name to the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2014_AVGeeks_Signup sign up list] if you are interested in attending so that we can inform the organizers about the level of interest<br />
<br />
=== Library Tech Cast Round table: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
The Library Tech Cast will be hosting a live Round table somewhere at the Sheraton, we are looking for about 5 people who would be interested. Our Topics can be anything you want, feel free to speak your mind!<br />
<br />
See [http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show]for details!<br />
<br />
Please contact Riley@LibraryTechCast.com if you have any questions!<br />
<br />
'''Location:''' Lobby, we will find a nice relaxing area! <br />
<br />
'''Time:''' Around 6PM, <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please put your Name and Email Address Below!<br />
<br />
*Riley Childs, Riley@TFSGEO.com<br />
<br />
=== Game Night: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
<br />
Game Night is another alternative option for Wednesday evening socializing. Conference goers are welcome to bring their own games from home. Games should probably be of the shorter variety (<2 hours) to allow new players to learn and finish games.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Magnolia 2<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday Evening from 6 to at least 10<br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' None. Just show up or leave as you please. There will be 4 tables with 8 chairs each.<br />
<br />
'''Food:''' Bring your own food/drinks. All alcoholic drinks must be bought at the bar.<br />
<br />
'''Fun:''' Absolutely<br />
<br />
Jason Raitz (jcraitz @ ncsu) for questions to direct to the hotel.<br />
<br />
'''Games!''' Who's bringing what:<br />
<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/257/kill-doctor-lucky Kill Doctor Lucky] (yo_bj)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/6830/zendo Zendo] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/98778/hanabi Hanabi] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/815/chrononauts Chrononauts] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/258/fluxx Fluxx] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12692/gloom Gloom] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/16992/tsuro Tsuro] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/100901/flash-point-fire-rescue Flash Point] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30549/pandemic Pandemic] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/68448/7-wonders 7 Wonders] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/140457/ultimate-werewolf-inquisition Ultimate Werewolf: Inquisition] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/131357/coup Coup] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/129622/love-letter Love Letter] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/478/citadels Citadels] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/70323/king-of-tokyo King of Tokyo] plus expansions (rachelvacek)<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
[https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=211601269129937460559.0004d8d5902e5e3d04b05&msa=0&ll=35.782519,-78.640223&spn=0.01464,0.01929 Code4Lib 2014 Amenities Map, Downtown Raleigh, NC] - Amenities that are within walking distance of the Sheraton or the R Line circulator<br />
<br />
New York Times: [http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/03/09/travel/36-hours-in-raleigh-nc.html?referrer 36 Hours in Raleigh NC] (March 6, 2014)<br />
<br />
== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
''Add your own ideas here''<br />
<br />
'''Game Night'''<br />
<br />
Update: We've secured Wednesday night in Magnolia 2! I'm adding this as a planned event above.<br />
<br />
I can bring some board games if people are interested. I have a decent [http://boardgamegeek.com/collection/user/vacekrae?geekranks=Board+Game+Rank&columns=title%7Cstatus%7Cversion%7Crating%7Cbggrating%7Cplays%7Ccomment%7Ccommands&own=1&ff=1&subtype=boardgame collection]. Let me know via email at vacekrae on gmail. +<br />
<br />
* I'll be bringing a few board games that I normally take to my weekly library game nights. Some of collaborative and are great facilitators for conversation (Flash Point, Pandemic). - Dan, danmoore1987 on gmail.<br />
<br />
'''Trolley Pub'''<br />
<br />
14 person pedal-powered [http://trolleypub.com/raleigh/ trolleys]. Can be booked for pub crawls in downtown or in the Warehouse District. BYOB allowed. Private tours for 8-14 people can be booked for $350 for two hour time slots between 11:00 AM and midnight. Smaller groups of 1-6 people can also buy 'Mixer' tickets for $30 (shared trolley).<br />
<br />
Note: with weather being what it might be and the money required, this might not be a good idea now. --J. Raitz @ NCSU<br />
<br />
'''Brewpub Walk'''<br />
<br />
Three brewpubs can be found along a [http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD 1.2 mile walk] through the Warehouse District west from the Sheraton.<br />
NOTE: Trophy Brewing, the westernmost brewpub, has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner, go in smaller numbers if eating at Trophy, or go around the corner to Irregardless Cafe, which has veg*n options. Alternatively, start at Trophy and go the opposite direction and eat in the Warehouse District or downtown where there are many dining options.<br />
<br />
'''NCAA Tournament Game at PNC Arena'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament Third Round Division I Men's basketball game], Sunday March 23. If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts Map of downtown arts and cultural entertainment]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event-calendar/2014/3 Calendar of downtown events]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/shopping Map of downtown shopping]<br />
<br />
=== Exhibits, Showings, Museums ===<br />
<br />
*[http://naturalsciences.org/ North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences]<br />
**[http://naturalsciences.org/nature-research-center Nature Research Center]<br />
**Exhibit - [http://naturalsciences.org/exhibits/special-exhibits Birds of Paradise: Amazing Avian Evolution] (final day March 23)<br />
<br />
*[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx North Carolina Museum of History] Exhibits: <br />
**[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/exhibit-opening-cedars-in-the-pines Cedars in the Pines]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeOurExhibits/CurrentExhibits/NorthCarolinaandtheCivilWar/The_Bitter_End.aspx North Carolina and the Civil War: The Bitter End, 1864-1865]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate: Political Scandal & the Presidency]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.nchistoricsites.org/capitol/ North Carolina State Capitol]<br />
<br />
*[http://camraleigh.org/2014nc-arts-council-artist-fellowship/ NC Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award Exhibition] at the [http://camraleigh.org/ Contemporary Arts Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://ncartmuseum.org/calendar/ NC Museum of Art Calendar]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts/art-galleries Downtown Raleigh Art Galleries]<br />
<br />
*[http://artspacenc.org/about-us/visit/ ArtSpace]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighcitymuseum.org/index.shtml City of Raleigh Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9669&view=EventDetails&information_id=27372 Remnants of the Floating World: Japanese Art from the Permanent Collection] at the [http://www.ncsu.edu/gregg/index.html NCSU Gregg Museum of Art & Design]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.joellane.org/ Joel Lane Museum House]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecRecreation/Articles/MordecaiHistoricPark2.html Mordecai Historic Park]<br />
<br />
=== Outside Activities ===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.triangleglides.com/ Triangle Glides] Segway tours, standup paddleboard rentals<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecDesignDevelop/Articles/CapitalAreaGreenwayTrailSystem.html Capital Area Greenway Trail System]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncartmuseum.org/museum_park/visit_park/ NC Museum of Art: Museum Park] Scenic trails and outdoor art<br />
<br />
* [http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/raleigh/index.htm National Register of Historic Places]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/jcraulstonarboretum/index.php JC Raulston Arboretum]<br />
<br />
=== Run Clubs ===<br />
<br />
'''Monday Night'''<br />
* [http://www.nogrunclub.com/ Nog Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Tir Na Nog Irish Pub: 3-5 mile routes, followed by team trivia, $1 pasta, and beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday Night'''<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/events/553725497983418/ Natty Greene's Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Natty Greene's Brewery: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
* Big Boss Run Club - 7:00 PM at [http://bigbossbrewing.com/age-verification.aspx?returnTo=%2f Big Boss Brewery]: 3-6 mile routes followed by beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday Night'''<br />
* Margarita Run Club - 6:00 PM at [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] restaurant: 3-5 mile routes followed by taco bar and margarita specials<br />
* [http://www.ymcatriangle.org/programs-services/fitness-wellness/walking-running-clubs/alexander-family-ymca-0 Trophy Brewery Runs] - 6:00 PM at Trophy Brewing: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/dining Map of Downtown Restaurants & Dining]<br />
<br />
=== Restaurants ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/01/30/3577164/2014-best-restaurants-in-the-triangle.html News & Observer 2014 Best Restaurants of the Triangle]<br />
<br />
[http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/LocationSearch?locationSection=1218750 Indy Weekly Triangle Dining Guide]<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District''' (0-0.4 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://clydecoopersbbq.com/ Clyde Cooper's BBQ] (since 1938)<br />
* [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken & Honey] Fried Chicken, Chicken and Waffles (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.sonoraleigh.com/ Sono] Sushi<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16] Eclectic pub grub<br />
* [http://sitti-raleigh.com/ Sitti] Lebanese<br />
* [http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] Tapas (vegan options)<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] Mexican<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Chuck's Burgers] (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.oakcitymeatball.com/ Oak City Meatball Shoppe]<br />
* [http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] Italian-American<br />
* [http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] American<br />
* [http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ Mecca] Diner/southern<br />
* [http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ Buku] Global street food<br />
* [http://www.boltbistro.com/ Bolt] Bistro, Steakhouse, Seafood<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square''' (0.3-0.5 miles east)<br />
<br />
* [http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] Laotian<br />
* [http://www.theremedydiner.com/ Remedy Diner] Veg*n and non-veg*n<br />
* [http://www.cafeluna.com/ Cafe Luna] Italian (Tuscan)<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and tequila<br />
* [http://www.bigedscitymarket.com/ Big Ed's] Diner<br />
* [http://www.mosdiner.net/ Mo's Diner] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District''' (0.2-0.7 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit] Whole-hog, pit-coooked BBQ<br />
* [http://thefictionkitchen.com/ Fiction Kitchen] Veg*n<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's Diner] American/Diner (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://joseandsons.com/ Jose and Sons] Mexican/Southern fusion<br />
* [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie] Tapas (Live jazz on Wed.)<br />
* [http://www.heatseekershrimp.com/ Five Star] Asian (Traditional and creative)<br />
* [http://roastgrill.com/ Roast Grill] Just hot dogs (''as seen on Man v. Food'')<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South''' (0.6-1.3 miles northwest)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.42ndstoysterbar.com/ 42nd St. Oyster Bar] Seafood<br />
* [http://therockfordrestaurant.com/ Rockford] American (New)/Pub grub<br />
* [http://www.518west.com/ 518 West] Italian<br />
* [http://www.second-empire.com/ Second Empire] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.''' (1.0-1.2 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.18seaboard.com/ Seaboard Station] Southern, American (New)<br />
* [http://jbetskis.com/ J. Betskis] Central & Eastern European<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/pages/Stanbury/359649790802483 Stanbury] Contemporary<br />
* [http://piebirdraleigh.com/ Piebird] Sweet and savory pies<br />
* [http://stationraleigh.com/ The Station] American (Traditional)<br />
<br />
'''West towards NC State''' (1.2-2.2 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.irregardless.com/ Irregardless Cafe] veg*n options<br />
* [http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abysinnia] Ethiopian<br />
* [http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling & Noodle Bar] Asian<br />
<br />
'''Five Points''' (2.5 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://bloomsburybistro.com/bistro.restaurant.raleigh/ Bloomsbury Bistro] American (New)<br />
* [https://nofo.com/ NOFO @ The Pig] American (New), Brunch<br />
* [http://lillyspizza.com/ Lilly's Pizza] Pizza and beer<br />
<br />
'''Other Inside-the-Beltline Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://guasaca.com/ Guasaca] Venezuelan (6 miles)<br />
* [http://glenwoodgrill.com/ Glenwood Grill] American (Traditional), Southern (4 miles)<br />
<br />
=== Desserts ===<br />
<br />
* [https://viderichocolatefactory.com/ Videri Chocolate Factory]<br />
* [http://www.escazuchocolates.com/ Escazu Artisan Chocolates]<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/113675251912407366356/about?gl=us&hl=en Crema] Ice cream<br />
<br />
=== Coffee ===<br />
<br />
* [http://morningtimes-raleigh.com/ Morning Times] (wifi) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/joule/ Joule Coffee] (''Ashley Christiansen'', wifi, breakfast/lunch -- CNN eatocracy [http://eatocracy.cnn.com/2014/02/21/5-hottest-new-coffee-spots-in-the-u-s/ 5 hottest new coffee spots in the US]) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://beneluxcoffee.com/ Benelux Coffee] (wifi) -- 4 blocks<br />
* [http://www.sostacafe.com/ Sosta Cafe] (wifi, lunch) -- 2 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafemuertos.com/ Cafe de los Muertos] (wifi) -- 5 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafehelios.com/ Cafe Helios] (wifi, breakfast/lunch) -- 1.1 miles<br />
<br />
There is a Starbucks in the lobby of the Marriott, next to the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/nightlife Map of Bars, Clubs & Live Entertainment]<br />
<br />
=== Bars ===<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ Raleigh Times] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar (The Hive is upstairs)<br />
* [http://foundationnc.com/ Foundation] Cocktails, bourbon, local beer<br />
* [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour] Cocktails, local beer<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/fox/ Fox Liquor Bar] Cocktails, local beer (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's] Dive bar (live music)<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16]<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.yelp.com/biz/landmark-tavern-raleigh Landmark Tavern] beer, back patio<br />
* [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog] Irish pub<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and 40 tequila varieties<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's] Beer and wings<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters] Grill, 2012 Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] Brewpub<br />
* [http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] Beer<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] Brewpub<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.cgracebar.com/ C Grace] Cocktails and live jazz<br />
* [http://clockworkraleigh.com/ Clockwork] Retro cocktail lounge<br />
* [http://hibernianpub.com/ Hibernian] Irish pub<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Tap Room] Beer<br />
* [http://www.person-street.com/ Person Street Bar]<br />
<br />
'''Best places for groups to watch NCAA Championship Games'''<br />
<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's]<br />
* [http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's]<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's]<br />
<br />
=== Breweries ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.ncbeer.org/brewery-map/ Map of NC Breweries]<br />
<br />
'''Walking Distance'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] (0.3 miles)<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (0.9 miles)<br />
* [http://trophybrewing.com/ Trophy Brewing & Pizza Company] (1.2 miles)<br />
<br />
[http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD Possible brewpub walking tour] [NOTE: Trophy has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner consider going the opposite direction and eating in the Warehouse District or downtown]<br />
<br />
'''Greater Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://bigbossbrewing.com/ Big Boss Brewing] (3.5 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://raleighbrewingcompany.com/ Raleigh Brewing Company] (4 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.lynnwoodgrill.com/node/10 Lynnwood Brewing Concern] (9 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.loneriderbeer.com/ Lone Rider] (13 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://gizmobrewworks.com/ Gizmo Brewworks] (12 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.aviatorbrew.com/ Aviator Brewing Company] (17 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://hosannabrewing.com/ Hosanna Brewery] (14 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://deepriverbrewing.com/ Deep River Brewing] (16 miles, Clayton)<br />
* [http://www.carolinabrew.com/ Carolina Brewing] (19 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.bombshellbeer.com/ Bombshell Beer] (18 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.whitestreetbrewing.com/ White Street Brewing] (18 miles, Wake Forest)<br />
<br />
'''Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* [http://trianglebrewery.com/ Triangle Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://www.fullsteam.ag/beer/ Fullsteam] (Durham)<br />
* [http://bullcityburgerandbrewery.com/Bull_City_Burger_and_Brewery/Home.html Bull City Burger & Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://thetopofthehill.com/ Top of the Hill] (Chapel Hill)<br />
* [http://steelstringbrewery.com/ Steel String Craft Brewery] (Carrboro)<br />
* [http://www.mysterybrewing.com/ Mystery Brewing] (Hillsborough)<br />
* [http://whiterabbitbrewery.com/ White Rabbit Brewing] (Angiers)<br />
* [http://doublebarleybrewing.com/ Double Barley Brewing] (Wilson Mills)<br />
<br />
Other nanobrews: [http://subnoir.net/ Sub Noir Brewing] (Raleigh), [http://starpointbrewing.com/ StarPoint Brewing] (Carrboro), [http://ponysaurusbrewing.com/ Ponysaurus] (Durham), [https://www.facebook.com/sourwoodbrewingco Sourwood Brewing Company - Cider] (Durham)<br />
<br />
=== Bottle Shops ===<br />
<br />
* [http://tastybeverageco.com/ Tasty Beverage Company] About 1200 packaged beers and 6 draft beers (0.3 mile)<br />
* [http://paddyobeers.com/ Paddy O'Beers] Bottle shop and tasting room (0.4 mile)<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/116185965486400371099/about?gl=us&hl=en The Bottle Shop at Tyler's Taproom] (1.0 mile)<br />
* [http://www.wineauthorities.com/ Wine Authorities] (1.3 miles)<br />
<br />
==Raleigh Events March 23-27==<br />
<br />
[https://www.mergerecords.com/25k Merge Records 25k] (March 22) Chapel Hill to Durham run, with post race party and bands at Motorco music hall (celebrating 25th year of Merge Records label)<br />
<br />
===Sunday March 23===<br />
<br />
* Apparently there's going to be [http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament some basketball game] at PNC Arena...<br />
** If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
* Another basketball game - [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Cary-Invasion-vs-East-Carolina-Stealth/26414/ Cary Invasion vs. East Carolina Stealth], 6 pm<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Civil-Rights-Through-Song/25383/ Civil Rights Through Song], Burning Coal Theater Company, at Murphrey School Auditorium, 2 pm<br />
* Romeo and Juliet - Carolina Ballet at [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/carolina-ballet-private-event-3340 Fletcher Opera Theater]<br />
* [http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9568&view=EventDetails&information_id=27101 LEO (the anti-gravity show)], NCSU Center Stage, 3 pm<br />
* [http://triangleyarncrawl.com/ Triangle Yarn Crawl]<br />
* [http://nuvyug.net/ India Fest] at Dorton Arena<br />
* [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/at-the-movies-frost-and-nixon At the Movies: Frost/Nixon] at NC Museum of History (free movie and lecture associated with the [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate exhibit])<br />
<br />
===Monday March 24===<br />
<br />
* Cure for the Mondays Comedy Night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, March 25===<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/NHL-Carolina-Hurricanes-vs-New-York-Islanders/24787/ NHL Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Islanders], 7pm (for free bus see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/pepsi-caniac-coach Pepsi Caniac Coach])<br />
<br />
* Job opportunity - AWS is hiring for Seattle-based positions. [https://aws.amazon.com/careers/raleigh-storage-hiring-2014/?sc_channel=sm&sc_campaign=hiringevent&sc_publisher=fb&sc_medium=std&sc_content=raleigh&sc_category=hiringevent Social gathering information], 6pm - 9pm<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, March 26===<br />
<br />
===Thursday, March 27===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/dance/events/PDP_SPR2014.html Panoramic Dance Project] at NCSU's Titmus Theater<br />
* [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/north-carolina-artists-exhibition-3994 2014 Artists Exhibition - Raleigh Fine Arts Society] at Betty Ray McCain Art Gallery<br />
* [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx Watergate: Politics, Scandal, and the Media] Panel discussion at the NC Museum of History (reservation required)<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Raleigh-Beer-Guide-Kickoff-Party/26790/ Raleigh Beer Guide Kickoff Party] All 15 Greater Raleigh breweries on tap.<br />
<br />
== Live Music ==<br />
<br />
'''Sunday March 23'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/447527-matt-schofield-raleigh/ Matt Schofield] at Pour House<br />
* Action Bronson at [http://www.catscradle.com/events/ Cat's Cradle] (in Carrboro)<br />
* Casanovas in Heat at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
<br />
'''Monday March 24'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.dpacnc.com/events/detail/csn Crosby, Stills & Nash] at Durham Performing Arts Center (in Durham)<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/asleep-wheel/ Asleep at the Wheel] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Devils Wears Prada, with Ghost Inside, others at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497289-daley-raleigh/ Daley] at Pour House<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday March 25'''<br />
<br />
* Three 6 Mafia at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/25/kings-presents-axxaabraxas-captured-tracks-at-slims/ Axxa/Abraxas] at Slim's, with Lollipops (''Recommended local band'') opening<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497341-coast-2-coast-live-raleigh/ Coast 2 Coast Live Interactive Showcase] at Pour House<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday March 26'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/479771-pigeons-playing-ping-pong-raleigh/ Pigeons Playing Ping Pong] and Imperial Blend at [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/ Pour House]<br />
* Mang (Ween tribute) at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* Free Jazz Night at [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie]<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Thursday March 27'''<br />
<br />
* Local Beer/Local Band night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497347-blue-sky-black-death-raleigh/ Blue Sky Black Death] at Pour House<br />
* [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/event/492779-unifier-jessica-long-new-raleigh/ Unifier, Jessica Long & The New Kind] at Deep South<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/27/good-graeff/ Good Graeff] at Kings Barcade<br />
* Triathalon with Giant Giants at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/alchemystics/ Alchemystics] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Sarah Colonna (Comedy) at [https://center-stage.seatengine.com/venues/goodnights Goodnight's Comedy]<br />
<br />
'''More Music Venues in the Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* Raleigh: [http://themaywoodraleigh.com/ Maywood]<br />
* Chapel Hill/Carrboro: [http://www.catscradle.com/ Cat's Cradle], [http://www.local506.com/calendar/ Local 506], [http://caverntavern.com/ The Cave], [http://www.chapelhillunderground.com/ Underground], [https://www.carolinaperformingarts.org/ Memorial Hall]<br />
* Durham: [http://motorcomusic.com/ Motorco], [http://www.thepinhook.com/ Pinhook]<br />
* Saxapahaw: [http://www.hawriverballroom.com/ Haw River Ballroom]<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2014]]<br />
<br />
==Getting Around==<br />
<br />
'''R-Line Downtown Circulator'''<br />
<br />
Free [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/r-line circulator bus] that connects downtown districts (see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/_files/docs/final_rline_map.pdf map]). Buses run every 10-15 minutes and can be tracked on the [http://m.yourhere.com/ R-Line mobile application].<br />
<br />
'''Capital Area Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.raleighnc.gov/transit/ CAT bus system] covers the Greater Raleigh area.<br />
<br />
'''Triangle Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.triangletransit.org/ TTA bus system] provides transportation to Chapel/Carrboro, Durham and other points across the Triangle region. The TTA routes complement CAT routes to West Raleigh locations such as NC State.<br />
<br />
'''Rickshaws'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.raleighrickshaw.com/ Raleigh Rickshaw] and [http://www.crankarmrickshaw.com/ Crank Arm Rickshaw] provide on call or on street pickup. Since January has decided to stick around through late March the rickshaws may not be out on the streets much however.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Social_Activities&diff=408152014 Social Activities2014-03-24T02:18:07Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 */</p>
<hr />
<div>The Social Activities Group is working on several events and social opportunities for after conference hours. We will be adding more events as they come along. Watch this page!<br />
<br />
Also, if you find a cool event to go to, and want to share the wealth with others, feel free to add the event to the page. :)<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>XML</strike> EZProxy alternatives.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Monday 3/24<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
**Some restaurants can hold multiple groups of six. It is up to you to investigate the venue to see if this is possible.<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
*See a restaurant that's not listed? Feel free to add one, '''but please make sure that it is open that Monday evening.'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
'''Under .5 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ bu ku] (Global street food)<br />
# Bohyun Kim - v (leader) Reservation at 6:15; Meet at the hotel lobby at 6pm (Twitter: [http://twitter.com/bohyunkim @bohyunkim] if u need to get in touch)<br />
# Junior Tidal - n<br />
# Brian Rogers - n<br />
# Vanessa Lucas - n<br />
# Ashley Blewer - n<br />
# Paula Gray-Overtoom - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.oxfordraleigh.com/ The Oxford] (Gastropub)<br />
# Roy Tennant - v (leader) 6:30 reservation set - please email roytennant on Google mail to provide contact info<br />
# David Bass - n<br />
# Dan Moore - n<br />
# Jack Reed - n<br />
# Sean Hendricks - n<br />
# Lauren Magnuson -v (ish - only been once before)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.sonoraleigh.com/index.php Sono] (Japanese)<br />
# Ryan Wick - v (leader) - Reservations made at 6:30. '''Meet in hotel lobby at 6:15''' email: ryanwick@gmail<br />
# Paul Ruderman - n<br />
# Sharon Clapp - v<br />
# Robin Dean - v<br />
# Tommy Ingulfsen - n<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.lavoltarestaurant.com/ La Volta] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's] (Local food)<br />
# Jean Rainwater - v (leader) - they don't take reservations - email me contact info at Jean_Rainwater-at-brown-dot-edu<br />
# Cynthia (Arty) Ng<br />
# Catelynne Sahadath -n<br />
# Maura Carbone -n<br />
# Kate Hill -n<br />
# Martin Haye - v (twice at c4l)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera Empanada & Tequila Bar] (Empanada)<br />
<br />
[http://bigeasync.com/ The Big Easy] (New Orleans/Creole) <br />
# Robert Haschart - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:30pm. email me contact info at rh9ec-at-virginia-dot-edu<br />
# Xiaoming Wang<br />
# Michael Durbin - v<br />
# Sue Richeson -n<br />
# Ed Fugikawa -n<br />
# Tao You - n<br />
# '''full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://postatuscangrille.com/ Posta Tuscan Grille] (Italian)<br />
<br />
# Julia Bauder - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:15pm. Please e-mail me your contact info at bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
# Brian Riley - n<br />
# Mark Mounts - v<br />
# Birkin James Diana - v<br />
# Walter Stine - n<br />
# Michael Levy - v(ish; I attended once, in 2011)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ The Mecca] (Diner/Southern)<br />
<br />
[http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] (American)<br />
# Ken Varnum - v (leader) -- reservation for 6 people at 6:15. Send me your contact info at varnum umich edu.<br />
# Josh Wilson - v(ish, as in: once)<br />
# Kristen Wilson - n<br />
# Michael Blake - n<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n (I'm landing later that evening and will join if you are still out at around 8:30/9)<br />
# Emily Reynolds - n <br />
# Wendy Hagenmaier - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' (I'll take 7 names, since one of us will be joining us later if we're still there)<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken + Honey] (Southern)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Rosalyn Metz - v (leader)<br />
# Chad Nelson - v (insubordinator)<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield - v<br />
# Aaron Coburn - n<br />
# Arcadia Falcone -n<br />
# Mike Beccaria - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2<br />
# Matt Zumwalt - v (leader)<br />
# Chris Sharp - v<br />
# Joe Ferrie - n<br />
# Logan Cox - n<br />
# Jerry Nugent - n<br />
# Joe Atzberger - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/chucks/ Chuck's] (Burgers)<br />
<br />
[http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] (Tapas vegan options)<br />
<br />
[http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's Osteria and Bar] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] (Laotian)<br />
# Dre - v (leader) -- Reservations at 6:15, meet at hotel lobby at 5:45. No, it won't take us half an hour to get there. Dre looks like [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/akorphan/ this handsome fella]. My e-mail address is on that page if you'd like to exchange contact info.<br />
# Heather Rayl - n<br />
# Ranti Junus - v<br />
# Jennifer Kishi - n<br />
# Nabil Kashyap - n<br />
# Laura Wrubel - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://sitti-raleigh.com/index1.php Sitti] (Lebanese) - Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm; look for the short woman in the big brown hat<br />
# Becky Yoose - v (benevolent dictator/leader) contact me at b.yoose at the google machine in case you might run late<br />
# Michael Gibney - n<br />
# Steven Holloway - n<br />
# Jeffrey Mudge - n<br />
# Arie Nugraha - n<br />
# Lisa Rabey - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit Authentic Barbecue] (BBQ)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Joshua Gomez - v (leader) (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: gomezjn_AT_usc_DOT_edu)<br />
# Andrew Darby - v<br />
# Tammy Allgood Wolf - n<br />
# Jim LeFager - n<br />
# Michael Daul - n<br />
# Natasha Nunn - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2 (Can we keep this mostly newbies, please?) - '''Reservations at 6:15 PM; depart hotel lobby at 6 PM'''<br />
# Mx Matienzo - v (leader)<br />
# Cary Gordon - v<br />
# Mark Breedlove - n<br />
# Coral Sheldon-Hess - n (pumpkin cornbread!?!?!)<br />
# Violeta Ilik<br />
# Robin Taylor - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 3 (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: justin@curationexperts.com)<br />
# Justin Coyne - v (leader)<br />
# Rachel Vacek- n<br />
# Devin Higgins - n<br />
# John Rees - n<br />
# Andrew Gordon - n<br />
# Bobbi Fox -v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 4 (Riley made reservations for 6:15)<br />
# Jon Stroop - v (leader, but Riley did the work. Contact: jpstroop@gmail.com)<br />
# [[Riley Childs]] - n<br />
# David Lacy - v<br />
# Shaun Ellis - v<br />
# William Hicks<br />
# Eleanor Dickson - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
Group V (Declan made reservations for 6 at 6p. Contact: declan@declan.net We'll leave the lobby at 5:45 and saunter over to The Pit.)<br />
# Declan Fleming - v (leader)<br />
# Mike Giarlo - v<br />
# Carolina Garcia - v<br />
# Jefferson Bailey - n<br />
# Laura Akerman - n<br />
# Lauren Work - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
[http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://theboroughraleigh.com/ The Borough] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.theremedydiner.com/ The Remedy Diner] (Diner (lots of Veg*n options))<br />
# Erin White - v (leader)<br />
# Linda Ballinger - v(ish)<br />
# Terry Brady - v (been one other time)<br />
# Gabe Ormsby - n<br />
# Eric James - v<br />
# Jenny Gubernick - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters Bar and Grill] (Brewpub)<br />
# Esmé Cowles - v (leader)<br />
# Christina Salazar - v/n<br />
# Francis Kayiwa - v (follower)<br />
# Megan Kudzia - v<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n <br />
# David Drexler - v (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
'''.5 to 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.518west.com/ 518 West Italian Cafe] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (Brewpub)<br />
# Carolyn Cole v (leader) We will meet in in the lobby around 5:30ish and walk over (its about a 20 minute walk). If you are not meeting us in the lobby let me know so we do not wait for you (cam156 at psu) <br />
# Justin Simpson - n<br />
# Christian Sarason - v (3rd times a charm?)<br />
# Scott Bacon - n<br />
# Andy Weidner - n<br />
# David Malone - n (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.mantraindiancuisinebar.com/ Mantra] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mtfujinc.com/SushiO/ Sushi O] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://zakyrestaurant.com/ Zaky Restaurant] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://sullivanssteakhouse.com/raleigh/ Sullivan's Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://bia-restaurant.com/ Bia ] (New American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.18seaboard.com/index.html 18 Seaboard] (Contemporary American)<br />
<br />
[http://sushibluescafe.com Sushi Blues Cafe] (Japanese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.therockfordrestaurant.com/About.aspx Rockford] (American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Restaurant and Taproom] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://bluemangoraleigh.com/ Blue Mango] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mellowmushroom.com/store/raleigh Mellow Mushroom] (Pizza)<br />
<br />
[http://tascabrava.com/index2.html Tasca Brava] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
[http://clockworkraleigh.com/index.html Clockwork] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://dostaquitosnc.com/ Dos Taquitos] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://nappertandysraleighnc.com/ Napper Tandy's Irish Pub] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiphoonbistro.com/ Thaiphoon bistro] (Thai)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''More than 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.peacechinanc.com/ Peace China] (Chinese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling and Noodle Bar] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abyssinia Ethiopian Restaurant] (Ethiopian)<br />
<br />
=== James B. Hunt Library Reception and Tour, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
A reception and tour of the James B. Hunt Library on NCSU's Centennial Campus will take place on Tuesday, March 25, 5:00-7:30 PM. The library, which opened in January 2013, was recently [http://library.stanford.edu/projects/stanford-prize-innovation-research-libraries-spirl/2014-prizes winner] of the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries, and has been recognized for it's [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/technology advanced technology and hi-tech spaces]. See the library through the eyes of the students in the over 3,000 Instagram photos in the [http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/myhuntlibrary My #HuntLibrary] project. The furniture alone has generated interest, as shown on the [http://chairsofhuntlibrary.tumblr.com/ Chairs of Hunt Library] Tumbler site.<br />
<br />
'''Travel to Hunt'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin loading at the Sheraton at 5:00 PM after the day's sessions have concluded. The last bus will leave the Sheraton at 5:45 PM, but attendees are encouraged to join the earlier buses if possible. Please note that the Hunt Library is 4 miles from the Sheraton and is not directly accessible via public transit from downtown.<br />
<br />
'''Reception'''<br />
<br />
Pizza and light snacks will be made available in the Multipurpose Room, along with soft drinks, and beer from the [http://www.ncsu.edu/foodscience/Sheppard/NCSU-12004%20Brewery%20Brochure1.pdf NC State Brewery]. Food and drink will be available until 7:00 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Tour'''<br />
<br />
Attendees will be welcome to embark on a self-guided tour of the library. Library staff will be on hand at selected locations, including hi-tech spaces such as the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/bookBot bookBot] robotic book delivery system, the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/ipearl-immersion-theater iPearl Immersion Theater], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/teaching-and-visualization-lab Teaching & Visualization Lab], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/creativity-studio Creativity Studio], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/game-lab Game Lab], and the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/makerspace Makerspace].<br />
<br />
'''Travel back to the Sheraton'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin to load for the return trip at 6:45 PM. The last bus will leave the Hunt Library at approximately 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
=== #libtechwomen meetup, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
An informal meetup for women and their friends in library technology for networking and fun. Come join us! Learn more about #libtechwomen at [http://libtechwomen.org/about.html].<br />
<br />
'''Where''': [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ The Raleigh Times Bar] 14 E Hargett St Raleigh, NC 27601. 7 minute walk from the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
'''When''': Evening after the tour :c) (Starting at 730P on)<br />
<br />
'''Cost''': No drink minimum.<br />
<br />
'''Contact''': Lisa Rabey [http://twitter.com/pnkrcklibrarian @pnkrcklibrarian]<br />
<br />
'''Signup''': Everyone welcome. Just show up!<br />
<br />
=== A/V Geeks Present: When Computers Were Young, Wednesday 3/26 ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/ A/V Geeks] maintains a collection of over 23,000 old 16mm educational films from various decades of the 20th century, including such classics as [http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/library-story-the-1952/ The Library Story (1952)], many obtained from school and government auctions. Media archaeologist [http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/skip-elsheimer/Content?oid=1183990 Skip Elsheimer] holds themed showings of selected films at events around the Triangle and in other states. <br />
<br />
This event, [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/26/av-geeks-present-when-computers-where-young/ When Computers Were Young], will include "Actual 16mm school films that introduce us to the wonderful world of computers and their potential future -- all before Google!" Films will include Disney's Ethics in the Computer Age and more. This showing is an all ages, public event that is part of a series of monthly shows held at [http://kingsbarcade.com/ Kings Barcade], but the event has been scheduled and themed with the Code4Lib crowd in mind.<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Doors open at 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Located two blocks from the Sheraton, Kings is a 250-capacity live music venue with a full bar and several local beers on tap. Kings is directly connected with the [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour], a cocktail lounge with classic arcade games, pinball, and nightly DJ's. The new [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian restaurant, operated by the same owners, is also downstairs.<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' The event is free with a suggested $5 donation. <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please add your name to the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2014_AVGeeks_Signup sign up list] if you are interested in attending so that we can inform the organizers about the level of interest<br />
<br />
=== Library Tech Cast Round table: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
The Library Tech Cast will be hosting a live Round table somewhere at the Sheraton, we are looking for about 5 people who would be interested. Our Topics can be anything you want, feel free to speak your mind!<br />
<br />
See [http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show]for details!<br />
<br />
Please contact Riley@LibraryTechCast.com if you have any questions!<br />
<br />
'''Location:''' Lobby, we will find a nice relaxing area! <br />
<br />
'''Time:''' Around 6PM, <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please put your Name and Email Address Below!<br />
<br />
*Riley Childs, Riley@TFSGEO.com<br />
<br />
=== Game Night: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
<br />
Game Night is another alternative option for Wednesday evening socializing. Conference goers are welcome to bring their own games from home. Games should probably be of the shorter variety (<2 hours) to allow new players to learn and finish games.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Magnolia 2<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday Evening from 6 to at least 10<br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' None. Just show up or leave as you please. There will be 4 tables with 8 chairs each.<br />
<br />
'''Food:''' Bring your own food/drinks. All alcoholic drinks must be bought at the bar.<br />
<br />
'''Fun:''' Absolutely<br />
<br />
Jason Raitz (jcraitz @ ncsu) for questions to direct to the hotel.<br />
<br />
'''Games!''' Who's bringing what:<br />
<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/257/kill-doctor-lucky Kill Doctor Lucky] (yo_bj)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/6830/zendo Zendo] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/98778/hanabi Hanabi] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/815/chrononauts Chrononauts] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/258/fluxx Fluxx] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12692/gloom Gloom] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/16992/tsuro Tsuro] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/100901/flash-point-fire-rescue Flash Point] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30549/pandemic Pandemic] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/68448/7-wonders 7 Wonders] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/140457/ultimate-werewolf-inquisition Ultimate Werewolf: Inquisition] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/131357/coup Coup] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/129622/love-letter Love Letter] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/478/citadels Citadels] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/70323/king-of-tokyo King of Tokyo] plus expansions (rachelvacek)<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
[https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=211601269129937460559.0004d8d5902e5e3d04b05&msa=0&ll=35.782519,-78.640223&spn=0.01464,0.01929 Code4Lib 2014 Amenities Map, Downtown Raleigh, NC] - Amenities that are within walking distance of the Sheraton or the R Line circulator<br />
<br />
New York Times: [http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/03/09/travel/36-hours-in-raleigh-nc.html?referrer 36 Hours in Raleigh NC] (March 6, 2014)<br />
<br />
== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
''Add your own ideas here''<br />
<br />
'''Game Night'''<br />
<br />
Update: We've secured Wednesday night in Magnolia 2! I'm adding this as a planned event above.<br />
<br />
I can bring some board games if people are interested. I have a decent [http://boardgamegeek.com/collection/user/vacekrae?geekranks=Board+Game+Rank&columns=title%7Cstatus%7Cversion%7Crating%7Cbggrating%7Cplays%7Ccomment%7Ccommands&own=1&ff=1&subtype=boardgame collection]. Let me know via email at vacekrae on gmail. +<br />
<br />
* I'll be bringing a few board games that I normally take to my weekly library game nights. Some of collaborative and are great facilitators for conversation (Flash Point, Pandemic). - Dan, danmoore1987 on gmail.<br />
<br />
'''Trolley Pub'''<br />
<br />
14 person pedal-powered [http://trolleypub.com/raleigh/ trolleys]. Can be booked for pub crawls in downtown or in the Warehouse District. BYOB allowed. Private tours for 8-14 people can be booked for $350 for two hour time slots between 11:00 AM and midnight. Smaller groups of 1-6 people can also buy 'Mixer' tickets for $30 (shared trolley).<br />
<br />
Note: with weather being what it might be and the money required, this might not be a good idea now. --J. Raitz @ NCSU<br />
<br />
'''Brewpub Walk'''<br />
<br />
Three brewpubs can be found along a [http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD 1.2 mile walk] through the Warehouse District west from the Sheraton.<br />
NOTE: Trophy Brewing, the westernmost brewpub, has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner, go in smaller numbers if eating at Trophy, or go around the corner to Irregardless Cafe, which has veg*n options. Alternatively, start at Trophy and go the opposite direction and eat in the Warehouse District or downtown where there are many dining options.<br />
<br />
'''NCAA Tournament Game at PNC Arena'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament Third Round Division I Men's basketball game], Sunday March 23. If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts Map of downtown arts and cultural entertainment]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event-calendar/2014/3 Calendar of downtown events]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/shopping Map of downtown shopping]<br />
<br />
=== Exhibits, Showings, Museums ===<br />
<br />
*[http://naturalsciences.org/ North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences]<br />
**[http://naturalsciences.org/nature-research-center Nature Research Center]<br />
**Exhibit - [http://naturalsciences.org/exhibits/special-exhibits Birds of Paradise: Amazing Avian Evolution] (final day March 23)<br />
<br />
*[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx North Carolina Museum of History] Exhibits: <br />
**[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/exhibit-opening-cedars-in-the-pines Cedars in the Pines]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeOurExhibits/CurrentExhibits/NorthCarolinaandtheCivilWar/The_Bitter_End.aspx North Carolina and the Civil War: The Bitter End, 1864-1865]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate: Political Scandal & the Presidency]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.nchistoricsites.org/capitol/ North Carolina State Capitol]<br />
<br />
*[http://camraleigh.org/2014nc-arts-council-artist-fellowship/ NC Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award Exhibition] at the [http://camraleigh.org/ Contemporary Arts Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://ncartmuseum.org/calendar/ NC Museum of Art Calendar]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts/art-galleries Downtown Raleigh Art Galleries]<br />
<br />
*[http://artspacenc.org/about-us/visit/ ArtSpace]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighcitymuseum.org/index.shtml City of Raleigh Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9669&view=EventDetails&information_id=27372 Remnants of the Floating World: Japanese Art from the Permanent Collection] at the [http://www.ncsu.edu/gregg/index.html NCSU Gregg Museum of Art & Design]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.joellane.org/ Joel Lane Museum House]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecRecreation/Articles/MordecaiHistoricPark2.html Mordecai Historic Park]<br />
<br />
=== Outside Activities ===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.triangleglides.com/ Triangle Glides] Segway tours, standup paddleboard rentals<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecDesignDevelop/Articles/CapitalAreaGreenwayTrailSystem.html Capital Area Greenway Trail System]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncartmuseum.org/museum_park/visit_park/ NC Museum of Art: Museum Park] Scenic trails and outdoor art<br />
<br />
* [http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/raleigh/index.htm National Register of Historic Places]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/jcraulstonarboretum/index.php JC Raulston Arboretum]<br />
<br />
=== Run Clubs ===<br />
<br />
'''Monday Night'''<br />
* [http://www.nogrunclub.com/ Nog Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Tir Na Nog Irish Pub: 3-5 mile routes, followed by team trivia, $1 pasta, and beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday Night'''<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/events/553725497983418/ Natty Greene's Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Natty Greene's Brewery: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
* Big Boss Run Club - 7:00 PM at [http://bigbossbrewing.com/age-verification.aspx?returnTo=%2f Big Boss Brewery]: 3-6 mile routes followed by beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday Night'''<br />
* Margarita Run Club - 6:00 PM at [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] restaurant: 3-5 mile routes followed by taco bar and margarita specials<br />
* [http://www.ymcatriangle.org/programs-services/fitness-wellness/walking-running-clubs/alexander-family-ymca-0 Trophy Brewery Runs] - 6:00 PM at Trophy Brewing: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/dining Map of Downtown Restaurants & Dining]<br />
<br />
=== Restaurants ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/01/30/3577164/2014-best-restaurants-in-the-triangle.html News & Observer 2014 Best Restaurants of the Triangle]<br />
<br />
[http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/LocationSearch?locationSection=1218750 Indy Weekly Triangle Dining Guide]<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District''' (0-0.4 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://clydecoopersbbq.com/ Clyde Cooper's BBQ] (since 1938)<br />
* [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken & Honey] Fried Chicken, Chicken and Waffles (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.sonoraleigh.com/ Sono] Sushi<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16] Eclectic pub grub<br />
* [http://sitti-raleigh.com/ Sitti] Lebanese<br />
* [http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] Tapas (vegan options)<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] Mexican<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Chuck's Burgers] (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.oakcitymeatball.com/ Oak City Meatball Shoppe]<br />
* [http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] Italian-American<br />
* [http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] American<br />
* [http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ Mecca] Diner/southern<br />
* [http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ Buku] Global street food<br />
* [http://www.boltbistro.com/ Bolt] Bistro, Steakhouse, Seafood<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square''' (0.3-0.5 miles east)<br />
<br />
* [http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] Laotian<br />
* [http://www.theremedydiner.com/ Remedy Diner] Veg*n and non-veg*n<br />
* [http://www.cafeluna.com/ Cafe Luna] Italian (Tuscan)<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and tequila<br />
* [http://www.bigedscitymarket.com/ Big Ed's] Diner<br />
* [http://www.mosdiner.net/ Mo's Diner] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District''' (0.2-0.7 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit] Whole-hog, pit-coooked BBQ<br />
* [http://thefictionkitchen.com/ Fiction Kitchen] Veg*n<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's Diner] American/Diner (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://joseandsons.com/ Jose and Sons] Mexican/Southern fusion<br />
* [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie] Tapas (Live jazz on Wed.)<br />
* [http://www.heatseekershrimp.com/ Five Star] Asian (Traditional and creative)<br />
* [http://roastgrill.com/ Roast Grill] Just hot dogs (''as seen on Man v. Food'')<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South''' (0.6-1.3 miles northwest)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.42ndstoysterbar.com/ 42nd St. Oyster Bar] Seafood<br />
* [http://therockfordrestaurant.com/ Rockford] American (New)/Pub grub<br />
* [http://www.518west.com/ 518 West] Italian<br />
* [http://www.second-empire.com/ Second Empire] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.''' (1.0-1.2 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.18seaboard.com/ Seaboard Station] Southern, American (New)<br />
* [http://jbetskis.com/ J. Betskis] Central & Eastern European<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/pages/Stanbury/359649790802483 Stanbury] Contemporary<br />
* [http://piebirdraleigh.com/ Piebird] Sweet and savory pies<br />
* [http://stationraleigh.com/ The Station] American (Traditional)<br />
<br />
'''West towards NC State''' (1.2-2.2 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.irregardless.com/ Irregardless Cafe] veg*n options<br />
* [http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abysinnia] Ethiopian<br />
* [http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling & Noodle Bar] Asian<br />
<br />
'''Five Points''' (2.5 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://bloomsburybistro.com/bistro.restaurant.raleigh/ Bloomsbury Bistro] American (New)<br />
* [https://nofo.com/ NOFO @ The Pig] American (New), Brunch<br />
* [http://lillyspizza.com/ Lilly's Pizza] Pizza and beer<br />
<br />
'''Other Inside-the-Beltline Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://guasaca.com/ Guasaca] Venezuelan (6 miles)<br />
* [http://glenwoodgrill.com/ Glenwood Grill] American (Traditional), Southern (4 miles)<br />
<br />
=== Desserts ===<br />
<br />
* [https://viderichocolatefactory.com/ Videri Chocolate Factory]<br />
* [http://www.escazuchocolates.com/ Escazu Artisan Chocolates]<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/113675251912407366356/about?gl=us&hl=en Crema] Ice cream<br />
<br />
=== Coffee ===<br />
<br />
* [http://morningtimes-raleigh.com/ Morning Times] (wifi) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/joule/ Joule Coffee] (''Ashley Christiansen'', wifi, breakfast/lunch -- CNN eatocracy [http://eatocracy.cnn.com/2014/02/21/5-hottest-new-coffee-spots-in-the-u-s/ 5 hottest new coffee spots in the US]) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://beneluxcoffee.com/ Benelux Coffee] (wifi) -- 4 blocks<br />
* [http://www.sostacafe.com/ Sosta Cafe] (wifi, lunch) -- 2 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafemuertos.com/ Cafe de los Muertos] (wifi) -- 5 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafehelios.com/ Cafe Helios] (wifi, breakfast/lunch) -- 1.1 miles<br />
<br />
There is a Starbucks in the lobby of the Marriott, next to the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/nightlife Map of Bars, Clubs & Live Entertainment]<br />
<br />
=== Bars ===<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ Raleigh Times] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar (The Hive is upstairs)<br />
* [http://foundationnc.com/ Foundation] Cocktails, bourbon, local beer<br />
* [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour] Cocktails, local beer<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/fox/ Fox Liquor Bar] Cocktails, local beer (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's] Dive bar (live music)<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16]<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.yelp.com/biz/landmark-tavern-raleigh Landmark Tavern] beer, back patio<br />
* [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog] Irish pub<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and 40 tequila varieties<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's] Beer and wings<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters] Grill, 2012 Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] Brewpub<br />
* [http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] Beer<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] Brewpub<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.cgracebar.com/ C Grace] Cocktails and live jazz<br />
* [http://clockworkraleigh.com/ Clockwork] Retro cocktail lounge<br />
* [http://hibernianpub.com/ Hibernian] Irish pub<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Tap Room] Beer<br />
* [http://www.person-street.com/ Person Street Bar]<br />
<br />
'''Best places for groups to watch NCAA Championship Games'''<br />
<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's]<br />
* [http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's]<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's]<br />
<br />
=== Breweries ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.ncbeer.org/brewery-map/ Map of NC Breweries]<br />
<br />
'''Walking Distance'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] (0.3 miles)<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (0.9 miles)<br />
* [http://trophybrewing.com/ Trophy Brewing & Pizza Company] (1.2 miles)<br />
<br />
[http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD Possible brewpub walking tour] [NOTE: Trophy has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner consider going the opposite direction and eating in the Warehouse District or downtown]<br />
<br />
'''Greater Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://bigbossbrewing.com/ Big Boss Brewing] (3.5 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://raleighbrewingcompany.com/ Raleigh Brewing Company] (4 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.lynnwoodgrill.com/node/10 Lynnwood Brewing Concern] (9 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.loneriderbeer.com/ Lone Rider] (13 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://gizmobrewworks.com/ Gizmo Brewworks] (12 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.aviatorbrew.com/ Aviator Brewing Company] (17 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://hosannabrewing.com/ Hosanna Brewery] (14 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://deepriverbrewing.com/ Deep River Brewing] (16 miles, Clayton)<br />
* [http://www.carolinabrew.com/ Carolina Brewing] (19 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.bombshellbeer.com/ Bombshell Beer] (18 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.whitestreetbrewing.com/ White Street Brewing] (18 miles, Wake Forest)<br />
<br />
'''Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* [http://trianglebrewery.com/ Triangle Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://www.fullsteam.ag/beer/ Fullsteam] (Durham)<br />
* [http://bullcityburgerandbrewery.com/Bull_City_Burger_and_Brewery/Home.html Bull City Burger & Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://thetopofthehill.com/ Top of the Hill] (Chapel Hill)<br />
* [http://steelstringbrewery.com/ Steel String Craft Brewery] (Carrboro)<br />
* [http://www.mysterybrewing.com/ Mystery Brewing] (Hillsborough)<br />
* [http://whiterabbitbrewery.com/ White Rabbit Brewing] (Angiers)<br />
* [http://doublebarleybrewing.com/ Double Barley Brewing] (Wilson Mills)<br />
<br />
Other nanobrews: [http://subnoir.net/ Sub Noir Brewing] (Raleigh), [http://starpointbrewing.com/ StarPoint Brewing] (Carrboro), [http://ponysaurusbrewing.com/ Ponysaurus] (Durham), [https://www.facebook.com/sourwoodbrewingco Sourwood Brewing Company - Cider] (Durham)<br />
<br />
=== Bottle Shops ===<br />
<br />
* [http://tastybeverageco.com/ Tasty Beverage Company] About 1200 packaged beers and 6 draft beers (0.3 mile)<br />
* [http://paddyobeers.com/ Paddy O'Beers] Bottle shop and tasting room (0.4 mile)<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/116185965486400371099/about?gl=us&hl=en The Bottle Shop at Tyler's Taproom] (1.0 mile)<br />
* [http://www.wineauthorities.com/ Wine Authorities] (1.3 miles)<br />
<br />
==Raleigh Events March 23-27==<br />
<br />
[https://www.mergerecords.com/25k Merge Records 25k] (March 22) Chapel Hill to Durham run, with post race party and bands at Motorco music hall (celebrating 25th year of Merge Records label)<br />
<br />
===Sunday March 23===<br />
<br />
* Apparently there's going to be [http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament some basketball game] at PNC Arena...<br />
** If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
* Another basketball game - [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Cary-Invasion-vs-East-Carolina-Stealth/26414/ Cary Invasion vs. East Carolina Stealth], 6 pm<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Civil-Rights-Through-Song/25383/ Civil Rights Through Song], Burning Coal Theater Company, at Murphrey School Auditorium, 2 pm<br />
* Romeo and Juliet - Carolina Ballet at [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/carolina-ballet-private-event-3340 Fletcher Opera Theater]<br />
* [http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9568&view=EventDetails&information_id=27101 LEO (the anti-gravity show)], NCSU Center Stage, 3 pm<br />
* [http://triangleyarncrawl.com/ Triangle Yarn Crawl]<br />
* [http://nuvyug.net/ India Fest] at Dorton Arena<br />
* [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/at-the-movies-frost-and-nixon At the Movies: Frost/Nixon] at NC Museum of History (free movie and lecture associated with the [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate exhibit])<br />
<br />
===Monday March 24===<br />
<br />
* Cure for the Mondays Comedy Night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, March 25===<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/NHL-Carolina-Hurricanes-vs-New-York-Islanders/24787/ NHL Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Islanders], 7pm (for free bus see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/pepsi-caniac-coach Pepsi Caniac Coach])<br />
<br />
* Job opportunity - AWS is hiring for Seattle-based positions. [https://aws.amazon.com/careers/raleigh-storage-hiring-2014/?sc_channel=sm&sc_campaign=hiringevent&sc_publisher=fb&sc_medium=std&sc_content=raleigh&sc_category=hiringevent Social gathering information], 6pm - 9pm<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, March 26===<br />
<br />
===Thursday, March 27===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/dance/events/PDP_SPR2014.html Panoramic Dance Project] at NCSU's Titmus Theater<br />
* [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/north-carolina-artists-exhibition-3994 2014 Artists Exhibition - Raleigh Fine Arts Society] at Betty Ray McCain Art Gallery<br />
* [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx Watergate: Politics, Scandal, and the Media] Panel discussion at the NC Museum of History (reservation required)<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Raleigh-Beer-Guide-Kickoff-Party/26790/ Raleigh Beer Guide Kickoff Party] All 15 Greater Raleigh breweries on tap.<br />
<br />
== Live Music ==<br />
<br />
'''Sunday March 23'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/447527-matt-schofield-raleigh/ Matt Schofield] at Pour House<br />
* Action Bronson at [http://www.catscradle.com/events/ Cat's Cradle] (in Carrboro)<br />
* Casanovas in Heat at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
<br />
'''Monday March 24'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.dpacnc.com/events/detail/csn Crosby, Stills & Nash] at Durham Performing Arts Center (in Durham)<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/asleep-wheel/ Asleep at the Wheel] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Devils Wears Prada, with Ghost Inside, others at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497289-daley-raleigh/ Daley] at Pour House<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday March 25'''<br />
<br />
* Three 6 Mafia at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/25/kings-presents-axxaabraxas-captured-tracks-at-slims/ Axxa/Abraxas] at Slim's, with Lollipops (''Recommended local band'') opening<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497341-coast-2-coast-live-raleigh/ Coast 2 Coast Live Interactive Showcase] at Pour House<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday March 26'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/479771-pigeons-playing-ping-pong-raleigh/ Pigeons Playing Ping Pong] and Imperial Blend at [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/ Pour House]<br />
* Mang (Ween tribute) at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* Free Jazz Night at [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie]<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Thursday March 27'''<br />
<br />
* Local Beer/Local Band night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497347-blue-sky-black-death-raleigh/ Blue Sky Black Death] at Pour House<br />
* [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/event/492779-unifier-jessica-long-new-raleigh/ Unifier, Jessica Long & The New Kind] at Deep South<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/27/good-graeff/ Good Graeff] at Kings Barcade<br />
* Triathalon with Giant Giants at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/alchemystics/ Alchemystics] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Sarah Colonna (Comedy) at [https://center-stage.seatengine.com/venues/goodnights Goodnight's Comedy]<br />
<br />
'''More Music Venues in the Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* Raleigh: [http://themaywoodraleigh.com/ Maywood]<br />
* Chapel Hill/Carrboro: [http://www.catscradle.com/ Cat's Cradle], [http://www.local506.com/calendar/ Local 506], [http://caverntavern.com/ The Cave], [http://www.chapelhillunderground.com/ Underground], [https://www.carolinaperformingarts.org/ Memorial Hall]<br />
* Durham: [http://motorcomusic.com/ Motorco], [http://www.thepinhook.com/ Pinhook]<br />
* Saxapahaw: [http://www.hawriverballroom.com/ Haw River Ballroom]<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2014]]<br />
<br />
==Getting Around==<br />
<br />
'''R-Line Downtown Circulator'''<br />
<br />
Free [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/r-line circulator bus] that connects downtown districts (see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/_files/docs/final_rline_map.pdf map]). Buses run every 10-15 minutes and can be tracked on the [http://m.yourhere.com/ R-Line mobile application].<br />
<br />
'''Capital Area Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.raleighnc.gov/transit/ CAT bus system] covers the Greater Raleigh area.<br />
<br />
'''Triangle Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.triangletransit.org/ TTA bus system] provides transportation to Chapel/Carrboro, Durham and other points across the Triangle region. The TTA routes complement CAT routes to West Raleigh locations such as NC State.<br />
<br />
'''Rickshaws'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.raleighrickshaw.com/ Raleigh Rickshaw] and [http://www.crankarmrickshaw.com/ Crank Arm Rickshaw] provide on call or on street pickup. Since January has decided to stick around through late March the rickshaws may not be out on the streets much however.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Social_Activities&diff=408032014 Social Activities2014-03-23T21:49:45Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 */</p>
<hr />
<div>The Social Activities Group is working on several events and social opportunities for after conference hours. We will be adding more events as they come along. Watch this page!<br />
<br />
Also, if you find a cool event to go to, and want to share the wealth with others, feel free to add the event to the page. :)<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>XML</strike> EZProxy alternatives.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Monday 3/24<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
**Some restaurants can hold multiple groups of six. It is up to you to investigate the venue to see if this is possible.<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
*See a restaurant that's not listed? Feel free to add one, '''but please make sure that it is open that Monday evening.'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
'''Under .5 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ bu ku] (Global street food)<br />
# Bohyun Kim - v (leader) Reservation at 6:15; Meet at the hotel lobby at 6pm (Twitter: [http://twitter.com/bohyunkim @bohyunkim] if u need to get in touch)<br />
# Junior Tidal - n<br />
# Brian Rogers - n<br />
# Vanessa Lucas - n<br />
# Ashley Blewer - n<br />
# Paula Gray-Overtoom - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.oxfordraleigh.com/ The Oxford] (Gastropub)<br />
# Roy Tennant - v (leader) 6:30 reservation set - please email roytennant on Google mail to provide contact info<br />
# David Bass - n<br />
# Dan Moore - n<br />
# Jack Reed - n<br />
# Sean Hendricks - n<br />
# Lauren Magnuson -v (ish - only been once before)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.sonoraleigh.com/index.php Sono] (Japanese)<br />
# Ryan Wick - v (leader) - Reservations made at 6:30. '''Meet in hotel lobby at 6:15''' email: ryanwick@gmail<br />
# Paul Ruderman - n<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.lavoltarestaurant.com/ La Volta] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's] (Local food)<br />
# Jean Rainwater - v (leader) - they don't take reservations - email me contact info at Jean_Rainwater-at-brown-dot-edu<br />
# Cynthia (Arty) Ng<br />
# Catelynne Sahadath -n<br />
# Maura Carbone -n<br />
# Kate Hill -n<br />
# Martin Haye - v (twice at c4l)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera Empanada & Tequila Bar] (Empanada)<br />
<br />
[http://bigeasync.com/ The Big Easy] (New Orleans/Creole) <br />
# Robert Haschart - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:30pm. email me contact info at rh9ec-at-virginia-dot-edu<br />
# Xiaoming Wang<br />
# Michael Durbin - v<br />
# Sue Richeson -n<br />
# Ed Fugikawa -n<br />
# Tao You - n<br />
# '''full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://postatuscangrille.com/ Posta Tuscan Grille] (Italian)<br />
<br />
# Julia Bauder - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:15pm. Please e-mail me your contact info at bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
# Brian Riley - n<br />
# Mark Mounts - v<br />
# Birkin James Diana - v<br />
# Walter Stine - n<br />
# Michael Levy - v(ish; I attended once, in 2011)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ The Mecca] (Diner/Southern)<br />
<br />
[http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] (American)<br />
# Ken Varnum - v (leader) -- reservation for 6 people at 6:15. Send me your contact info at varnum umich edu.<br />
# Josh Wilson - v(ish, as in: once)<br />
# Kristen Wilson - n<br />
# Michael Blake - n<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n (I'm landing later that evening and will join if you are still out at around 8:30/9)<br />
# Emily Reynolds - n <br />
# Wendy Hagenmaier - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' (I'll take 7 names, since one of us will be joining us later if we're still there)<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken + Honey] (Southern)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Rosalyn Metz - v (leader)<br />
# Chad Nelson - v (insubordinator)<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield - v<br />
# Aaron Coburn - n<br />
# Arcadia Falcone -n<br />
# Mike Beccaria - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2<br />
# Matt Zumwalt - v (leader)<br />
# Chris Sharp - v<br />
# Joe Ferrie - n<br />
# Logan Cox - n<br />
# Jerry Nugent - n<br />
# Joe Atzberger - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/chucks/ Chuck's] (Burgers)<br />
<br />
[http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] (Tapas vegan options)<br />
<br />
[http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's Osteria and Bar] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] (Laotian)<br />
# Dre - v (leader) -- Reservations at 6:15, meet at hotel lobby at 5:45. No, it won't take us half an hour to get there. Dre looks like [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/akorphan/ this handsome fella]. My e-mail address is on that page if you'd like to exchange contact info.<br />
# Heather Rayl - n<br />
# Ranti Junus - v<br />
# Jennifer Kishi - n<br />
# Nabil Kashyap - n<br />
# Laura Wrubel - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://sitti-raleigh.com/index1.php Sitti] (Lebanese) - Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm; look for the short woman in the big brown hat<br />
# Becky Yoose - v (benevolent dictator/leader) contact me at b.yoose at the google machine in case you might run late<br />
# Michael Gibney - n<br />
# Steven Holloway - n<br />
# Jeffrey Mudge - n<br />
# Arie Nugraha - n<br />
# Lisa Rabey - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit Authentic Barbecue] (BBQ)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Joshua Gomez - v (leader) (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: gomezjn_AT_usc_DOT_edu)<br />
# Andrew Darby - v<br />
# Tammy Allgood Wolf - n<br />
# Jim LeFager - n<br />
# Michael Daul - n<br />
# Natasha Nunn - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2 (Can we keep this mostly newbies, please?) - '''Reservations at 6:15 PM; depart hotel lobby at 6 PM'''<br />
# Mx Matienzo - v (leader)<br />
# Cary Gordon - v<br />
# Mark Breedlove - n<br />
# Coral Sheldon-Hess - n (pumpkin cornbread!?!?!)<br />
# Violeta Ilik<br />
# Robin Taylor - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 3 (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: justin@curationexperts.com)<br />
# Justin Coyne - v (leader)<br />
# Rachel Vacek- n<br />
# Devin Higgins - n<br />
# John Rees - n<br />
# Andrew Gordon - n<br />
# Bobbi Fox -v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 4 (Riley made reservations for 6:15)<br />
# Jon Stroop - v (leader, but Riley did the work. Contact: jpstroop@gmail.com)<br />
# [[Riley Childs]] - n<br />
# David Lacy - v<br />
# Shaun Ellis - v<br />
# William Hicks<br />
# Eleanor Dickson - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
Group V (Declan made reservations for 6 at 6p. Contact: declan@declan.net We'll leave the lobby at 5:45 and saunter over to The Pit.)<br />
# Declan Fleming - v (leader)<br />
# Mike Giarlo - v<br />
# Carolina Garcia - v<br />
# Jefferson Bailey - n<br />
# Laura Akerman - n<br />
# Lauren Work - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
[http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://theboroughraleigh.com/ The Borough] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.theremedydiner.com/ The Remedy Diner] (Diner (lots of Veg*n options))<br />
# Erin White - v (leader)<br />
# Linda Ballinger - v(ish)<br />
# Terry Brady - v (been one other time)<br />
# Gabe Ormsby - n<br />
# Eric James - v<br />
# Jenny Gubernick - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters Bar and Grill] (Brewpub)<br />
# Esmé Cowles - v (leader)<br />
# Christina Salazar - v/n<br />
# Francis Kayiwa - v (follower)<br />
# Megan Kudzia - v<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n <br />
# David Drexler - v (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
'''.5 to 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.518west.com/ 518 West Italian Cafe] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (Brewpub)<br />
# Carolyn Cole v (leader) We will meet in in the lobby around 5:30ish and walk over (its about a 20 minute walk). If you are not meeting us in the lobby let me know so we do not wait for you (cam156 at psu) <br />
# Justin Simpson - n<br />
# Christian Sarason - v (3rd times a charm?)<br />
# Scott Bacon - n<br />
# Andy Weidner - n<br />
# David Malone - n (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.mantraindiancuisinebar.com/ Mantra] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mtfujinc.com/SushiO/ Sushi O] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://zakyrestaurant.com/ Zaky Restaurant] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://sullivanssteakhouse.com/raleigh/ Sullivan's Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://bia-restaurant.com/ Bia ] (New American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.18seaboard.com/index.html 18 Seaboard] (Contemporary American)<br />
<br />
[http://sushibluescafe.com Sushi Blues Cafe] (Japanese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.therockfordrestaurant.com/About.aspx Rockford] (American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Restaurant and Taproom] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://bluemangoraleigh.com/ Blue Mango] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mellowmushroom.com/store/raleigh Mellow Mushroom] (Pizza)<br />
<br />
[http://tascabrava.com/index2.html Tasca Brava] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
[http://clockworkraleigh.com/index.html Clockwork] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://dostaquitosnc.com/ Dos Taquitos] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://nappertandysraleighnc.com/ Napper Tandy's Irish Pub] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiphoonbistro.com/ Thaiphoon bistro] (Thai)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''More than 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.peacechinanc.com/ Peace China] (Chinese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling and Noodle Bar] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abyssinia Ethiopian Restaurant] (Ethiopian)<br />
<br />
=== James B. Hunt Library Reception and Tour, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
A reception and tour of the James B. Hunt Library on NCSU's Centennial Campus will take place on Tuesday, March 25, 5:00-7:30 PM. The library, which opened in January 2013, was recently [http://library.stanford.edu/projects/stanford-prize-innovation-research-libraries-spirl/2014-prizes winner] of the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries, and has been recognized for it's [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/technology advanced technology and hi-tech spaces]. See the library through the eyes of the students in the over 3,000 Instagram photos in the [http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/myhuntlibrary My #HuntLibrary] project. The furniture alone has generated interest, as shown on the [http://chairsofhuntlibrary.tumblr.com/ Chairs of Hunt Library] Tumbler site.<br />
<br />
'''Travel to Hunt'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin loading at the Sheraton at 5:00 PM after the day's sessions have concluded. The last bus will leave the Sheraton at 5:45 PM, but attendees are encouraged to join the earlier buses if possible. Please note that the Hunt Library is 4 miles from the Sheraton and is not directly accessible via public transit from downtown.<br />
<br />
'''Reception'''<br />
<br />
Pizza and light snacks will be made available in the Multipurpose Room, along with soft drinks, and beer from the [http://www.ncsu.edu/foodscience/Sheppard/NCSU-12004%20Brewery%20Brochure1.pdf NC State Brewery]. Food and drink will be available until 7:00 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Tour'''<br />
<br />
Attendees will be welcome to embark on a self-guided tour of the library. Library staff will be on hand at selected locations, including hi-tech spaces such as the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/bookBot bookBot] robotic book delivery system, the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/ipearl-immersion-theater iPearl Immersion Theater], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/teaching-and-visualization-lab Teaching & Visualization Lab], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/creativity-studio Creativity Studio], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/game-lab Game Lab], and the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/makerspace Makerspace].<br />
<br />
'''Travel back to the Sheraton'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin to load for the return trip at 6:45 PM. The last bus will leave the Hunt Library at approximately 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
=== #libtechwomen meetup, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
An informal meetup for women and their friends in library technology for networking and fun. Come join us! Learn more about #libtechwomen at [http://libtechwomen.org/about.html].<br />
<br />
'''Where''': [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ The Raleigh Times Bar] 14 E Hargett St Raleigh, NC 27601. 7 minute walk from the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
'''When''': Evening after the tour :c) (Starting at 730P on)<br />
<br />
'''Cost''': No drink minimum.<br />
<br />
'''Contact''': Lisa Rabey [http://twitter.com/pnkrcklibrarian @pnkrcklibrarian]<br />
<br />
'''Signup''': Everyone welcome. Just show up!<br />
<br />
=== A/V Geeks Present: When Computers Were Young, Wednesday 3/26 ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/ A/V Geeks] maintains a collection of over 23,000 old 16mm educational films from various decades of the 20th century, including such classics as [http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/library-story-the-1952/ The Library Story (1952)], many obtained from school and government auctions. Media archaeologist [http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/skip-elsheimer/Content?oid=1183990 Skip Elsheimer] holds themed showings of selected films at events around the Triangle and in other states. <br />
<br />
This event, [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/26/av-geeks-present-when-computers-where-young/ When Computers Were Young], will include "Actual 16mm school films that introduce us to the wonderful world of computers and their potential future -- all before Google!" Films will include Disney's Ethics in the Computer Age and more. This showing is an all ages, public event that is part of a series of monthly shows held at [http://kingsbarcade.com/ Kings Barcade], but the event has been scheduled and themed with the Code4Lib crowd in mind.<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Doors open at 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Located two blocks from the Sheraton, Kings is a 250-capacity live music venue with a full bar and several local beers on tap. Kings is directly connected with the [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour], a cocktail lounge with classic arcade games, pinball, and nightly DJ's. The new [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian restaurant, operated by the same owners, is also downstairs.<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' The event is free with a suggested $5 donation. <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please add your name to the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2014_AVGeeks_Signup sign up list] if you are interested in attending so that we can inform the organizers about the level of interest<br />
<br />
=== Library Tech Cast Round table: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
The Library Tech Cast will be hosting a live Round table somewhere at the Sheraton, we are looking for about 5 people who would be interested. Our Topics can be anything you want, feel free to speak your mind!<br />
<br />
See [http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show]for details!<br />
<br />
Please contact Riley@LibraryTechCast.com if you have any questions!<br />
<br />
'''Location:''' Lobby, we will find a nice relaxing area! <br />
<br />
'''Time:''' Around 6PM, <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please put your Name and Email Address Below!<br />
<br />
*Riley Childs, Riley@TFSGEO.com<br />
<br />
=== Game Night: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
<br />
Game Night is another alternative option for Wednesday evening socializing. Conference goers are welcome to bring their own games from home. Games should probably be of the shorter variety (<2 hours) to allow new players to learn and finish games.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Magnolia 2<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday Evening from 6 to at least 10<br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' None. Just show up or leave as you please. There will be 4 tables with 8 chairs each.<br />
<br />
'''Food:''' Bring your own food/drinks. All alcoholic drinks must be bought at the bar.<br />
<br />
'''Fun:''' Absolutely<br />
<br />
Jason Raitz (jcraitz @ ncsu) for questions to direct to the hotel.<br />
<br />
'''Games!''' Who's bringing what:<br />
<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/257/kill-doctor-lucky Kill Doctor Lucky] (yo_bj)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/6830/zendo Zendo] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/98778/hanabi Hanabi] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/815/chrononauts Chrononauts] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/258/fluxx Fluxx] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12692/gloom Gloom] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/16992/tsuro Tsuro] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/100901/flash-point-fire-rescue Flash Point] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30549/pandemic Pandemic] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/68448/7-wonders 7 Wonders] (dan)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/140457/ultimate-werewolf-inquisition Ultimate Werewolf: Inquisition] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/131357/coup Coup] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/129622/love-letter Love Letter] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/478/citadels Citadels] (rachelvacek)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/70323/king-of-tokyo King of Tokyo] plus expansions (rachelvacek)<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
[https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=211601269129937460559.0004d8d5902e5e3d04b05&msa=0&ll=35.782519,-78.640223&spn=0.01464,0.01929 Code4Lib 2014 Amenities Map, Downtown Raleigh, NC] - Amenities that are within walking distance of the Sheraton or the R Line circulator<br />
<br />
New York Times: [http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/03/09/travel/36-hours-in-raleigh-nc.html?referrer 36 Hours in Raleigh NC] (March 6, 2014)<br />
<br />
== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
''Add your own ideas here''<br />
<br />
'''Game Night'''<br />
<br />
Update: We've secured Wednesday night in Magnolia 2! I'm adding this as a planned event above.<br />
<br />
I can bring some board games if people are interested. I have a decent [http://boardgamegeek.com/collection/user/vacekrae?geekranks=Board+Game+Rank&columns=title%7Cstatus%7Cversion%7Crating%7Cbggrating%7Cplays%7Ccomment%7Ccommands&own=1&ff=1&subtype=boardgame collection]. Let me know via email at vacekrae on gmail. +<br />
<br />
* I'll be bringing a few board games that I normally take to my weekly library game nights. Some of collaborative and are great facilitators for conversation (Flash Point, Pandemic). - Dan, danmoore1987 on gmail.<br />
<br />
'''Trolley Pub'''<br />
<br />
14 person pedal-powered [http://trolleypub.com/raleigh/ trolleys]. Can be booked for pub crawls in downtown or in the Warehouse District. BYOB allowed. Private tours for 8-14 people can be booked for $350 for two hour time slots between 11:00 AM and midnight. Smaller groups of 1-6 people can also by 'Mixer' tickets for $30 (shared trolley).<br />
<br />
Note: with weather being what it might be and the money required, this might not be a good idea now. --J. Raitz @ NCSU<br />
<br />
'''Brewpub Walk'''<br />
<br />
Three brewpubs can be found along a [http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD 1.2 mile walk] through the Warehouse District west from the Sheraton.<br />
NOTE: Trophy Brewing, the westernmost brewpub, has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner, go in smaller numbers if eating at Trophy, or go around the corner to Irregardless Cafe, which has veg*n options. Alternatively, start at Trophy and go the opposite direction and eat in the Warehouse District or downtown where there are many dining options.<br />
<br />
'''NCAA Tournament Game at PNC Arena'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament Third Round Division I Men's basketball game], Sunday March 23. If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts Map of downtown arts and cultural entertainment]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event-calendar/2014/3 Calendar of downtown events]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/shopping Map of downtown shopping]<br />
<br />
=== Exhibits, Showings, Museums ===<br />
<br />
*[http://naturalsciences.org/ North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences]<br />
**[http://naturalsciences.org/nature-research-center Nature Research Center]<br />
**Exhibit - [http://naturalsciences.org/exhibits/special-exhibits Birds of Paradise: Amazing Avian Evolution] (final day March 23)<br />
<br />
*[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx North Carolina Museum of History] Exhibits: <br />
**[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/exhibit-opening-cedars-in-the-pines Cedars in the Pines]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeOurExhibits/CurrentExhibits/NorthCarolinaandtheCivilWar/The_Bitter_End.aspx North Carolina and the Civil War: The Bitter End, 1864-1865]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate: Political Scandal & the Presidency]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.nchistoricsites.org/capitol/ North Carolina State Capitol]<br />
<br />
*[http://camraleigh.org/2014nc-arts-council-artist-fellowship/ NC Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award Exhibition] at the [http://camraleigh.org/ Contemporary Arts Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://ncartmuseum.org/calendar/ NC Museum of Art Calendar]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts/art-galleries Downtown Raleigh Art Galleries]<br />
<br />
*[http://artspacenc.org/about-us/visit/ ArtSpace]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighcitymuseum.org/index.shtml City of Raleigh Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9669&view=EventDetails&information_id=27372 Remnants of the Floating World: Japanese Art from the Permanent Collection] at the [http://www.ncsu.edu/gregg/index.html NCSU Gregg Museum of Art & Design]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.joellane.org/ Joel Lane Museum House]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecRecreation/Articles/MordecaiHistoricPark2.html Mordecai Historic Park]<br />
<br />
=== Outside Activities ===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.triangleglides.com/ Triangle Glides] Segway tours, standup paddleboard rentals<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecDesignDevelop/Articles/CapitalAreaGreenwayTrailSystem.html Capital Area Greenway Trail System]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncartmuseum.org/museum_park/visit_park/ NC Museum of Art: Museum Park] Scenic trails and outdoor art<br />
<br />
* [http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/raleigh/index.htm National Register of Historic Places]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/jcraulstonarboretum/index.php JC Raulston Arboretum]<br />
<br />
=== Run Clubs ===<br />
<br />
'''Monday Night'''<br />
* [http://www.nogrunclub.com/ Nog Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Tir Na Nog Irish Pub: 3-5 mile routes, followed by team trivia, $1 pasta, and beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday Night'''<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/events/553725497983418/ Natty Greene's Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Natty Greene's Brewery: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
* Big Boss Run Club - 7:00 PM at [http://bigbossbrewing.com/age-verification.aspx?returnTo=%2f Big Boss Brewery]: 3-6 mile routes followed by beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday Night'''<br />
* Margarita Run Club - 6:00 PM at [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] restaurant: 3-5 mile routes followed by taco bar and margarita specials<br />
* [http://www.ymcatriangle.org/programs-services/fitness-wellness/walking-running-clubs/alexander-family-ymca-0 Trophy Brewery Runs] - 6:00 PM at Trophy Brewing: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/dining Map of Downtown Restaurants & Dining]<br />
<br />
=== Restaurants ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/01/30/3577164/2014-best-restaurants-in-the-triangle.html News & Observer 2014 Best Restaurants of the Triangle]<br />
<br />
[http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/LocationSearch?locationSection=1218750 Indy Weekly Triangle Dining Guide]<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District''' (0-0.4 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://clydecoopersbbq.com/ Clyde Cooper's BBQ] (since 1938)<br />
* [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken & Honey] Fried Chicken, Chicken and Waffles (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.sonoraleigh.com/ Sono] Sushi<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16] Eclectic pub grub<br />
* [http://sitti-raleigh.com/ Sitti] Lebanese<br />
* [http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] Tapas (vegan options)<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] Mexican<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Chuck's Burgers] (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.oakcitymeatball.com/ Oak City Meatball Shoppe]<br />
* [http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] Italian-American<br />
* [http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] American<br />
* [http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ Mecca] Diner/southern<br />
* [http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ Buku] Global street food<br />
* [http://www.boltbistro.com/ Bolt] Bistro, Steakhouse, Seafood<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square''' (0.3-0.5 miles east)<br />
<br />
* [http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] Laotian<br />
* [http://www.theremedydiner.com/ Remedy Diner] Veg*n and non-veg*n<br />
* [http://www.cafeluna.com/ Cafe Luna] Italian (Tuscan)<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and tequila<br />
* [http://www.bigedscitymarket.com/ Big Ed's] Diner<br />
* [http://www.mosdiner.net/ Mo's Diner] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District''' (0.2-0.7 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit] Whole-hog, pit-coooked BBQ<br />
* [http://thefictionkitchen.com/ Fiction Kitchen] Veg*n<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's Diner] American/Diner (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://joseandsons.com/ Jose and Sons] Mexican/Southern fusion<br />
* [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie] Tapas (Live jazz on Wed.)<br />
* [http://www.heatseekershrimp.com/ Five Star] Asian (Traditional and creative)<br />
* [http://roastgrill.com/ Roast Grill] Just hot dogs (''as seen on Man v. Food'')<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South''' (0.6-1.3 miles northwest)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.42ndstoysterbar.com/ 42nd St. Oyster Bar] Seafood<br />
* [http://therockfordrestaurant.com/ Rockford] American (New)/Pub grub<br />
* [http://www.518west.com/ 518 West] Italian<br />
* [http://www.second-empire.com/ Second Empire] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.''' (1.0-1.2 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.18seaboard.com/ Seaboard Station] Southern, American (New)<br />
* [http://jbetskis.com/ J. Betskis] Central & Eastern European<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/pages/Stanbury/359649790802483 Stanbury] Contemporary<br />
* [http://piebirdraleigh.com/ Piebird] Sweet and savory pies<br />
* [http://stationraleigh.com/ The Station] American (Traditional)<br />
<br />
'''West towards NC State''' (1.2-2.2 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.irregardless.com/ Irregardless Cafe] veg*n options<br />
* [http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abysinnia] Ethiopian<br />
* [http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling & Noodle Bar] Asian<br />
<br />
'''Five Points''' (2.5 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://bloomsburybistro.com/bistro.restaurant.raleigh/ Bloomsbury Bistro] American (New)<br />
* [https://nofo.com/ NOFO @ The Pig] American (New), Brunch<br />
* [http://lillyspizza.com/ Lilly's Pizza] Pizza and beer<br />
<br />
'''Other Inside-the-Beltline Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://guasaca.com/ Guasaca] Venezuelan (6 miles)<br />
* [http://glenwoodgrill.com/ Glenwood Grill] American (Traditional), Southern (4 miles)<br />
<br />
=== Desserts ===<br />
<br />
* [https://viderichocolatefactory.com/ Videri Chocolate Factory]<br />
* [http://www.escazuchocolates.com/ Escazu Artisan Chocolates]<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/113675251912407366356/about?gl=us&hl=en Crema] Ice cream<br />
<br />
=== Coffee ===<br />
<br />
* [http://morningtimes-raleigh.com/ Morning Times] (wifi) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/joule/ Joule Coffee] (''Ashley Christiansen'', wifi, breakfast/lunch -- CNN eatocracy [http://eatocracy.cnn.com/2014/02/21/5-hottest-new-coffee-spots-in-the-u-s/ 5 hottest new coffee spots in the US]) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://beneluxcoffee.com/ Benelux Coffee] (wifi) -- 4 blocks<br />
* [http://www.sostacafe.com/ Sosta Cafe] (wifi, lunch) -- 2 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafemuertos.com/ Cafe de los Muertos] (wifi) -- 5 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafehelios.com/ Cafe Helios] (wifi, breakfast/lunch) -- 1.1 miles<br />
<br />
There is a Starbucks in the lobby of the Marriott, next to the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/nightlife Map of Bars, Clubs & Live Entertainment]<br />
<br />
=== Bars ===<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ Raleigh Times] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar (The Hive is upstairs)<br />
* [http://foundationnc.com/ Foundation] Cocktails, bourbon, local beer<br />
* [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour] Cocktails, local beer<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/fox/ Fox Liquor Bar] Cocktails, local beer (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's] Dive bar (live music)<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.yelp.com/biz/landmark-tavern-raleigh Landmark Tavern] beer, back patio<br />
* [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog] Irish pub<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and 40 tequila varieties<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's] Beer and wings<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters] Grill, 2012 Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] Brewpub<br />
* [http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] Beer<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] Brewpub<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.cgracebar.com/ C Grace] Cocktails and live jazz<br />
* [http://clockworkraleigh.com/ Clockwork] Retro cocktail lounge<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Tap Room] Beer<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/personstreetbar Person Street Bar]<br />
<br />
'''Best places for groups to watch NCAA Championship Games'''<br />
<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's]<br />
* [http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's]<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's]<br />
<br />
=== Breweries ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.ncbeer.org/brewery-map/ Map of NC Breweries]<br />
<br />
'''Walking Distance'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] (0.3 miles)<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (0.9 miles)<br />
* [http://trophybrewing.com/ Trophy Brewing & Pizza Company] (1.2 miles)<br />
<br />
[http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD Possible brewpub walking tour] [NOTE: Trophy has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner consider going the opposite direction and eating in the Warehouse District or downtown]<br />
<br />
'''Greater Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://bigbossbrewing.com/ Big Boss Brewing] (3.5 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://raleighbrewingcompany.com/ Raleigh Brewing Company] (4 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.lynnwoodgrill.com/node/10 Lynnwood Brewing Concern] (9 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.loneriderbeer.com/ Lone Rider] (13 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://gizmobrewworks.com/ Gizmo Brewworks] (12 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.aviatorbrew.com/ Aviator Brewing Company] (17 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://hosannabrewing.com/ Hosanna Brewery] (14 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://deepriverbrewing.com/ Deep River Brewing] (16 miles, Clayton)<br />
* [http://www.carolinabrew.com/ Carolina Brewing] (19 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.bombshellbeer.com/ Bombshell Beer] (18 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.whitestreetbrewing.com/ White Street Brewing] (18 miles, Wake Forest)<br />
<br />
'''Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* [http://trianglebrewery.com/ Triangle Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://www.fullsteam.ag/beer/ Fullsteam] (Durham)<br />
* [http://bullcityburgerandbrewery.com/Bull_City_Burger_and_Brewery/Home.html Bull City Burger & Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://thetopofthehill.com/ Top of the Hill] (Chapel Hill)<br />
* [http://steelstringbrewery.com/ Steel String Craft Brewery] (Carrboro)<br />
* [http://www.mysterybrewing.com/ Mystery Brewing] (Hillsborough)<br />
* [http://whiterabbitbrewery.com/ White Rabbit Brewing] (Angiers)<br />
* [http://doublebarleybrewing.com/ Double Barley Brewing] (Wilson Mills)<br />
<br />
Other nanobrews: [http://subnoir.net/ Sub Noir Brewing] (Raleigh), [http://starpointbrewing.com/ StarPoint Brewing] (Carrboro), [http://ponysaurusbrewing.com/ Ponysaurus] (Durham), [https://www.facebook.com/sourwoodbrewingco Sourwood Brewing Company - Cider] (Durham)<br />
<br />
=== Bottle Shops ===<br />
<br />
* [http://tastybeverageco.com/ Tasty Beverage Company] About 1200 packaged beers and 6 draft beers (0.3 mile)<br />
* [http://paddyobeers.com/ Paddy O'Beers] Bottle shop and tasting room (0.4 mile)<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/116185965486400371099/about?gl=us&hl=en The Bottle Shop at Tyler's Taproom] (1.0 mile)<br />
* [http://www.wineauthorities.com/ Wine Authorities] (1.3 miles)<br />
<br />
==Raleigh Events March 23-27==<br />
<br />
[https://www.mergerecords.com/25k Merge Records 25k] (March 22) Chapel Hill to Durham run, with post race party and bands at Motorco music hall (celebrating 25th year of Merge Records label)<br />
<br />
===Sunday March 23===<br />
<br />
* Apparently there's going to be [http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament some basketball game] at PNC Arena...<br />
** If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
* Another basketball game - [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Cary-Invasion-vs-East-Carolina-Stealth/26414/ Cary Invasion vs. East Carolina Stealth], 6 pm<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Civil-Rights-Through-Song/25383/ Civil Rights Through Song], Burning Coal Theater Company, at Murphrey School Auditorium, 2 pm<br />
* Romeo and Juliet - Carolina Ballet at [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/carolina-ballet-private-event-3340 Fletcher Opera Theater]<br />
* [http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9568&view=EventDetails&information_id=27101 LEO (the anti-gravity show)], NCSU Center Stage, 3 pm<br />
* [http://triangleyarncrawl.com/ Triangle Yarn Crawl]<br />
* [http://nuvyug.net/ India Fest] at Dorton Arena<br />
* [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/at-the-movies-frost-and-nixon At the Movies: Frost/Nixon] at NC Museum of History (free movie and lecture associated with the [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate exhibit])<br />
<br />
===Monday March 24===<br />
<br />
* Cure for the Mondays Comedy Night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, March 25===<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/NHL-Carolina-Hurricanes-vs-New-York-Islanders/24787/ NHL Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Islanders], 7pm (for free bus see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/pepsi-caniac-coach Pepsi Caniac Coach])<br />
<br />
* Job opportunity - AWS is hiring for Seattle-based positions. [https://aws.amazon.com/careers/raleigh-storage-hiring-2014/?sc_channel=sm&sc_campaign=hiringevent&sc_publisher=fb&sc_medium=std&sc_content=raleigh&sc_category=hiringevent Social gathering information], 6pm - 9pm<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, March 26===<br />
<br />
===Thursday, March 27===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/dance/events/PDP_SPR2014.html Panoramic Dance Project] at NCSU's Titmus Theater<br />
* [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/north-carolina-artists-exhibition-3994 2014 Artists Exhibition - Raleigh Fine Arts Society] at Betty Ray McCain Art Gallery<br />
* [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx Watergate: Politics, Scandal, and the Media] Panel discussion at the NC Museum of History (reservation required)<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Raleigh-Beer-Guide-Kickoff-Party/26790/ Raleigh Beer Guide Kickoff Party] All 15 Greater Raleigh breweries on tap.<br />
<br />
== Music ==<br />
<br />
'''Sunday March 23'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/447527-matt-schofield-raleigh/ Matt Schofield] at Pour House<br />
* Action Bronson at [http://www.catscradle.com/events/ Cat's Cradle] (in Carrboro)<br />
* Casanovas in Heat at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
<br />
'''Monday March 24'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.dpacnc.com/events/detail/csn Crosby, Stills & Nash] at Durham Performing Arts Center (in Durham)<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/asleep-wheel/ Asleep at the Wheel] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Devils Wears Prada, with Ghost Inside, others at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497289-daley-raleigh/ Daley] at Pour House<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday March 25'''<br />
<br />
* Three 6 Mafia at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/25/kings-presents-axxaabraxas-captured-tracks-at-slims/ Axxa/Abraxas] at Slim's<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497341-coast-2-coast-live-raleigh/ Coast 2 Coast Live Interactive Showcase] at Pour House<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday March 26'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/479771-pigeons-playing-ping-pong-raleigh/ Pigeons Playing Ping Pong] and Imperial Blend at [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/ Pour House]<br />
* Mang (Ween tribute) at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* Free Jazz Night at [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie]<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Thursday March 27'''<br />
<br />
* Local Beer/Local Band night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497347-blue-sky-black-death-raleigh/ Blue Sky Black Death] at Pour House<br />
* [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/event/492779-unifier-jessica-long-new-raleigh/ Unifier, Jessica Long & The New Kind] at Deep South<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/27/good-graeff/ Good Graeff] at Kings Barcade<br />
* Triathalon with Giant Giants at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/alchemystics/ Alchemystics] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Sarah Colonna (Comedy) at [https://center-stage.seatengine.com/venues/goodnights Goodnight's Comedy]<br />
<br />
'''More Music Venues in the Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* Raleigh: [http://themaywoodraleigh.com/ Maywood]<br />
* Chapel Hill/Carrboro: [http://www.catscradle.com/ Cat's Cradle], [http://www.local506.com/calendar/ Local 506], [http://caverntavern.com/ The Cave], [http://www.chapelhillunderground.com/ Underground], [https://www.carolinaperformingarts.org/ Memorial Hall]<br />
* Durham: [http://motorcomusic.com/ Motorco], [http://www.thepinhook.com/ Pinhook]<br />
* Saxapahaw: [http://www.hawriverballroom.com/ Haw River Ballroom]<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2014]]<br />
<br />
==Getting Around==<br />
<br />
'''R-Line Downtown Circulator'''<br />
<br />
Free [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/r-line circulator bus] that connects downtown districts (see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/_files/docs/final_rline_map.pdf map]). Buses run every 10-15 minutes and can be tracked on the [http://m.yourhere.com/ R-Line mobile application].<br />
<br />
'''Capital Area Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.raleighnc.gov/transit/ CAT bus system] covers the Greater Raleigh area.<br />
<br />
'''Triangle Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.triangletransit.org/ TTA bus system] provides transportation to Chapel/Carrboro, Durham and other points across the Triangle region. The TTA routes complement CAT routes to West Raleigh locations such as NC State.<br />
<br />
'''Rickshaws'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.raleighrickshaw.com/ Raleigh Rickshaw] and [http://www.crankarmrickshaw.com/ Crank Arm Rickshaw] provide on call or on street pickup. Since January has decided to stick around through late March the rickshaws may not be out on the streets much however.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=User:Wickr&diff=40802User:Wickr2014-03-23T21:48:18Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>'''Ryan Wick'''<br />
<br/>[http://scarc.library.oregonstate.edu Special Collections and Archives Research Center]<br />
<br/>Oregon State University Libraries<br />
<br />
Contact me with questions or issues with this wiki, or the code4lib.org site, or planet.code4lib.org.<br />
<br />
== Contact ==<br />
* Email: [mailto:ryanwick@gmail.com ryanwick@gmail.com]<br />
* Twitter: [https://twitter.com/ryanwick @ryanwick]<br />
* IRC: wickr on [http://code4lib.org/irc IRC]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Social_Activities&diff=407902014 Social Activities2014-03-23T03:51:06Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 */</p>
<hr />
<div>The Social Activities Group is working on several events and social opportunities for after conference hours. We will be adding more events as they come along. Watch this page!<br />
<br />
Also, if you find a cool event to go to, and want to share the wealth with others, feel free to add the event to the page. :)<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Monday 3/24 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>XML</strike> EZProxy alternatives.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Monday 3/24<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
**Some restaurants can hold multiple groups of six. It is up to you to investigate the venue to see if this is possible.<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
*See a restaurant that's not listed? Feel free to add one, '''but please make sure that it is open that Monday evening.'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
'''Under .5 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ bu ku] (Global street food)<br />
# Bohyun Kim - v (leader) Reservation at 6:15; Meet at the hotel lobby at 6pm (Twitter: [http://twitter.com/bohyunkim @bohyunkim] if u need to get in touch)<br />
# Junior Tidal - n<br />
# Brian Rogers - n<br />
# Vanessa Lucas - n<br />
# Ashley Blewer - n<br />
# Paula Gray-Overtoom - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.oxfordraleigh.com/ The Oxford] (Gastropub)<br />
# Roy Tennant - v (leader) 6:30 reservation set - please email roytennant on Google mail to provide contact info<br />
# David Bass - n<br />
# Dan Moore - n<br />
# Jack Reed - n<br />
# Sean Hendricks - n<br />
# Lauren Magnuson -v (ish - only been once before)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.sonoraleigh.com/index.php Sono] (Japanese)<br />
# Ryan Wick - v (leader)<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.lavoltarestaurant.com/ La Volta] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's] (Local food)<br />
# Jean Rainwater - v (leader) - they don't take reservations - email me contact info at Jean_Rainwater-at-brown-dot-edu<br />
# Cynthia (Arty) Ng<br />
# Catelynne Sahadath -n<br />
# Maura Carbone -n<br />
# Kate Hill -n<br />
# Martin Haye - v (twice at c4l)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera Empanada & Tequila Bar] (Empanada)<br />
<br />
[http://bigeasync.com/ The Big Easy] (New Orleans/Creole) <br />
# Robert Haschart - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:30pm. email me contact info at rh9ec-at-virginia-dot-edu<br />
# Xiaoming Wang<br />
# Michael Durbin - v<br />
# Sue Richeson -n<br />
# Ed Fugikawa -n<br />
# Tao You - n<br />
# '''full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://postatuscangrille.com/ Posta Tuscan Grille] (Italian)<br />
<br />
# Julia Bauder - v (leader) Reservations for 6 people at 6:15pm. Please e-mail me your contact info at bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
# Brian Riley - n<br />
# Mark Mounts - v<br />
# Birkin James Diana - v<br />
# Walter Stine - n<br />
# Michael Levy - v(ish; I attended once, in 2012)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ The Mecca] (Diner/Southern)<br />
<br />
[http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] (American)<br />
# Ken Varnum - v (leader) -- reservation for 6 people at 6:15. Send me your contact info at varnum umich edu.<br />
# Josh Wilson - v(ish, as in: once)<br />
# Kristen Wilson - n<br />
# Michael Blake - n<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n (I'm landing later that evening and will join if you are still out at around 8:30/9)<br />
# Emily Reynolds - n <br />
# Wendy Hagenmaier - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' (I'll take 7 names, since one of us will be joining us later if we're still there)<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken + Honey] (Southern)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Rosalyn Metz - v (leader)<br />
# Chad Nelson - v (insubordinator)<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield - v<br />
# Aaron Coburn - n<br />
# Arcadia Falcone -n<br />
# Mike Beccaria - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2<br />
# Matt Zumwalt - v (leader)<br />
# Chris Sharp - v<br />
# Joe Ferrie - n<br />
# Logan Cox - n<br />
# Jerry Nugent - n<br />
# Joe Atzberger - v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://ac-restaurants.com/chucks/ Chuck's] (Burgers)<br />
<br />
[http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] (Tapas vegan options)<br />
<br />
[http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's Osteria and Bar] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] (Laotian)<br />
# Dre - v (leader) -- Reservations at 6:15, meet at hotel lobby at 5:45. No, it won't take us half an hour to get there. Dre looks like [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/akorphan/ this handsome fella]. My e-mail address is on that page if you'd like to exchange contact info.<br />
# Heather Rayl - n<br />
# Ranti Junus - v<br />
# Jennifer Kishi - n<br />
# Nabil Kashyap - n<br />
# Laura Wrubel - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://sitti-raleigh.com/index1.php Sitti] (Lebanese) - Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm; look for the short woman in the big brown hat<br />
# Becky Yoose - v (benevolent dictator/leader) contact me at b.yoose at the google machine in case you might run late<br />
# Michael Gibney - n<br />
# Steven Holloway - n<br />
# Jeffrey Mudge - n<br />
# Arie Nugraha - n<br />
# Lisa Rabey - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit Authentic Barbecue] (BBQ)<br />
<br />
Group 1<br />
# Joshua Gomez - v (leader) (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: gomezjn_AT_usc_DOT_edu)<br />
# Andrew Darby - v<br />
# Tammy Allgood Wolf - n<br />
# Jim LeFager - n<br />
# Michael Daul - n<br />
# Natasha Nunn - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 2 (Can we keep this mostly newbies, please?) - '''Reservations at 6:15 PM; depart hotel lobby at 6 PM'''<br />
# Mx Matienzo - v (leader)<br />
# Cary Gordon - v<br />
# Mark Breedlove - n<br />
# Coral Sheldon-Hess - n (pumpkin cornbread!?!?!)<br />
# Violeta Ilik<br />
# Robin Taylor - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 3 (I have reservations for 6 people at 6pm. Send me your contact info: justin@curationexperts.com)<br />
# Justin Coyne - v (leader)<br />
# Rachel Vacek- n<br />
# Devin Higgins - n<br />
# John Rees - n<br />
# Andrew Gordon - n<br />
# Bobbi Fox -v<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
Group 4 (Riley made reservations for 6:15)<br />
# Jon Stroop - v (leader, but Riley did the work. Contact: jpstroop@gmail.com)<br />
# [[Riley Childs]] - n<br />
# David Lacy - v<br />
# Shaun Ellis - v<br />
# William Hicks<br />
# Eleanor Dickson - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
Group V (Declan made reservations for 6 at 6p. Contact: declan@declan.net We'll leave the lobby at 5:45 and saunter over to The Pit.)<br />
# Declan Fleming - v (leader)<br />
# Mike Giarlo - v<br />
# Carolina Garcia - v<br />
# Jefferson Bailey - n<br />
# Laura Akerman - n<br />
# Lauren Work - n<br />
# '''Full group!''' <br />
<br />
[http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://theboroughraleigh.com/ The Borough] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.theremedydiner.com/ The Remedy Diner] (Diner (lots of Veg*n options))<br />
# Erin White - v (leader)<br />
# Linda Ballinger - v(ish)<br />
# Terry Brady - v (been one other time)<br />
# Gabe Ormsby - n<br />
# Eric James - v<br />
# Jenny Gubernick - n<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters Bar and Grill] (Brewpub)<br />
# Esmé Cowles - v (leader)<br />
# Christina Salazar - v/n<br />
# Francis Kayiwa - v (follower)<br />
# Megan Kudzia - v<br />
# Zahra Ashktorab - n <br />
# David Drexler - v (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
'''.5 to 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.518west.com/ 518 West Italian Cafe] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (Brewpub)<br />
# Carolyn Cole v (leader) We will meet in in the lobby around 5:30ish and walk over (its about a 20 minute walk). If you are not meeting us in the lobby let me know so we do not wait for you (cam156 at psu) <br />
# Justin Simpson - n<br />
# Christian Sarason - v (3rd times a charm?)<br />
# Scott Bacon - n<br />
# Andy Weidner - n<br />
# David Malone - n (ish)<br />
# '''Full group!'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.mantraindiancuisinebar.com/ Mantra] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mtfujinc.com/SushiO/ Sushi O] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://zakyrestaurant.com/ Zaky Restaurant] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://sullivanssteakhouse.com/raleigh/ Sullivan's Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://bia-restaurant.com/ Bia ] (New American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.18seaboard.com/index.html 18 Seaboard] (Contemporary American)<br />
<br />
[http://sushibluescafe.com Sushi Blues Cafe] (Japanese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.therockfordrestaurant.com/About.aspx Rockford] (American)<br />
<br />
[http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Restaurant and Taproom] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://bluemangoraleigh.com/ Blue Mango] (Indian)<br />
<br />
[http://mellowmushroom.com/store/raleigh Mellow Mushroom] (Pizza)<br />
<br />
[http://tascabrava.com/index2.html Tasca Brava] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
[http://clockworkraleigh.com/index.html Clockwork] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://dostaquitosnc.com/ Dos Taquitos] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://nappertandysraleighnc.com/ Napper Tandy's Irish Pub] (Pub)<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiphoonbistro.com/ Thaiphoon bistro] (Thai)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''More than 1 mile from hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.peacechinanc.com/ Peace China] (Chinese)<br />
<br />
[http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling and Noodle Bar] (Asian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abyssinia Ethiopian Restaurant] (Ethiopian)<br />
<br />
=== James B. Hunt Library Reception and Tour, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
A reception and tour of the James B. Hunt Library on NCSU's Centennial Campus will take place on Tuesday, March 25, 5:00-7:30 PM. The library, which opened in January 2013, was recently [http://library.stanford.edu/projects/stanford-prize-innovation-research-libraries-spirl/2014-prizes winner] of the Stanford Prize for Innovation in Research Libraries, and has been recognized for it's [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/technology advanced technology and hi-tech spaces]. See the library through the eyes of the students in the over 3,000 Instagram photos in the [http://d.lib.ncsu.edu/myhuntlibrary My #HuntLibrary] project. The furniture alone has generated interest, as shown on the [http://chairsofhuntlibrary.tumblr.com/ Chairs of Hunt Library] Tumbler site.<br />
<br />
'''Travel to Hunt'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin loading at the Sheraton at 5:00 PM after the day's sessions have concluded. The last bus will leave the Sheraton at 5:45 PM, but attendees are encouraged to join the earlier buses if possible. Please note that the Hunt Library is 4 miles from the Sheraton and is not directly accessible via public transit from downtown.<br />
<br />
'''Reception'''<br />
<br />
Pizza and light snacks will be made available in the Multipurpose Room, along with soft drinks, and beer from the [http://www.ncsu.edu/foodscience/Sheppard/NCSU-12004%20Brewery%20Brochure1.pdf NC State Brewery]. Food and drink will be available until 7:00 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Tour'''<br />
<br />
Attendees will be welcome to embark on a self-guided tour of the library. Library staff will be on hand at selected locations, including hi-tech spaces such as the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/huntlibrary/bookBot bookBot] robotic book delivery system, the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/ipearl-immersion-theater iPearl Immersion Theater], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/teaching-and-visualization-lab Teaching & Visualization Lab], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/creativity-studio Creativity Studio], the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/game-lab Game Lab], and the [http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/spaces/makerspace Makerspace].<br />
<br />
'''Travel back to the Sheraton'''<br />
<br />
Buses will begin to load for the return trip at 6:45 PM. The last bus will leave the Hunt Library at approximately 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
=== #libtechwomen meetup, Tuesday 3/25 ===<br />
<br />
An informal meetup for women and their friends in library technology for networking and fun. Come join us! Learn more about #libtechwomen at [http://libtechwomen.org/about.html].<br />
<br />
'''Where''': [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ The Raleigh Times Bar] 14 E Hargett St Raleigh, NC 27601. 7 minute walk from the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
'''When''': Evening after the tour :c) (Starting at 730P on)<br />
<br />
'''Cost''': No drink minimum.<br />
<br />
'''Contact''': Lisa Rabey [http://twitter.com/pnkrcklibrarian @pnkrcklibrarian]<br />
<br />
'''Signup''': Everyone welcome. Just show up!<br />
<br />
=== A/V Geeks Present: When Computers Were Young, Wednesday 3/26 ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/ A/V Geeks] maintains a collection of over 23,000 old 16mm educational films from various decades of the 20th century, including such classics as [http://www.avgeeks.com/wp2/library-story-the-1952/ The Library Story (1952)], many obtained from school and government auctions. Media archaeologist [http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/skip-elsheimer/Content?oid=1183990 Skip Elsheimer] holds themed showings of selected films at events around the Triangle and in other states. <br />
<br />
This event, [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/26/av-geeks-present-when-computers-where-young/ When Computers Were Young], will include "Actual 16mm school films that introduce us to the wonderful world of computers and their potential future -- all before Google!" Films will include Disney's Ethics in the Computer Age and more. This showing is an all ages, public event that is part of a series of monthly shows held at [http://kingsbarcade.com/ Kings Barcade], but the event has been scheduled and themed with the Code4Lib crowd in mind.<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Doors open at 7:30 PM.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Located two blocks from the Sheraton, Kings is a 250-capacity live music venue with a full bar and several local beers on tap. Kings is directly connected with the [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour], a cocktail lounge with classic arcade games, pinball, and nightly DJ's. The new [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian restaurant, operated by the same owners, is also downstairs.<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' The event is free with a suggested $5 donation. <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please add your name to the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2014_AVGeeks_Signup sign up list] if you are interested in attending so that we can inform the organizers about the level of interest<br />
<br />
=== Library Tech Cast Round table: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
The Library Tech Cast will be hosting a live Round table somewhere at the Sheraton, we are looking for about 5 people who would be interested. Our Topics can be anything you want, feel free to speak your mind!<br />
<br />
See [http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show http://librarytechcast.com/c4l-show]for details!<br />
<br />
Please contact Riley@LibraryTechCast.com if you have any questions!<br />
<br />
'''Location:''' Lobby, we will find a nice relaxing area! <br />
<br />
'''Time:''' Around 6PM, <br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' Please put your Name and Email Address Below!<br />
<br />
*Riley Childs, Riley@TFSGEO.com<br />
<br />
=== Game Night: Wednesday Evening ===<br />
<br />
Game Night is another alternative option for Wednesday evening socializing. Conference goers are welcome to bring their own games from home. Games should probably be of the shorter variety (<2 hours) to allow new players to learn and finish games.<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' Magnolia 2<br />
<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday Evening from 6 to at least 10<br />
<br />
'''Signup:''' None. Just show up or leave as you please. There will be 4 tables with 8 chairs each.<br />
<br />
'''Food:''' Bring your own food/drinks. All alcoholic drinks must be bought at the bar.<br />
<br />
'''Fun:''' Absolutely<br />
<br />
Jason Raitz (jcraitz @ ncsu) for questions to direct to the hotel.<br />
<br />
'''Games!''' Who's bringing what:<br />
<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/257/kill-doctor-lucky Kill Doctor Lucky] (yo_bj)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/6830/zendo Zendo] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/98778/hanabi Hanabi] (coral)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/815/chrononauts Chrononauts] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/258/fluxx Fluxx] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
* [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/12692/gloom Gloom] (pnkrcklibrarian)<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
[https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=211601269129937460559.0004d8d5902e5e3d04b05&msa=0&ll=35.782519,-78.640223&spn=0.01464,0.01929 Code4Lib 2014 Amenities Map, Downtown Raleigh, NC] - Amenities that are within walking distance of the Sheraton or the R Line circulator<br />
<br />
New York Times: [http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/03/09/travel/36-hours-in-raleigh-nc.html?referrer 36 Hours in Raleigh NC] (March 6, 2014)<br />
<br />
== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
''Add your own ideas here''<br />
<br />
'''Game Night'''<br />
<br />
Update: We've secured Wednesday night in Magnolia 2! I'm adding this as a planned event above.<br />
<br />
I can bring some board games if people are interested. I have a decent [http://boardgamegeek.com/collection/user/vacekrae?geekranks=Board+Game+Rank&columns=title%7Cstatus%7Cversion%7Crating%7Cbggrating%7Cplays%7Ccomment%7Ccommands&own=1&ff=1&subtype=boardgame collection]. Let me know via email at vacekrae on gmail. +<br />
<br />
* I'll be bringing a few board games that I normally take to my weekly library game nights. Some of collaborative and are great facilitators for conversation (Flash Point, Pandemic). - Dan, danmoore1987 on gmail.<br />
<br />
'''Trolley Pub'''<br />
<br />
14 person pedal-powered [http://trolleypub.com/raleigh/ trolleys]. Can be booked for pub crawls in downtown or in the Warehouse District. BYOB allowed. Private tours for 8-14 people can be booked for $350 for two hour time slots between 11:00 AM and midnight. Smaller groups of 1-6 people can also by 'Mixer' tickets for $30 (shared trolley).<br />
<br />
Note: with weather being what it might be and the money required, this might not be a good idea now. --J. Raitz @ NCSU<br />
<br />
'''Brewpub Walk'''<br />
<br />
Three brewpubs can be found along a [http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD 1.2 mile walk] through the Warehouse District west from the Sheraton.<br />
NOTE: Trophy Brewing, the westernmost brewpub, has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner, go in smaller numbers if eating at Trophy, or go around the corner to Irregardless Cafe, which has veg*n options. Alternatively, start at Trophy and go the opposite direction and eat in the Warehouse District or downtown where there are many dining options.<br />
<br />
'''NCAA Tournament Game at PNC Arena'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament Third Round Division I Men's basketball game], Sunday March 23. If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts Map of downtown arts and cultural entertainment]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event-calendar/2014/3 Calendar of downtown events]<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/shopping Map of downtown shopping]<br />
<br />
=== Exhibits, Showings, Museums ===<br />
<br />
*[http://naturalsciences.org/ North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences]<br />
**[http://naturalsciences.org/nature-research-center Nature Research Center]<br />
**Exhibit - [http://naturalsciences.org/exhibits/special-exhibits Birds of Paradise: Amazing Avian Evolution] (final day March 23)<br />
<br />
*[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx North Carolina Museum of History] Exhibits: <br />
**[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/exhibit-opening-cedars-in-the-pines Cedars in the Pines]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeOurExhibits/CurrentExhibits/NorthCarolinaandtheCivilWar/The_Bitter_End.aspx North Carolina and the Civil War: The Bitter End, 1864-1865]<br />
**[http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate: Political Scandal & the Presidency]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.nchistoricsites.org/capitol/ North Carolina State Capitol]<br />
<br />
*[http://camraleigh.org/2014nc-arts-council-artist-fellowship/ NC Arts Council Artist Fellowship Award Exhibition] at the [http://camraleigh.org/ Contemporary Arts Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://ncartmuseum.org/calendar/ NC Museum of Art Calendar]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/arts/art-galleries Downtown Raleigh Art Galleries]<br />
<br />
*[http://artspacenc.org/about-us/visit/ ArtSpace]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighcitymuseum.org/index.shtml City of Raleigh Museum]<br />
<br />
*[http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9669&view=EventDetails&information_id=27372 Remnants of the Floating World: Japanese Art from the Permanent Collection] at the [http://www.ncsu.edu/gregg/index.html NCSU Gregg Museum of Art & Design]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.joellane.org/ Joel Lane Museum House]<br />
<br />
*[http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecRecreation/Articles/MordecaiHistoricPark2.html Mordecai Historic Park]<br />
<br />
=== Outside Activities ===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.triangleglides.com/ Triangle Glides] Segway tours, standup paddleboard rentals<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleighnc.gov/parks/content/PRecDesignDevelop/Articles/CapitalAreaGreenwayTrailSystem.html Capital Area Greenway Trail System]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncartmuseum.org/museum_park/visit_park/ NC Museum of Art: Museum Park] Scenic trails and outdoor art<br />
<br />
* [http://www.nps.gov/nr/travel/raleigh/index.htm National Register of Historic Places]<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/jcraulstonarboretum/index.php JC Raulston Arboretum]<br />
<br />
=== Run Clubs ===<br />
<br />
'''Monday Night'''<br />
* [http://www.nogrunclub.com/ Nog Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Tir Na Nog Irish Pub: 3-5 mile routes, followed by team trivia, $1 pasta, and beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday Night'''<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/events/553725497983418/ Natty Greene's Run Club] - 6:00 PM at Natty Greene's Brewery: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
* Big Boss Run Club - 7:00 PM at [http://bigbossbrewing.com/age-verification.aspx?returnTo=%2f Big Boss Brewery]: 3-6 mile routes followed by beer specials<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday Night'''<br />
* Margarita Run Club - 6:00 PM at [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] restaurant: 3-5 mile routes followed by taco bar and margarita specials<br />
* [http://www.ymcatriangle.org/programs-services/fitness-wellness/walking-running-clubs/alexander-family-ymca-0 Trophy Brewery Runs] - 6:00 PM at Trophy Brewing: 1, 3, 5 mile routes<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/dining Map of Downtown Restaurants & Dining]<br />
<br />
=== Restaurants ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.newsobserver.com/2014/01/30/3577164/2014-best-restaurants-in-the-triangle.html News & Observer 2014 Best Restaurants of the Triangle]<br />
<br />
[http://www.indyweek.com/indyweek/LocationSearch?locationSection=1218750 Indy Weekly Triangle Dining Guide]<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District''' (0-0.4 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://clydecoopersbbq.com/ Clyde Cooper's BBQ] (since 1938)<br />
* [http://garlandraleigh.com/ Garland] Indian<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/beasleys/ Beasley's Chicken & Honey] Fried Chicken, Chicken and Waffles (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.sonoraleigh.com/ Sono] Sushi<br />
* [http://www.capitalclub16.com/Capital_Club_16/Home.html Capital Club 16] Eclectic pub grub<br />
* [http://sitti-raleigh.com/ Sitti] Lebanese<br />
* [http://ororaleigh.com/ Oro] Tapas (vegan options)<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Centro] Mexican<br />
* [http://www.centroraleigh.com/ Chuck's Burgers] (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.oakcitymeatball.com/ Oak City Meatball Shoppe]<br />
* [http://www.gravyraleigh.com/ Gravy] Italian-American<br />
* [http://busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee Cafe] American<br />
* [http://www.mecca-restaurant.com/ Mecca] Diner/southern<br />
* [http://bukuraleigh.com/buku/ Buku] Global street food<br />
* [http://www.boltbistro.com/ Bolt] Bistro, Steakhouse, Seafood<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square''' (0.3-0.5 miles east)<br />
<br />
* [http://bidamanda.com/ Bida Manda] Laotian<br />
* [http://www.theremedydiner.com/ Remedy Diner] Veg*n and non-veg*n<br />
* [http://www.cafeluna.com/ Cafe Luna] Italian (Tuscan)<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and tequila<br />
* [http://www.bigedscitymarket.com/ Big Ed's] Diner<br />
* [http://www.mosdiner.net/ Mo's Diner] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District''' (0.2-0.7 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepit-raleigh.com/ The Pit] Whole-hog, pit-coooked BBQ<br />
* [http://thefictionkitchen.com/ Fiction Kitchen] Veg*n<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/pooles/ Poole's Diner] American/Diner (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://joseandsons.com/ Jose and Sons] Mexican/Southern fusion<br />
* [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie] Tapas (Live jazz on Wed.)<br />
* [http://www.heatseekershrimp.com/ Five Star] Asian (Traditional and creative)<br />
* [http://roastgrill.com/ Roast Grill] Just hot dogs (''as seen on Man v. Food'')<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South''' (0.6-1.3 miles northwest)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.42ndstoysterbar.com/ 42nd St. Oyster Bar] Seafood<br />
* [http://therockfordrestaurant.com/ Rockford] American (New)/Pub grub<br />
* [http://www.518west.com/ 518 West] Italian<br />
* [http://www.second-empire.com/ Second Empire] American (New)<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.''' (1.0-1.2 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.18seaboard.com/ Seaboard Station] Southern, American (New)<br />
* [http://jbetskis.com/ J. Betskis] Central & Eastern European<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/pages/Stanbury/359649790802483 Stanbury] Contemporary<br />
* [http://piebirdraleigh.com/ Piebird] Sweet and savory pies<br />
* [http://stationraleigh.com/ The Station] American (Traditional)<br />
<br />
'''West towards NC State''' (1.2-2.2 miles west)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.irregardless.com/ Irregardless Cafe] veg*n options<br />
* [http://www.abyssiniarestaurant.net/5.html Abysinnia] Ethiopian<br />
* [http://www.ddandnb.com/ Davids Dumpling & Noodle Bar] Asian<br />
<br />
'''Five Points''' (2.5 miles north)<br />
<br />
* [http://bloomsburybistro.com/bistro.restaurant.raleigh/ Bloomsbury Bistro] American (New)<br />
* [https://nofo.com/ NOFO @ The Pig] American (New), Brunch<br />
* [http://lillyspizza.com/ Lilly's Pizza] Pizza and beer<br />
<br />
'''Other Inside-the-Beltline Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://guasaca.com/ Guasaca] Venezuelan (6 miles)<br />
* [http://glenwoodgrill.com/ Glenwood Grill] American (Traditional), Southern (4 miles)<br />
<br />
=== Desserts ===<br />
<br />
* [https://viderichocolatefactory.com/ Videri Chocolate Factory]<br />
* [http://www.escazuchocolates.com/ Escazu Artisan Chocolates]<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/113675251912407366356/about?gl=us&hl=en Crema] Ice cream<br />
<br />
=== Coffee ===<br />
<br />
* [http://morningtimes-raleigh.com/ Morning Times] (wifi) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/joule/ Joule Coffee] (''Ashley Christiansen'', wifi, breakfast/lunch -- CNN eatocracy [http://eatocracy.cnn.com/2014/02/21/5-hottest-new-coffee-spots-in-the-u-s/ 5 hottest new coffee spots in the US]) -- 3 blocks<br />
* [http://beneluxcoffee.com/ Benelux Coffee] (wifi) -- 4 blocks<br />
* [http://www.sostacafe.com/ Sosta Cafe] (wifi, lunch) -- 2 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafemuertos.com/ Cafe de los Muertos] (wifi) -- 5 blocks<br />
* [http://www.cafehelios.com/ Cafe Helios] (wifi, breakfast/lunch) -- 1.1 miles<br />
<br />
There is a Starbucks in the lobby of the Marriott, next to the Sheraton.<br />
<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
<br />
[http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/explore/nightlife Map of Bars, Clubs & Live Entertainment]<br />
<br />
=== Bars ===<br />
<br />
'''Fayetteville St. District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.raleightimesbar.com/ Raleigh Times] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.busybeeraleigh.com/ Busy Bee] Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar (The Hive is upstairs)<br />
* [http://foundationnc.com/ Foundation] Cocktails, bourbon, local beer<br />
* [http://neptunesparlour.com/ Neptunes Parlour] Cocktails, local beer<br />
* [http://ac-restaurants.com/fox/ Fox Liquor Bar] Cocktails, local beer (''Ashley Christiansen'')<br />
* [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's] Dive bar (live music)<br />
<br />
'''Moore Square'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.yelp.com/biz/landmark-tavern-raleigh Landmark Tavern] beer, back patio<br />
* [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog] Irish pub<br />
* [http://calaveraraleigh.com/ Calavera] Empanadas and 40 tequila varieties<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's] Beer and wings<br />
<br />
'''Warehouse District'''<br />
<br />
* [http://brewmastersbarandgrill.com/ Brewmasters] Grill, 2012 Draft Magazine Top 100 beer bar<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] Brewpub<br />
* [http://www.beerknurd.com/stores/raleigh/ Flying Saucer] Beer<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] Brewpub<br />
<br />
'''Glenwood South'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.cgracebar.com/ C Grace] Cocktails and live jazz<br />
* [http://clockworkraleigh.com/ Clockwork] Retro cocktail lounge<br />
<br />
'''Seaboard Station/Person St.'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's Tap Room] Beer<br />
* [https://www.facebook.com/personstreetbar Person Street Bar]<br />
<br />
'''Best places for groups to watch NCAA Championship Games'''<br />
<br />
* [http://woodyscitymarket.com/ Woody's]<br />
* [http://www.jimmyvsraleigh.com/ Jimmy V's]<br />
* [http://www.tylerstaproom.com/ Tyler's]<br />
<br />
=== Breweries ===<br />
<br />
[http://www.ncbeer.org/brewery-map/ Map of NC Breweries]<br />
<br />
'''Walking Distance'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.crankarmbrewing.com/ Crank Arm Brewing] (0.3 miles)<br />
* [http://boylanbridge.com/ Boylan Bridge Brewpub] (0.9 miles)<br />
* [http://trophybrewing.com/ Trophy Brewing & Pizza Company] (1.2 miles)<br />
<br />
[http://goo.gl/maps/haOiD Possible brewpub walking tour] [NOTE: Trophy has great pizza but limited seating. To finish with dinner consider going the opposite direction and eating in the Warehouse District or downtown]<br />
<br />
'''Greater Raleigh'''<br />
<br />
* [http://bigbossbrewing.com/ Big Boss Brewing] (3.5 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://raleighbrewingcompany.com/ Raleigh Brewing Company] (4 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.lynnwoodgrill.com/node/10 Lynnwood Brewing Concern] (9 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.loneriderbeer.com/ Lone Rider] (13 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://gizmobrewworks.com/ Gizmo Brewworks] (12 miles, Raleigh)<br />
* [http://www.aviatorbrew.com/ Aviator Brewing Company] (17 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://hosannabrewing.com/ Hosanna Brewery] (14 miles, Fuquay Varina)<br />
* [http://deepriverbrewing.com/ Deep River Brewing] (16 miles, Clayton)<br />
* [http://www.carolinabrew.com/ Carolina Brewing] (19 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.bombshellbeer.com/ Bombshell Beer] (18 miles, Holly Springs)<br />
* [http://www.whitestreetbrewing.com/ White Street Brewing] (18 miles, Wake Forest)<br />
<br />
'''Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* [http://trianglebrewery.com/ Triangle Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://www.fullsteam.ag/beer/ Fullsteam] (Durham)<br />
* [http://bullcityburgerandbrewery.com/Bull_City_Burger_and_Brewery/Home.html Bull City Burger & Brewing] (Durham)<br />
* [http://thetopofthehill.com/ Top of the Hill] (Chapel Hill)<br />
* [http://steelstringbrewery.com/ Steel String Craft Brewery] (Carrboro)<br />
* [http://www.mysterybrewing.com/ Mystery Brewing] (Hillsborough)<br />
* [http://whiterabbitbrewery.com/ White Rabbit Brewing] (Angiers)<br />
* [http://doublebarleybrewing.com/ Double Barley Brewing] (Wilson Mills)<br />
<br />
Other nanobrews: [http://subnoir.net/ Sub Noir Brewing] (Raleigh), [http://starpointbrewing.com/ StarPoint Brewing] (Carrboro), [http://ponysaurusbrewing.com/ Ponysaurus] (Durham), [https://www.facebook.com/sourwoodbrewingco Sourwood Brewing Company - Cider] (Durham)<br />
<br />
=== Bottle Shops ===<br />
<br />
* [http://tastybeverageco.com/ Tasty Beverage Company] About 1200 packaged beers and 6 draft beers (0.3 mile)<br />
* [http://paddyobeers.com/ Paddy O'Beers] Bottle shop and tasting room (0.4 mile)<br />
* [https://plus.google.com/116185965486400371099/about?gl=us&hl=en The Bottle Shop at Tyler's Taproom] (1.0 mile)<br />
* [http://www.wineauthorities.com/ Wine Authorities] (1.3 miles)<br />
<br />
==Raleigh Events March 23-27==<br />
<br />
[https://www.mergerecords.com/25k Merge Records 25k] (March 22) Chapel Hill to Durham run, with post race party and bands at Motorco music hall (celebrating 25th year of Merge Records label)<br />
<br />
===Sunday March 23===<br />
<br />
* Apparently there's going to be [http://www.thepncarena.com/events/detail/2014-ncaa-division-i-mens-basketball-tournament some basketball game] at PNC Arena...<br />
** If anyone else is crazy enough to pay the money for tickets email rosalynmetz [at] the gmail<br />
* Another basketball game - [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Cary-Invasion-vs-East-Carolina-Stealth/26414/ Cary Invasion vs. East Carolina Stealth], 6 pm<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Civil-Rights-Through-Song/25383/ Civil Rights Through Song], Burning Coal Theater Company, at Murphrey School Auditorium, 2 pm<br />
* Romeo and Juliet - Carolina Ballet at [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/carolina-ballet-private-event-3340 Fletcher Opera Theater]<br />
* [http://calendar.activedatax.com/ncstate/EventList.aspx?fromdate=3/1/2014&todate=3/31/2014&display=Month&type=public&eventidn=9568&view=EventDetails&information_id=27101 LEO (the anti-gravity show)], NCSU Center Stage, 3 pm<br />
* [http://triangleyarncrawl.com/ Triangle Yarn Crawl]<br />
* [http://nuvyug.net/ India Fest] at Dorton Arena<br />
* [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/event/at-the-movies-frost-and-nixon At the Movies: Frost/Nixon] at NC Museum of History (free movie and lecture associated with the [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/SeeourExhibits/CurrentExhibits/Watergate.aspx Watergate exhibit])<br />
<br />
===Monday March 24===<br />
<br />
* Cure for the Mondays Comedy Night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, March 25===<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/NHL-Carolina-Hurricanes-vs-New-York-Islanders/24787/ NHL Carolina Hurricanes vs. New York Islanders], 7pm (for free bus see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/pepsi-caniac-coach Pepsi Caniac Coach])<br />
<br />
* Job opportunity - AWS is hiring for Seattle-based positions. [https://aws.amazon.com/careers/raleigh-storage-hiring-2014/?sc_channel=sm&sc_campaign=hiringevent&sc_publisher=fb&sc_medium=std&sc_content=raleigh&sc_category=hiringevent Social gathering information], 6pm - 9pm<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, March 26===<br />
<br />
===Thursday, March 27===<br />
<br />
* [http://www.ncsu.edu/dance/events/PDP_SPR2014.html Panoramic Dance Project] at NCSU's Titmus Theater<br />
* [http://www.dukeenergycenterraleigh.com/event/north-carolina-artists-exhibition-3994 2014 Artists Exhibition - Raleigh Fine Arts Society] at Betty Ray McCain Art Gallery<br />
* [http://www.ncdcr.gov/ncmoh/Home.aspx Watergate: Politics, Scandal, and the Media] Panel discussion at the NC Museum of History (reservation required)<br />
* [http://www.visitraleigh.com/includes/calendar-of-events/Raleigh-Beer-Guide-Kickoff-Party/26790/ Raleigh Beer Guide Kickoff Party] All 15 Greater Raleigh breweries on tap.<br />
<br />
== Music ==<br />
<br />
'''Sunday March 23'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/447527-matt-schofield-raleigh/ Matt Schofield] at Pour House<br />
* Action Bronson at [http://www.catscradle.com/events/ Cat's Cradle] (in Carrboro)<br />
* Casanovas in Heat at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
<br />
'''Monday March 24'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.dpacnc.com/events/detail/csn Crosby, Stills & Nash] at Durham Performing Arts Center (in Durham)<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/asleep-wheel/ Asleep at the Wheel] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Devils Wears Prada, with Ghost Inside, others at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497289-daley-raleigh/ Daley] at Pour House<br />
<br />
'''Tuesday March 25'''<br />
<br />
* Three 6 Mafia at [http://www.lincolntheatre.com/schedule.htm Lincoln Theater]<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/25/kings-presents-axxaabraxas-captured-tracks-at-slims/ Axxa/Abraxas] at Slim's<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497341-coast-2-coast-live-raleigh/ Coast 2 Coast Live Interactive Showcase] at Pour House<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Wednesday March 26'''<br />
<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/479771-pigeons-playing-ping-pong-raleigh/ Pigeons Playing Ping Pong] and Imperial Blend at [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/ Pour House]<br />
* Mang (Ween tribute) at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* Free Jazz Night at [http://humblepierestaurant.com/ Humble Pie]<br />
* Open Mic Night at [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/ Deep South]<br />
<br />
'''Thursday March 27'''<br />
<br />
* Local Beer/Local Band night at [http://www.tnnirishpub.com/ Tir Na Nog]<br />
* [http://www.thepourhousemusichall.com/event/497347-blue-sky-black-death-raleigh/ Blue Sky Black Death] at Pour House<br />
* [http://www.deepsouththebar.com/event/492779-unifier-jessica-long-new-raleigh/ Unifier, Jessica Long & The New Kind] at Deep South<br />
* [http://kingsbarcade.com/2014/03/27/good-graeff/ Good Graeff] at Kings Barcade<br />
* Triathalon with Giant Giants at [http://www.slimsraleigh.com/ Slim's]<br />
* [http://southlandballroom.com/events/alchemystics/ Alchemystics] at Southland Ballroom<br />
* Sarah Colonna (Comedy) at [https://center-stage.seatengine.com/venues/goodnights Goodnight's Comedy]<br />
<br />
'''More Music Venues in the Greater Triangle'''<br />
<br />
* Raleigh: [http://themaywoodraleigh.com/ Maywood]<br />
* Chapel Hill/Carrboro: [http://www.catscradle.com/ Cat's Cradle], [http://www.local506.com/calendar/ Local 506], [http://caverntavern.com/ The Cave], [http://www.chapelhillunderground.com/ Underground], [https://www.carolinaperformingarts.org/ Memorial Hall]<br />
* Durham: [http://motorcomusic.com/ Motorco], [http://www.thepinhook.com/ Pinhook]<br />
* Saxapahaw: [http://www.hawriverballroom.com/ Haw River Ballroom]<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2014]]<br />
<br />
==Getting Around==<br />
<br />
'''R-Line Downtown Circulator'''<br />
<br />
Free [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/get-around/r-line circulator bus] that connects downtown districts (see [http://www.godowntownraleigh.com/_files/docs/final_rline_map.pdf map]). Buses run every 10-15 minutes and can be tracked on the [http://m.yourhere.com/ R-Line mobile application].<br />
<br />
'''Capital Area Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.raleighnc.gov/transit/ CAT bus system] covers the Greater Raleigh area.<br />
<br />
'''Triangle Transit'''<br />
<br />
The [http://www.triangletransit.org/ TTA bus system] provides transportation to Chapel/Carrboro, Durham and other points across the Triangle region. The TTA routes complement CAT routes to West Raleigh locations such as NC State.<br />
<br />
'''Rickshaws'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.raleighrickshaw.com/ Raleigh Rickshaw] and [http://www.crankarmrickshaw.com/ Crank Arm Rickshaw] provide on call or on street pickup. Since January has decided to stick around through late March the rickshaws may not be out on the streets much however.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=398342014 Prepared Talk Proposals2013-11-08T18:44:21Z<p>Wickr: /* Sorting it out: a piece of the User Centred Design Process */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
<br />
* ''Projects'' you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* ''Tools and technologies'' – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* ''Technical issues'' - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* ''Relevant non-technical issues'' – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
'''To Propose a Talk'''<br />
* Log in to the wiki in order to submit a proposal. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
* Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
* If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist us in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
As in past years, the Code4Lib community will vote on proposals that they would like to see included in the program. This year, however, only the top 10 proposals will be guaranteed a slot at the conference. Additional presentations will be selected by the Program Committee in an effort to ensure diversity in program content. Community votes will, of course, still weigh heavily in these decisions.<br />
<br />
Presenters whose proposals are selected for inclusion in the program will be guaranteed an opportunity to register for the conference. The standard conference registration fee will still apply.<br />
<br />
''Proposals can be submitted through '''Friday, November 8, 2013, at 5pm PST'''''. Voting will commence on November 18, 2013 and continue through December 6, 2013. The final line-up of presentations will be announced in early January, 2014.<br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
<br />
==Creating a new Greek-Dutch dictionary==<br />
* Caspar Treijtel, University of Amsterdam, c.treijtel@uva.nl<br />
<br />
At present, no complete dictionary of (ancient) Greek-Dutch is available online. A new dictionary is currently under construction at Leiden University, with software being developed at the University of Amsterdam. The team in Leiden has already begun preparation of the data, with at this moment about 6,000 approved lemmas. The ultimate goal is to produce both a print version and online open access version from the same source documents. The software needed for this has been made in a project that was funded by CLARIN-NL.<br />
<br />
Migrator<br />
<br />
For the production of lemmas we have implemented an advanced workflow. The (generally non-technical) users create lemmas using MS Word, which is both familiar and easy to use. We have developed a custom software module that carefully migrates the Word documents into deeply structured XML by analyzing the structure and semantics of the lemmas, and falling back on heuristics in ambiguous cases. While having initially envisioned the oXygen XML Author component as the main tool for creating new lemmas, we obtained excellent results with the migrator module, and decided therefore to continue using MS Word as the primary composition tool. The main advantage of this is that the editors are much more familiar with Word than with any other WYSIWYG editor. Lemmas that have been migrated to XML are stored in an XML database and can be further edited using oXygen XML Author.<br />
<br />
Lemmatizer<br />
<br />
Greek morphology is complicated. In order to use a dictionary effectively, a rather high level of initial language competence is necessary for the user to be able to relate the word form s/he finds in a text to the correct basic lemma form, where the definition of the word can be found. Using a Greek morphological database we have been able to facilitate the search for lemmas. A ‘lemmatizer’ module gives the possible parsings of the word forms and the lemmas they can be derived from. This enables the user to type in the word as found in the text and be redirected to the correct lemma.<br />
<br />
Visualization<br />
<br />
For the online dictionary we have implemented a visualization module that allows the user to view multiple lemmas at once. The implementation of this module has been done using the Javascript framework MooTools. The result is a viewer that performs really well and is run by maintainable Javascript code.<br />
<br />
The online dictionary is still being worked on, have a look at http://www.woordenboekgrieks.nl/ for the beta version. A newer test version with additional features can be found here: http://angel.ic.uva.nl:8600/.<br />
<br />
Credits<br />
<br />
* construction of the dictionary: Prof. Ineke Sluiter, Classics department of Leiden University; Prof. Albert Rijksbaron, University of Amsterdam<br />
* publisher of the dictionary: Amsterdam University Press<br />
* design/typesetting dictionary: TaT Zetwerk (http://www.tatzetwerk.nl/)<br />
* software development: Digital Production Center, University Library, University of Amsterdam<br />
* project funding: CLARIN-NL (http://www.clarin.nl/)<br />
* morphological database for use by the lemmatizer: courtesy of Prof. Helma Dik, University of Chicago (based on data of the Perseus Project)<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
== Using Drupal to drive alternative presentation systems ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Recently, we have been building systems that use angular.js, Rails, or other systems for presentation, while leveraging Drupal's sophisticated content management capabilities on the back end.<br />
<br />
So far, these have been one-way systems, but as we move to Drupal 8 we are beginning to explore ways to further decouple the presentation and CMS functions.<br />
<br />
== A Book, a Web Browser and a Tablet: How Bibliotheca Alexandrina's Book Viewer Framework Makes It Possible ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Mohammed.abuouda|Mohammed Abu ouda]], Bibliotheca Alexandrina (The new Library of Alexandria)<br />
<br />
A lot of institutions around the world are engaged in multiple digitization projects aiming at preserving the human knowledge present in books and availing them through multiple channels to people around the whole globe. These efforts will sure help close the digital gap particularly with the arrival of affordable e-readers, mobile phones and network coverage. However, the digital reading experience has not yet arrived to its maximum potential. Many readers miss features they like in their good old books and wish to find them in their digital counterpart. In an attempt to create a unique digital reading experience, Bibliotheca Alexandria (BA) created a flexible book viewing framework that is currently used to access its current collection of more than 300,000 digital books in five different languages which includes the largest collection of digitized Arabic books.<br />
<br />
Using open source tools, BA used the framework to develop a modular book viewer that can be deployed in different environments and is currently at the heart of various BA projects. The Book viewer provides several features creating a more natural reading experience. As with physical books, the reader can now personalize the books he reads by adding annotations like highlights, underlines and sticky notes to capture his thoughts and ideas in addition to being able to share the book with friends on social networks. The reader can perform a search across the content of the book receiving highlighted search results within the pages of the book. More features can be further added to the book viewer through its plugin architecture.<br />
<br />
== Structured data NOW: seeding schema.org in library systems ==<br />
<br />
* [http://coffeecode.net Dan Scott], Laurentian University<br />
** Previous code4lib presentations: [https://archive.org/details/code4lib.conf.2008.pres.CouchDBsacrilege CouchDB is sacrilege... mmm, delicious sacrilege] at Code4Lib 2008<br />
<br />
The semantic web, linked data, and structured data are all fantastic ideas with a barrier imposed by implementation constraints. If their system does not allow customizations, or the institution lacks skilled human resources, it does not matter how enthused a given library might be about publishing structured data... it will not happen. However, if the software in use simply publishes structured data by default, then the web will be populated for free. Really! No extra resources necessary.<br />
<br />
This presentation highlights Dan's work with systems such as Evergreen, Koha, and VuFind to enable the publication of schema.org structured data out-of-the-box. Along the way, we reflect the current state of the W3C Schema.org Bibliographic Extension community group efforts to shape the evolution of the schema.org vocabulary. Finally, hold on tight as we contemplate next steps and the possibilities of a world where structured data is the norm on the web.<br />
<br />
== Towards Pasta Code Nirvana: Using JavaScript MVC to Fill Your Programming Ravioli ==<br />
<br />
* Bret Davidson, North Carolina State University Libraries, bret_davidson@ncsu.edu<br />
** Previous Code4Lib Presentations: [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_talks_proposals#Data-Driven_Documents:_Visualizing_library_data_with_D3.js Visualizing library data with D3.js] at Code4Lib 2013<br />
<br />
JavaScript MVC frameworks are ushering in a golden age of robust and responsive web applications that take advantage of evergreen browsers, performant JS engines, and the unprecedented reach provided by billions of personal computing devices. The web browser has emerged as the world’s most popular application runtime and the complexity[1] and scope of JavaScript applications has exploded accordingly. Server-side web frameworks like Rails and Django have helped developers adhere to best practices like modularity, dependency injection, and unit testing for years, practices that are now being applied to JavaScript development through projects like Backbone[2], Ember[3], and Angular[4].<br />
<br />
This talk will discuss the issues JavaScript MVC frameworks are trying to solve, common features like data binding, implications for the future of web development[5], and the appropriateness of JavaScript MVC for library applications.<br />
<br />
*[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghetti_code<br />
*[2]http://backbonejs.org<br />
*[3]http://emberjs.com<br />
*[4]http://angularjs.org<br />
*[5]http://tomdale.net/2013/09/progressive-enhancement-is-dead/<br />
<br />
== WebSockets for Real-Time and Interactive Interfaces ==<br />
<br />
* [http://ronallo.com Jason Ronallo], NCSU Libraries, jason_ronallo@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ronallo HTML5 Microdata and Schema.org] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/ronallo HTML5 Video Now!] 2013<br />
<br />
Watching the Google Analytics Real-Time dashboard for the first time was mesmerizing. As soon as someone visited a site, I could see what page they were on. For a digital collections site with a lot of images, it was fun to see what visitors were looking at. But getting from Google Analytics to the image or other content of what was currently being viewed was cumbersome. The real-time experience was something I wanted share with others. I'll show you how I used a WebSocket service to create a real-time interface to digital collections.<br />
<br />
In the Hunt Library at NCSU we have some large video walls. I wanted to make HTML-based exhibits that featured viewer interactions. I'll show you how I converted Listen to Wikipedia [1] into an bring-your-own-device interactive exhibit. With WebSockets any HTML page can be remote controlled by any internet connected device.<br />
<br />
I will attempt to include real-time audience participation.<br />
<br />
[1] http://listen.hatnote.com/<br />
<br />
== Rapid Development of Automated Tasks with the File Analyzer ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, Georgetown University Libraries, twb27@georgetown.edu<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Libraries have customized the File Analyzer and Metadata Harvester application (https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer) to solve a number of library automation challenges:<br />
* validating digitized and reformatted files<br />
* validating vendor statistics for counter compliance<br />
* preparing collections of digital files for archiving and ingest<br />
* manipulating ILS import and export files<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer application was used by the US National Archives to validate 3.5 million digitized images from the 1940 Census. After implementing a customized ingest workflow within the File Analyzer, the Georgetown University Libraries was able to process an ingest backlog of over a thousand files of digital resources into DigitalGeorgetown, the Libraries’ Digital Collections and Institutional Repository platform. Georgetown is currently developing customized workflows that integrate Apache Tika, BagIt, and Marc conversion utilities.<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer is a desktop application with a powerful framework for implementing customized file validation and transformation rules. As new rules are deployed, they are presented to users within a user interface that is easy (and powerful) to use.<br />
<br />
Learn about the functionality that is available for download, how you can use this tool to automate workflows from digital collections to ILS ingests to electronic resources statistics and also discuss the opportunities to collaborate on enhancements to this application!<br />
<br />
== GeoHydra: How to Build a Geospatial Digital Library with Fedora ==<br />
<br />
* [http://stanford.edu/~drh Darren Hardy], Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
Geographically-rich data are exploding and putting fear in those trying to<br />
tackle integrating them into existing digital library infrastructures.<br />
Building a spatial data infrastructure that integrates with your digital<br />
library infrastructure need not be a daunting task. We have successfully<br />
deployed a geospatial digital library infrastructure using Fedora and<br />
open-source geospatial software [1]. We'll discuss the primary design<br />
decisions and technologies that led to a production deployment within a few<br />
months. Briefly, our architecture revolves around discovery, delivery, and<br />
metadata pipelines using open-source OpenGeoPortal [2], Solr [3], GeoServer<br />
[4], PostGIS [5], and GeoNetwork [6] technologies, plus the proprietary ESRI<br />
ArcMap [7] -- the GIS industry's workhorse. Finally, we'll discuss the key<br />
skillsets needed to build and maintain a spatial data infrastructure.<br />
<br />
[1] http://foss4g.org<br />
[2] http://opengeoportal.org<br />
[3] http://lucene.apache.org/solr<br />
[4] http://geoserver.org<br />
[5] http://postgis.net<br />
[6] http://geonetwork-opensource.org<br />
[7] http://esri.com<br />
<br />
==Under the Hood of Hadoop Processing at OCLC Research ==<br />
<br />
[http://roytennant.com/ Roy Tennant]<br />
<br />
* Previous Code4Lib presentations: 2006: "The Case for Code4Lib 501c(3)"<br />
<br />
[http://hadoop.apache.org/ Apache Hadoop] is widely used by Yahoo!, Google, and many others to process massive amounts of data quickly. OCLC Research uses a 40-node compute cluster with Hadoop and HBase to process the 300 million MARC records of WorldCat in various ways. This presentation will explain how Hadoop MapReduce works and illustrate it with specific examples and code. The role of the jobtracker in both monitoring and reporting on processes will be explained. String searching WorldCat will also be demonstrated live.<br />
<br />
== Quick and Easy Data Visualization with Google Visualization API and Google Chart Libraries ==<br />
<br />
[http://bohyunkim.net/blog Bohyun Kim], Florida International University, bohyun.kim@fiu.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Do most of the data that your library collects stay in spreadsheets or are published as a static table with a series of boring numbers? Do your library stakeholders spend more time collecting the data than using it as a decision-making tool because the data is presented in a way that makes it hard for them [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery to quickly grasp its significance? ]<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an overview of [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/reference Google Visualization API] [2] and [http://developers.google.com/chart/ Google Chart Libraries] [3] to get you started on the way to quickly query and visualize your library data from remote data sources (e.g. a Google Spreadsheet or your own database) with (or without) cool-looking user-controls, animation effects, and even a dashboard.<br />
<br />
== Leap Motion + Rare Books: A hands-free way to view and interact with rare books in 3D ==<br />
<br />
[http://http://www.youtube.com/user/jpdenzer Juan Denzer], Binghamton University, jdenzer@binghamton.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
As rare books become more delicate over time, making them available to the public becomes harder. We at Binghamton University Library have developed an application that makes it easier to view rare books without ever having to touch them. We have combined the Leap Motion hands-free device and 3D rendered models to create a new virtual experience for the viewer.<br />
<br />
The application allows the user to rotate and zoom in on a 3D representation of a rare book. The user is also able to ‘open’ the virtual book and flip through it using a natural user interface. Such as swiping the hand left or right to turn the page.<br />
<br />
The application is built on the .Net framework and is written in C#. 3D models are created using simple 3D software such as sketchup or Blender. Scans of the book cover and spine are created using simple flatbed scanners. The inside pages are scanned using overhead scanners. <br />
<br />
This talk with discuss the technologies used in developing the application and virtually any library could implement the application with virtually no coding at all. This presentation will have a demonstration of the software and also a chance for audience members to experience the Rare Book Leap Motion App themselves.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Course Reserves Unleashed! ==<br />
<br />
* Bobbi Fox, Library Technology Services, Harvard University, bobbi_fox@harvard.edu<br />
* Gloria Korsman, Andover-Harvard Theological Library<br />
** No previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Hey kids! Remember when SOAP was used for something other than washing? Our sophisticated (and highly functional) Course Reserves Request system does!<br />
<br />
However, while the system is great for submitting and processing course reserve requests, the student-facing presentation through Havard’s home-grown -- and soon to be replaced -- LMS leaves a lot to be desired. <br />
<br />
Follow along as we leverage Solr 4 as a No-SQL database, along with more progressive RESTful API techniques, to release Reserves data into the wild without interfering with reserves request processing -- and, in the process, open up the opportunity for other schools to feed their data in as well.<br />
<br />
== We Are All Disabled! Universal Web Design Making Web Services Accessible for Everyone ==<br />
<br />
Cynthia Ng, Accessibility Librarian, CILS at Langara College<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations (not counting lightning talks)<br />
<br />
We’re building and improving tools and services all the time, but do you only develop for the “average” user or add things for “disabled” users? We all use “assistive” technology accessing information in a multitude of ways with different platforms, devices, etc. Let’s focus on providing web services that are accessible to everyone without it being onerous or ugly. The aim is to get you thinking about what you can do to make web-based services and content more accessible for all from the beginning or with small amounts of effort whether you're a developer or not.<br />
<br />
The goal of the presentation is to provide both developers and content creators with information on simple, practical ways to make web content and web services more accessible. However, rather than thinking about putting in extra effort or making adjustment for those with disabilities, I want to help people think about how to make their websites more accessible for all users through universal web design.<br />
<br />
== Personalize your Google Analytics Data with Custom Events and Variables ==<br />
<br />
[http://joshwilson.net Josh Wilson], Systems Integration Librarian, State Library of North Carolina - joshwilsonnc@gmail.com<br />
<br />
At the State Library of North Carolina, we had more specific questions about the use of our digital collections than standard GA could provide. A few implementations of custom events and custom variables later, we have our answers.<br />
<br />
I'll demonstrate how these analytics add-ons work, and why implementation can sometimes be more complicated than just adding a few lines of JavaScript to your ga.js. I'll discuss some specific examples in use at the SLNC:<br />
<br />
* Capturing the content of specific metadata fields in CONTENTdm as Custom Events <br />
* Recording Drupal taxonomy terms as Custom Variables<br />
<br />
In both instances, this data deepened our understanding of how our sites and collections were being used, and in turn, we were able to report usage more accurately to content contributors and other stakeholders.<br />
<br />
More on: [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/eventTrackerGuide GA Custom Events] | [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/gaTrackingCustomVariables GA Custom Variables]<br />
<br />
<br />
== Behold Fedora 4: The Incredible Shrinking Repository! ==<br />
<br />
Esmé Cowles, UC San Diego Library. Previous talk: [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/cowles-critchlow-westbrook All Teh Metadatas Re-Revisited] (2013)<br />
<br />
* One repository contains untold numbers of digital objects and powers many Hydra and Islandora apps<br />
* It speaks RDF, but contains no triplestore! (triplestores sold separately, SPARQL Update may be involved, some restrictions apply)<br />
* Flexible enough to tie itself in knots implementing storage and access control policies<br />
* Witness feats of strength and scalability, with dramatically increased performance and clustering<br />
* Plumb the depths of bottomless hierarchies, and marvel at the metadata woven into the very fabric of the repository<br />
* Ponder the paradox of ingesting large files by not ingesting them<br />
* Be amazed as Fedora 4 swallows other systems whole (including Fedora 3 repositories)<br />
* Watch novice developers setup Fedora 4 from scratch, with just a handful of incantations to Git and Maven<br />
<br />
The Fedora Commons Repository is the foundation of many digital collections, e-research, digital library, archives, digital preservation, institutional repository and open access publishing systems. This talk will focus on how Fedora 4 improves core repository functionality, adds new features, maintains backwards compatibility, and addresses the shortcomings of Fedora 3.<br />
<br />
== Organic Free-Range API Development - Making Web Services That You Will Actually Want to Consume ==<br />
<br />
Steve Meyer and Karen Coombs, OCLC<br />
<br />
Building web services can have great benefits by providing reusability of data and functionality. Underpinning your applications with a web service will allow you to write code once and support multiple environments: your library's web app, mobile applications, the embedded widget in your campus portal. However, building a web service is its own kind of artful programming. Doing it well requires attention to many of the same techniques and requirements as building web applications, though with different outcomes. <br />
<br />
So what are the usability principles for web services? How do you build a web service that you (and others) will actually want to use? In this talk, we’ll share some of the lessons learned - the good, the bad, and the ugly - through OCLC's work on the WorldCat Metadata API. This web service is a sophisticated API that provides external clients with read and write access to WorldCat data. It provides a model to help aspiring API creators navigate the potential complications of crafting a web service. We'll cover:<br />
<br />
* Loose coupling of data assets and resource-oriented data modeling at the core<br />
* Coding to standards vs. exposure of an internal data model<br />
* Authentication and security for web services: API Keys, Digital Signing, OAuth Flows<br />
* Building web services that behave as a suite so it looks like the left hand knows what the right hand is doing<br />
<br />
So at the end of the day, your team will know your API is a very good egg after all. <br />
<br />
If accepted, the presenters intend to produce and share a Quick Guide for building a web service that will reflect content presented in the talk.<br />
<br />
== Lucene's Latest (for Libraries) ==<br />
<br />
erik.hatcher@lucidworks.com<br />
<br />
Lucene powers the search capabilities of practically all library discovery platforms, by way of Solr, etc. The Lucene project evolves rapidly, and it's a full-time job to keep up with the ever improving features and scalability. This talk will distill and showcase the most relevant(!) advancements to date.<br />
<br />
== The Why and How of Very Large Displays in Libraries. ==<br />
<br />
* Cory Lown, NCSU Libraries, cwlown@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib Presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/lown How People Search the Library from a Single Search Box] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/orphanides_lown_lynema Enhancing Discoverability with Virtual Shelf Browse] 2010<br />
<br />
Built into the walls of NC State's new Hunt Library are several [http://www.christiedigital.com/en-us/digital-signage/products/microtiles/pages/microtiles-digital-signage-video-wall.aspx Christie MicroTile Display Wall Systems]. What does a library do with a display that's seven feet tall and over twenty feet wide? I'll talk about why libraries might want large displays like this, what we're doing with them right now, and what we might do with them in the future. I'll talk about how these displays factor into planning for new and existing web projects. And I'll get into the fun details of how you build web applications that scale from the very small browser window on a phone all the way up to a browser window with about 14 million pixels (about 10 million more than a dual 24" monitor desktop setup).<br />
<br />
== Your Library, Anywhere: A Modern, Responsive Library Catalogue at University of Toronto Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Bilal Khalid, Gordon Belray, Lisa Gayhart (lisa.gayhart@utoronto.ca)<br />
<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations<br />
<br />
With the recent surge in the mobile device market and an ever expanding patron base with increasingly divergent levels of technical ability, the University of Toronto Libraries embarked on the development of a new catalogue discovery layer to fit the needs of its diverse users. <br />
<br />
[http://search.library.utoronto.ca The result]: a mobile-friendly, flexible and intuitive web application that brings the full power of a faceted library catalogue to users without compromising quality or performance, employing Responsive Web Design principles. This talk will discuss: application development; service improvements; interface design; and user outreach, testing, and project communications. Feedback and questions from the audience are very welcome. If time runs short, we will be available for questions and conversation after the presentation.<br />
<br />
Note: A version of this content has been provisionally accepted as an article for Code4Lib Journal, January 2014 publication.)<br />
<br />
== All Tiled Up ==<br />
<br />
* Mike Graves, MIT Libraries (mgraves@mit.edu)<br />
<br />
You've got maps. You even scanned and georeferenced them. Now what? Running a full GIS stack can be expensive, and overkill in some cases. The good news is that you have a lot more options now than you did just a few years ago. I'd like to present some lighter weight solutions to making georeferenced images available on the Web.<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an introduction to MBTiles. I'll go over what they are, how you create them, how you use them and why you would use them.<br />
<br />
== The Great War: Image Interoperability to Facebook ==<br />
<br />
* Rob Sanderson, Los Alamos National Laboratory (azaroth42@gmail.com)<br />
** (Code4Lib 2006: [http://www.code4lib.org/2006/sanderson | Library Text Mining])<br />
* Rob Warren, Carleton University<br />
** No previous presentations<br />
<br />
Using a pipeline constructed from Linked Open Data and other interoperability specifications, it is possible to merge and re-use image and textual data from distributed library collections to build new, useful tools and applications. Starting with the OAI-PMH interface to ContentDM, we will take you on a tour through the International Image Interoperability Framework and Shared Canvas, to a cross-institutional viewer, and image analysis for the purposes of building a historical Facebook from finding and tagging people in photographs. The World War One collections are drawn from multiple institutions and merged by the machine learning code.<br />
<br />
The presentation will focus on the (open source) toolchain and the benefits of the use of standards throughout: OAI-PMH to get the metadata, IIIF for interaction with the images, the Shared Canvas ontology for describing collections of digitized objects, Open Annotation for tagging things in the images and specialized ontologies that are specific to the contents. The tools include standard RDF / OWL technologies, JSON-LD, imagemagick and OpenCV for image analysis.<br />
<br />
== Visualizing Solr Search Results with D3.js for User-Friendly Navigation of Large Results Sets ==<br />
<br />
*Julia Bauder, Grinnell College Libraries (bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
*No previous presentations at national Code4Lib conferences<br />
<br />
As the corpus of articles, books, and other resources searched by discovery systems continues to get bigger, searchers are more and more frequently confronted with unmanageably large numbers of results. How can we help users make sense of 10,000 hits and find the ones they actually want? Facets help, but making sense of a gigantic sidebar of facets is not an easy task for users, either.<br />
During this talk, I will explain how we will soon be using Solr 4’s pivot queries and hierarchical visualizations (e.g., treemaps) from D3.js to let patrons view and manipulate search results. We will be doing this with our VuFind 2.0 catalog, but this technique will work with any system running Solr 4. I will also talk about early student reaction to our tests of these visualization features.<br />
<br />
== PeerLibrary – open source cloud based collaborative library ==<br />
<br />
[https://github.com/peerlibrary/peerlibrary PeerLibrary is a new open source project] and a cloud service providing collaborative reading, sharing and storing. Users can upload publications they want to read (currently in PDF format), read them in the browser in real-time with others, highlight, annotate and organize their own or collaborative library. PeerLibrary provides a search engine to search over all uploaded open access publications. Additionally, it aims to collaboratively aggregate the open layer of knowledge on top of this publications through public annotations and references user will add to publications. In this way publications would not just be available to read, but accessible to the general public as well. Currently, it is aiming at scientific community and scientific publications.<br />
<br />
See [http://blog.peerlibrary.org/post/63458789185/screencast-previewing-the-peerlibrary-project screencast here].<br />
<br />
It is still in development and beta launch is planned at the end of November.<br />
<br />
== Who was where when, or finding biographical articles on Wikipedia by place and time ==<br />
<br />
* [http://morton-owens.info Emily Morton-Owens], The Seattle Public Library (presenting on work from NYU)<br />
* No previous c4l presentations<br />
<br />
It's easy to answer the question "What important people were in Paris in 1939?" But what about Virginia in the 1750s or Scandinavia in the 14th century? I created a tool that allows you to search for biographies in a generally applicable way, using a map interface. I would like to present updates to my thesis project, which combines a crawler written in Java that extracts information from Wikipedia articles, with a MongoDB data store and a frontend in Python.<br />
<br />
The input to the project is freetext of entire articles in Wikipedia; this is important to allow us to pick up Benjamin Franklin not just in the single most obvious place of Philadelphia but also in London, Paris, Boston, etc. I can talk about my experiments disambiguating place names (approaches pioneered on newspaper articles were actually unhelpful on this type of text) and setting up a processing queue that does not become mired in the biographies of every human who ever played soccer. I also want to mitigate some of the implementation choices I made due to my academic deadline and improve the accuracy/usability.<br />
<br />
What I hope to show is that I was able to develop a novel and useful reference tool automatically, using fairly simple heuristics that are a far cry from hand-cataloging familiar to many librarians.<br />
<br />
You can try out [http://linserv1.cims.nyu.edu:48866/ the original version] (this server is inconveniently set to be updated/rebooted on 11/8--may be temporarily unavailable)<br />
<br />
== Good!, DRY, and Dynamic: Content Strategy for Libraries (Especially the Big Ones) ==<br />
<br />
*Michael Schofield, Nova Southeastern University Libraries, mschofield@nova.edu<br />
*No previous code4lib presentations.<br />
<br />
The responsibilities of the #libweb are exploding [it’s a good thing] and it is no longer uncommon for libraries to manage or even home-grow multiple applications and sites. Often it is at this point where the web people begin to suffer the absence of a content strategy when, say, business hours need to be updated sitewide a half-dozen times.<br />
<br />
We were already feeling this crunch when we decided to further complicate the Nova Southeastern University Libraries by splitting the main library website into two. The Alvin Sherman Library, Research, and Information Technology Center is a unique joint-use facility that serves not only the academic community but the public of Broward County - and marketing a hyperblend of content through one portal just wasn't cutting it. With a web team of two, we knew that managing all this rehashed, disparate content was totally unsustainable.<br />
<br />
I want to share in this talk how I went about making our library content DRY (“don’t repeat yourself”): input content in one place--blurbs, policies, featured events, featured databases, book reviews, business hours, and so on.--and syndicate it everywhere - even, sometimes, dynamically target that content for specific audiences or context. It is a presentation that is a little about workflow, a little more about browser and context detection, a tangent about content-modeling the CMS, and a lot about APIs, syndication, and performance.<br />
<br />
== No code, no root, no problem? Adventures in SaaS and library discovery ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:erwhite@vcu.edu Erin White, VCU]<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
In 2012 VCU was an eager early adopter of Ex Libris' cloud service Alma as an ILS, ERM, link resolver, and single-stop, de-silo'd public-facing discovery tool. This has been a disruptive change that has shifted our systems staff's day-to-day work, relationships with others in the library, and relationships with vendors.<br />
<br />
I'll share some of our experiences and takeaways from implementing and maintaining a cloud service:<br />
* Seeking disruption and finding it<br />
* Changing expectations of service and the reality of unplanned downtime<br />
* Communication and problem resolution with non-IT library staff<br />
* Working with a vendor that uses agile development methodology<br />
* Benefits and pitfalls of creating customizations and code workarounds<br />
* Changes in library IT/coders' roles with SaaS<br />
<br />
...as well as thoughts on the philosophy of library discovery vs real-life experiences in moving to a single-search model.<br />
<br />
== Building for others (and ourselves): the Avalon Media System ==<br />
* [mailto:michael.klein@northwestern.edu Michael B Klein], Senior Software Developer, Northwestern University <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/metz_klein Public Datasets in the Cloud] (code4lib 2010)<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/klein-rogers The Avalon Media System: A Next Generation Hydra Head For Audio and Video Delivery] (code4lib 2013)<br />
* [mailto:j-rudder@northwestern.edu Julie Rudder], Digital Initiatives Project Manager, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
[http://www.avalonmediasystem.org/ Avalon Media System] is a collaborative effort between development teams at Northwestern and Indiana Universities. Our goal is to produce an open source media management platform that works well for us, but is also widely adopted and contributed to by other institutions. We believe that building a strong user and contributor community is vital to the success and longevity of the project, and have developed the system with this goal in mind. We will share lessons learned, pains and successes we’ve had releasing two versions of the application since last year. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will cover our experiences:<br />
* providing flexible, admin-friendly distribution and installation options<br />
* building with abstraction, customization and local integrations in mind<br />
* prioritizing features (user stories)<br />
* attracting code contributions from other institutions<br />
* gathering community feedback <br />
* creating a product rather than a bag of parts<br />
<br />
== How to check your data to provide a great data product? Data quality as a key product feature at Europeana ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:Peter.Kiraly@kb.nl Péter Király] portal backend developer, Europeana<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
[http://Europeana.eu/ Europeana.eu] - Europe's digital library, archive and museum - aggregates more than 30 million metadata records from more than 2200 institutions. The records come from libraries, archives, museums and every other kind of cultural institution, from very different systems and metadata schemas, and are typically transformed several times until they are ingested into the Europeana data repository. Europeana builds a consolidated database from these records, creating reliable and consistent services for end-users (a search portal, search widget, mobile apps, thematic sites etc.) and an API, which supports our strategic goeal of data for reuse in education, creative industries, and the cultural sector. A reliable "data product" is thus at the core of our own software products, as well as those of our API partners.<br />
<br />
Much effort is needed to smooth out local differences in the metadata curation practice of our data providers. We need a solid framework to measure the consistency of our data and provide feedback to decision-makers inside and outside the organisation. We can also use this metrics framework to ask content providers to improve their own metadata. Of course, a data-quality-driven approach requires that we also improve the data transformation steps of the Europeana ingestion process itself. Data quality issues heavily define what new features we are able to create in our user interfaces and API, and might actually affect the design and implementation of our underlying data structure, the Europeana Data Model.<br />
<br />
In the presentation I briefly describe the Europeana metadata ingestion process, show the data quality metrics, the measuring techniques (using the Europeana API, Solr and MongoDB queries), some typical problems (both trivial and difficult ones), and finally the feedback mechanism we propose to deploy.<br />
<br />
Keywords: Europeana, data quality, EDM, API, Apache Solr, MongoDB, #opendata, #openglam<br />
<br />
== Teach your Fedora to Fly: scaling out your digital repository ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:acoburn@amherst.edu Aaron Coburn], Software Developer, Amherst College<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
Fedora is a great repository system for managing large collections of digital objects, but what happens when a popular food magazine begins directing a large number of readers to a manuscript showing Emily Dickinson’s own recipe for doughnuts? While Fedora excels in its support of XML-based metadata, it doesn’t always perform well under a high volume of traffic. Nor is it especially tolerant of network or hardware failures.<br />
<br />
This presentation will show how we are making heavy use of a fedora repository while at the same time insulating it almost entirely from any web traffic. Starting with a distributed web front-end built with Node.js, and caching most of the user-accessible content from Fedora in an elastic, fault-tolerant Riak (NoSQL) cluster, we have eliminated nearly all single points of failure in the system. It also means that our production system is spread across twelve separate servers, where asynchrony and Map-Reduce are king. And aside from being blazing fast, it is also entirely Hydra-compliant.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, we will attempt to answer the question: if fedora crashes and the visitors to your site don’t notice, did it really fail?<br />
<br />
<br />
== Using Open Source Software and Freeware to Preserve and Deliver Digital Videos ==<br />
* [mailto:wfang@kinoy.rutgers.edu Wei Fang], Head of Digital Services, Rutgers University Law Library<br />
* Jiebei Luo, Digital Projects Initiative Intern, Rutgers University<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
The Rutgers University Law Library is the official digital repository of the New Jersey Supreme Court oral arguments since 2002. This large video collection contains approximately 3,000 videos with a total of 400 GB or 6,000 viewing hours. With the expansion of this collection, the existing database and the static website could not efficiently support the library’s daily operations and meet its patrons’ search needs. <br />
By utilizing open source software and freeware such as Ubuntu, FFmpeg, Solr and Drupal, the library is able to develop a complete solution to re-encoding videos, embedding subtitles, incorporating Solr search engine and content management system to support full-text subtitle search, automatically updating video metadata records in the library catalog system and eventually providing a plug-in free HTML 5-based Web interface for patrons to view the videos online.<br />
The aspects below will be presented in detail at the conference:<br />
* Video codecs comparison <br />
* Server-end batch video encoding/re-encoding<br />
* HTML 5 video tag and embedding subtitles<br />
* Incorporating search engine Solr and content management tool Drupal with the database to retrieve videos by full-text search especially in subtitle files<br />
* Incorporating video metadata with the library catalog system<br />
<br />
== Shared Vision, Shared Resources: the Curate Institutional Repository ==<br />
* Dan Brubaker Horst, University of Notre Dame <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011/JohnsonHorst A Community-Based Approach to Developing a Digital Exhibit at Notre Dame Using the Hydra Framework] <br />
* Julie Rudder, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous presentations<br />
<br />
Curate is being collaboratively developed by several institutions in the Hydra community who share the need and vision for a Fedora-backed Institutional Repository. The first release of Curate was a collaboration between Notre Dame and Northwestern University, along with Digital Curation Experts (DCE) - a vendor hired jointly by our two institutions. Powered by the Hydra engine Sufia, the team worked quickly to release the first version of Curate in October 2013 which provides a basic self-deposit system that has support for various content types, collection building, DOI minting, and user profile creation. From the very beginning we have built Curate to be easy to theme and extend in order to ease the process of installation and use by other institutions.<br />
<br />
In December 2013, additional partners will join the project including: Indiana University, the University of Cincinnati and the University of Virginia. Each institution contributes resources to the project in order to further our common goal to create a product that fits our needs and has a sustainable future.Together we will tackle additional content types (like complex data, software, media), administrative collections and more. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will include:<br />
* a brief demonstration of Curate and technical overview<br />
* why and how we work together<br />
* why build Curate<br />
* the future of the project<br />
<br />
== Solr, Cloud and Blacklight ==<br />
* David Jiao, Library Information Systems, Indiana University at Bloomington, djiao@indiana.edu<br />
** No previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
SolrCloud refers to the distributed capabilities in Solr4. It is designed to offer a highly available, fault tolerant environment by organizing data into multiple pieces that can be hosted on multiple machines with replicas, and providing a centralized cluster configuration and management. <br />
<br />
At Indiana University, we are upgrading our Solr backend for our recently released Blacklight-based OPAC system from Solr 1.4 to Solr4, and we also put up efforts to build a private cloud of Solr4 servers. In this talk, I will persent certain features of SolrCloud, including distributed requests, fault tolerance, near real time indexing/searching, and configuration management with Zookeeper, and our experiences of utilizing these features to provide better performance and architecture for our OPAC system, which serves over 7 million bibliographic records to over 100 thousand students and faculty members. I will also discuss some practical lessons learned from our SolrCloud setup/upgrade and the integration of the new SolrCloud to our customized Blacklight system. <br />
<br />
== Leveraging XSD's for Reflective, Live Dataset Support in Institutional Repositories ==<br />
* [mailto:msulliva@ufl.edu Mark Sullivan], Library Information Technology, University of Florida<br />
** No previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
The University of Florida Libraries are currently adding support for active datasets into our METS-based institutional repository software. This ongoing project enables the library to be a partner in current, or long-running, data-driven projects around the university by providing tangible short-term and long-term benefits to the projects. The system assists project teams by storing and providing access to their data, while supporting online filtering and sorting of the data, custom queries, and adding and editing of the data by authorized users. We are also exploring simple data visualizations to allow users to perform basic graphical and geographic queries. Currently the system is being developed using XSD's describing XML datasets, but this model should easily scale to support SQL datasets or large datasets supported by Hadoop or iRODS.<br />
<br />
This work is being integrated in the open source [http://sobek.ufl.edu SobekCM Digital Content Management System] which is built on a pair-tree structure of METS resources with [http://ufdc.ufl.edu/design/webcontent/sobekcm/SobekCM_Resource_Object.pdf rich metadata support] including DC, MODS, MARC, VRACore, DarwinCore, IEE-LOM, GML/KML, schema.org microdata, and many other standard schemas. The system has emphasized online, distributed creation and maintenance of resources including geo-placement and geographic searching of resources, building structure maps (table of contents) visually online, and a broad suite of curator tools. <br />
<br />
This work is presented as a model which could be implemented in other systems as well. We will demonstrate current support and discuss our upcoming roadmap to provide complete support.<br />
<br />
== Dead-simple Video Content Management: Let Your Filesystem Do The Work ==<br />
<br />
* Andreas Orphanides, NCSU Libraries (akorphan (at) ncsu.edu)<br />
** (never led or soloed a C4L presentation)<br />
<br />
Content management is hard. To keep all the moving parts in order, and to maintain a layer of separation between the system and content creators (who are frequently not technical experts), we typically turn to content management systems like Drupal. But even Drupal and its kin require significant overhead and present a not inconsiderable learning curve for nontechnical users.<br />
<br />
In some contexts it's possible -- and desirable -- to manage content in a more streamlined, lightweight way, with a minimum of fuss and technical infrastructure. In this presentation I'll share a simple MVC-like architecture for managing video content for playback on the web, which uses a combination of Apache's mod_rewrite module and your server's filesystem structure to provide an automated approach to video content management that's easy to implement and provides a low barrier to content updates: friendly to content creators and technology implementors alike. Even better, the basic method is HTML5-friendly, and can be integrated into your favorite content management system if you've got permissions for creating templates.<br />
<br />
== Managing Discovery ==<br />
<br />
* Andrew Pasterfield, Senior Programmer/Systems Analyst, University of Calgary Library, ampaster@ucalgary.ca<br />
**No previous code4lib presentations <br><br><br />
In fall 2012 the University of Calgary Library launched a new home page that incorporated a Summon powered<br />
Single Search Box with customized “bento box” results display. Search at the U of C now combines a range of<br />
metadata sources for discovery and customized mapping of a database recommender and LibGuide into a unified<br />
display. Further customizations include a non Google Analytics/non proxy method to log clicks.<br><br><br />
<br />
This presentation will discuss the technical details of bringing the various systems together into one display interface to increase discovery at the U of C Library.<br />
<br />
http://library.ucalgary.ca<br />
<br />
<br />
== Sorting it out: a piece of the User Centered Design Process ==<br />
<br />
* Cindy Beggs, [http://www.akendi.com/aboutus/management/ Akendi], cindy@akendi.com<br />
<br />
This talk is about how to apply a user centered design methodology to the process of creating an information architecture. Participants learn the fundamentals of UCD and how card sorting and reverse card sorting enable us to isolate the content we present on screen from the layouts and visuals of those screens. We talk about ways to identify who will be using the information architecture you are creating and why we need to know how it will be used.<br />
<br />
What will attendees takes away from your talk?<br />
The criticality of involving “real” end users in the process of creating an information architecture. The basics of following a user-centered-design process in the creation of best in class, content-rich, digital products.<br />
<br />
Cindy Beggs has been working in the “information industry” for over 25 years. A librarian by profession, she has spent decades helping users figure out how to find their way through large bodies of content. Her insights into how people seek information, her empathy for those who find it a challenge and her practical experience helping organizations figure out how to best structure their content contribute to her success as an information architect with both clients and trainees. (http://www.akendi.com/aboutus/management/)<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[:Category:Code4Lib2014]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=398332014 Prepared Talk Proposals2013-11-08T18:43:46Z<p>Wickr: Adding talk proposal for Cindy</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
<br />
* ''Projects'' you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* ''Tools and technologies'' – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* ''Technical issues'' - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* ''Relevant non-technical issues'' – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
'''To Propose a Talk'''<br />
* Log in to the wiki in order to submit a proposal. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
* Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
* If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist us in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
As in past years, the Code4Lib community will vote on proposals that they would like to see included in the program. This year, however, only the top 10 proposals will be guaranteed a slot at the conference. Additional presentations will be selected by the Program Committee in an effort to ensure diversity in program content. Community votes will, of course, still weigh heavily in these decisions.<br />
<br />
Presenters whose proposals are selected for inclusion in the program will be guaranteed an opportunity to register for the conference. The standard conference registration fee will still apply.<br />
<br />
''Proposals can be submitted through '''Friday, November 8, 2013, at 5pm PST'''''. Voting will commence on November 18, 2013 and continue through December 6, 2013. The final line-up of presentations will be announced in early January, 2014.<br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
<br />
==Creating a new Greek-Dutch dictionary==<br />
* Caspar Treijtel, University of Amsterdam, c.treijtel@uva.nl<br />
<br />
At present, no complete dictionary of (ancient) Greek-Dutch is available online. A new dictionary is currently under construction at Leiden University, with software being developed at the University of Amsterdam. The team in Leiden has already begun preparation of the data, with at this moment about 6,000 approved lemmas. The ultimate goal is to produce both a print version and online open access version from the same source documents. The software needed for this has been made in a project that was funded by CLARIN-NL.<br />
<br />
Migrator<br />
<br />
For the production of lemmas we have implemented an advanced workflow. The (generally non-technical) users create lemmas using MS Word, which is both familiar and easy to use. We have developed a custom software module that carefully migrates the Word documents into deeply structured XML by analyzing the structure and semantics of the lemmas, and falling back on heuristics in ambiguous cases. While having initially envisioned the oXygen XML Author component as the main tool for creating new lemmas, we obtained excellent results with the migrator module, and decided therefore to continue using MS Word as the primary composition tool. The main advantage of this is that the editors are much more familiar with Word than with any other WYSIWYG editor. Lemmas that have been migrated to XML are stored in an XML database and can be further edited using oXygen XML Author.<br />
<br />
Lemmatizer<br />
<br />
Greek morphology is complicated. In order to use a dictionary effectively, a rather high level of initial language competence is necessary for the user to be able to relate the word form s/he finds in a text to the correct basic lemma form, where the definition of the word can be found. Using a Greek morphological database we have been able to facilitate the search for lemmas. A ‘lemmatizer’ module gives the possible parsings of the word forms and the lemmas they can be derived from. This enables the user to type in the word as found in the text and be redirected to the correct lemma.<br />
<br />
Visualization<br />
<br />
For the online dictionary we have implemented a visualization module that allows the user to view multiple lemmas at once. The implementation of this module has been done using the Javascript framework MooTools. The result is a viewer that performs really well and is run by maintainable Javascript code.<br />
<br />
The online dictionary is still being worked on, have a look at http://www.woordenboekgrieks.nl/ for the beta version. A newer test version with additional features can be found here: http://angel.ic.uva.nl:8600/.<br />
<br />
Credits<br />
<br />
* construction of the dictionary: Prof. Ineke Sluiter, Classics department of Leiden University; Prof. Albert Rijksbaron, University of Amsterdam<br />
* publisher of the dictionary: Amsterdam University Press<br />
* design/typesetting dictionary: TaT Zetwerk (http://www.tatzetwerk.nl/)<br />
* software development: Digital Production Center, University Library, University of Amsterdam<br />
* project funding: CLARIN-NL (http://www.clarin.nl/)<br />
* morphological database for use by the lemmatizer: courtesy of Prof. Helma Dik, University of Chicago (based on data of the Perseus Project)<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
== Using Drupal to drive alternative presentation systems ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Recently, we have been building systems that use angular.js, Rails, or other systems for presentation, while leveraging Drupal's sophisticated content management capabilities on the back end.<br />
<br />
So far, these have been one-way systems, but as we move to Drupal 8 we are beginning to explore ways to further decouple the presentation and CMS functions.<br />
<br />
== A Book, a Web Browser and a Tablet: How Bibliotheca Alexandrina's Book Viewer Framework Makes It Possible ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Mohammed.abuouda|Mohammed Abu ouda]], Bibliotheca Alexandrina (The new Library of Alexandria)<br />
<br />
A lot of institutions around the world are engaged in multiple digitization projects aiming at preserving the human knowledge present in books and availing them through multiple channels to people around the whole globe. These efforts will sure help close the digital gap particularly with the arrival of affordable e-readers, mobile phones and network coverage. However, the digital reading experience has not yet arrived to its maximum potential. Many readers miss features they like in their good old books and wish to find them in their digital counterpart. In an attempt to create a unique digital reading experience, Bibliotheca Alexandria (BA) created a flexible book viewing framework that is currently used to access its current collection of more than 300,000 digital books in five different languages which includes the largest collection of digitized Arabic books.<br />
<br />
Using open source tools, BA used the framework to develop a modular book viewer that can be deployed in different environments and is currently at the heart of various BA projects. The Book viewer provides several features creating a more natural reading experience. As with physical books, the reader can now personalize the books he reads by adding annotations like highlights, underlines and sticky notes to capture his thoughts and ideas in addition to being able to share the book with friends on social networks. The reader can perform a search across the content of the book receiving highlighted search results within the pages of the book. More features can be further added to the book viewer through its plugin architecture.<br />
<br />
== Structured data NOW: seeding schema.org in library systems ==<br />
<br />
* [http://coffeecode.net Dan Scott], Laurentian University<br />
** Previous code4lib presentations: [https://archive.org/details/code4lib.conf.2008.pres.CouchDBsacrilege CouchDB is sacrilege... mmm, delicious sacrilege] at Code4Lib 2008<br />
<br />
The semantic web, linked data, and structured data are all fantastic ideas with a barrier imposed by implementation constraints. If their system does not allow customizations, or the institution lacks skilled human resources, it does not matter how enthused a given library might be about publishing structured data... it will not happen. However, if the software in use simply publishes structured data by default, then the web will be populated for free. Really! No extra resources necessary.<br />
<br />
This presentation highlights Dan's work with systems such as Evergreen, Koha, and VuFind to enable the publication of schema.org structured data out-of-the-box. Along the way, we reflect the current state of the W3C Schema.org Bibliographic Extension community group efforts to shape the evolution of the schema.org vocabulary. Finally, hold on tight as we contemplate next steps and the possibilities of a world where structured data is the norm on the web.<br />
<br />
== Towards Pasta Code Nirvana: Using JavaScript MVC to Fill Your Programming Ravioli ==<br />
<br />
* Bret Davidson, North Carolina State University Libraries, bret_davidson@ncsu.edu<br />
** Previous Code4Lib Presentations: [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_talks_proposals#Data-Driven_Documents:_Visualizing_library_data_with_D3.js Visualizing library data with D3.js] at Code4Lib 2013<br />
<br />
JavaScript MVC frameworks are ushering in a golden age of robust and responsive web applications that take advantage of evergreen browsers, performant JS engines, and the unprecedented reach provided by billions of personal computing devices. The web browser has emerged as the world’s most popular application runtime and the complexity[1] and scope of JavaScript applications has exploded accordingly. Server-side web frameworks like Rails and Django have helped developers adhere to best practices like modularity, dependency injection, and unit testing for years, practices that are now being applied to JavaScript development through projects like Backbone[2], Ember[3], and Angular[4].<br />
<br />
This talk will discuss the issues JavaScript MVC frameworks are trying to solve, common features like data binding, implications for the future of web development[5], and the appropriateness of JavaScript MVC for library applications.<br />
<br />
*[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghetti_code<br />
*[2]http://backbonejs.org<br />
*[3]http://emberjs.com<br />
*[4]http://angularjs.org<br />
*[5]http://tomdale.net/2013/09/progressive-enhancement-is-dead/<br />
<br />
== WebSockets for Real-Time and Interactive Interfaces ==<br />
<br />
* [http://ronallo.com Jason Ronallo], NCSU Libraries, jason_ronallo@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ronallo HTML5 Microdata and Schema.org] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/ronallo HTML5 Video Now!] 2013<br />
<br />
Watching the Google Analytics Real-Time dashboard for the first time was mesmerizing. As soon as someone visited a site, I could see what page they were on. For a digital collections site with a lot of images, it was fun to see what visitors were looking at. But getting from Google Analytics to the image or other content of what was currently being viewed was cumbersome. The real-time experience was something I wanted share with others. I'll show you how I used a WebSocket service to create a real-time interface to digital collections.<br />
<br />
In the Hunt Library at NCSU we have some large video walls. I wanted to make HTML-based exhibits that featured viewer interactions. I'll show you how I converted Listen to Wikipedia [1] into an bring-your-own-device interactive exhibit. With WebSockets any HTML page can be remote controlled by any internet connected device.<br />
<br />
I will attempt to include real-time audience participation.<br />
<br />
[1] http://listen.hatnote.com/<br />
<br />
== Rapid Development of Automated Tasks with the File Analyzer ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, Georgetown University Libraries, twb27@georgetown.edu<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Libraries have customized the File Analyzer and Metadata Harvester application (https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer) to solve a number of library automation challenges:<br />
* validating digitized and reformatted files<br />
* validating vendor statistics for counter compliance<br />
* preparing collections of digital files for archiving and ingest<br />
* manipulating ILS import and export files<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer application was used by the US National Archives to validate 3.5 million digitized images from the 1940 Census. After implementing a customized ingest workflow within the File Analyzer, the Georgetown University Libraries was able to process an ingest backlog of over a thousand files of digital resources into DigitalGeorgetown, the Libraries’ Digital Collections and Institutional Repository platform. Georgetown is currently developing customized workflows that integrate Apache Tika, BagIt, and Marc conversion utilities.<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer is a desktop application with a powerful framework for implementing customized file validation and transformation rules. As new rules are deployed, they are presented to users within a user interface that is easy (and powerful) to use.<br />
<br />
Learn about the functionality that is available for download, how you can use this tool to automate workflows from digital collections to ILS ingests to electronic resources statistics and also discuss the opportunities to collaborate on enhancements to this application!<br />
<br />
== GeoHydra: How to Build a Geospatial Digital Library with Fedora ==<br />
<br />
* [http://stanford.edu/~drh Darren Hardy], Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
Geographically-rich data are exploding and putting fear in those trying to<br />
tackle integrating them into existing digital library infrastructures.<br />
Building a spatial data infrastructure that integrates with your digital<br />
library infrastructure need not be a daunting task. We have successfully<br />
deployed a geospatial digital library infrastructure using Fedora and<br />
open-source geospatial software [1]. We'll discuss the primary design<br />
decisions and technologies that led to a production deployment within a few<br />
months. Briefly, our architecture revolves around discovery, delivery, and<br />
metadata pipelines using open-source OpenGeoPortal [2], Solr [3], GeoServer<br />
[4], PostGIS [5], and GeoNetwork [6] technologies, plus the proprietary ESRI<br />
ArcMap [7] -- the GIS industry's workhorse. Finally, we'll discuss the key<br />
skillsets needed to build and maintain a spatial data infrastructure.<br />
<br />
[1] http://foss4g.org<br />
[2] http://opengeoportal.org<br />
[3] http://lucene.apache.org/solr<br />
[4] http://geoserver.org<br />
[5] http://postgis.net<br />
[6] http://geonetwork-opensource.org<br />
[7] http://esri.com<br />
<br />
==Under the Hood of Hadoop Processing at OCLC Research ==<br />
<br />
[http://roytennant.com/ Roy Tennant]<br />
<br />
* Previous Code4Lib presentations: 2006: "The Case for Code4Lib 501c(3)"<br />
<br />
[http://hadoop.apache.org/ Apache Hadoop] is widely used by Yahoo!, Google, and many others to process massive amounts of data quickly. OCLC Research uses a 40-node compute cluster with Hadoop and HBase to process the 300 million MARC records of WorldCat in various ways. This presentation will explain how Hadoop MapReduce works and illustrate it with specific examples and code. The role of the jobtracker in both monitoring and reporting on processes will be explained. String searching WorldCat will also be demonstrated live.<br />
<br />
== Quick and Easy Data Visualization with Google Visualization API and Google Chart Libraries ==<br />
<br />
[http://bohyunkim.net/blog Bohyun Kim], Florida International University, bohyun.kim@fiu.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Do most of the data that your library collects stay in spreadsheets or are published as a static table with a series of boring numbers? Do your library stakeholders spend more time collecting the data than using it as a decision-making tool because the data is presented in a way that makes it hard for them [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery to quickly grasp its significance? ]<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an overview of [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/reference Google Visualization API] [2] and [http://developers.google.com/chart/ Google Chart Libraries] [3] to get you started on the way to quickly query and visualize your library data from remote data sources (e.g. a Google Spreadsheet or your own database) with (or without) cool-looking user-controls, animation effects, and even a dashboard.<br />
<br />
== Leap Motion + Rare Books: A hands-free way to view and interact with rare books in 3D ==<br />
<br />
[http://http://www.youtube.com/user/jpdenzer Juan Denzer], Binghamton University, jdenzer@binghamton.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
As rare books become more delicate over time, making them available to the public becomes harder. We at Binghamton University Library have developed an application that makes it easier to view rare books without ever having to touch them. We have combined the Leap Motion hands-free device and 3D rendered models to create a new virtual experience for the viewer.<br />
<br />
The application allows the user to rotate and zoom in on a 3D representation of a rare book. The user is also able to ‘open’ the virtual book and flip through it using a natural user interface. Such as swiping the hand left or right to turn the page.<br />
<br />
The application is built on the .Net framework and is written in C#. 3D models are created using simple 3D software such as sketchup or Blender. Scans of the book cover and spine are created using simple flatbed scanners. The inside pages are scanned using overhead scanners. <br />
<br />
This talk with discuss the technologies used in developing the application and virtually any library could implement the application with virtually no coding at all. This presentation will have a demonstration of the software and also a chance for audience members to experience the Rare Book Leap Motion App themselves.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Course Reserves Unleashed! ==<br />
<br />
* Bobbi Fox, Library Technology Services, Harvard University, bobbi_fox@harvard.edu<br />
* Gloria Korsman, Andover-Harvard Theological Library<br />
** No previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Hey kids! Remember when SOAP was used for something other than washing? Our sophisticated (and highly functional) Course Reserves Request system does!<br />
<br />
However, while the system is great for submitting and processing course reserve requests, the student-facing presentation through Havard’s home-grown -- and soon to be replaced -- LMS leaves a lot to be desired. <br />
<br />
Follow along as we leverage Solr 4 as a No-SQL database, along with more progressive RESTful API techniques, to release Reserves data into the wild without interfering with reserves request processing -- and, in the process, open up the opportunity for other schools to feed their data in as well.<br />
<br />
== We Are All Disabled! Universal Web Design Making Web Services Accessible for Everyone ==<br />
<br />
Cynthia Ng, Accessibility Librarian, CILS at Langara College<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations (not counting lightning talks)<br />
<br />
We’re building and improving tools and services all the time, but do you only develop for the “average” user or add things for “disabled” users? We all use “assistive” technology accessing information in a multitude of ways with different platforms, devices, etc. Let’s focus on providing web services that are accessible to everyone without it being onerous or ugly. The aim is to get you thinking about what you can do to make web-based services and content more accessible for all from the beginning or with small amounts of effort whether you're a developer or not.<br />
<br />
The goal of the presentation is to provide both developers and content creators with information on simple, practical ways to make web content and web services more accessible. However, rather than thinking about putting in extra effort or making adjustment for those with disabilities, I want to help people think about how to make their websites more accessible for all users through universal web design.<br />
<br />
== Personalize your Google Analytics Data with Custom Events and Variables ==<br />
<br />
[http://joshwilson.net Josh Wilson], Systems Integration Librarian, State Library of North Carolina - joshwilsonnc@gmail.com<br />
<br />
At the State Library of North Carolina, we had more specific questions about the use of our digital collections than standard GA could provide. A few implementations of custom events and custom variables later, we have our answers.<br />
<br />
I'll demonstrate how these analytics add-ons work, and why implementation can sometimes be more complicated than just adding a few lines of JavaScript to your ga.js. I'll discuss some specific examples in use at the SLNC:<br />
<br />
* Capturing the content of specific metadata fields in CONTENTdm as Custom Events <br />
* Recording Drupal taxonomy terms as Custom Variables<br />
<br />
In both instances, this data deepened our understanding of how our sites and collections were being used, and in turn, we were able to report usage more accurately to content contributors and other stakeholders.<br />
<br />
More on: [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/eventTrackerGuide GA Custom Events] | [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/gaTrackingCustomVariables GA Custom Variables]<br />
<br />
<br />
== Behold Fedora 4: The Incredible Shrinking Repository! ==<br />
<br />
Esmé Cowles, UC San Diego Library. Previous talk: [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/cowles-critchlow-westbrook All Teh Metadatas Re-Revisited] (2013)<br />
<br />
* One repository contains untold numbers of digital objects and powers many Hydra and Islandora apps<br />
* It speaks RDF, but contains no triplestore! (triplestores sold separately, SPARQL Update may be involved, some restrictions apply)<br />
* Flexible enough to tie itself in knots implementing storage and access control policies<br />
* Witness feats of strength and scalability, with dramatically increased performance and clustering<br />
* Plumb the depths of bottomless hierarchies, and marvel at the metadata woven into the very fabric of the repository<br />
* Ponder the paradox of ingesting large files by not ingesting them<br />
* Be amazed as Fedora 4 swallows other systems whole (including Fedora 3 repositories)<br />
* Watch novice developers setup Fedora 4 from scratch, with just a handful of incantations to Git and Maven<br />
<br />
The Fedora Commons Repository is the foundation of many digital collections, e-research, digital library, archives, digital preservation, institutional repository and open access publishing systems. This talk will focus on how Fedora 4 improves core repository functionality, adds new features, maintains backwards compatibility, and addresses the shortcomings of Fedora 3.<br />
<br />
== Organic Free-Range API Development - Making Web Services That You Will Actually Want to Consume ==<br />
<br />
Steve Meyer and Karen Coombs, OCLC<br />
<br />
Building web services can have great benefits by providing reusability of data and functionality. Underpinning your applications with a web service will allow you to write code once and support multiple environments: your library's web app, mobile applications, the embedded widget in your campus portal. However, building a web service is its own kind of artful programming. Doing it well requires attention to many of the same techniques and requirements as building web applications, though with different outcomes. <br />
<br />
So what are the usability principles for web services? How do you build a web service that you (and others) will actually want to use? In this talk, we’ll share some of the lessons learned - the good, the bad, and the ugly - through OCLC's work on the WorldCat Metadata API. This web service is a sophisticated API that provides external clients with read and write access to WorldCat data. It provides a model to help aspiring API creators navigate the potential complications of crafting a web service. We'll cover:<br />
<br />
* Loose coupling of data assets and resource-oriented data modeling at the core<br />
* Coding to standards vs. exposure of an internal data model<br />
* Authentication and security for web services: API Keys, Digital Signing, OAuth Flows<br />
* Building web services that behave as a suite so it looks like the left hand knows what the right hand is doing<br />
<br />
So at the end of the day, your team will know your API is a very good egg after all. <br />
<br />
If accepted, the presenters intend to produce and share a Quick Guide for building a web service that will reflect content presented in the talk.<br />
<br />
== Lucene's Latest (for Libraries) ==<br />
<br />
erik.hatcher@lucidworks.com<br />
<br />
Lucene powers the search capabilities of practically all library discovery platforms, by way of Solr, etc. The Lucene project evolves rapidly, and it's a full-time job to keep up with the ever improving features and scalability. This talk will distill and showcase the most relevant(!) advancements to date.<br />
<br />
== The Why and How of Very Large Displays in Libraries. ==<br />
<br />
* Cory Lown, NCSU Libraries, cwlown@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib Presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/lown How People Search the Library from a Single Search Box] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/orphanides_lown_lynema Enhancing Discoverability with Virtual Shelf Browse] 2010<br />
<br />
Built into the walls of NC State's new Hunt Library are several [http://www.christiedigital.com/en-us/digital-signage/products/microtiles/pages/microtiles-digital-signage-video-wall.aspx Christie MicroTile Display Wall Systems]. What does a library do with a display that's seven feet tall and over twenty feet wide? I'll talk about why libraries might want large displays like this, what we're doing with them right now, and what we might do with them in the future. I'll talk about how these displays factor into planning for new and existing web projects. And I'll get into the fun details of how you build web applications that scale from the very small browser window on a phone all the way up to a browser window with about 14 million pixels (about 10 million more than a dual 24" monitor desktop setup).<br />
<br />
== Your Library, Anywhere: A Modern, Responsive Library Catalogue at University of Toronto Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Bilal Khalid, Gordon Belray, Lisa Gayhart (lisa.gayhart@utoronto.ca)<br />
<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations<br />
<br />
With the recent surge in the mobile device market and an ever expanding patron base with increasingly divergent levels of technical ability, the University of Toronto Libraries embarked on the development of a new catalogue discovery layer to fit the needs of its diverse users. <br />
<br />
[http://search.library.utoronto.ca The result]: a mobile-friendly, flexible and intuitive web application that brings the full power of a faceted library catalogue to users without compromising quality or performance, employing Responsive Web Design principles. This talk will discuss: application development; service improvements; interface design; and user outreach, testing, and project communications. Feedback and questions from the audience are very welcome. If time runs short, we will be available for questions and conversation after the presentation.<br />
<br />
Note: A version of this content has been provisionally accepted as an article for Code4Lib Journal, January 2014 publication.)<br />
<br />
== All Tiled Up ==<br />
<br />
* Mike Graves, MIT Libraries (mgraves@mit.edu)<br />
<br />
You've got maps. You even scanned and georeferenced them. Now what? Running a full GIS stack can be expensive, and overkill in some cases. The good news is that you have a lot more options now than you did just a few years ago. I'd like to present some lighter weight solutions to making georeferenced images available on the Web.<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an introduction to MBTiles. I'll go over what they are, how you create them, how you use them and why you would use them.<br />
<br />
== The Great War: Image Interoperability to Facebook ==<br />
<br />
* Rob Sanderson, Los Alamos National Laboratory (azaroth42@gmail.com)<br />
** (Code4Lib 2006: [http://www.code4lib.org/2006/sanderson | Library Text Mining])<br />
* Rob Warren, Carleton University<br />
** No previous presentations<br />
<br />
Using a pipeline constructed from Linked Open Data and other interoperability specifications, it is possible to merge and re-use image and textual data from distributed library collections to build new, useful tools and applications. Starting with the OAI-PMH interface to ContentDM, we will take you on a tour through the International Image Interoperability Framework and Shared Canvas, to a cross-institutional viewer, and image analysis for the purposes of building a historical Facebook from finding and tagging people in photographs. The World War One collections are drawn from multiple institutions and merged by the machine learning code.<br />
<br />
The presentation will focus on the (open source) toolchain and the benefits of the use of standards throughout: OAI-PMH to get the metadata, IIIF for interaction with the images, the Shared Canvas ontology for describing collections of digitized objects, Open Annotation for tagging things in the images and specialized ontologies that are specific to the contents. The tools include standard RDF / OWL technologies, JSON-LD, imagemagick and OpenCV for image analysis.<br />
<br />
== Visualizing Solr Search Results with D3.js for User-Friendly Navigation of Large Results Sets ==<br />
<br />
*Julia Bauder, Grinnell College Libraries (bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
*No previous presentations at national Code4Lib conferences<br />
<br />
As the corpus of articles, books, and other resources searched by discovery systems continues to get bigger, searchers are more and more frequently confronted with unmanageably large numbers of results. How can we help users make sense of 10,000 hits and find the ones they actually want? Facets help, but making sense of a gigantic sidebar of facets is not an easy task for users, either.<br />
During this talk, I will explain how we will soon be using Solr 4’s pivot queries and hierarchical visualizations (e.g., treemaps) from D3.js to let patrons view and manipulate search results. We will be doing this with our VuFind 2.0 catalog, but this technique will work with any system running Solr 4. I will also talk about early student reaction to our tests of these visualization features.<br />
<br />
== PeerLibrary – open source cloud based collaborative library ==<br />
<br />
[https://github.com/peerlibrary/peerlibrary PeerLibrary is a new open source project] and a cloud service providing collaborative reading, sharing and storing. Users can upload publications they want to read (currently in PDF format), read them in the browser in real-time with others, highlight, annotate and organize their own or collaborative library. PeerLibrary provides a search engine to search over all uploaded open access publications. Additionally, it aims to collaboratively aggregate the open layer of knowledge on top of this publications through public annotations and references user will add to publications. In this way publications would not just be available to read, but accessible to the general public as well. Currently, it is aiming at scientific community and scientific publications.<br />
<br />
See [http://blog.peerlibrary.org/post/63458789185/screencast-previewing-the-peerlibrary-project screencast here].<br />
<br />
It is still in development and beta launch is planned at the end of November.<br />
<br />
== Who was where when, or finding biographical articles on Wikipedia by place and time ==<br />
<br />
* [http://morton-owens.info Emily Morton-Owens], The Seattle Public Library (presenting on work from NYU)<br />
* No previous c4l presentations<br />
<br />
It's easy to answer the question "What important people were in Paris in 1939?" But what about Virginia in the 1750s or Scandinavia in the 14th century? I created a tool that allows you to search for biographies in a generally applicable way, using a map interface. I would like to present updates to my thesis project, which combines a crawler written in Java that extracts information from Wikipedia articles, with a MongoDB data store and a frontend in Python.<br />
<br />
The input to the project is freetext of entire articles in Wikipedia; this is important to allow us to pick up Benjamin Franklin not just in the single most obvious place of Philadelphia but also in London, Paris, Boston, etc. I can talk about my experiments disambiguating place names (approaches pioneered on newspaper articles were actually unhelpful on this type of text) and setting up a processing queue that does not become mired in the biographies of every human who ever played soccer. I also want to mitigate some of the implementation choices I made due to my academic deadline and improve the accuracy/usability.<br />
<br />
What I hope to show is that I was able to develop a novel and useful reference tool automatically, using fairly simple heuristics that are a far cry from hand-cataloging familiar to many librarians.<br />
<br />
You can try out [http://linserv1.cims.nyu.edu:48866/ the original version] (this server is inconveniently set to be updated/rebooted on 11/8--may be temporarily unavailable)<br />
<br />
== Good!, DRY, and Dynamic: Content Strategy for Libraries (Especially the Big Ones) ==<br />
<br />
*Michael Schofield, Nova Southeastern University Libraries, mschofield@nova.edu<br />
*No previous code4lib presentations.<br />
<br />
The responsibilities of the #libweb are exploding [it’s a good thing] and it is no longer uncommon for libraries to manage or even home-grow multiple applications and sites. Often it is at this point where the web people begin to suffer the absence of a content strategy when, say, business hours need to be updated sitewide a half-dozen times.<br />
<br />
We were already feeling this crunch when we decided to further complicate the Nova Southeastern University Libraries by splitting the main library website into two. The Alvin Sherman Library, Research, and Information Technology Center is a unique joint-use facility that serves not only the academic community but the public of Broward County - and marketing a hyperblend of content through one portal just wasn't cutting it. With a web team of two, we knew that managing all this rehashed, disparate content was totally unsustainable.<br />
<br />
I want to share in this talk how I went about making our library content DRY (“don’t repeat yourself”): input content in one place--blurbs, policies, featured events, featured databases, book reviews, business hours, and so on.--and syndicate it everywhere - even, sometimes, dynamically target that content for specific audiences or context. It is a presentation that is a little about workflow, a little more about browser and context detection, a tangent about content-modeling the CMS, and a lot about APIs, syndication, and performance.<br />
<br />
== No code, no root, no problem? Adventures in SaaS and library discovery ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:erwhite@vcu.edu Erin White, VCU]<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
In 2012 VCU was an eager early adopter of Ex Libris' cloud service Alma as an ILS, ERM, link resolver, and single-stop, de-silo'd public-facing discovery tool. This has been a disruptive change that has shifted our systems staff's day-to-day work, relationships with others in the library, and relationships with vendors.<br />
<br />
I'll share some of our experiences and takeaways from implementing and maintaining a cloud service:<br />
* Seeking disruption and finding it<br />
* Changing expectations of service and the reality of unplanned downtime<br />
* Communication and problem resolution with non-IT library staff<br />
* Working with a vendor that uses agile development methodology<br />
* Benefits and pitfalls of creating customizations and code workarounds<br />
* Changes in library IT/coders' roles with SaaS<br />
<br />
...as well as thoughts on the philosophy of library discovery vs real-life experiences in moving to a single-search model.<br />
<br />
== Building for others (and ourselves): the Avalon Media System ==<br />
* [mailto:michael.klein@northwestern.edu Michael B Klein], Senior Software Developer, Northwestern University <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/metz_klein Public Datasets in the Cloud] (code4lib 2010)<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/klein-rogers The Avalon Media System: A Next Generation Hydra Head For Audio and Video Delivery] (code4lib 2013)<br />
* [mailto:j-rudder@northwestern.edu Julie Rudder], Digital Initiatives Project Manager, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
[http://www.avalonmediasystem.org/ Avalon Media System] is a collaborative effort between development teams at Northwestern and Indiana Universities. Our goal is to produce an open source media management platform that works well for us, but is also widely adopted and contributed to by other institutions. We believe that building a strong user and contributor community is vital to the success and longevity of the project, and have developed the system with this goal in mind. We will share lessons learned, pains and successes we’ve had releasing two versions of the application since last year. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will cover our experiences:<br />
* providing flexible, admin-friendly distribution and installation options<br />
* building with abstraction, customization and local integrations in mind<br />
* prioritizing features (user stories)<br />
* attracting code contributions from other institutions<br />
* gathering community feedback <br />
* creating a product rather than a bag of parts<br />
<br />
== How to check your data to provide a great data product? Data quality as a key product feature at Europeana ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:Peter.Kiraly@kb.nl Péter Király] portal backend developer, Europeana<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
[http://Europeana.eu/ Europeana.eu] - Europe's digital library, archive and museum - aggregates more than 30 million metadata records from more than 2200 institutions. The records come from libraries, archives, museums and every other kind of cultural institution, from very different systems and metadata schemas, and are typically transformed several times until they are ingested into the Europeana data repository. Europeana builds a consolidated database from these records, creating reliable and consistent services for end-users (a search portal, search widget, mobile apps, thematic sites etc.) and an API, which supports our strategic goeal of data for reuse in education, creative industries, and the cultural sector. A reliable "data product" is thus at the core of our own software products, as well as those of our API partners.<br />
<br />
Much effort is needed to smooth out local differences in the metadata curation practice of our data providers. We need a solid framework to measure the consistency of our data and provide feedback to decision-makers inside and outside the organisation. We can also use this metrics framework to ask content providers to improve their own metadata. Of course, a data-quality-driven approach requires that we also improve the data transformation steps of the Europeana ingestion process itself. Data quality issues heavily define what new features we are able to create in our user interfaces and API, and might actually affect the design and implementation of our underlying data structure, the Europeana Data Model.<br />
<br />
In the presentation I briefly describe the Europeana metadata ingestion process, show the data quality metrics, the measuring techniques (using the Europeana API, Solr and MongoDB queries), some typical problems (both trivial and difficult ones), and finally the feedback mechanism we propose to deploy.<br />
<br />
Keywords: Europeana, data quality, EDM, API, Apache Solr, MongoDB, #opendata, #openglam<br />
<br />
== Teach your Fedora to Fly: scaling out your digital repository ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:acoburn@amherst.edu Aaron Coburn], Software Developer, Amherst College<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
Fedora is a great repository system for managing large collections of digital objects, but what happens when a popular food magazine begins directing a large number of readers to a manuscript showing Emily Dickinson’s own recipe for doughnuts? While Fedora excels in its support of XML-based metadata, it doesn’t always perform well under a high volume of traffic. Nor is it especially tolerant of network or hardware failures.<br />
<br />
This presentation will show how we are making heavy use of a fedora repository while at the same time insulating it almost entirely from any web traffic. Starting with a distributed web front-end built with Node.js, and caching most of the user-accessible content from Fedora in an elastic, fault-tolerant Riak (NoSQL) cluster, we have eliminated nearly all single points of failure in the system. It also means that our production system is spread across twelve separate servers, where asynchrony and Map-Reduce are king. And aside from being blazing fast, it is also entirely Hydra-compliant.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, we will attempt to answer the question: if fedora crashes and the visitors to your site don’t notice, did it really fail?<br />
<br />
<br />
== Using Open Source Software and Freeware to Preserve and Deliver Digital Videos ==<br />
* [mailto:wfang@kinoy.rutgers.edu Wei Fang], Head of Digital Services, Rutgers University Law Library<br />
* Jiebei Luo, Digital Projects Initiative Intern, Rutgers University<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
The Rutgers University Law Library is the official digital repository of the New Jersey Supreme Court oral arguments since 2002. This large video collection contains approximately 3,000 videos with a total of 400 GB or 6,000 viewing hours. With the expansion of this collection, the existing database and the static website could not efficiently support the library’s daily operations and meet its patrons’ search needs. <br />
By utilizing open source software and freeware such as Ubuntu, FFmpeg, Solr and Drupal, the library is able to develop a complete solution to re-encoding videos, embedding subtitles, incorporating Solr search engine and content management system to support full-text subtitle search, automatically updating video metadata records in the library catalog system and eventually providing a plug-in free HTML 5-based Web interface for patrons to view the videos online.<br />
The aspects below will be presented in detail at the conference:<br />
* Video codecs comparison <br />
* Server-end batch video encoding/re-encoding<br />
* HTML 5 video tag and embedding subtitles<br />
* Incorporating search engine Solr and content management tool Drupal with the database to retrieve videos by full-text search especially in subtitle files<br />
* Incorporating video metadata with the library catalog system<br />
<br />
== Shared Vision, Shared Resources: the Curate Institutional Repository ==<br />
* Dan Brubaker Horst, University of Notre Dame <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011/JohnsonHorst A Community-Based Approach to Developing a Digital Exhibit at Notre Dame Using the Hydra Framework] <br />
* Julie Rudder, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous presentations<br />
<br />
Curate is being collaboratively developed by several institutions in the Hydra community who share the need and vision for a Fedora-backed Institutional Repository. The first release of Curate was a collaboration between Notre Dame and Northwestern University, along with Digital Curation Experts (DCE) - a vendor hired jointly by our two institutions. Powered by the Hydra engine Sufia, the team worked quickly to release the first version of Curate in October 2013 which provides a basic self-deposit system that has support for various content types, collection building, DOI minting, and user profile creation. From the very beginning we have built Curate to be easy to theme and extend in order to ease the process of installation and use by other institutions.<br />
<br />
In December 2013, additional partners will join the project including: Indiana University, the University of Cincinnati and the University of Virginia. Each institution contributes resources to the project in order to further our common goal to create a product that fits our needs and has a sustainable future.Together we will tackle additional content types (like complex data, software, media), administrative collections and more. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will include:<br />
* a brief demonstration of Curate and technical overview<br />
* why and how we work together<br />
* why build Curate<br />
* the future of the project<br />
<br />
== Solr, Cloud and Blacklight ==<br />
* David Jiao, Library Information Systems, Indiana University at Bloomington, djiao@indiana.edu<br />
** No previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
SolrCloud refers to the distributed capabilities in Solr4. It is designed to offer a highly available, fault tolerant environment by organizing data into multiple pieces that can be hosted on multiple machines with replicas, and providing a centralized cluster configuration and management. <br />
<br />
At Indiana University, we are upgrading our Solr backend for our recently released Blacklight-based OPAC system from Solr 1.4 to Solr4, and we also put up efforts to build a private cloud of Solr4 servers. In this talk, I will persent certain features of SolrCloud, including distributed requests, fault tolerance, near real time indexing/searching, and configuration management with Zookeeper, and our experiences of utilizing these features to provide better performance and architecture for our OPAC system, which serves over 7 million bibliographic records to over 100 thousand students and faculty members. I will also discuss some practical lessons learned from our SolrCloud setup/upgrade and the integration of the new SolrCloud to our customized Blacklight system. <br />
<br />
== Leveraging XSD's for Reflective, Live Dataset Support in Institutional Repositories ==<br />
* [mailto:msulliva@ufl.edu Mark Sullivan], Library Information Technology, University of Florida<br />
** No previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
The University of Florida Libraries are currently adding support for active datasets into our METS-based institutional repository software. This ongoing project enables the library to be a partner in current, or long-running, data-driven projects around the university by providing tangible short-term and long-term benefits to the projects. The system assists project teams by storing and providing access to their data, while supporting online filtering and sorting of the data, custom queries, and adding and editing of the data by authorized users. We are also exploring simple data visualizations to allow users to perform basic graphical and geographic queries. Currently the system is being developed using XSD's describing XML datasets, but this model should easily scale to support SQL datasets or large datasets supported by Hadoop or iRODS.<br />
<br />
This work is being integrated in the open source [http://sobek.ufl.edu SobekCM Digital Content Management System] which is built on a pair-tree structure of METS resources with [http://ufdc.ufl.edu/design/webcontent/sobekcm/SobekCM_Resource_Object.pdf rich metadata support] including DC, MODS, MARC, VRACore, DarwinCore, IEE-LOM, GML/KML, schema.org microdata, and many other standard schemas. The system has emphasized online, distributed creation and maintenance of resources including geo-placement and geographic searching of resources, building structure maps (table of contents) visually online, and a broad suite of curator tools. <br />
<br />
This work is presented as a model which could be implemented in other systems as well. We will demonstrate current support and discuss our upcoming roadmap to provide complete support.<br />
<br />
== Dead-simple Video Content Management: Let Your Filesystem Do The Work ==<br />
<br />
* Andreas Orphanides, NCSU Libraries (akorphan (at) ncsu.edu)<br />
** (never led or soloed a C4L presentation)<br />
<br />
Content management is hard. To keep all the moving parts in order, and to maintain a layer of separation between the system and content creators (who are frequently not technical experts), we typically turn to content management systems like Drupal. But even Drupal and its kin require significant overhead and present a not inconsiderable learning curve for nontechnical users.<br />
<br />
In some contexts it's possible -- and desirable -- to manage content in a more streamlined, lightweight way, with a minimum of fuss and technical infrastructure. In this presentation I'll share a simple MVC-like architecture for managing video content for playback on the web, which uses a combination of Apache's mod_rewrite module and your server's filesystem structure to provide an automated approach to video content management that's easy to implement and provides a low barrier to content updates: friendly to content creators and technology implementors alike. Even better, the basic method is HTML5-friendly, and can be integrated into your favorite content management system if you've got permissions for creating templates.<br />
<br />
== Managing Discovery ==<br />
<br />
* Andrew Pasterfield, Senior Programmer/Systems Analyst, University of Calgary Library, ampaster@ucalgary.ca<br />
**No previous code4lib presentations <br><br><br />
In fall 2012 the University of Calgary Library launched a new home page that incorporated a Summon powered<br />
Single Search Box with customized “bento box” results display. Search at the U of C now combines a range of<br />
metadata sources for discovery and customized mapping of a database recommender and LibGuide into a unified<br />
display. Further customizations include a non Google Analytics/non proxy method to log clicks.<br><br><br />
<br />
This presentation will discuss the technical details of bringing the various systems together into one display interface to increase discovery at the U of C Library.<br />
<br />
http://library.ucalgary.ca<br />
<br />
<br />
== Sorting it out: a piece of the User Centred Design Process ==<br />
<br />
* Cindy Beggs, [http://www.akendi.com/aboutus/management/ Akendi], cindy@akendi.com<br />
<br />
This talk is about how to apply a user centered design methodology to the process of creating an information architecture. Participants learn the fundamentals of UCD and how card sorting and reverse card sorting enable us to isolate the content we present on screen from the layouts and visuals of those screens. We talk about ways to identify who will be using the information architecture you are creating and why we need to know how it will be used.<br />
<br />
What will attendees takes away from your talk?<br />
The criticality of involving “real” end users in the process of creating an information architecture. The basics of following a user-centered-design process in the creation of best in class, content-rich, digital products.<br />
<br />
Cindy Beggs has been working in the “information industry” for over 25 years. A librarian by profession, she has spent decades helping users figure out how to find their way through large bodies of content. Her insights into how people seek information, her empathy for those who find it a challenge and her practical experience helping organizations figure out how to best structure their content contribute to her success as an information architect with both clients and trainees. (http://www.akendi.com/aboutus/management/)<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[:Category:Code4Lib2014]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=398242014 Prepared Talk Proposals2013-11-08T17:37:33Z<p>Wickr: Decided to remove heading, same as page title</p>
<hr />
<div>'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
<br />
* ''Projects'' you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* ''Tools and technologies'' – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* ''Technical issues'' - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* ''Relevant non-technical issues'' – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
'''To Propose a Talk'''<br />
* Log in to the wiki in order to submit a proposal. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
* Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
* If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist us in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
As in past years, the Code4Lib community will vote on proposals that they would like to see included in the program. This year, however, only the top 10 proposals will be guaranteed a slot at the conference. Additional presentations will be selected by the Program Committee in an effort to ensure diversity in program content. Community votes will, of course, still weigh heavily in these decisions.<br />
<br />
Presenters whose proposals are selected for inclusion in the program will be guaranteed an opportunity to register for the conference. The standard conference registration fee will still apply.<br />
<br />
''Proposals can be submitted through '''Friday, November 8, 2013, at 5pm PST'''''. Voting will commence on November 18, 2013 and continue through December 6, 2013. The final line-up of presentations will be announced in early January, 2014.<br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
<br />
==Creating a new Greek-Dutch dictionary==<br />
* Caspar Treijtel, University of Amsterdam, c.treijtel@uva.nl<br />
<br />
At present, no complete dictionary of (ancient) Greek-Dutch is available online. A new dictionary is currently under construction at Leiden University, with software being developed at the University of Amsterdam. The team in Leiden has already begun preparation of the data, with at this moment about 6,000 approved lemmas. The ultimate goal is to produce both a print version and online open access version from the same source documents. The software needed for this has been made in a project that was funded by CLARIN-NL.<br />
<br />
Migrator<br />
<br />
For the production of lemmas we have implemented an advanced workflow. The (generally non-technical) users create lemmas using MS Word, which is both familiar and easy to use. We have developed a custom software module that carefully migrates the Word documents into deeply structured XML by analyzing the structure and semantics of the lemmas, and falling back on heuristics in ambiguous cases. While having initially envisioned the oXygen XML Author component as the main tool for creating new lemmas, we obtained excellent results with the migrator module, and decided therefore to continue using MS Word as the primary composition tool. The main advantage of this is that the editors are much more familiar with Word than with any other WYSIWYG editor. Lemmas that have been migrated to XML are stored in an XML database and can be further edited using oXygen XML Author.<br />
<br />
Lemmatizer<br />
<br />
Greek morphology is complicated. In order to use a dictionary effectively, a rather high level of initial language competence is necessary for the user to be able to relate the word form s/he finds in a text to the correct basic lemma form, where the definition of the word can be found. Using a Greek morphological database we have been able to facilitate the search for lemmas. A ‘lemmatizer’ module gives the possible parsings of the word forms and the lemmas they can be derived from. This enables the user to type in the word as found in the text and be redirected to the correct lemma.<br />
<br />
Visualization<br />
<br />
For the online dictionary we have implemented a visualization module that allows the user to view multiple lemmas at once. The implementation of this module has been done using the Javascript framework MooTools. The result is a viewer that performs really well and is run by maintainable Javascript code.<br />
<br />
The online dictionary is still being worked on, have a look at http://www.woordenboekgrieks.nl/ for the beta version. A newer test version with additional features can be found here: http://angel.ic.uva.nl:8600/.<br />
<br />
Credits<br />
<br />
* construction of the dictionary: Prof. Ineke Sluiter, Classics department of Leiden University; Prof. Albert Rijksbaron, University of Amsterdam<br />
* publisher of the dictionary: Amsterdam University Press<br />
* design/typesetting dictionary: TaT Zetwerk (http://www.tatzetwerk.nl/)<br />
* software development: Digital Production Center, University Library, University of Amsterdam<br />
* project funding: CLARIN-NL (http://www.clarin.nl/)<br />
* morphological database for use by the lemmatizer: courtesy of Prof. Helma Dik, University of Chicago (based on data of the Perseus Project)<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
== Using Drupal to drive alternative presentation systems ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Recently, we have been building systems that use angular.js, Rails, or other systems for presentation, while leveraging Drupal's sophisticated content management capabilities on the back end.<br />
<br />
So far, these have been one-way systems, but as we move to Drupal 8 we are beginning to explore ways to further decouple the presentation and CMS functions.<br />
<br />
== A Book, a Web Browser and a Tablet: How Bibliotheca Alexandrina's Book Viewer Framework Makes It Possible ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Mohammed.abuouda|Mohammed Abu ouda]], Bibliotheca Alexandrina (The new Library of Alexandria)<br />
<br />
A lot of institutions around the world are engaged in multiple digitization projects aiming at preserving the human knowledge present in books and availing them through multiple channels to people around the whole globe. These efforts will sure help close the digital gap particularly with the arrival of affordable e-readers, mobile phones and network coverage. However, the digital reading experience has not yet arrived to its maximum potential. Many readers miss features they like in their good old books and wish to find them in their digital counterpart. In an attempt to create a unique digital reading experience, Bibliotheca Alexandria (BA) created a flexible book viewing framework that is currently used to access its current collection of more than 300,000 digital books in five different languages which includes the largest collection of digitized Arabic books.<br />
<br />
Using open source tools, BA used the framework to develop a modular book viewer that can be deployed in different environments and is currently at the heart of various BA projects. The Book viewer provides several features creating a more natural reading experience. As with physical books, the reader can now personalize the books he reads by adding annotations like highlights, underlines and sticky notes to capture his thoughts and ideas in addition to being able to share the book with friends on social networks. The reader can perform a search across the content of the book receiving highlighted search results within the pages of the book. More features can be further added to the book viewer through its plugin architecture.<br />
<br />
== Structured data NOW: seeding schema.org in library systems ==<br />
<br />
* [http://coffeecode.net Dan Scott], Laurentian University<br />
** Previous code4lib presentations: [https://archive.org/details/code4lib.conf.2008.pres.CouchDBsacrilege CouchDB is sacrilege... mmm, delicious sacrilege] at Code4Lib 2008<br />
<br />
The semantic web, linked data, and structured data are all fantastic ideas with a barrier imposed by implementation constraints. If their system does not allow customizations, or the institution lacks skilled human resources, it does not matter how enthused a given library might be about publishing structured data... it will not happen. However, if the software in use simply publishes structured data by default, then the web will be populated for free. Really! No extra resources necessary.<br />
<br />
This presentation highlights Dan's work with systems such as Evergreen, Koha, and VuFind to enable the publication of schema.org structured data out-of-the-box. Along the way, we reflect the current state of the W3C Schema.org Bibliographic Extension community group efforts to shape the evolution of the schema.org vocabulary. Finally, hold on tight as we contemplate next steps and the possibilities of a world where structured data is the norm on the web.<br />
<br />
== Towards Pasta Code Nirvana: Using JavaScript MVC to Fill Your Programming Ravioli ==<br />
<br />
* Bret Davidson, North Carolina State University Libraries, bret_davidson@ncsu.edu<br />
** Previous Code4Lib Presentations: [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_talks_proposals#Data-Driven_Documents:_Visualizing_library_data_with_D3.js Visualizing library data with D3.js] at Code4Lib 2013<br />
<br />
JavaScript MVC frameworks are ushering in a golden age of robust and responsive web applications that take advantage of evergreen browsers, performant JS engines, and the unprecedented reach provided by billions of personal computing devices. The web browser has emerged as the world’s most popular application runtime and the complexity[1] and scope of JavaScript applications has exploded accordingly. Server-side web frameworks like Rails and Django have helped developers adhere to best practices like modularity, dependency injection, and unit testing for years, practices that are now being applied to JavaScript development through projects like Backbone[2], Ember[3], and Angular[4].<br />
<br />
This talk will discuss the issues JavaScript MVC frameworks are trying to solve, common features like data binding, implications for the future of web development[5], and the appropriateness of JavaScript MVC for library applications.<br />
<br />
*[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghetti_code<br />
*[2]http://backbonejs.org<br />
*[3]http://emberjs.com<br />
*[4]http://angularjs.org<br />
*[5]http://tomdale.net/2013/09/progressive-enhancement-is-dead/<br />
<br />
== WebSockets for Real-Time and Interactive Interfaces ==<br />
<br />
* [http://ronallo.com Jason Ronallo], NCSU Libraries, jason_ronallo@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ronallo HTML5 Microdata and Schema.org] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/ronallo HTML5 Video Now!] 2013<br />
<br />
Watching the Google Analytics Real-Time dashboard for the first time was mesmerizing. As soon as someone visited a site, I could see what page they were on. For a digital collections site with a lot of images, it was fun to see what visitors were looking at. But getting from Google Analytics to the image or other content of what was currently being viewed was cumbersome. The real-time experience was something I wanted share with others. I'll show you how I used a WebSocket service to create a real-time interface to digital collections.<br />
<br />
In the Hunt Library at NCSU we have some large video walls. I wanted to make HTML-based exhibits that featured viewer interactions. I'll show you how I converted Listen to Wikipedia [1] into an bring-your-own-device interactive exhibit. With WebSockets any HTML page can be remote controlled by any internet connected device.<br />
<br />
I will attempt to include real-time audience participation.<br />
<br />
[1] http://listen.hatnote.com/<br />
<br />
== Rapid Development of Automated Tasks with the File Analyzer ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, Georgetown University Libraries, twb27@georgetown.edu<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Libraries have customized the File Analyzer and Metadata Harvester application (https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer) to solve a number of library automation challenges:<br />
* validating digitized and reformatted files<br />
* validating vendor statistics for counter compliance<br />
* preparing collections of digital files for archiving and ingest<br />
* manipulating ILS import and export files<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer application was used by the US National Archives to validate 3.5 million digitized images from the 1940 Census. After implementing a customized ingest workflow within the File Analyzer, the Georgetown University Libraries was able to process an ingest backlog of over a thousand files of digital resources into DigitalGeorgetown, the Libraries’ Digital Collections and Institutional Repository platform. Georgetown is currently developing customized workflows that integrate Apache Tika, BagIt, and Marc conversion utilities.<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer is a desktop application with a powerful framework for implementing customized file validation and transformation rules. As new rules are deployed, they are presented to users within a user interface that is easy (and powerful) to use.<br />
<br />
Learn about the functionality that is available for download, how you can use this tool to automate workflows from digital collections to ILS ingests to electronic resources statistics and also discuss the opportunities to collaborate on enhancements to this application!<br />
<br />
== GeoHydra: How to Build a Geospatial Digital Library with Fedora ==<br />
<br />
* [http://stanford.edu/~drh Darren Hardy], Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
Geographically-rich data are exploding and putting fear in those trying to<br />
tackle integrating them into existing digital library infrastructures.<br />
Building a spatial data infrastructure that integrates with your digital<br />
library infrastructure need not be a daunting task. We have successfully<br />
deployed a geospatial digital library infrastructure using Fedora and<br />
open-source geospatial software [1]. We'll discuss the primary design<br />
decisions and technologies that led to a production deployment within a few<br />
months. Briefly, our architecture revolves around discovery, delivery, and<br />
metadata pipelines using open-source OpenGeoPortal [2], Solr [3], GeoServer<br />
[4], PostGIS [5], and GeoNetwork [6] technologies, plus the proprietary ESRI<br />
ArcMap [7] -- the GIS industry's workhorse. Finally, we'll discuss the key<br />
skillsets needed to build and maintain a spatial data infrastructure.<br />
<br />
[1] http://foss4g.org<br />
[2] http://opengeoportal.org<br />
[3] http://lucene.apache.org/solr<br />
[4] http://geoserver.org<br />
[5] http://postgis.net<br />
[6] http://geonetwork-opensource.org<br />
[7] http://esri.com<br />
<br />
==Under the Hood of Hadoop Processing at OCLC Research ==<br />
<br />
[http://roytennant.com/ Roy Tennant]<br />
<br />
* Previous Code4Lib presentations: 2006: "The Case for Code4Lib 501c(3)"<br />
<br />
[http://hadoop.apache.org/ Apache Hadoop] is widely used by Yahoo!, Google, and many others to process massive amounts of data quickly. OCLC Research uses a 40-node compute cluster with Hadoop and HBase to process the 300 million MARC records of WorldCat in various ways. This presentation will explain how Hadoop MapReduce works and illustrate it with specific examples and code. The role of the jobtracker in both monitoring and reporting on processes will be explained. String searching WorldCat will also be demonstrated live.<br />
<br />
== Quick and Easy Data Visualization with Google Visualization API and Google Chart Libraries ==<br />
<br />
[http://bohyunkim.net/blog Bohyun Kim], Florida International University, bohyun.kim@fiu.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Do most of the data that your library collects stay in spreadsheets or are published as a static table with a series of boring numbers? Do your library stakeholders spend more time collecting the data than using it as a decision-making tool because the data is presented in a way that makes it hard for them [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery to quickly grasp its significance? ]<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an overview of [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/reference Google Visualization API] [2] and [http://developers.google.com/chart/ Google Chart Libraries] [3] to get you started on the way to quickly query and visualize your library data from remote data sources (e.g. a Google Spreadsheet or your own database) with (or without) cool-looking user-controls, animation effects, and even a dashboard.<br />
<br />
== Leap Motion + Rare Books: A hands-free way to view and interact with rare books in 3D ==<br />
<br />
[http://http://www.youtube.com/user/jpdenzer Juan Denzer], Binghamton University, jdenzer@binghamton.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
As rare books become more delicate over time, making them available to the public becomes harder. We at Binghamton University Library have developed an application that makes it easier to view rare books without ever having to touch them. We have combined the Leap Motion hands-free device and 3D rendered models to create a new virtual experience for the viewer.<br />
<br />
The application allows the user to rotate and zoom in on a 3D representation of a rare book. The user is also able to ‘open’ the virtual book and flip through it using a natural user interface. Such as swiping the hand left or right to turn the page.<br />
<br />
The application is built on the .Net framework and is written in C#. 3D models are created using simple 3D software such as sketchup or Blender. Scans of the book cover and spine are created using simple flatbed scanners. The inside pages are scanned using overhead scanners. <br />
<br />
This talk with discuss the technologies used in developing the application and virtually any library could implement the application with virtually no coding at all. This presentation will have a demonstration of the software and also a chance for audience members to experience the Rare Book Leap Motion App themselves.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Course Reserves Unleashed! ==<br />
<br />
* Bobbi Fox, Library Technology Services, Harvard University, bobbi_fox@harvard.edu<br />
* Gloria Korsman, Andover-Harvard Theological Library<br />
** No previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Hey kids! Remember when SOAP was used for something other than washing? Our sophisticated (and highly functional) Course Reserves Request system does!<br />
<br />
However, while the system is great for submitting and processing course reserve requests, the student-facing presentation through Havard’s home-grown -- and soon to be replaced -- LMS leaves a lot to be desired. <br />
<br />
Follow along as we leverage Solr 4 as a No-SQL database, along with more progressive RESTful API techniques, to release Reserves data into the wild without interfering with reserves request processing -- and, in the process, open up the opportunity for other schools to feed their data in as well.<br />
<br />
== We Are All Disabled! Universal Web Design Making Web Services Accessible for Everyone ==<br />
<br />
Cynthia Ng, Accessibility Librarian, CILS at Langara College<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations (not counting lightning talks)<br />
<br />
We’re building and improving tools and services all the time, but do you only develop for the “average” user or add things for “disabled” users? We all use “assistive” technology accessing information in a multitude of ways with different platforms, devices, etc. Let’s focus on providing web services that are accessible to everyone without it being onerous or ugly. The aim is to get you thinking about what you can do to make web-based services and content more accessible for all from the beginning or with small amounts of effort whether you're a developer or not.<br />
<br />
The goal of the presentation is to provide both developers and content creators with information on simple, practical ways to make web content and web services more accessible. However, rather than thinking about putting in extra effort or making adjustment for those with disabilities, I want to help people think about how to make their websites more accessible for all users through universal web design.<br />
<br />
== Personalize your Google Analytics Data with Custom Events and Variables ==<br />
<br />
[http://joshwilson.net Josh Wilson], Systems Integration Librarian, State Library of North Carolina - joshwilsonnc@gmail.com<br />
<br />
At the State Library of North Carolina, we had more specific questions about the use of our digital collections than standard GA could provide. A few implementations of custom events and custom variables later, we have our answers.<br />
<br />
I'll demonstrate how these analytics add-ons work, and why implementation can sometimes be more complicated than just adding a few lines of JavaScript to your ga.js. I'll discuss some specific examples in use at the SLNC:<br />
<br />
* Capturing the content of specific metadata fields in CONTENTdm as Custom Events <br />
* Recording Drupal taxonomy terms as Custom Variables<br />
<br />
In both instances, this data deepened our understanding of how our sites and collections were being used, and in turn, we were able to report usage more accurately to content contributors and other stakeholders.<br />
<br />
More on: [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/eventTrackerGuide GA Custom Events] | [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/gaTrackingCustomVariables GA Custom Variables]<br />
<br />
<br />
== Behold Fedora 4: The Incredible Shrinking Repository! ==<br />
<br />
Esmé Cowles, UC San Diego Library. Previous talk: [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/cowles-critchlow-westbrook All Teh Metadatas Re-Revisited] (2013)<br />
<br />
* One repository contains untold numbers of digital objects and powers many Hydra and Islandora apps<br />
* It speaks RDF, but contains no triplestore! (triplestores sold separately, SPARQL Update may be involved, some restrictions apply)<br />
* Flexible enough to tie itself in knots implementing storage and access control policies<br />
* Witness feats of strength and scalability, with dramatically increased performance and clustering<br />
* Plumb the depths of bottomless hierarchies, and marvel at the metadata woven into the very fabric of the repository<br />
* Ponder the paradox of ingesting large files by not ingesting them<br />
* Be amazed as Fedora 4 swallows other systems whole (including Fedora 3 repositories)<br />
* Watch novice developers setup Fedora 4 from scratch, with just a handful of incantations to Git and Maven<br />
<br />
The Fedora Commons Repository is the foundation of many digital collections, e-research, digital library, archives, digital preservation, institutional repository and open access publishing systems. This talk will focus on how Fedora 4 improves core repository functionality, adds new features, maintains backwards compatibility, and addresses the shortcomings of Fedora 3.<br />
<br />
== Organic Free-Range API Development - Making Web Services That You Will Actually Want to Consume ==<br />
<br />
Steve Meyer and Karen Coombs, OCLC<br />
<br />
Building web services can have great benefits by providing reusability of data and functionality. Underpinning your applications with a web service will allow you to write code once and support multiple environments: your library's web app, mobile applications, the embedded widget in your campus portal. However, building a web service is its own kind of artful programming. Doing it well requires attention to many of the same techniques and requirements as building web applications, though with different outcomes. <br />
<br />
So what are the usability principles for web services? How do you build a web service that you (and others) will actually want to use? In this talk, we’ll share some of the lessons learned - the good, the bad, and the ugly - through OCLC's work on the WorldCat Metadata API. This web service is a sophisticated API that provides external clients with read and write access to WorldCat data. It provides a model to help aspiring API creators navigate the potential complications of crafting a web service. We'll cover:<br />
<br />
* Loose coupling of data assets and resource-oriented data modeling at the core<br />
* Coding to standards vs. exposure of an internal data model<br />
* Authentication and security for web services: API Keys, Digital Signing, OAuth Flows<br />
* Building web services that behave as a suite so it looks like the left hand knows what the right hand is doing<br />
<br />
So at the end of the day, your team will know your API is a very good egg after all. <br />
<br />
If accepted, the presenters intend to produce and share a Quick Guide for building a web service that will reflect content presented in the talk.<br />
<br />
== Lucene's Latest (for Libraries) ==<br />
<br />
erik.hatcher@lucidworks.com<br />
<br />
Lucene powers the search capabilities of practically all library discovery platforms, by way of Solr, etc. The Lucene project evolves rapidly, and it's a full-time job to keep up with the ever improving features and scalability. This talk will distill and showcase the most relevant(!) advancements to date.<br />
<br />
== The Why and How of Very Large Displays in Libraries. ==<br />
<br />
* Cory Lown, NCSU Libraries, cwlown@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib Presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/lown How People Search the Library from a Single Search Box] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/orphanides_lown_lynema Enhancing Discoverability with Virtual Shelf Browse] 2010<br />
<br />
Built into the walls of NC State's new Hunt Library are several [http://www.christiedigital.com/en-us/digital-signage/products/microtiles/pages/microtiles-digital-signage-video-wall.aspx Christie MicroTile Display Wall Systems]. What does a library do with a display that's seven feet tall and over twenty feet wide? I'll talk about why libraries might want large displays like this, what we're doing with them right now, and what we might do with them in the future. I'll talk about how these displays factor into planning for new and existing web projects. And I'll get into the fun details of how you build web applications that scale from the very small browser window on a phone all the way up to a browser window with about 14 million pixels (about 10 million more than a dual 24" monitor desktop setup).<br />
<br />
== Your Library, Anywhere: A Modern, Responsive Library Catalogue at University of Toronto Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Bilal Khalid, Gordon Belray, Lisa Gayhart (lisa.gayhart@utoronto.ca)<br />
<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations<br />
<br />
With the recent surge in the mobile device market and an ever expanding patron base with increasingly divergent levels of technical ability, the University of Toronto Libraries embarked on the development of a new catalogue discovery layer to fit the needs of its diverse users. <br />
<br />
[http://search.library.utoronto.ca The result]: a mobile-friendly, flexible and intuitive web application that brings the full power of a faceted library catalogue to users without compromising quality or performance, employing Responsive Web Design principles. This talk will discuss: application development; service improvements; interface design; and user outreach, testing, and project communications. Feedback and questions from the audience are very welcome. If time runs short, we will be available for questions and conversation after the presentation.<br />
<br />
Note: A version of this content has been provisionally accepted as an article for Code4Lib Journal, January 2014 publication.)<br />
<br />
== All Tiled Up ==<br />
<br />
* Mike Graves, MIT Libraries (mgraves@mit.edu)<br />
<br />
You've got maps. You even scanned and georeferenced them. Now what? Running a full GIS stack can be expensive, and overkill in some cases. The good news is that you have a lot more options now than you did just a few years ago. I'd like to present some lighter weight solutions to making georeferenced images available on the Web.<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an introduction to MBTiles. I'll go over what they are, how you create them, how you use them and why you would use them.<br />
<br />
== The Great War: Image Interoperability to Facebook ==<br />
<br />
* Rob Sanderson, Los Alamos National Laboratory (azaroth42@gmail.com)<br />
** (Code4Lib 2006: [http://www.code4lib.org/2006/sanderson | Library Text Mining])<br />
* Rob Warren, Carleton University<br />
** No previous presentations<br />
<br />
Using a pipeline constructed from Linked Open Data and other interoperability specifications, it is possible to merge and re-use image and textual data from distributed library collections to build new, useful tools and applications. Starting with the OAI-PMH interface to ContentDM, we will take you on a tour through the International Image Interoperability Framework and Shared Canvas, to a cross-institutional viewer, and image analysis for the purposes of building a historical Facebook from finding and tagging people in photographs. The World War One collections are drawn from multiple institutions and merged by the machine learning code.<br />
<br />
The presentation will focus on the (open source) toolchain and the benefits of the use of standards throughout: OAI-PMH to get the metadata, IIIF for interaction with the images, the Shared Canvas ontology for describing collections of digitized objects, Open Annotation for tagging things in the images and specialized ontologies that are specific to the contents. The tools include standard RDF / OWL technologies, JSON-LD, imagemagick and OpenCV for image analysis.<br />
<br />
== Visualizing Solr Search Results with D3.js for User-Friendly Navigation of Large Results Sets ==<br />
<br />
*Julia Bauder, Grinnell College Libraries (bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
*No previous presentations at national Code4Lib conferences<br />
<br />
As the corpus of articles, books, and other resources searched by discovery systems continues to get bigger, searchers are more and more frequently confronted with unmanageably large numbers of results. How can we help users make sense of 10,000 hits and find the ones they actually want? Facets help, but making sense of a gigantic sidebar of facets is not an easy task for users, either.<br />
During this talk, I will explain how we will soon be using Solr 4’s pivot queries and hierarchical visualizations (e.g., treemaps) from D3.js to let patrons view and manipulate search results. We will be doing this with our VuFind 2.0 catalog, but this technique will work with any system running Solr 4. I will also talk about early student reaction to our tests of these visualization features.<br />
<br />
== PeerLibrary – open source cloud based collaborative library ==<br />
<br />
[https://github.com/peerlibrary/peerlibrary PeerLibrary is a new open source project] and a cloud service providing collaborative reading, sharing and storing. Users can upload publications they want to read (currently in PDF format), read them in the browser in real-time with others, highlight, annotate and organize their own or collaborative library. PeerLibrary provides a search engine to search over all uploaded open access publications. Additionally, it aims to collaboratively aggregate the open layer of knowledge on top of this publications through public annotations and references user will add to publications. In this way publications would not just be available to read, but accessible to the general public as well. Currently, it is aiming at scientific community and scientific publications.<br />
<br />
See [http://blog.peerlibrary.org/post/63458789185/screencast-previewing-the-peerlibrary-project screencast here].<br />
<br />
It is still in development and beta launch is planned at the end of November.<br />
<br />
== Who was where when, or finding biographical articles on Wikipedia by place and time ==<br />
<br />
* [http://morton-owens.info Emily Morton-Owens], The Seattle Public Library (presenting on work from NYU)<br />
* No previous c4l presentations<br />
<br />
It's easy to answer the question "What important people were in Paris in 1939?" But what about Virginia in the 1750s or Scandinavia in the 14th century? I created a tool that allows you to search for biographies in a generally applicable way, using a map interface. I would like to present updates to my thesis project, which combines a crawler written in Java that extracts information from Wikipedia articles, with a MongoDB data store and a frontend in Python.<br />
<br />
The input to the project is freetext of entire articles in Wikipedia; this is important to allow us to pick up Benjamin Franklin not just in the single most obvious place of Philadelphia but also in London, Paris, Boston, etc. I can talk about my experiments disambiguating place names (approaches pioneered on newspaper articles were actually unhelpful on this type of text) and setting up a processing queue that does not become mired in the biographies of every human who ever played soccer. I also want to mitigate some of the implementation choices I made due to my academic deadline and improve the accuracy/usability.<br />
<br />
What I hope to show is that I was able to develop a novel and useful reference tool automatically, using fairly simple heuristics that are a far cry from hand-cataloging familiar to many librarians.<br />
<br />
You can try out [http://linserv1.cims.nyu.edu:48866/ the original version] (this server is inconveniently set to be updated/rebooted on 11/8--may be temporarily unavailable)<br />
<br />
== Good!, DRY, and Dynamic: Content Strategy for Libraries (Especially the Big Ones) ==<br />
<br />
*Michael Schofield, Nova Southeastern University Libraries, mschofield@nova.edu<br />
*No previous code4lib presentations.<br />
<br />
The responsibilities of the #libweb are exploding [it’s a good thing] and it is no longer uncommon for libraries to manage or even home-grow multiple applications and sites. Often it is at this point where the web people begin to suffer the absence of a content strategy when, say, business hours need to be updated sitewide a half-dozen times.<br />
<br />
We were already feeling this crunch when we decided to further complicate the Nova Southeastern University Libraries by splitting the main library website into two. The Alvin Sherman Library, Research, and Information Technology Center is a unique joint-use facility that serves not only the academic community but the public of Broward County - and marketing a hyperblend of content through one portal just wasn't cutting it. With a web team of two, we knew that managing all this rehashed, disparate content was totally unsustainable.<br />
<br />
I want to share in this talk how I went about making our library content DRY (“don’t repeat yourself”): input content in one place--blurbs, policies, featured events, featured databases, book reviews, business hours, and so on.--and syndicate it everywhere - even, sometimes, dynamically target that content for specific audiences or context. It is a presentation that is a little about workflow, a little more about browser and context detection, a tangent about content-modeling the CMS, and a lot about APIs, syndication, and performance.<br />
<br />
== No code, no root, no problem? Adventures in SaaS and library discovery ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:erwhite@vcu.edu Erin White, VCU]<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
In 2012 VCU was an eager early adopter of Ex Libris' cloud service Alma as an ILS, ERM, link resolver, and single-stop, de-silo'd public-facing discovery tool. This has been a disruptive change that has shifted our systems staff's day-to-day work, relationships with others in the library, and relationships with vendors.<br />
<br />
I'll share some of our experiences and takeaways from implementing and maintaining a cloud service:<br />
* Seeking disruption and finding it<br />
* Changing expectations of service and the reality of unplanned downtime<br />
* Communication and problem resolution with non-IT library staff<br />
* Working with a vendor that uses agile development methodology<br />
* Benefits and pitfalls of creating customizations and code workarounds<br />
* Changes in library IT/coders' roles with SaaS<br />
<br />
...as well as thoughts on the philosophy of library discovery vs real-life experiences in moving to a single-search model.<br />
<br />
== Building for others (and ourselves): the Avalon Media System ==<br />
* [mailto:michael.klein@northwestern.edu Michael B Klein], Senior Software Developer, Northwestern University <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/metz_klein Public Datasets in the Cloud] (code4lib 2010)<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/klein-rogers The Avalon Media System: A Next Generation Hydra Head For Audio and Video Delivery] (code4lib 2013)<br />
* [mailto:j-rudder@northwestern.edu Julie Rudder], Digital Initiatives Project Manager, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
[http://www.avalonmediasystem.org/ Avalon Media System] is a collaborative effort between development teams at Northwestern and Indiana Universities. Our goal is to produce an open source media management platform that works well for us, but is also widely adopted and contributed to by other institutions. We believe that building a strong user and contributor community is vital to the success and longevity of the project, and have developed the system with this goal in mind. We will share lessons learned, pains and successes we’ve had releasing two versions of the application since last year. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will cover our experiences:<br />
* providing flexible, admin-friendly distribution and installation options<br />
* building with abstraction, customization and local integrations in mind<br />
* prioritizing features (user stories)<br />
* attracting code contributions from other institutions<br />
* gathering community feedback <br />
* creating a product rather than a bag of parts<br />
<br />
== How to check your data to provide a great data product? Data quality as a key product feature at Europeana ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:Peter.Kiraly@kb.nl Péter Király] portal backend developer, Europeana<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
[http://Europeana.eu/ Europeana.eu] - Europe's digital library, archive and museum - aggregates more than 30 million metadata records from more than 2200 institutions. The records come from libraries, archives, museums and every other kind of cultural institution, from very different systems and metadata schemas, and are typically transformed several times until they are ingested into the Europeana data repository. Europeana builds a consolidated database from these records, creating reliable and consistent services for end-users (a search portal, search widget, mobile apps, thematic sites etc.) and an API, which supports our strategic goeal of data for reuse in education, creative industries, and the cultural sector. A reliable "data product" is thus at the core of our own software products, as well as those of our API partners.<br />
<br />
Much effort is needed to smooth out local differences in the metadata curation practice of our data providers. We need a solid framework to measure the consistency of our data and provide feedback to decision-makers inside and outside the organisation. We can also use this metrics framework to ask content providers to improve their own metadata. Of course, a data-quality-driven approach requires that we also improve the data transformation steps of the Europeana ingestion process itself. Data quality issues heavily define what new features we are able to create in our user interfaces and API, and might actually affect the design and implementation of our underlying data structure, the Europeana Data Model.<br />
<br />
In the presentation I briefly describe the Europeana metadata ingestion process, show the data quality metrics, the measuring techniques (using the Europeana API, Solr and MongoDB queries), some typical problems (both trivial and difficult ones), and finally the feedback mechanism we propose to deploy.<br />
<br />
Keywords: Europeana, data quality, EDM, API, Apache Solr, MongoDB, #opendata, #openglam<br />
<br />
== Teach your Fedora to Fly: scaling out your digital repository ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:acoburn@amherst.edu Aaron Coburn], Software Developer, Amherst College<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
Fedora is a great repository system for managing large collections of digital objects, but what happens when a popular food magazine begins directing a large number of readers to a manuscript showing Emily Dickinson’s own recipe for doughnuts? While Fedora excels in its support of XML-based metadata, it doesn’t always perform well under a high volume of traffic. Nor is it especially tolerant of network or hardware failures.<br />
<br />
This presentation will show how we are making heavy use of a fedora repository while at the same time insulating it almost entirely from any web traffic. Starting with a distributed web front-end built with Node.js, and caching most of the user-accessible content from Fedora in an elastic, fault-tolerant Riak (NoSQL) cluster, we have eliminated nearly all single points of failure in the system. It also means that our production system is spread across twelve separate servers, where asynchrony and Map-Reduce are king. And aside from being blazing fast, it is also entirely Hydra-compliant.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, we will attempt to answer the question: if fedora crashes and the visitors to your site don’t notice, did it really fail?<br />
<br />
<br />
== Using Open Source Software and Freeware to Preserve and Deliver Digital Videos ==<br />
* [mailto:wfang@kinoy.rutgers.edu Wei Fang], Head of Digital Services, Rutgers University Law Library<br />
* Jiebei Luo, Digital Projects Initiative Intern, Rutgers University<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
The Rutgers University Law Library is the official digital repository of the New Jersey Supreme Court oral arguments since 2002. This large video collection contains approximately 3,000 videos with a total of 400 GB or 6,000 viewing hours. With the expansion of this collection, the existing database and the static website could not efficiently support the library’s daily operations and meet its patrons’ search needs. <br />
By utilizing open source software and freeware such as Ubuntu, FFmpeg, Solr and Drupal, the library is able to develop a complete solution to re-encoding videos, embedding subtitles, incorporating Solr search engine and content management system to support full-text subtitle search, automatically updating video metadata records in the library catalog system and eventually providing a plug-in free HTML 5-based Web interface for patrons to view the videos online.<br />
The aspects below will be presented in detail at the conference:<br />
* Video codecs comparison <br />
* Server-end batch video encoding/re-encoding<br />
* HTML 5 video tag and embedding subtitles<br />
* Incorporating search engine Solr and content management tool Drupal with the database to retrieve videos by full-text search especially in subtitle files<br />
* Incorporating video metadata with the library catalog system<br />
<br />
== Shared Vision, Shared Resources: the Curate Institutional Repository ==<br />
* Dan Brubaker Horst, University of Notre Dame <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011/JohnsonHorst A Community-Based Approach to Developing a Digital Exhibit at Notre Dame Using the Hydra Framework] <br />
* Julie Rudder, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous presentations<br />
<br />
Curate is being collaboratively developed by several institutions in the Hydra community who share the need and vision for a Fedora-backed Institutional Repository. The first release of Curate was a collaboration between Notre Dame and Northwestern University, along with Digital Curation Experts (DCE) - a vendor hired jointly by our two institutions. Powered by the Hydra engine Sufia, the team worked quickly to release the first version of Curate in October 2013 which provides a basic self-deposit system that has support for various content types, collection building, DOI minting, and user profile creation. From the very beginning we have built Curate to be easy to theme and extend in order to ease the process of installation and use by other institutions.<br />
<br />
In December 2013, additional partners will join the project including: Indiana University, the University of Cincinnati and the University of Virginia. Each institution contributes resources to the project in order to further our common goal to create a product that fits our needs and has a sustainable future.Together we will tackle additional content types (like complex data, software, media), administrative collections and more. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will include:<br />
* a brief demonstration of Curate and technical overview<br />
* why and how we work together<br />
* why build Curate<br />
* the future of the project<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[:Category:Code4Lib2014]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2014_Prepared_Talk_Proposals&diff=398232014 Prepared Talk Proposals2013-11-08T17:36:54Z<p>Wickr: Changed first heading and moved category tag</p>
<hr />
<div>= 2014 Prepared Talk Proposals =<br />
<br />
'''Proposals for Prepared Talks:'''<br />
<br />
Prepared talks are 20 minutes (including setup and questions), and should focus on one or more of the following areas:<br />
<br />
* ''Projects'' you've worked on which incorporate innovative implementation of existing technologies and/or development of new software<br />
* ''Tools and technologies'' – How to get the most out of existing tools, standards and protocols (and ideas on how to make them better)<br />
* ''Technical issues'' - Big issues in library technology that should be addressed or better understood<br />
* ''Relevant non-technical issues'' – Concerns of interest to the Code4Lib community which are not strictly technical in nature, e.g. collaboration, diversity, organizational challenges, etc.<br />
<br />
'''To Propose a Talk'''<br />
* Log in to the wiki in order to submit a proposal. If you are not already registered, follow the instructions to do so.<br />
* Provide a title and brief (500 words or fewer) description of your proposed talk.<br />
* If you so choose, you may also indicate when, if ever, you have presented at a prior Code4Lib conference. This information is completely optional, but it may assist us in opening the conference to new presenters.<br />
<br />
As in past years, the Code4Lib community will vote on proposals that they would like to see included in the program. This year, however, only the top 10 proposals will be guaranteed a slot at the conference. Additional presentations will be selected by the Program Committee in an effort to ensure diversity in program content. Community votes will, of course, still weigh heavily in these decisions.<br />
<br />
Presenters whose proposals are selected for inclusion in the program will be guaranteed an opportunity to register for the conference. The standard conference registration fee will still apply.<br />
<br />
''Proposals can be submitted through '''Friday, November 8, 2013, at 5pm PST'''''. Voting will commence on November 18, 2013 and continue through December 6, 2013. The final line-up of presentations will be announced in early January, 2014.<br />
<br />
'''Talk Proposals'''<br />
<br />
==Creating a new Greek-Dutch dictionary==<br />
* Caspar Treijtel, University of Amsterdam, c.treijtel@uva.nl<br />
<br />
At present, no complete dictionary of (ancient) Greek-Dutch is available online. A new dictionary is currently under construction at Leiden University, with software being developed at the University of Amsterdam. The team in Leiden has already begun preparation of the data, with at this moment about 6,000 approved lemmas. The ultimate goal is to produce both a print version and online open access version from the same source documents. The software needed for this has been made in a project that was funded by CLARIN-NL.<br />
<br />
Migrator<br />
<br />
For the production of lemmas we have implemented an advanced workflow. The (generally non-technical) users create lemmas using MS Word, which is both familiar and easy to use. We have developed a custom software module that carefully migrates the Word documents into deeply structured XML by analyzing the structure and semantics of the lemmas, and falling back on heuristics in ambiguous cases. While having initially envisioned the oXygen XML Author component as the main tool for creating new lemmas, we obtained excellent results with the migrator module, and decided therefore to continue using MS Word as the primary composition tool. The main advantage of this is that the editors are much more familiar with Word than with any other WYSIWYG editor. Lemmas that have been migrated to XML are stored in an XML database and can be further edited using oXygen XML Author.<br />
<br />
Lemmatizer<br />
<br />
Greek morphology is complicated. In order to use a dictionary effectively, a rather high level of initial language competence is necessary for the user to be able to relate the word form s/he finds in a text to the correct basic lemma form, where the definition of the word can be found. Using a Greek morphological database we have been able to facilitate the search for lemmas. A ‘lemmatizer’ module gives the possible parsings of the word forms and the lemmas they can be derived from. This enables the user to type in the word as found in the text and be redirected to the correct lemma.<br />
<br />
Visualization<br />
<br />
For the online dictionary we have implemented a visualization module that allows the user to view multiple lemmas at once. The implementation of this module has been done using the Javascript framework MooTools. The result is a viewer that performs really well and is run by maintainable Javascript code.<br />
<br />
The online dictionary is still being worked on, have a look at http://www.woordenboekgrieks.nl/ for the beta version. A newer test version with additional features can be found here: http://angel.ic.uva.nl:8600/.<br />
<br />
Credits<br />
<br />
* construction of the dictionary: Prof. Ineke Sluiter, Classics department of Leiden University; Prof. Albert Rijksbaron, University of Amsterdam<br />
* publisher of the dictionary: Amsterdam University Press<br />
* design/typesetting dictionary: TaT Zetwerk (http://www.tatzetwerk.nl/)<br />
* software development: Digital Production Center, University Library, University of Amsterdam<br />
* project funding: CLARIN-NL (http://www.clarin.nl/)<br />
* morphological database for use by the lemmatizer: courtesy of Prof. Helma Dik, University of Chicago (based on data of the Perseus Project)<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
== Using Drupal to drive alternative presentation systems ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Highermath|Cary Gordon]], The Cherry Hill Company, cgordon@chillco.com<br />
<br />
Recently, we have been building systems that use angular.js, Rails, or other systems for presentation, while leveraging Drupal's sophisticated content management capabilities on the back end.<br />
<br />
So far, these have been one-way systems, but as we move to Drupal 8 we are beginning to explore ways to further decouple the presentation and CMS functions.<br />
<br />
== A Book, a Web Browser and a Tablet: How Bibliotheca Alexandrina's Book Viewer Framework Makes It Possible ==<br />
<br />
* [[User:Mohammed.abuouda|Mohammed Abu ouda]], Bibliotheca Alexandrina (The new Library of Alexandria)<br />
<br />
A lot of institutions around the world are engaged in multiple digitization projects aiming at preserving the human knowledge present in books and availing them through multiple channels to people around the whole globe. These efforts will sure help close the digital gap particularly with the arrival of affordable e-readers, mobile phones and network coverage. However, the digital reading experience has not yet arrived to its maximum potential. Many readers miss features they like in their good old books and wish to find them in their digital counterpart. In an attempt to create a unique digital reading experience, Bibliotheca Alexandria (BA) created a flexible book viewing framework that is currently used to access its current collection of more than 300,000 digital books in five different languages which includes the largest collection of digitized Arabic books.<br />
<br />
Using open source tools, BA used the framework to develop a modular book viewer that can be deployed in different environments and is currently at the heart of various BA projects. The Book viewer provides several features creating a more natural reading experience. As with physical books, the reader can now personalize the books he reads by adding annotations like highlights, underlines and sticky notes to capture his thoughts and ideas in addition to being able to share the book with friends on social networks. The reader can perform a search across the content of the book receiving highlighted search results within the pages of the book. More features can be further added to the book viewer through its plugin architecture.<br />
<br />
== Structured data NOW: seeding schema.org in library systems ==<br />
<br />
* [http://coffeecode.net Dan Scott], Laurentian University<br />
** Previous code4lib presentations: [https://archive.org/details/code4lib.conf.2008.pres.CouchDBsacrilege CouchDB is sacrilege... mmm, delicious sacrilege] at Code4Lib 2008<br />
<br />
The semantic web, linked data, and structured data are all fantastic ideas with a barrier imposed by implementation constraints. If their system does not allow customizations, or the institution lacks skilled human resources, it does not matter how enthused a given library might be about publishing structured data... it will not happen. However, if the software in use simply publishes structured data by default, then the web will be populated for free. Really! No extra resources necessary.<br />
<br />
This presentation highlights Dan's work with systems such as Evergreen, Koha, and VuFind to enable the publication of schema.org structured data out-of-the-box. Along the way, we reflect the current state of the W3C Schema.org Bibliographic Extension community group efforts to shape the evolution of the schema.org vocabulary. Finally, hold on tight as we contemplate next steps and the possibilities of a world where structured data is the norm on the web.<br />
<br />
== Towards Pasta Code Nirvana: Using JavaScript MVC to Fill Your Programming Ravioli ==<br />
<br />
* Bret Davidson, North Carolina State University Libraries, bret_davidson@ncsu.edu<br />
** Previous Code4Lib Presentations: [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_talks_proposals#Data-Driven_Documents:_Visualizing_library_data_with_D3.js Visualizing library data with D3.js] at Code4Lib 2013<br />
<br />
JavaScript MVC frameworks are ushering in a golden age of robust and responsive web applications that take advantage of evergreen browsers, performant JS engines, and the unprecedented reach provided by billions of personal computing devices. The web browser has emerged as the world’s most popular application runtime and the complexity[1] and scope of JavaScript applications has exploded accordingly. Server-side web frameworks like Rails and Django have helped developers adhere to best practices like modularity, dependency injection, and unit testing for years, practices that are now being applied to JavaScript development through projects like Backbone[2], Ember[3], and Angular[4].<br />
<br />
This talk will discuss the issues JavaScript MVC frameworks are trying to solve, common features like data binding, implications for the future of web development[5], and the appropriateness of JavaScript MVC for library applications.<br />
<br />
*[1]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaghetti_code<br />
*[2]http://backbonejs.org<br />
*[3]http://emberjs.com<br />
*[4]http://angularjs.org<br />
*[5]http://tomdale.net/2013/09/progressive-enhancement-is-dead/<br />
<br />
== WebSockets for Real-Time and Interactive Interfaces ==<br />
<br />
* [http://ronallo.com Jason Ronallo], NCSU Libraries, jason_ronallo@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ronallo HTML5 Microdata and Schema.org] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/ronallo HTML5 Video Now!] 2013<br />
<br />
Watching the Google Analytics Real-Time dashboard for the first time was mesmerizing. As soon as someone visited a site, I could see what page they were on. For a digital collections site with a lot of images, it was fun to see what visitors were looking at. But getting from Google Analytics to the image or other content of what was currently being viewed was cumbersome. The real-time experience was something I wanted share with others. I'll show you how I used a WebSocket service to create a real-time interface to digital collections.<br />
<br />
In the Hunt Library at NCSU we have some large video walls. I wanted to make HTML-based exhibits that featured viewer interactions. I'll show you how I converted Listen to Wikipedia [1] into an bring-your-own-device interactive exhibit. With WebSockets any HTML page can be remote controlled by any internet connected device.<br />
<br />
I will attempt to include real-time audience participation.<br />
<br />
[1] http://listen.hatnote.com/<br />
<br />
== Rapid Development of Automated Tasks with the File Analyzer ==<br />
<br />
* Terry Brady, Georgetown University Libraries, twb27@georgetown.edu<br />
<br />
The Georgetown University Libraries have customized the File Analyzer and Metadata Harvester application (https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer) to solve a number of library automation challenges:<br />
* validating digitized and reformatted files<br />
* validating vendor statistics for counter compliance<br />
* preparing collections of digital files for archiving and ingest<br />
* manipulating ILS import and export files<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer application was used by the US National Archives to validate 3.5 million digitized images from the 1940 Census. After implementing a customized ingest workflow within the File Analyzer, the Georgetown University Libraries was able to process an ingest backlog of over a thousand files of digital resources into DigitalGeorgetown, the Libraries’ Digital Collections and Institutional Repository platform. Georgetown is currently developing customized workflows that integrate Apache Tika, BagIt, and Marc conversion utilities.<br />
<br />
The File Analyzer is a desktop application with a powerful framework for implementing customized file validation and transformation rules. As new rules are deployed, they are presented to users within a user interface that is easy (and powerful) to use.<br />
<br />
Learn about the functionality that is available for download, how you can use this tool to automate workflows from digital collections to ILS ingests to electronic resources statistics and also discuss the opportunities to collaborate on enhancements to this application!<br />
<br />
== GeoHydra: How to Build a Geospatial Digital Library with Fedora ==<br />
<br />
* [http://stanford.edu/~drh Darren Hardy], Stanford University, drh@stanford.edu<br />
<br />
Geographically-rich data are exploding and putting fear in those trying to<br />
tackle integrating them into existing digital library infrastructures.<br />
Building a spatial data infrastructure that integrates with your digital<br />
library infrastructure need not be a daunting task. We have successfully<br />
deployed a geospatial digital library infrastructure using Fedora and<br />
open-source geospatial software [1]. We'll discuss the primary design<br />
decisions and technologies that led to a production deployment within a few<br />
months. Briefly, our architecture revolves around discovery, delivery, and<br />
metadata pipelines using open-source OpenGeoPortal [2], Solr [3], GeoServer<br />
[4], PostGIS [5], and GeoNetwork [6] technologies, plus the proprietary ESRI<br />
ArcMap [7] -- the GIS industry's workhorse. Finally, we'll discuss the key<br />
skillsets needed to build and maintain a spatial data infrastructure.<br />
<br />
[1] http://foss4g.org<br />
[2] http://opengeoportal.org<br />
[3] http://lucene.apache.org/solr<br />
[4] http://geoserver.org<br />
[5] http://postgis.net<br />
[6] http://geonetwork-opensource.org<br />
[7] http://esri.com<br />
<br />
==Under the Hood of Hadoop Processing at OCLC Research ==<br />
<br />
[http://roytennant.com/ Roy Tennant]<br />
<br />
* Previous Code4Lib presentations: 2006: "The Case for Code4Lib 501c(3)"<br />
<br />
[http://hadoop.apache.org/ Apache Hadoop] is widely used by Yahoo!, Google, and many others to process massive amounts of data quickly. OCLC Research uses a 40-node compute cluster with Hadoop and HBase to process the 300 million MARC records of WorldCat in various ways. This presentation will explain how Hadoop MapReduce works and illustrate it with specific examples and code. The role of the jobtracker in both monitoring and reporting on processes will be explained. String searching WorldCat will also be demonstrated live.<br />
<br />
== Quick and Easy Data Visualization with Google Visualization API and Google Chart Libraries ==<br />
<br />
[http://bohyunkim.net/blog Bohyun Kim], Florida International University, bohyun.kim@fiu.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Do most of the data that your library collects stay in spreadsheets or are published as a static table with a series of boring numbers? Do your library stakeholders spend more time collecting the data than using it as a decision-making tool because the data is presented in a way that makes it hard for them [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/gallery to quickly grasp its significance? ]<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an overview of [http://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/reference Google Visualization API] [2] and [http://developers.google.com/chart/ Google Chart Libraries] [3] to get you started on the way to quickly query and visualize your library data from remote data sources (e.g. a Google Spreadsheet or your own database) with (or without) cool-looking user-controls, animation effects, and even a dashboard.<br />
<br />
== Leap Motion + Rare Books: A hands-free way to view and interact with rare books in 3D ==<br />
<br />
[http://http://www.youtube.com/user/jpdenzer Juan Denzer], Binghamton University, jdenzer@binghamton.edu<br />
* 'No' previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
As rare books become more delicate over time, making them available to the public becomes harder. We at Binghamton University Library have developed an application that makes it easier to view rare books without ever having to touch them. We have combined the Leap Motion hands-free device and 3D rendered models to create a new virtual experience for the viewer.<br />
<br />
The application allows the user to rotate and zoom in on a 3D representation of a rare book. The user is also able to ‘open’ the virtual book and flip through it using a natural user interface. Such as swiping the hand left or right to turn the page.<br />
<br />
The application is built on the .Net framework and is written in C#. 3D models are created using simple 3D software such as sketchup or Blender. Scans of the book cover and spine are created using simple flatbed scanners. The inside pages are scanned using overhead scanners. <br />
<br />
This talk with discuss the technologies used in developing the application and virtually any library could implement the application with virtually no coding at all. This presentation will have a demonstration of the software and also a chance for audience members to experience the Rare Book Leap Motion App themselves.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Course Reserves Unleashed! ==<br />
<br />
* Bobbi Fox, Library Technology Services, Harvard University, bobbi_fox@harvard.edu<br />
* Gloria Korsman, Andover-Harvard Theological Library<br />
** No previous Code4Lib presentations <br />
<br />
Hey kids! Remember when SOAP was used for something other than washing? Our sophisticated (and highly functional) Course Reserves Request system does!<br />
<br />
However, while the system is great for submitting and processing course reserve requests, the student-facing presentation through Havard’s home-grown -- and soon to be replaced -- LMS leaves a lot to be desired. <br />
<br />
Follow along as we leverage Solr 4 as a No-SQL database, along with more progressive RESTful API techniques, to release Reserves data into the wild without interfering with reserves request processing -- and, in the process, open up the opportunity for other schools to feed their data in as well.<br />
<br />
== We Are All Disabled! Universal Web Design Making Web Services Accessible for Everyone ==<br />
<br />
Cynthia Ng, Accessibility Librarian, CILS at Langara College<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations (not counting lightning talks)<br />
<br />
We’re building and improving tools and services all the time, but do you only develop for the “average” user or add things for “disabled” users? We all use “assistive” technology accessing information in a multitude of ways with different platforms, devices, etc. Let’s focus on providing web services that are accessible to everyone without it being onerous or ugly. The aim is to get you thinking about what you can do to make web-based services and content more accessible for all from the beginning or with small amounts of effort whether you're a developer or not.<br />
<br />
The goal of the presentation is to provide both developers and content creators with information on simple, practical ways to make web content and web services more accessible. However, rather than thinking about putting in extra effort or making adjustment for those with disabilities, I want to help people think about how to make their websites more accessible for all users through universal web design.<br />
<br />
== Personalize your Google Analytics Data with Custom Events and Variables ==<br />
<br />
[http://joshwilson.net Josh Wilson], Systems Integration Librarian, State Library of North Carolina - joshwilsonnc@gmail.com<br />
<br />
At the State Library of North Carolina, we had more specific questions about the use of our digital collections than standard GA could provide. A few implementations of custom events and custom variables later, we have our answers.<br />
<br />
I'll demonstrate how these analytics add-ons work, and why implementation can sometimes be more complicated than just adding a few lines of JavaScript to your ga.js. I'll discuss some specific examples in use at the SLNC:<br />
<br />
* Capturing the content of specific metadata fields in CONTENTdm as Custom Events <br />
* Recording Drupal taxonomy terms as Custom Variables<br />
<br />
In both instances, this data deepened our understanding of how our sites and collections were being used, and in turn, we were able to report usage more accurately to content contributors and other stakeholders.<br />
<br />
More on: [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/eventTrackerGuide GA Custom Events] | [https://developers.google.com/analytics/devguides/collection/gajs/gaTrackingCustomVariables GA Custom Variables]<br />
<br />
<br />
== Behold Fedora 4: The Incredible Shrinking Repository! ==<br />
<br />
Esmé Cowles, UC San Diego Library. Previous talk: [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/cowles-critchlow-westbrook All Teh Metadatas Re-Revisited] (2013)<br />
<br />
* One repository contains untold numbers of digital objects and powers many Hydra and Islandora apps<br />
* It speaks RDF, but contains no triplestore! (triplestores sold separately, SPARQL Update may be involved, some restrictions apply)<br />
* Flexible enough to tie itself in knots implementing storage and access control policies<br />
* Witness feats of strength and scalability, with dramatically increased performance and clustering<br />
* Plumb the depths of bottomless hierarchies, and marvel at the metadata woven into the very fabric of the repository<br />
* Ponder the paradox of ingesting large files by not ingesting them<br />
* Be amazed as Fedora 4 swallows other systems whole (including Fedora 3 repositories)<br />
* Watch novice developers setup Fedora 4 from scratch, with just a handful of incantations to Git and Maven<br />
<br />
The Fedora Commons Repository is the foundation of many digital collections, e-research, digital library, archives, digital preservation, institutional repository and open access publishing systems. This talk will focus on how Fedora 4 improves core repository functionality, adds new features, maintains backwards compatibility, and addresses the shortcomings of Fedora 3.<br />
<br />
== Organic Free-Range API Development - Making Web Services That You Will Actually Want to Consume ==<br />
<br />
Steve Meyer and Karen Coombs, OCLC<br />
<br />
Building web services can have great benefits by providing reusability of data and functionality. Underpinning your applications with a web service will allow you to write code once and support multiple environments: your library's web app, mobile applications, the embedded widget in your campus portal. However, building a web service is its own kind of artful programming. Doing it well requires attention to many of the same techniques and requirements as building web applications, though with different outcomes. <br />
<br />
So what are the usability principles for web services? How do you build a web service that you (and others) will actually want to use? In this talk, we’ll share some of the lessons learned - the good, the bad, and the ugly - through OCLC's work on the WorldCat Metadata API. This web service is a sophisticated API that provides external clients with read and write access to WorldCat data. It provides a model to help aspiring API creators navigate the potential complications of crafting a web service. We'll cover:<br />
<br />
* Loose coupling of data assets and resource-oriented data modeling at the core<br />
* Coding to standards vs. exposure of an internal data model<br />
* Authentication and security for web services: API Keys, Digital Signing, OAuth Flows<br />
* Building web services that behave as a suite so it looks like the left hand knows what the right hand is doing<br />
<br />
So at the end of the day, your team will know your API is a very good egg after all. <br />
<br />
If accepted, the presenters intend to produce and share a Quick Guide for building a web service that will reflect content presented in the talk.<br />
<br />
== Lucene's Latest (for Libraries) ==<br />
<br />
erik.hatcher@lucidworks.com<br />
<br />
Lucene powers the search capabilities of practically all library discovery platforms, by way of Solr, etc. The Lucene project evolves rapidly, and it's a full-time job to keep up with the ever improving features and scalability. This talk will distill and showcase the most relevant(!) advancements to date.<br />
<br />
== The Why and How of Very Large Displays in Libraries. ==<br />
<br />
* Cory Lown, NCSU Libraries, cwlown@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
Previous Code4Lib Presentations:<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/lown How People Search the Library from a Single Search Box] 2012<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/orphanides_lown_lynema Enhancing Discoverability with Virtual Shelf Browse] 2010<br />
<br />
Built into the walls of NC State's new Hunt Library are several [http://www.christiedigital.com/en-us/digital-signage/products/microtiles/pages/microtiles-digital-signage-video-wall.aspx Christie MicroTile Display Wall Systems]. What does a library do with a display that's seven feet tall and over twenty feet wide? I'll talk about why libraries might want large displays like this, what we're doing with them right now, and what we might do with them in the future. I'll talk about how these displays factor into planning for new and existing web projects. And I'll get into the fun details of how you build web applications that scale from the very small browser window on a phone all the way up to a browser window with about 14 million pixels (about 10 million more than a dual 24" monitor desktop setup).<br />
<br />
== Your Library, Anywhere: A Modern, Responsive Library Catalogue at University of Toronto Libraries ==<br />
<br />
* Bilal Khalid, Gordon Belray, Lisa Gayhart (lisa.gayhart@utoronto.ca)<br />
<br />
* No previous Code4Lib presentations<br />
<br />
With the recent surge in the mobile device market and an ever expanding patron base with increasingly divergent levels of technical ability, the University of Toronto Libraries embarked on the development of a new catalogue discovery layer to fit the needs of its diverse users. <br />
<br />
[http://search.library.utoronto.ca The result]: a mobile-friendly, flexible and intuitive web application that brings the full power of a faceted library catalogue to users without compromising quality or performance, employing Responsive Web Design principles. This talk will discuss: application development; service improvements; interface design; and user outreach, testing, and project communications. Feedback and questions from the audience are very welcome. If time runs short, we will be available for questions and conversation after the presentation.<br />
<br />
Note: A version of this content has been provisionally accepted as an article for Code4Lib Journal, January 2014 publication.)<br />
<br />
== All Tiled Up ==<br />
<br />
* Mike Graves, MIT Libraries (mgraves@mit.edu)<br />
<br />
You've got maps. You even scanned and georeferenced them. Now what? Running a full GIS stack can be expensive, and overkill in some cases. The good news is that you have a lot more options now than you did just a few years ago. I'd like to present some lighter weight solutions to making georeferenced images available on the Web.<br />
<br />
This talk will provide an introduction to MBTiles. I'll go over what they are, how you create them, how you use them and why you would use them.<br />
<br />
== The Great War: Image Interoperability to Facebook ==<br />
<br />
* Rob Sanderson, Los Alamos National Laboratory (azaroth42@gmail.com)<br />
** (Code4Lib 2006: [http://www.code4lib.org/2006/sanderson | Library Text Mining])<br />
* Rob Warren, Carleton University<br />
** No previous presentations<br />
<br />
Using a pipeline constructed from Linked Open Data and other interoperability specifications, it is possible to merge and re-use image and textual data from distributed library collections to build new, useful tools and applications. Starting with the OAI-PMH interface to ContentDM, we will take you on a tour through the International Image Interoperability Framework and Shared Canvas, to a cross-institutional viewer, and image analysis for the purposes of building a historical Facebook from finding and tagging people in photographs. The World War One collections are drawn from multiple institutions and merged by the machine learning code.<br />
<br />
The presentation will focus on the (open source) toolchain and the benefits of the use of standards throughout: OAI-PMH to get the metadata, IIIF for interaction with the images, the Shared Canvas ontology for describing collections of digitized objects, Open Annotation for tagging things in the images and specialized ontologies that are specific to the contents. The tools include standard RDF / OWL technologies, JSON-LD, imagemagick and OpenCV for image analysis.<br />
<br />
== Visualizing Solr Search Results with D3.js for User-Friendly Navigation of Large Results Sets ==<br />
<br />
*Julia Bauder, Grinnell College Libraries (bauderj-at-grinnell-dot-edu)<br />
*No previous presentations at national Code4Lib conferences<br />
<br />
As the corpus of articles, books, and other resources searched by discovery systems continues to get bigger, searchers are more and more frequently confronted with unmanageably large numbers of results. How can we help users make sense of 10,000 hits and find the ones they actually want? Facets help, but making sense of a gigantic sidebar of facets is not an easy task for users, either.<br />
During this talk, I will explain how we will soon be using Solr 4’s pivot queries and hierarchical visualizations (e.g., treemaps) from D3.js to let patrons view and manipulate search results. We will be doing this with our VuFind 2.0 catalog, but this technique will work with any system running Solr 4. I will also talk about early student reaction to our tests of these visualization features.<br />
<br />
== PeerLibrary – open source cloud based collaborative library ==<br />
<br />
[https://github.com/peerlibrary/peerlibrary PeerLibrary is a new open source project] and a cloud service providing collaborative reading, sharing and storing. Users can upload publications they want to read (currently in PDF format), read them in the browser in real-time with others, highlight, annotate and organize their own or collaborative library. PeerLibrary provides a search engine to search over all uploaded open access publications. Additionally, it aims to collaboratively aggregate the open layer of knowledge on top of this publications through public annotations and references user will add to publications. In this way publications would not just be available to read, but accessible to the general public as well. Currently, it is aiming at scientific community and scientific publications.<br />
<br />
See [http://blog.peerlibrary.org/post/63458789185/screencast-previewing-the-peerlibrary-project screencast here].<br />
<br />
It is still in development and beta launch is planned at the end of November.<br />
<br />
== Who was where when, or finding biographical articles on Wikipedia by place and time ==<br />
<br />
* [http://morton-owens.info Emily Morton-Owens], The Seattle Public Library (presenting on work from NYU)<br />
* No previous c4l presentations<br />
<br />
It's easy to answer the question "What important people were in Paris in 1939?" But what about Virginia in the 1750s or Scandinavia in the 14th century? I created a tool that allows you to search for biographies in a generally applicable way, using a map interface. I would like to present updates to my thesis project, which combines a crawler written in Java that extracts information from Wikipedia articles, with a MongoDB data store and a frontend in Python.<br />
<br />
The input to the project is freetext of entire articles in Wikipedia; this is important to allow us to pick up Benjamin Franklin not just in the single most obvious place of Philadelphia but also in London, Paris, Boston, etc. I can talk about my experiments disambiguating place names (approaches pioneered on newspaper articles were actually unhelpful on this type of text) and setting up a processing queue that does not become mired in the biographies of every human who ever played soccer. I also want to mitigate some of the implementation choices I made due to my academic deadline and improve the accuracy/usability.<br />
<br />
What I hope to show is that I was able to develop a novel and useful reference tool automatically, using fairly simple heuristics that are a far cry from hand-cataloging familiar to many librarians.<br />
<br />
You can try out [http://linserv1.cims.nyu.edu:48866/ the original version] (this server is inconveniently set to be updated/rebooted on 11/8--may be temporarily unavailable)<br />
<br />
== Good!, DRY, and Dynamic: Content Strategy for Libraries (Especially the Big Ones) ==<br />
<br />
*Michael Schofield, Nova Southeastern University Libraries, mschofield@nova.edu<br />
*No previous code4lib presentations.<br />
<br />
The responsibilities of the #libweb are exploding [it’s a good thing] and it is no longer uncommon for libraries to manage or even home-grow multiple applications and sites. Often it is at this point where the web people begin to suffer the absence of a content strategy when, say, business hours need to be updated sitewide a half-dozen times.<br />
<br />
We were already feeling this crunch when we decided to further complicate the Nova Southeastern University Libraries by splitting the main library website into two. The Alvin Sherman Library, Research, and Information Technology Center is a unique joint-use facility that serves not only the academic community but the public of Broward County - and marketing a hyperblend of content through one portal just wasn't cutting it. With a web team of two, we knew that managing all this rehashed, disparate content was totally unsustainable.<br />
<br />
I want to share in this talk how I went about making our library content DRY (“don’t repeat yourself”): input content in one place--blurbs, policies, featured events, featured databases, book reviews, business hours, and so on.--and syndicate it everywhere - even, sometimes, dynamically target that content for specific audiences or context. It is a presentation that is a little about workflow, a little more about browser and context detection, a tangent about content-modeling the CMS, and a lot about APIs, syndication, and performance.<br />
<br />
== No code, no root, no problem? Adventures in SaaS and library discovery ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:erwhite@vcu.edu Erin White, VCU]<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
In 2012 VCU was an eager early adopter of Ex Libris' cloud service Alma as an ILS, ERM, link resolver, and single-stop, de-silo'd public-facing discovery tool. This has been a disruptive change that has shifted our systems staff's day-to-day work, relationships with others in the library, and relationships with vendors.<br />
<br />
I'll share some of our experiences and takeaways from implementing and maintaining a cloud service:<br />
* Seeking disruption and finding it<br />
* Changing expectations of service and the reality of unplanned downtime<br />
* Communication and problem resolution with non-IT library staff<br />
* Working with a vendor that uses agile development methodology<br />
* Benefits and pitfalls of creating customizations and code workarounds<br />
* Changes in library IT/coders' roles with SaaS<br />
<br />
...as well as thoughts on the philosophy of library discovery vs real-life experiences in moving to a single-search model.<br />
<br />
== Building for others (and ourselves): the Avalon Media System ==<br />
* [mailto:michael.klein@northwestern.edu Michael B Klein], Senior Software Developer, Northwestern University <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/metz_klein Public Datasets in the Cloud] (code4lib 2010)<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/klein-rogers The Avalon Media System: A Next Generation Hydra Head For Audio and Video Delivery] (code4lib 2013)<br />
* [mailto:j-rudder@northwestern.edu Julie Rudder], Digital Initiatives Project Manager, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous code4lib presentations<br />
<br />
[http://www.avalonmediasystem.org/ Avalon Media System] is a collaborative effort between development teams at Northwestern and Indiana Universities. Our goal is to produce an open source media management platform that works well for us, but is also widely adopted and contributed to by other institutions. We believe that building a strong user and contributor community is vital to the success and longevity of the project, and have developed the system with this goal in mind. We will share lessons learned, pains and successes we’ve had releasing two versions of the application since last year. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will cover our experiences:<br />
* providing flexible, admin-friendly distribution and installation options<br />
* building with abstraction, customization and local integrations in mind<br />
* prioritizing features (user stories)<br />
* attracting code contributions from other institutions<br />
* gathering community feedback <br />
* creating a product rather than a bag of parts<br />
<br />
== How to check your data to provide a great data product? Data quality as a key product feature at Europeana ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:Peter.Kiraly@kb.nl Péter Király] portal backend developer, Europeana<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
[http://Europeana.eu/ Europeana.eu] - Europe's digital library, archive and museum - aggregates more than 30 million metadata records from more than 2200 institutions. The records come from libraries, archives, museums and every other kind of cultural institution, from very different systems and metadata schemas, and are typically transformed several times until they are ingested into the Europeana data repository. Europeana builds a consolidated database from these records, creating reliable and consistent services for end-users (a search portal, search widget, mobile apps, thematic sites etc.) and an API, which supports our strategic goeal of data for reuse in education, creative industries, and the cultural sector. A reliable "data product" is thus at the core of our own software products, as well as those of our API partners.<br />
<br />
Much effort is needed to smooth out local differences in the metadata curation practice of our data providers. We need a solid framework to measure the consistency of our data and provide feedback to decision-makers inside and outside the organisation. We can also use this metrics framework to ask content providers to improve their own metadata. Of course, a data-quality-driven approach requires that we also improve the data transformation steps of the Europeana ingestion process itself. Data quality issues heavily define what new features we are able to create in our user interfaces and API, and might actually affect the design and implementation of our underlying data structure, the Europeana Data Model.<br />
<br />
In the presentation I briefly describe the Europeana metadata ingestion process, show the data quality metrics, the measuring techniques (using the Europeana API, Solr and MongoDB queries), some typical problems (both trivial and difficult ones), and finally the feedback mechanism we propose to deploy.<br />
<br />
Keywords: Europeana, data quality, EDM, API, Apache Solr, MongoDB, #opendata, #openglam<br />
<br />
== Teach your Fedora to Fly: scaling out your digital repository ==<br />
<br />
*[mailto:acoburn@amherst.edu Aaron Coburn], Software Developer, Amherst College<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
Fedora is a great repository system for managing large collections of digital objects, but what happens when a popular food magazine begins directing a large number of readers to a manuscript showing Emily Dickinson’s own recipe for doughnuts? While Fedora excels in its support of XML-based metadata, it doesn’t always perform well under a high volume of traffic. Nor is it especially tolerant of network or hardware failures.<br />
<br />
This presentation will show how we are making heavy use of a fedora repository while at the same time insulating it almost entirely from any web traffic. Starting with a distributed web front-end built with Node.js, and caching most of the user-accessible content from Fedora in an elastic, fault-tolerant Riak (NoSQL) cluster, we have eliminated nearly all single points of failure in the system. It also means that our production system is spread across twelve separate servers, where asynchrony and Map-Reduce are king. And aside from being blazing fast, it is also entirely Hydra-compliant.<br />
<br />
Furthermore, we will attempt to answer the question: if fedora crashes and the visitors to your site don’t notice, did it really fail?<br />
<br />
<br />
== Using Open Source Software and Freeware to Preserve and Deliver Digital Videos ==<br />
* [mailto:wfang@kinoy.rutgers.edu Wei Fang], Head of Digital Services, Rutgers University Law Library<br />
* Jiebei Luo, Digital Projects Initiative Intern, Rutgers University<br />
*No previous C4L presentations<br />
<br />
The Rutgers University Law Library is the official digital repository of the New Jersey Supreme Court oral arguments since 2002. This large video collection contains approximately 3,000 videos with a total of 400 GB or 6,000 viewing hours. With the expansion of this collection, the existing database and the static website could not efficiently support the library’s daily operations and meet its patrons’ search needs. <br />
By utilizing open source software and freeware such as Ubuntu, FFmpeg, Solr and Drupal, the library is able to develop a complete solution to re-encoding videos, embedding subtitles, incorporating Solr search engine and content management system to support full-text subtitle search, automatically updating video metadata records in the library catalog system and eventually providing a plug-in free HTML 5-based Web interface for patrons to view the videos online.<br />
The aspects below will be presented in detail at the conference:<br />
* Video codecs comparison <br />
* Server-end batch video encoding/re-encoding<br />
* HTML 5 video tag and embedding subtitles<br />
* Incorporating search engine Solr and content management tool Drupal with the database to retrieve videos by full-text search especially in subtitle files<br />
* Incorporating video metadata with the library catalog system<br />
<br />
== Shared Vision, Shared Resources: the Curate Institutional Repository ==<br />
* Dan Brubaker Horst, University of Notre Dame <br />
** [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011/JohnsonHorst A Community-Based Approach to Developing a Digital Exhibit at Notre Dame Using the Hydra Framework] <br />
* Julie Rudder, Northwestern University<br />
** no previous presentations<br />
<br />
Curate is being collaboratively developed by several institutions in the Hydra community who share the need and vision for a Fedora-backed Institutional Repository. The first release of Curate was a collaboration between Notre Dame and Northwestern University, along with Digital Curation Experts (DCE) - a vendor hired jointly by our two institutions. Powered by the Hydra engine Sufia, the team worked quickly to release the first version of Curate in October 2013 which provides a basic self-deposit system that has support for various content types, collection building, DOI minting, and user profile creation. From the very beginning we have built Curate to be easy to theme and extend in order to ease the process of installation and use by other institutions.<br />
<br />
In December 2013, additional partners will join the project including: Indiana University, the University of Cincinnati and the University of Virginia. Each institution contributes resources to the project in order to further our common goal to create a product that fits our needs and has a sustainable future.Together we will tackle additional content types (like complex data, software, media), administrative collections and more. <br />
<br />
Our presentation will include:<br />
* a brief demonstration of Curate and technical overview<br />
* why and how we work together<br />
* why build Curate<br />
* the future of the project<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[:Category:Code4Lib2014]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2013_Code4Lib_Midwest_Conference&diff=394952013 Code4Lib Midwest Conference2013-08-28T18:27:05Z<p>Wickr: /* Registration */</p>
<hr />
<div>==Code4Lib Midwest 2013==<br />
Please join us Sunday, October 13, and Monday, October 14, in Iowa City for the Code4Lib Midwest 2013 conference! This informal conference will feature short lightning talks, longer presentations, workshops, and breakout discussion sessions covering technology in libraries, archives and museums in the Midwest. Each Code4Lib conference is different; take a look through the main [http://code4lib.org/about Code4Lib Wiki] to learn more about this volunteer-driven collective.<br />
* Twitter hash tag: [http://twitter.com/#!/search/%23c4lmw #c4lmw]<br />
===Location===<br />
Code4Lib MidWest meeting will be hosted by [http://lib.uiowa.edu University of Iowa Libraries].<br />
* '''When''' - Sunday, October 13th - Monday, October 14th<br />
* '''Where''' - [http://www.uiowa.edu/~maps/p/pbb1.htm John Pappajohn Business Building, University of Iowa], Room W401 <br />
* '''Registration Cost''' - Free!<br />
* '''Planning Committee''' - Emily Shaw (emily-f-shaw@uiowa.edu), Shawn Averkamp (shawn-averkamp@uiowa.edu), Becky Yoose(YOOSEBEC@grinnell.edu), Julia Bauder (BAUDERJ@grinnell.edu), Wendy Robertson (wendy-robertson@uiowa.edu), Matthew Butler (matthew-butler@uiowa.edu)<br />
<br />
===Logistics===<br />
* Lodging<br />
** We have blocked off rooms for 10/13 & 10/14 at the [http://www.sheratoniowacity.com/ Sheraton Iowa City] as the official hotel. The group name is "Code4Lib". These rooms are available at a discounted rate ($99/night, wifi included), and are held on a first come first served basis. Reservations must be booked by '''September 14, 2013''' or the rooms will be released back to the public. It's a pretty nice hotel, and a pleasant, easy walk through downtown Iowa City to the room where we'll be meeting. The Sheraton has an attached parking garage; ask about parking when you call to reserve a room.<br />
<br />
* Transportation<br />
** '''Bus -''' [http://www.greyhound.com/ Greyhound], [http://us.megabus.com/ Megabus] (routes to Iowa City from Chicago, Omaha, Des Moines)<br />
** '''Air - ''' [http://www.eiairport.org/ Eastern Iowa Airport](CID, in Cedar Rapids) is the closest airport (22 miles); [http://www.crshuttle.com/ Cedar Rapids Airport Shuttle] can get you to and from the airport (reserve in advance). [http://www.qcairport.com/ Quad City International Airport] (MLI) is 66 miles away, but flights are often cheaper; unfortunately, a shuttle or taxi to/from there might cost you almost as much as your flight. <br />
** '''Driving -''' Iowa City is off of I-80, which every Midwesterner should know how to get to :) There are several [http://en.parkopedia.com/parking/building/john-pappajohn-business-building-johnson-ia/ public parking structures] around campus, in easy walking distance to both the Sheraton (conference hotel) and Pappajohn Business Building (meeting room).<br />
<br />
==Programming Sign-up==<br />
<br />
Share what you are working on! We would also love to hear some ideas for a Sunday morning workshop/hackfest. Add your name and a description below.<br />
<br />
===Workshops/Hackfest===<br />
List your name and what you want to hack, teach, or see someone else teach.<br />
*Shawn Averkamp -- Linked Data Tool Share: Let's share tips and tricks for making/publishing/consuming linked data. How to set up a SPARQL server? How to use parsers and serializers? I don't have that many tricks up my sleeve yet, so add your name and comments here if you'd like to help organize.<br />
*Emily Shaw (UIowa) - CurateCamp, anyone? I've participated in a grand total of 1 before, but it was great and I'd be glad to facilitate if others are interested.<br />
*Ian Mason (UIowa) -- Displaying Live Data: if people are interested, we could hack together some web page charts using public facing data and the Google Charts API.<br />
*<br />
more...<br />
<br />
===Presentations===<br />
15-20 minutes suggested, but feel free to propose a longer talk.<br />
* Mark McFate (Grinnell College) - The Status of Islandora and Digital.Grinnell -- Islandora and http://Digital.Grinnell.edu are evolving rapidly. See what's new in Islandora and get a glimpse of how it’s used in Digital.Grinnell. <br />
* Alan Schmitz (Iowa State University - SILO Program) - Iowa Heritage Digital Collections and Omeka -- http://www.iowaheritage.org/<br />
*<br />
more...<br />
<br />
===Lightning Talks===<br />
5 minutes suggested. We'll open more slots at the conference.<br />
# Isabel Gonzalez-Smith, UIC<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
#<br />
<br />
==Schedule==<br />
<br />
===Sunday, October 13===<br />
<br />
====Mingling (9:00am - 9:30am)====<br />
<br />
====Workshops/Hackfest (9:30am - 12:00pm):====<br />
Pitch an idea above.<br />
<br />
====Lunch (12:00pm - 1:30pm)====<br />
Lunch on your own. <br />
<br />
====Talks (1:30pm - 5:00pm)====<br />
<br />
====Social Outing (5:30pm)====<br />
Dinner at The Mill<br />
<br />
===Monday, October 14===<br />
<br />
====Coffee (8:30am - 9:00am)====<br />
Get your name badge, drink some coffee, eat a snack, and meet some library folks.<br />
<br />
====Talks (9:00am - 12:00pm)====<br />
<br />
====Lunch (12:00pm - 1:30pm)====<br />
Lunch on your own<br />
<br />
====More Talks (1:30pm - 4:00pm)====<br />
<br />
==Registration==<br />
<br />
'''Registration is free.''' We have tables and chairs for about 50 people, but we have plenty of perimeter seating if you sign up too late. List your name, affiliation, and email address here to register for the meeting. If you signed up and are unable to attend please remove your name or contact us, so that we can make room for others.<br />
<br />
Contact Ryan Wick (ryanwick@gmail.com) with your preferred username to set up a Code4Lib wiki account, or ask Shawn Averkamp (shawn-averkamp@uiowa.edu) to add your name to this list if you prefer not to set up an account.:<br />
<br />
# Matthew Butler, University of Iowa, matthew-butler@uiowa.edu<br />
# Becky Yoose, Grinnell College, yoosebec at grinnell dot edu (maybe on Sunday, definitely on Monday)<br />
# Julia Bauder, Grinnell College, bauderj at grinnell dot edu<br />
# Samantha Helmick, Burlington Public Library, shelmick@burlington.lib.ia.us<br />
# Kelly Thompson, Iowa State University, kellyt@iastate.edu<br />
# Jason Stirnaman, University of Kansas Medical Center (KC), jstirnaman@kumc.edu<br />
# Sarah Park, Northwest Missouri State University, gopark at nwmissouri dot edu<br />
# Scott Hanrath, University of Kansas, shanrath@ku.edu<br />
# Ian Mason, University of Iowa, ian-mason@uiowa.edu<br />
# Linda Ballinger, Newberry Library, ballingerl at newberry dot org<br />
# Shannon Cody, University of Iowa, shannon-cody@uiowa.edu<br />
# Jillian Phillips, University of Iowa, jillian-phillips@uiowa.edu<br />
# Kathy Magarrell, University of Iowa, kathy-magarrell@uiowa.edu<br />
# Wendy Robertson, University of Iowa, wendy-robertson@uiowa.edu<br />
# Audrey Altman, University of Iowa, audrey-altman@uiowa.edu<br />
# Micah Bateman, University of Iowa, micah-bateman@uiowa.edu<br />
# Alan Schmitz, Iowa State University, aschmitz@silo.lib.ia.us<br />
# Jerry Balmer, Iowa State University, jbalmer@silo.lib.ia.us<br />
# Paul Ertz, Iowa State University, pertz@silo.lib.ia.us<br />
# Marie Harms, Iowa Library Services, marie.harms@lib.state.ia.us<br />
# Mark McFate, Grinnell College, mcfatem at grinnell dot edu<br />
# Robert Manaster, University of Illinois (UC), manaster at illinois dot edu<br />
# Brett Cloyd, University of Iowa, brett-cloyd@uiowa.edu<br />
# Sue Julich, University of Iowa, suzanne-julich@uiowa.edu<br />
# Melody Dworak, Iowa City Public Library, melody-dworak@icpl.org<br />
# Deana Greenfield, National Louis University Chicago, deana.greenfield@nl.edu<br />
# Colleen Theisen, University of Iowa Special Collections & University Archives, colleen-theisen@uiowa.edu<br />
# Ben Rodriguez, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, benrodriguez9@gmail.com<br />
# Christine Vivian, University of Iowa, christine-vivian@uiowa.edu<br />
# Roberto Arteaga, University of Iowa, roberto-arteaga@uiowa.edu<br />
# Beth Kamp, Freelance Librarian, beth-kamp@uiowa.edu<br />
# Jon Gorman, University of Illinois - Urbana Champaign, jtgorman@illinois.edu<br />
# Kirk Hess, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, kirkhess@illinois.edu<br />
# Isabel Gonzalez-Smith, University of Illinois at Chicago, igonza9@uic.edu<br />
# Amy Weidner, Benedictine University, aweidner@ben.edu<br />
# Sara Pitcher, Coralville Public Library, spitcher@coralville.lib.ia.us<br />
# Amy LeFager, National Louis University, amy.lefager@nl.edu<br />
# Mark Baldwin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, mbaldwi2@illinois.edu<br />
# Olivia Husman, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, husman2@illinois.edu<br />
# Wesley Teal, University of Iowa, wesley-teal@uiowa.edu<br />
# Carol Marquardsen, carol.marquardsen@gmail.com<br />
# Kelsey Berryhill, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, kelsey.a.berryhill@gmail.com<br />
# Cate Kompare, cmkompare@gmail.com<br />
# Peg Lawrence, Minnesota State University, Mankato margaret.lawrence@mnsu.edu<br />
# Graham Hukill, Wayne State University, graham.hukill@wayne.edu<br />
# Cole Hudson, Wayne State University, cole.hudson@wayne.edu<br />
# Lynne Weber, Minnesota State University, Mankato, lnweber@mnsu.edu<br />
# Amber Carlson, Davenport Public Library, acarlson@davenportlibrary.com<br />
# Stephen Wynn, Truman State University, swynn@truman.edu<br />
# Rebecca Cooling-Mallard, DePaul University, rebeccascooling@gmail.com<br />
# Rebecca Pfenning, Dominican University & Calumet City Public Library, rebeccapfenning@gmail.com<br />
# Larry Palmquist, University of Kansas, l-palmquist@ku.edu<br />
# Torii Moré, McLean County Museum of History, TMore@mchistory.org<br />
<br />
----<br />
<br />
== Previous C4L Midwest Regional Meetings ==<br />
<br />
* [[2010 (Inaugural) Code4Lib Midwest Meeting]]<br />
* [[2011 Code4Lib Midwest Meeting]]<br />
* [[2012 Code4Lib Midwest Meeting]]<br />
<br />
== Mailing list ==<br />
<br />
For better or for worse, Code4Lib "Midwest" has low-traffic [http://groups.google.com/group/code4lib-midwest mailing list/Google group]. Consider subscribing.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Loginprompt&diff=39430MediaWiki:Loginprompt2013-08-06T21:22:31Z<p>Wickr: Added message about emailing me for account creation</p>
<hr />
<div>To get a wiki account, please email Ryan Wick at '''ryanwick@gmail.com'''.<br/><br/><br />
You must have cookies enabled to log in to {{SITENAME}}.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=MediaWiki:Nosuchuser&diff=38730MediaWiki:Nosuchuser2013-03-18T19:31:57Z<p>Wickr: Created page with "There is no user by the name "$1". Account creation is '''disabled'''. Contact Ryan Wick (User:Wickr) to create an account."</p>
<hr />
<div>There is no user by the name "$1". Account creation is '''disabled'''.<br />
<br />
Contact Ryan Wick ([[User:Wickr]]) to create an account.</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=37834Main Page2013-03-08T15:48:16Z<p>Wickr: Reverted edits by Sherlenec0h5v (talk) to last revision by Wickr</p>
<hr />
<div>{|align=right<br />
|__TOC__<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== About Code4Lib ==<br />
<br />
* [[About Code4Lib]] - Background and history of the community<br />
* [[A Guide for the Perplexed]] - Building skills for working with library technologies<br />
* [[How to hack code4lib]] - For those newer to the community<br />
* [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m-9VtL7L_fUxl2hTF_YZSdFRfucaLtmHvLSzom6XPVM/edit?pli=1 Code4Lib Indoctrination] (This is a Google doc open to all including anonymous feedback.)<br />
**"How do we make code4lib a more inclusive place for newcomers? <br/> Or, how do we quickly indoctrinate newbies to our values and ways of doing things?" <br />
**Suggestions, ideas, and follow-up actions solicited.<br />
* [[One recommended tool/resource for n00bs]] - For new coding librarians/library Coders<br />
* [[Mentorship Program]]<br />
* [[Zoia or the Code4Lib IRC bot]]<br />
<br />
==Code4Lib 2013 Conference==<br />
See also the ''[[:Category:Code4Lib2013]] category''<br />
*[http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/schedule 2013 Schedule]<br />
*[[2013 Lightning Talks Signup]]<br />
*[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1TahfqabnchZLD1opq6ILs8XCYdXkgJDsj8-WyVLNzI4/edit Breakout Session Signups] | [[2013_breakout_sessions_reports|2013 Breakout Sessions Reports]]<br />
*[[2013_committees_sign-up_page|Volunteer to help plan 2013 conference]]<br />
*[[2013_During_the_Conference_Volunteers|During the conference volunteer signup]]<br />
*[[2013 Invited Speakers Nominations]] -- nominations close Aug. 31, 2012.<br />
*[[2013 preconference proposals|2013 preconference sessions]] - try to sign up by Jan 15th<br />
*[[2013 talks proposals]] - due Friday, Nov 9<br />
*[[2013 t-shirt design proposals]] - due Monday, Dec. 31<br />
<br />
*[[2013_social_activities|Social Activities for 2013 Conference]]<br />
*[[2013_travel|Travel Advice and Getting To and From the 2013 Conference]]<br />
*[[2013_room_ride_share|2013 Conference Room and Ride Share]]<br />
*[[2013_Guide_To_Wireless| Connecting to the UIC's Wifi]]<br />
*[[2013 Twitter List| 2013 Twitter Attendee List]]<br />
<br />
* Conference hashtag: #c4l13 -- [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AsyivMoYhk87dFljMUZURWZMYzNzT2lwcEduUUJ6d1E#gid=113 Archive of tweets] | [http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=c4l13 Flickr photos]<br />
<br />
== Local / Regional Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[NYC|Code4LibNYC]] - NYC and surrounding areas<br />
* [[NEC4L|New England Code4lib]] - New England<br />
* [[NL|Code4Bib]] - Dutch Code4Bib<br />
* [[MDC|Code4libMDC]] - Maryland, Washington D.C, Virginia, and surrounding areas<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/pnwcode4lib?hl=en PNWCode4Lib] - Pacific Northwest<br />
* [[North|code4lib North]] - Ontario and surrounding areas ''(new for Jan 2010!)''<br />
* [[Midwest|Code4Lib Midwest]] - Wherever that is...<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/ikr-fejlesztok/ Code4lib.hu] - Group of Hungarian library developers<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.jp/ Code4Lib Japan] - ''(new in 2010!)'', see also [http://twitter.com/yesonline/statuses/28561046501 tweet from Jerry Lee]<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/code4glam Code4GLAM Australia] - coders, hackers, developers and technologists in the Australian GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums) sector.<br />
* [[GreatEastern|Code4Lib Great Eastern]] - Atlantic Provinces<br />
* [[Code4lib_Mid-Atlantic|Code4Lib Mid-Atlantic]] - Philadelphia and the Greater Tri-State Area<br />
<br />
== Interest Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[ILS_Interop|ILS Interoperability]] - A group working to develop an infrastructure for interoperating between discovery layers and integrated library systems.<br />
* [[Open_Source_Book_Widgets|Open Source Book Widgets]] - A list of open source book widgets<br />
* [[Discovery|Open Source Discovery]] - Open Source application to enhance and support "discovery" in libraries<br />
* [[Mobile_Apps|Mobile Applications]] - A group interested in mobile web and native application development for libraries<br />
* [[Sources_Of_Metadata|Sources Of Metadata]] - list of api's and sources of interest to libraries<br />
<br />
== Software Usage and Documentation ==<br />
<br />
* [[Umlaut]] - OpenURL link resolving middleware<br />
* [[:Category:Patterns|Patterns for Collaborative Code]] - Patterns to make your open source 'more open', more amenable to distributed development and use at multiple institutions without forking. <br />
* [[ILS Documentation]]<br />
* [[OSS Directory]]<br />
* [[Working with MARC]]<br />
* [[Rogue]] - principles for standards creation<br />
* [[ProjectManagement]] - list of project management and issue tracking software that are frequently mentioned on the Code4Lib mailinglist<br />
<br />
== Code4Lib Journal ==<br />
<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib Journal|Code4Lib Journal]] - information and working documents<br />
<br />
== Current topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Code4Lib Website Update]]<br />
* [[OCLC Policy Change]]<br />
* [[SirsiDynix: Integrated Library System Platforms on Open Source]]<br />
* [[Parsing Library Data]]<br />
* [[Robots Are Our Friends]]<br />
<br />
== Other Code4Lib Sites ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/ code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://planet.code4lib.org planet.code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org journal.code4lib.org]<br />
<br />
== Earlier Conferences and events ==<br />
[[Conference Financial History At A Glance]]<br />
<br />
===Code4Lib 2012 Conference===<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2012 Code4lib2012 category]''<br />
<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ 2012 home]<br />
* [[During_the_Conference_Volunteers|Volunteer to help at code4lib 2012]]<br />
* [[2012_committees_sign-up_page|Volunteer to help plan 2012 conference]]<br />
* [[2012_preconference_proposals|2012 Preconference Proposals]]--due Sunday, November 20<br />
* [[2012_talks_proposals|2012 Talk Proposals]]--due Sunday, November 20<br />
* [[2012_c4l2012_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas and sign-up<br />
* [[c4l2012_rideshare|Rideshare-Roomshare]]<br />
* [[c4l2012_t-shirtcontest|T-shirt contest]]<br />
* [[ideas_for_2012|Put your ideas for 2012 here!]]<br />
* [[C4L2012_Call_For_Host|2012 Call For Host]]<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
* [http://linkd.in/unhJsR LinkedIn Event]<br />
* [[2012_twitter_list|List your Twitter handle here]]<br />
* [[2012_Lightning_Talks_Signup|Lightning Talks Signup]]<br />
* [http://irc.code4lib.org/ IRC Channel Timeline & Log]<br />
* [http://www.livestream.com/code4lib Conference Livestream] (non-attendees only, please!)<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2011 Conference ===<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2011 Code4lib2011 category]''<br />
<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011 C4L2011 Home]<br />
* [[C4L2011_registration | Registration Information!]]<br />
* [[2011_committees_sign-up_page | 2011 Committees Sign-Up]] - '''Volunteer to help'''<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
* [[C4L2011_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas & sign-up<br />
* [[C4L2011_planning_wishlist|'''Put your ideas for 2011 here!''']]<br />
* [http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=161853827200024 Facebook Event Page]<br />
* [http://events.linkedin.com/Code4Lib-2011/pub/448897 LinkedIn Event Page]<br />
<!-- commenting out until later * '''[[2011 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff''' --><br />
* [[C4L2011_rideshare|Airport Ride Share and Carpooling]]<br />
* [[C4L2011_roomshare | Hotel room share]]<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2010 Conference ===<br />
<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2010 Code4lib2010 category]''<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/schedule Finalized schedule]<br />
* [[2010 Lightning Talks Signup]] - sign up to give a lightning talk<br />
* [[2010 Breakout Sessions]] - suggest a breakout here<br />
* '''[[2010 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff'''<br />
* [[C4L2010_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas & sign-up<br />
* [[Committees sign-up page]] - '''Volunteer to help'''<br />
* [[C4L2011_planning_wishlist|'''Put your ideas for 2011 here!''']]<br />
* [[Asheville Airport to Hotel Van Manifest]] <br />
* [[C4L2010rideshare|General shared travel/transportation planning]]<br />
* [[C4L2010planning:RoommatesRidesEtc|Roommates, Rides, Etc]]<br />
* [[C4L2010_manning_discount|Manning Publications Discount]] - discount code (40% off) for use by attendees through Feb. 28, 2010<br />
* Thanks also to our other sponsors!<br />
* [[C4L2010planning|2010 Planning]]<br />
* [[C4L2010planning:_wishlist | 2010 Planning Wishlist]] - planning page for issues, expectations, etc. for the 2010 conference<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2009 Conference ===<br />
<br />
* [[BookRaffle]] - coordinate begging publishers for books to raffle off at the conference<br />
* [http://inkdroid.org/c4l2009/attendees Get FOAFed] - add your FOAF profile to the network of c4l2009 attendees<br />
* PreConferences:<br />
** [[GIS_preconf_code4libcon2009]] - Open source GIS just like mom used to make<br />
** [[LinkedData]] - A proposal for a linked-data code4lib2009 pre-conference<br />
** [[LibX_Preconference]] - Proposal for a half-day pre-conference targeted at developers who wish to use the LibX 2.0 platform<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/2009/oclc-precon OCLC Grid Services Preconference]<br />
* [[RoommatesRidesEtc]] - Find roommates for Code4Lib 2009, share rides, etc.<br />
* [[2009 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff<br />
<br />
=== Other workshops ===<br />
* [http://barcamp.org/SearchCampDC SearchCampDC] - barcamp style event in DC with usual suspects from code4lib<br />
* [[code4lib/elag2010]] - 1-day code4lib preconference at elag2010<br />
<br />
== Archived topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Logo Design Process]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[AdminToDo]] - ideas and tasks for maintaining the Code4Lib sites</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Main_Page&diff=37633Main Page2013-03-06T08:07:35Z<p>Wickr: Reverted edits by Dalee7o3y (talk) to last revision by Tseneca</p>
<hr />
<div>{|align=right<br />
|__TOC__<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== About Code4Lib ==<br />
<br />
* [[About Code4Lib]] - Background and history of the community<br />
* [[A Guide for the Perplexed]] - Building skills for working with library technologies<br />
* [[How to hack code4lib]] - For those newer to the community<br />
* [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m-9VtL7L_fUxl2hTF_YZSdFRfucaLtmHvLSzom6XPVM/edit?pli=1 Code4Lib Indoctrination] (This is a Google doc open to all including anonymous feedback.)<br />
**"How do we make code4lib a more inclusive place for newcomers? <br/> Or, how do we quickly indoctrinate newbies to our values and ways of doing things?" <br />
**Suggestions, ideas, and follow-up actions solicited.<br />
* [[One recommended tool/resource for n00bs]] - For new coding librarians/library Coders<br />
* [[Mentorship Program]]<br />
* [[Zoia or the Code4Lib IRC bot]]<br />
<br />
==Code4Lib 2013 Conference==<br />
See also the ''[[:Category:Code4Lib2013]] category''<br />
*[http://code4lib.org/conference/2013/schedule 2013 Schedule]<br />
*[[2013 Lightning Talks Signup]]<br />
*[https://docs.google.com/document/d/1TahfqabnchZLD1opq6ILs8XCYdXkgJDsj8-WyVLNzI4/edit Breakout Session Signups] | [[2013_breakout_sessions_reports|2013 Breakout Sessions Reports]]<br />
*[[2013_committees_sign-up_page|Volunteer to help plan 2013 conference]]<br />
*[[2013_During_the_Conference_Volunteers|During the conference volunteer signup]]<br />
*[[2013 Invited Speakers Nominations]] -- nominations close Aug. 31, 2012.<br />
*[[2013 preconference proposals|2013 preconference sessions]] - try to sign up by Jan 15th<br />
*[[2013 talks proposals]] - due Friday, Nov 9<br />
*[[2013 t-shirt design proposals]] - due Monday, Dec. 31<br />
<br />
*[[2013_social_activities|Social Activities for 2013 Conference]]<br />
*[[2013_travel|Travel Advice and Getting To and From the 2013 Conference]]<br />
*[[2013_room_ride_share|2013 Conference Room and Ride Share]]<br />
*[[2013_Guide_To_Wireless| Connecting to the UIC's Wifi]]<br />
*[[2013 Twitter List| 2013 Twitter Attendee List]]<br />
<br />
* Conference hashtag: #c4l13 -- [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0AsyivMoYhk87dFljMUZURWZMYzNzT2lwcEduUUJ6d1E#gid=113 Archive of tweets] | [http://www.flickr.com/search/?q=c4l13 Flickr photos]<br />
<br />
== Local / Regional Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[NYC|Code4LibNYC]] - NYC and surrounding areas<br />
* [[NEC4L|New England Code4lib]] - New England<br />
* [[NL|Code4Bib]] - Dutch Code4Bib<br />
* [[MDC|Code4libMDC]] - Maryland, Washington D.C, Virginia, and surrounding areas<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/pnwcode4lib?hl=en PNWCode4Lib] - Pacific Northwest<br />
* [[North|code4lib North]] - Ontario and surrounding areas ''(new for Jan 2010!)''<br />
* [[Midwest|Code4Lib Midwest]] - Wherever that is...<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/ikr-fejlesztok/ Code4lib.hu] - Group of Hungarian library developers<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.jp/ Code4Lib Japan] - ''(new in 2010!)'', see also [http://twitter.com/yesonline/statuses/28561046501 tweet from Jerry Lee]<br />
* [http://groups.google.com/group/code4glam Code4GLAM Australia] - coders, hackers, developers and technologists in the Australian GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums) sector.<br />
* [[GreatEastern|Code4Lib Great Eastern]] - Atlantic Provinces<br />
* [[Code4lib_Mid-Atlantic|Code4Lib Mid-Atlantic]] - Philadelphia and the Greater Tri-State Area<br />
<br />
== Interest Groups ==<br />
<br />
* [[ILS_Interop|ILS Interoperability]] - A group working to develop an infrastructure for interoperating between discovery layers and integrated library systems.<br />
* [[Open_Source_Book_Widgets|Open Source Book Widgets]] - A list of open source book widgets<br />
* [[Discovery|Open Source Discovery]] - Open Source application to enhance and support "discovery" in libraries<br />
* [[Mobile_Apps|Mobile Applications]] - A group interested in mobile web and native application development for libraries<br />
* [[Sources_Of_Metadata|Sources Of Metadata]] - list of api's and sources of interest to libraries<br />
<br />
== Software Usage and Documentation ==<br />
<br />
* [[Umlaut]] - OpenURL link resolving middleware<br />
* [[:Category:Patterns|Patterns for Collaborative Code]] - Patterns to make your open source 'more open', more amenable to distributed development and use at multiple institutions without forking. <br />
* [[ILS Documentation]]<br />
* [[OSS Directory]]<br />
* [[Working with MARC]]<br />
* [[Rogue]] - principles for standards creation<br />
* [[ProjectManagement]] - list of project management and issue tracking software that are frequently mentioned on the Code4Lib mailinglist<br />
<br />
== Code4Lib Journal ==<br />
<br />
* [[:Category:Code4Lib Journal|Code4Lib Journal]] - information and working documents<br />
<br />
== Current topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Code4Lib Website Update]]<br />
* [[OCLC Policy Change]]<br />
* [[SirsiDynix: Integrated Library System Platforms on Open Source]]<br />
* [[Parsing Library Data]]<br />
* [[Robots Are Our Friends]]<br />
<br />
== Other Code4Lib Sites ==<br />
<br />
* [http://www.code4lib.org/ code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://planet.code4lib.org planet.code4lib.org]<br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org journal.code4lib.org]<br />
<br />
== Earlier Conferences and events ==<br />
[[Conference Financial History At A Glance]]<br />
<br />
===Code4Lib 2012 Conference===<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2012 Code4lib2012 category]''<br />
<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2012/ 2012 home]<br />
* [[During_the_Conference_Volunteers|Volunteer to help at code4lib 2012]]<br />
* [[2012_committees_sign-up_page|Volunteer to help plan 2012 conference]]<br />
* [[2012_preconference_proposals|2012 Preconference Proposals]]--due Sunday, November 20<br />
* [[2012_talks_proposals|2012 Talk Proposals]]--due Sunday, November 20<br />
* [[2012_c4l2012_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas and sign-up<br />
* [[c4l2012_rideshare|Rideshare-Roomshare]]<br />
* [[c4l2012_t-shirtcontest|T-shirt contest]]<br />
* [[ideas_for_2012|Put your ideas for 2012 here!]]<br />
* [[C4L2012_Call_For_Host|2012 Call For Host]]<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
* [http://linkd.in/unhJsR LinkedIn Event]<br />
* [[2012_twitter_list|List your Twitter handle here]]<br />
* [[2012_Lightning_Talks_Signup|Lightning Talks Signup]]<br />
* [http://irc.code4lib.org/ IRC Channel Timeline & Log]<br />
* [http://www.livestream.com/code4lib Conference Livestream] (non-attendees only, please!)<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2011 Conference ===<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2011 Code4lib2011 category]''<br />
<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2011 C4L2011 Home]<br />
* [[C4L2011_registration | Registration Information!]]<br />
* [[2011_committees_sign-up_page | 2011 Committees Sign-Up]] - '''Volunteer to help'''<br />
* [[How To Plan A Code4LibCon]]<br />
* [[C4L2011_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas & sign-up<br />
* [[C4L2011_planning_wishlist|'''Put your ideas for 2011 here!''']]<br />
* [http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=161853827200024 Facebook Event Page]<br />
* [http://events.linkedin.com/Code4Lib-2011/pub/448897 LinkedIn Event Page]<br />
<!-- commenting out until later * '''[[2011 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff''' --><br />
* [[C4L2011_rideshare|Airport Ride Share and Carpooling]]<br />
* [[C4L2011_roomshare | Hotel room share]]<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2010 Conference ===<br />
<br />
''See also the [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Category:Code4Lib2010 Code4lib2010 category]''<br />
* [http://code4lib.org/conference/2010/schedule Finalized schedule]<br />
* [[2010 Lightning Talks Signup]] - sign up to give a lightning talk<br />
* [[2010 Breakout Sessions]] - suggest a breakout here<br />
* '''[[2010 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff'''<br />
* [[C4L2010_social_activities|Social Activities]] - ideas & sign-up<br />
* [[Committees sign-up page]] - '''Volunteer to help'''<br />
* [[C4L2011_planning_wishlist|'''Put your ideas for 2011 here!''']]<br />
* [[Asheville Airport to Hotel Van Manifest]] <br />
* [[C4L2010rideshare|General shared travel/transportation planning]]<br />
* [[C4L2010planning:RoommatesRidesEtc|Roommates, Rides, Etc]]<br />
* [[C4L2010_manning_discount|Manning Publications Discount]] - discount code (40% off) for use by attendees through Feb. 28, 2010<br />
* Thanks also to our other sponsors!<br />
* [[C4L2010planning|2010 Planning]]<br />
* [[C4L2010planning:_wishlist | 2010 Planning Wishlist]] - planning page for issues, expectations, etc. for the 2010 conference<br />
<br />
=== Code4Lib 2009 Conference ===<br />
<br />
* [[BookRaffle]] - coordinate begging publishers for books to raffle off at the conference<br />
* [http://inkdroid.org/c4l2009/attendees Get FOAFed] - add your FOAF profile to the network of c4l2009 attendees<br />
* PreConferences:<br />
** [[GIS_preconf_code4libcon2009]] - Open source GIS just like mom used to make<br />
** [[LinkedData]] - A proposal for a linked-data code4lib2009 pre-conference<br />
** [[LibX_Preconference]] - Proposal for a half-day pre-conference targeted at developers who wish to use the LibX 2.0 platform<br />
** [http://code4lib.org/2009/oclc-precon OCLC Grid Services Preconference]<br />
* [[RoommatesRidesEtc]] - Find roommates for Code4Lib 2009, share rides, etc.<br />
* [[2009 Conference Buzz]] - Conference announcements and a place for code4libbers to plan stuff<br />
<br />
=== Other workshops ===<br />
* [http://barcamp.org/SearchCampDC SearchCampDC] - barcamp style event in DC with usual suspects from code4lib<br />
* [[code4lib/elag2010]] - 1-day code4lib preconference at elag2010<br />
<br />
== Archived topics ==<br />
<br />
* [[Logo Design Process]]<br />
<br />
<br />
[[AdminToDo]] - ideas and tasks for maintaining the Code4Lib sites</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Information_about_meeting_rooms_and_available_equipment&diff=37038Information about meeting rooms and available equipment2013-02-20T00:04:40Z<p>Wickr: Reverted edits by ClariceVillarreal1988 (talk) to last revision by Ksprague</p>
<hr />
<div>General information about:<br/><br />
[http://www.yale.edu Yale University]<br/><br />
[http://www.library.yale.edu Yale University Library]<br/><br />
<br/><br />
The Sterling Memorial Library Lecture Hall is equipped with a standard, Tier 3, Yale University Media services A/V system, which includes: <br />
<br><br />
<ul><br />
<li> a podium with affixed microphone</li><br />
<li> wireless microphone </li><br />
<li> network PC </li><br />
<li> MAC laptop adapter </li><br />
<li> several USB ports </li><br />
<li> LCD projector and wall screen </li><br />
<li> DVD player </li><br />
</ul><br />
<br />
<br><br />
[[image:view-from-back.jpg|thumb|left|400px|alt=View of Lecture Hall from back of room| View of Lecture Hall from back of room]]<br />
<br />
[[image:View-from-podium.jpg|thumb|left|400px|alt+View of Lecture Hall from podium|View of Lecture Hall from podium]]<br/></div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=OSS_Directory&diff=36936OSS Directory2013-02-17T00:32:04Z<p>Wickr: fixed typo</p>
<hr />
<div>[[Category:OSSDirectory]]<br />
Below is a growing list of open source projects that relate to libraries. The hope is that it will allow this projects to be easier to find. For news about open source systems in libraries, check out http://oss4lib.org/ or http://foss4lib.org.<br />
<br />
'''Note:''' The licenses given are those of the software itself. Some have dependencies which may have different licenses. Please take this into account when applicable.<br />
<br />
* [[ILS|Integrated Library Systems]]<br />
* [[MetaSearch|MetaSearch and Resolver]]<br />
* [[DigLib|Digital Library and Repository]]<br />
* [[OPAC|OPAC Replacements]]<br />
* [[ILL|Interlibrary Loan]]<br />
* [[LangLib|Classes and Libraries]]<br />
* [[ProjInt|Other Projects of Interest]]<br />
* [[unapi|unapi for ILS]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=Libraries_Sharing_Code&diff=36896Libraries Sharing Code2013-02-16T05:43:07Z<p>Wickr: Added a few more from URLs in my conf notes</p>
<hr />
<div>A number of libraries have organizational repositories in GitHub. These can be very valuable and we attempt to collect them here.<br />
<br />
* [https://github.com/nypl/ The New York Public Library]<br />
* [https://github.com/NYULibraries NYU Libraries]<br />
* [https://github.com/psu-stewardship Penn State Digital Stewardship]<br />
* [https://github.com/gwu-libraries/ George Washington University Libraries]<br />
* [https://github.com/ucsdlib?tab=repositories UCSD Library]<br />
* [https://github.com/ui-libraries University of Iowa Libraries]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=OCLC_Policy_Change&diff=36777OCLC Policy Change2013-02-14T06:27:34Z<p>Wickr: Reverted edits by Dsof (talk) to last revision by Wickr</p>
<hr />
<div>== Background ==<br />
On 5-Nov-2008, [[OCLC]] announced the Policy for Use and Transfer of [[WorldCat]]® Records to replace the Guidelines for the Use and Transfer of OCLC-Derived Records. The goals of the policy, as described by OCLC, were "to modernize record use and transfer practices for application on the Web, foster new uses of WorldCat data that benefit members and clarify data sharing rights and restrictions." This new policy generated considerable discussion in the library community, including two petitions, several trade publication articles, and over 80 blog posts with related comments. <br />
<br />
On 13-Jan-2009, OCLC announced a [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/board/default.htm Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship] with a charge to: consult with librarians and member representatives as appropriate; review reports, letters and comments including blog and listserv messages from the global library community regarding the revised Policy; and recommend principles of shared data creation and changes in the Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records that will preserve the community around WorldCat infrastructure and services, and strengthen libraries. The Review Board submitted its [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/FinalReport_ReviewBoard.pdf final report] to OCLC on 22-Jun-2009 recommending that the proposed policy be withdrawn and a Record Use Policy Development Task Force be formed along with a "formal, transparent and well-managed process" to create a new policy. In a [http://www.oclc.org/news/releases/200939.htm news release] posted on 26-Jun-2009, OCLC accepted these recommendations.<br />
<br />
On 7-April-2010, the Review Board of Shared Data Curation and Stewardship posted their draft policy for a period of review and comment (see link below).<br />
<br />
This page documents the discussion of members of the library community surrounding the revision of the Guidelines and creation of the Policy. It can be edited by anyone who has registered for an account on the Code4Lib wiki. [[Special:Userlogin|Registration]] on the Code4Lib wiki is open to anyone with an e-mail address.<br />
<br />
== The Policy ==<br />
<br />
Links to various forms of the policy -- previous editions, drafts, etc -- in reverse chronological order.<br />
<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/default.htm WorldCat Rights and Responsibilities for the OCLC Cooperative] (7-Apr-2010)<br />
<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/news/releases/20092.htm Press release regarding the Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
* [http://lists.ala.org/wws/arc/lita-l/2009-03/msg00117.html Announcement of OCLC Review Board Survey] (via LITA-L mailing list)<br />
<br />
<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/policy.htm Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat® Records] (Last known update is 19-Nov-2008; this version is in PDF)<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/ OCLC's summary statement about the policy]<br />
* [http://www.oclc.org/support/documentation/worldcat/records/guidelines/default.htm Guidelines for the Use and Transfer of OCLC-Derived Records] (the "Previous 1987 version")<br />
<br />
<br />
* [http://marc.coffeecode.net/oclc_2008_11_02/ Archived copy of 2-Nov-2008 version]<br />
* [http://www.librarything.com/wiki/index.php?title=OCLC_Policy_Changes&diff=11748&oldid=11747 Difference between the November 2nd version and the November 5th version]<br />
* [http://www.librarything.com/wiki/index.php?title=OCLC_Policy_Changes&diff=12067&oldid=12062 Difference between the November 5th version and the November 19th version]<br />
<br />
== Petitions ==<br />
<br />
On November 13, 2008, a petition called [http://watchdog.net/c/stop-oclc Stop the OCLC powergrab!] was started by Aaron Swartz to repeal the new policy. Background in his blog post, [http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/oclcscam Stealing Your Library: The OCLC Powergrab].<br />
<br />
On December 1, 2008, Elaine Sanchez created a new [http://www.petitiononline.com/oclc/petition.html petition] with more depth and specificity. The petition calls for OCLC to vacate the new policy, create a more open process for revising the 1987 guidelines, and assert that the records are the property of the respective contributing members. Ms. Sanchez [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cA5EA7312DD1822479490004ED396177E96E8D2D455%40BOBCATMAIL4.matrix.txstate.edu%3e posted an announcement about it] on the Autocat mailing list.<br />
<br />
<br />
== Commentary Regarding First Revision (nov 2) ==<br />
<br />
* pmurray - [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-gbs-speculation/ Is OCLC’s Change of WorldCat Record Use/Transfer Policy Related to the Google Book Search Agreement?]<br />
* jrochkind - [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/03/viral-nature-of-oclc-usage-policy-like-open-source-no/ viral nature of OCLC usage policy–like open source? No.]<br />
* Thingology - [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/11/worldcat-policy-change.php OCLC Policy Change]<br />
* Ed Summers - [http://inkdroid.org/journal/2008/11/03/bibliovirus/ Bibliovirus]<br />
* Dan Scott - [http://coffeecode.net/archives/174-Archive-of-OCLC-WorldCat-Policy-as-posted-2008-11-02.html Archive of OCLC WorldCat Policy as posted 2008-11-02]<br />
* Libology - [http://www.libology.com/blog/2008/11/03/oclc-worldcat-is-the-tiger-not-the-lady.html OCLC WorldCat is the Tiger, not the Lady]<br />
<br />
== Commentary Regarding Second Revision (nov 5) / General ==<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|- style="text-align: left;"<br />
! Date !! Author !! Title<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-02 || Reese, Terry || [http://oregonstate.edu/~reeset/blog/archives/574 OCLC’s proposed new guidelines for the transfer of bibliographic records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-03 || Reese, Terry || [http://oregonstate.edu/~reeset/blog/archives/579 What would it look like if OCLC was broken up?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-03 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/03/oclcs-new-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records/ oclc’s new policy for use and transfer of worldcat records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-04 || Calhoun, Karen || [http://community.oclc.org/metalogue/archives/2008/11/notes-on-oclcs-updated-record.html Notes on OCLC's Updated Record Use Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-04 || Panlibus || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/11/what-are-oclc-playing-at.php What are OCLC playing at?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-04 || Mahoney, Richard || [http://lists.indexdata.dk/pipermail/yazlist/2008-November/002594.html Yazlist: Impact of new OCLC `Policy for Use and Transfer of WC Records' on federated search/virtual union catalogues] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Coombs, Karen || [http://www.librarywebchic.net/wordpress/2008/11/05/whos-record-is-it-anyway/ Who’s record is it anyway?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/05/karen-calhoun-on-worldcat/ karen calhoun on oclc’s updated record use policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/05/new-oclc-policy-on-worldcat-records-re-released/ new oclc policy on worldcat records re-released]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Open Content Alliance || [http://www.opencontentalliance.org/?p=162 New OCLC Records Policy Generates Debate]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Reese, Terry || [http://oregonstate.edu/~reeset/blog/archives/582 A look at the Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records revision]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-05 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/05/more-on-oclcs-policies/ More on OCLC’s policies]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-06 || ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6612175.html After Delay, OCLC Lays Out New Policy for Records Use and Transfer] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-06 || Repohate || [http://repohate.blogspot.com/2008/11/declaration-of-independance-of-metadata.html Declaration of Independance of Metadata]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-06 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/06/copyright-trivia/ copyright trivia], [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/06/one-more/ one more]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-06 || Styles, Rob || [http://dynamicorange.com/2008/11/06/oclc-record-usage-copyright-contracts-and-the-law/ OCLC, Record Usage, Copyright, Contracts and the Law]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-07 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/07/update-on-oclc-worldcat-policy/ update on oclc worldcat policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-07 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/07/a-logical-oclc-argument/ A logical OCLC argument]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-07 || Wallis, Richard (Panlibus) || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/11/keeping-the-worldcat-in-the-bag.php Keeping the WorldCat in the bag]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-12 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/12/i-dont-actually-want-to-destroy-oclc/ I don’t actually want to destroy OCLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-12 || Uncontrolled Vocabulary #62 (podcast) || [http://uncontrolledvocabulary.com/2008/11/12/uncontrolled-vocabulary-62-a-reliable-guide-to-unicorns/ A Reliable Guide to Unicorns]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-12 || Wallis, Richard (Panlibus) || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/11/oclc-any-questions.php OCLC – any questions?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-13 || Hartman-Caverly, Sarah || [http://seriallyyours.wordpress.com/2008/11/13/final-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records-post-by-oclc/ Final ‘Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records’ Posted by OCLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-13 || O'Steen, Ben || [http://oxfordrepo.blogspot.com/2008/11/oclc-viral-licence-being-added-to.html OCLC - viral licence being added to WorldCat data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-13 || Slashdot || [http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/13/1929213 Non-Profit Org Claims Rights In Library Catalog Data] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-13 || Swartz, Aaron || [http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/oclcscam Stealing Your Library: The OCLC Powergrab] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || ''Inside Higher Ed'' || [http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/11/14/worldcat Maelstrom Over Metadata] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Calhoun, Karen / Roy Tennant / Richard Wallis || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/11/oclc-talk-with-talis-about-the-new-record-use-policy.php OCLC Talk with Talis about the new Record Use Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Calhoun, Karen (via Autocat) || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c2FA61018D659CF4B95A0F938AE66965A037EAA5A%40OAEXCH4SERVER.oa.oclc.org%3e OCLC Record Use Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/14/oclc-worldcat-record-policy-makes-it-to-inside-higher-ed-and-slashdot/ OCLC WorldCat Record Policy makes it to Inside Higher Ed and Slashdot]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Libology || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2008/11/14/more-oclc-comments.html More OCLC Comments]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Litwin, Roy || [http://libraryjuicepress.com/blog/?p=792 OCLC Powergrab?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Sanchez, Elaine (via Autocat) || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cA5EA7312DD1822479490004ED396177E96E853AE0A%40BOBCATMAIL4.matrix.txstate.edu%3e Petition to stop OCLC from initiating the new WorldCat Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Styles, Rob || [http://dynamicorange.com/2008/11/14/more-oclc-policy/ More OCLC Policy…]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-14 || Suburban Banshee || [http://suburbanbanshee.wordpress.com/2008/11/14/oclc-gets-grabby/ OCLC Gets Grabby]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-15 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/15/talis-podcast-about-oclc-worldcat-record-use-policy-with-karen-clahoun-and-roy-tennant/ Talis Podcast about OCLC WorldCat Record Use Policy with Karen Clahoun and Roy Tennant]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-15 || LISnews || [http://lisnews.org/oclc_claims_ownership_data_opacs OCLC Claims Ownership of Data In OPACs]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-15 || Swartz, Aaron || [http://www.aaronsw.com/weblog/oclcreply OCLC on the Run] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-15 || West, Jessamyn || [http://www.librarian.net/stax/2536/what-is-up-with-oclc/ What is up with OCLC?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-16 || Mazzocchi, Stefano || [http://www.betaversion.org/~stefano/linotype/news/220/ Rule #1 for Surviving Paradigm Shifts: Don’t S**t Where You Eat]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-16 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/16/more-oclc/ more OCLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-16 || Schwartz, Christine || [http://www.catalogingfutures.com/catalogingfutures/2008/11/essential-listening-calhoun-and-tennant-on-oclcs-policy.html Essential listening: Calhoun and Tennant on OCLC's policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-17 || Alford, Larry (Chair, OCLC Board of Trustees) || [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/trusteesletter.pdf An open letter to the OCLC membership on the WorldCat Record Use Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-17 || Annoyed Librarian || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/blog/580000658/post/290036629.html How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love OCLC] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-18 || Mehta, Devanshu || [http://www.geekactivism.com/2008/11/18/on-community-based-collaboration-lesson-from-the-oclc-debacle/ On Community-Based Collaboration: Lesson From the OCLC Debacle]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-18 || Styles, Rob || [http://dynamicorange.com/2008/11/18/schroedingers_worldcat/ Schroedinger’s WorldCat]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-18 || Baker, Gavin || [http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2008/11/oclc-fighting-oa-to-bibliographic-data.html OCLC fighting OA to bibliographic data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-18 || Lawson, Steve || [http://stevelawson.name/seealso/archives/2008/11/clarifications_and_cautions.html Clarifications and Cautions]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-19 || Lang, John || [http://lonewolflibrarian.wordpress.com/2008/11/19/oclc-and-google-policy-discussion-continues111908/ OCLC and Google Policy Discussion Continues…11.19.08]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-19 || Library 2.0 Gang (podcast) || [http://librarygang.talis.com/2008/11/19/library-20-gang-1008-policy-oclc-google-book-search/ Library 2.0 Gang 10/08: Policy – OCLC & Google Book Search]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-19 || Sauers, Michael (screenshot) || [http://www.flickr.com/photos/travelinlibrarian/3044179351/ Hey Roy, remember this?] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-19 || Uncontrolled Vocabulary #63 (podcast) || [http://uncontrolledvocabulary.com/2008/11/19/uncontrolled-vocabulary-63-aacr3-now-with-frbr/ Uncontrolled Vocabulary #63 - AACR3, now with FRBR] (OCLC discussion starts at the 20:50 mark.)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-19 || Mark Ockerbloom, John || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2008/11/19/drawing-a-line-in-the-sand-part-1-the-importance-of-open-library-metadata/ Drawing a line in the sand, Part 1: The importance of open library metadata]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-20 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/11/oclc-policy-re-re-released-now-in.php OCLC Policy Re-re-released, now in unfriendly PDF]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-20 || Jastram, Iris || [http://pegasuslibrarian.blogspot.com/2008/11/oclc-kerfuffle-in-which-i-write-much.html The OCLC Kerfuffle: In which I write much but come to few conclusions]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-20 || Bridle, James || [http://www.liberalconspiracy.org/2008/11/20/the-great-public-library-scandal/ The great public library scandal]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-21 || Sauers, Michael || [http://www.travelinlibrarian.info/2008/11/oclc-and-cc.html OCLC and CC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-21 || Mehta, Devanshu || [http://www.geekactivism.com/2008/11/21/the-continuing-adventures-of-worldcat-conditions-not-restrictions/ Continuing Adventures of WorldCat: Conditions, not Restrictions]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-21 || Wallis, Richard || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/11/oclc-questions-answers-and-an-open-letter.php OCLC - Questions Answers and an Open Letter]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-21 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2008/11/fork-worldcat.html Fork WorldCat]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-21 || Mark Ockerbloom, John || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2008/11/21/drawing-a-line-in-the-sand-part-2-problems-with-oclcs-catalog-policy/ Drawing a line in the sand, Part 2: Problems with OCLC’s catalog policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-24 || Kleinman, Molly || [http://mollykleinman.com/2008/11/24/oclc-licensing-saga/ The OCLC data licensing saga: Adapt or die]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-24 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/24/of-identifiers-matching-oclcnums-and-umlaut/ Of Identifiers, matching, OCLCnums, and Umlaut]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-24 || Mark Ockerbloom, John || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2008/11/24/drawing-a-line-in-the-sand-part-3-how-to-respond/ Drawing a line in the sand, Part 3: How to respond?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-24 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/24/creative-commons-is-not-appropriate-for-data/ Creative Commons is not appropriate for data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-25 || Salo, Dorothea || [http://cavlec.yarinareth.net/2008/11/25/oclc-catalogue-records-and-labor/ OCLC, catalogue records, and labor]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-25 || Mehta, Devanshu || [http://www.geekactivism.com/2008/11/25/i-can-haz-worldcats/ I Can Haz Worldcat?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-26 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2008/11/26/380/ OCLC, and what we lose without openness (a True Story)]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-26 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2008/11/26/putting-your-golden-eggs-in-one-basket/ Putting Your Golden Eggs in One Basket]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-27 || NELLCO USS project blog || [http://blog.nellco.org/?p=47 USS Use of OCLC MARC Records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-28 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2008/11/oclc-use-policy-details-your-records.html OCLC Use Policy Details: Your Records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-28 || Kline, Heather || [http://heatherjkline.wordpress.com/2008/11/28/maelstrom-over-metadata/ "Maelstrom over Metadata"]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-11-28 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2008/11/oclc-use-policy-details-use-and.html OCLC Use Policy Details: Use and Transparency]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-01 || Schwartz, Christine || [http://www.catalogingfutures.com/catalogingfutures/2008/12/oclc-policy-spreading-the-bibliographic-wealth-around.html OCLC policy: spreading the bibliographic wealth around?] <br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-01 || Sanchez, Elaine (via autocat) || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cA5EA7312DD1822479490004ED396177E96E8D2D455%40BOBCATMAIL4.matrix.txstate.edu%3e Petition for OCLC to Collaboratively Re-write Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-01 || York University Libraries Bibliographic Services || [http://www.yorku.ca/yul/bibserv/blog/?p=190 The Bib Blog: Petition for OCLC to Collaboratively Re-write Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-04 || Voss, Jacob || [http://jakoblog.de/2008/12/04/bibliographische-daten-muessen-frei-sein/ Bibliographische Daten müssen frei sein] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//jakoblog.de/2008/12/04/bibliographische-daten-muessen-frei-sein/&hl=en&langpair=auto%2Fen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 rough English translation] via Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-07 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/12/elusive-moose-and-oclc.php The Elusive Moose and OCLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-07 || barbarakitten_t (Livejournal) || [http://community.livejournal.com/library_mofo/988321.html OCLC Policy Suckage] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-07 || Anonymous blogger (paraprofessional?*) || [http://kittent.wordpress.com/2008/12/07/oclc-policy-sucks/ OCLC policy Sucks]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-08 || techdirt || [http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20081208/1224123056.shtml Landgrab For Ownership Of Library Catalog Data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-09 || Missouri Libr Net Corp || [http://pipeup.wordpress.com/2008/12/09/worldcat-records-policy-update/ WorldCat Records Policy Update]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-09 || PALINET Cataloging Blog || [http://blog.palinet.org/cat/?p=118 OCLC Record Use Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-09 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/12/new-oclc-policy-and-federal-libraries.php The New OCLC Policy and Federal Libraries]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-10 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2008/12/10/oclc-license-policy-a-recommendation.html OCLC License Policy - A Recommendation]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-10 || ''Autocat'' list discussion || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cDE579CE2077A804AB69F6A84F17421DA0F0F37%40TFTMEXCH1.tufts.ad.tufts.edu%3e Re: The new OCLC Policy and Federal libraries] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c17C8A0DAFF17854790F2BC013D9F5BC5132D328583%40XVS2%2dCLUSTER.yu.yale.edu%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cDE579CE2077A804AB69F6A84F17421DA0F0F38%40TFTMEXCH1.tufts.ad.tufts.edu%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cDE579CE2077A804AB69F6A84F17421DA0F0F39%40TFTMEXCH1.tufts.ad.tufts.edu%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c63d3c8ce0812101051rf0b0cdbg825c7e26ee7c4002%40mail.gmail.com%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0812101417360.13972%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cDE579CE2077A804AB69F6A84F17421DA0F0F3A%40TFTMEXCH1.tufts.ad.tufts.edu%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0812102245300.27468%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-12 || Anonymous blogger (Cainmark) || [http://cainmark.livejournal.com/629741.html OCLC trying to use its EULA to hold freely given catolog data hostage.] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-12 || ''American Libraries Online'' || [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2008/december2008/worldcatobjections.cfm WorldCat Policy Revision Draws Librarians’ Ire] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-12 || Open Libraries Tech list || [http://mail.archive.org/pipermail/ol-tech/2008-December/thread.html#192 the land-grabs] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-12 || Klienman, Molly || [http://librarycopyright.net/wordpress/?p=180 OCLC licensing saga]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-13 || Schneider, Karen || [http://freerangelibrarian.com/2008/12/13/oclcs-policy-train-stop-cried-the-constable-on-the-rails/ OCLC’s policy: Train, stop, cried the constable on the rails]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-15 || Wallis, Richard || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2008/12/oclc-record-sharing-yogurt-and-copyright.php OCLC Record Sharing, Yogurt, and Copyright]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-16 || ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6622391.html?rssid=191 ARL/ASERL Task Force to Investigate OCLC Policy Change] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-16 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/12/new-oclc-logos.php New OCLC logos], [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2008/12/666.php more]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-18 || Salo, Dorothea || [http://cavlec.yarinareth.net/2008/12/18/thursday-wtfery/ Thursday WTFery]<br />
|-<br />
| 2008-12-20 || Singer Gordon, Rachel || [http://www.lisjobs.com/blog/?p=401 Mine! Mine! Mine!]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-04 || McGrath, Kelley || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c20439895A37DB5408D0D28C0177E097F3D90DD7C61%40EMAILBACKEND01.bsu.edu%3e OCLC's new WorldCat Record Policy, original cataloging, and 040 $a] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c2FA61018D659CF4B95A0F938AE66965A03D09B9A%40OAEXCH4SERVER.oa.oclc.org%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cA070928F0B0F46EFA59DE0EBFFBD7D31%40cstserver.local%3e more] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-07 || Houghton-Jan, Sarah || [http://librarianinblack.typepad.com/librarianinblack/2009/01/problems-with-oclc-policy-on-worldcat-records.html Problems with OCLC Policy on WorldCat Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-07 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/01/07/bibliosnet-and-the-future-of-cataloging/ biblios.net and the future of cataloging]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-09 || Leggott, Mark || [http://loomware.typepad.com/loomware/2009/01/oclc-worldcat-record-policy-petition.html OCLC WorldCat Record Policy Petition] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-10 || Morgan, Eric Lease || [http://litablog.org/2009/01/10/eric-lease-morgans-top-tech-trends-for-ala-mid-winter-2009/ Eric Lease Morgan’s Top Tech Trends for ALA Mid-Winter, 2009]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-11 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/01/this-is-like-heinlein-novel.php This is like a Heinlein novel!]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-11 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/01/why-libraries-must-reject-oclc-policy.php Why libraries must reject the OCLC Policy (part 1)]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-12 || Kleinman, Molly || [http://librarycopyright.net/wordpress/?p=180 OCLC licensing saga]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-12 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/01/11/why-libraries-must-reject-the-oclc-policy.html Why Libraries Must Reject the OCLC Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-12 || Kellat, Stephen Michael || [http://www.lisnews.org/listen_lisnews_org_podcast_episode_56 LISTen: The LISNews.org Podcast -- Episode #56 (Commentary portion of episode)]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-13 || Datema, Jay || [http://www.bookism.org/open/2009/01/13/lock-in-leads-to-lockdown/ Lock-in leads to lockdown]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-13 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/01/oclc-protest-teeshirts-are-here.php OCLC protest teeshirts are here!]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-13 || OCLC, Board of Trustees, Members Council || [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/news/releases/20092.htm Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
* "working as staff at University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign"<br />
<br />
== Commentary Following the Announcement of the Review Board ==<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|- style="text-align: left;"<br />
! Date !! Author !! Title<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-13 || Reese, Terry || [http://oregonstate.edu/~reeset/blog/archives/612 OCLC to convene a Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
|- <br />
| 2009-01-13 || ''LISNews'' || [http://lisnews.org/oclc_convene_review_board_shared_data OCLC to convene Review Board of Shared Data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-13 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/01/13/oclc-creates-review-board-of-shared-data-creation-and-stewardship.html OCLC Creates Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-14 || Bigwood, David || [http://catalogablog.blogspot.com/2009/01/oclc-record-sharing-news.html OCLC Record Sharing News]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-14 || Open Content Alliance blog || [http://www.opencontentalliance.org/2009/01/14/is-oclc-reconsidering-its-proposed-records-policy/ Is OCLC Reconsidering its Proposed Records Policy?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-14 || Styles, Rob || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2009/01/oclc-is-listening.php OCLC is listening.]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-14 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2009/01/oclc-pushes-back-policy-to-fall-2009.html OCLC pushes back policy to fall, 2009]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-14 || Mark Ockerbloom, John || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2009/01/14/chances-to-stop-and-think-about-the-future-of-library-catalogs/ Chances to stop and think about the future of library catalogs]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-15 || Uncontrolled Vocabulary #67 (podcast) || [http://uncontrolledvocabulary.com/2009/01/15/uncontrolled-vocabulary-67-policy-driven-drm/ Uncontrolled Vocabulary #67 ("Policy-driven DRM")]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-15 || ''AUTOCAT mailing list'' || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cLISTSERV%25200901151548150370.1BA6%40LISTSERV.SYR.EDU%3e OCLC to review record use policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-15 || Anonymous blogger || [http://catalogsofbabes.wordpress.com/2009/01/15/more-about-oclc-and-nipples/ From the Catalogs of Babes: more about OCLC and nipples]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-15 || Chatterjee, Anirvan || [http://journal.bookfinder.com/archives/entry/000424.html Bookfinder Journal: Notes from all over] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-15 || Schwartz, Christine || [http://www.catalogingfutures.com/catalogingfutures/2009/01/oclc-establishes-review-board-to-look-at-question-of-shared-library-data.html OCLC establishes review board to look at question of shared library data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-16 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/01/library-social-media-wins-one.php Library social media wins one]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-16 || ''American Libraries Online'' || [http://www.ala.org/ala/alonline/currentnews/newsarchive/2009/January2009/worldcatreview.cfm OCLC Delays WorldCat Policy Pending Review Board] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-17 || Matienzo, Mark A. || [http://thesecretmirror.com/mark/this-is-all-im-going-to-say-on-this-here-blogsite-concerning-the-brouhaha-about-the-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records-because-i-have-other-more-interesting-and-more-complex-problems-t/comment-page-1 This Is All I’m Going To Say On This Here Blogsite ...]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Grossman, Wendy M; ''The Guardian'' || [http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2009/jan/22/library-search-engines-books Why you can't find a library book in your search engine] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || ''FriendFeed commentary on Guardian article || [http://friendfeed.com/e/ae0253d3-1af3-404f-8889-e74a472b1d11/Why-you-can-t-find-a-library-book-in-your-search/ FriendFeed] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-21 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/01/guardian-asks-why-you-cant-find-library.php The Guardian asks "Why you can't find a library book in your search engine?"]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/01/22/oclc-in-the-guardian/ OCLC in the Guardian]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Berm&egrave;s, Manue || [http://figoblog.org/node/1953 Le c&ocirc;t&eacute; obscur de la force ?] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//figoblog.org/node/1953&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] from French courtesy of Google) [NC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Lone Wolf Librarian || [http://lonewolflibrarian.wordpress.com/2009/01/22/oclc-policy-changes-appear-in-international-media012209/ OCLC Policy Change Controversy Appears in International Media]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Biancu, Bonaria || [http://bonariabiancu.wordpress.com/2009/01/22/libraries-need-freedom/ Libraries need freedom] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//bonariabiancu.wordpress.com/2009/01/22/libraries-need-freedom/&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] from Italian courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Powell, Andy || [http://efoundations.typepad.com/efoundations/2009/01/why-cant-i-find-a-library-book-in-my-search-engine.html Why can't I find a library book in my search engine?] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || West, Jessamyn || [http://www.librarian.net/stax/2661/why-you-cant-google-a-library-book/ why you can’t google a library book]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Baumgart, Jessica || [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/jkbaumga/2009/01/22/why-you-can%e2%80%99t-google-a-library-book/ why you can’t google a library book]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-22 || Ottevanger, Jeremy || [http://doofercall.blogspot.com/2009/01/worldcatoclc-get-rough-end-of-guardians.html WorldCat/OCLC get the rough end of the Guardian's stick]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-23 || Marcel || [http://mondayevening.wordpress.com/2009/01/23/finding-and-reading-books/ Finding and reading books]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-23 || ''the.effing.librarian'' || [http://effinglibrarian.blogspot.com/2009/01/oclc-vs-everyone.html OCLC vs. Everyone]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-23 || Miedema, John || [http://johnmiedema.ca/2009/01/23/youve-heard-of-worldcat-now-meet-fuzzycat/ You’ve Heard of WorldCat, Now Meet FuzzyCat]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-23 || Cairns, Michael || [http://personanondata.blogspot.com/2009/01/bibliographic-studies.html Bibliographic Studies]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-25 || ''AUTOCAT mailing list'' || [http://article.gmane.org/gmane.education.libraries.autocat/19178 OCLC and the Guardian] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0901250927110.9718%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0901252149140.28128%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c497F24E6020000CA0004B82A%40ntgwgate.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0901271743270.24031%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0901271835590.24031%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-26 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/01/26/enforcing-cataloging-copyright-whose-interest/ enforcing catalog record copyright is in whose interest?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-26 || Ahlberg, Carina || [http://www.biblioteksrelaterat.se/2009/01/varf%C3%B6r-man-inte-hittar-bibliotekets-b%C3%B6cker-i-google.html Varför man inte hittar bibliotekets böcker i Google] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//www.biblioteksrelaterat.se/2009/01/varf%25C3%25B6r-man-inte-hittar-bibliotekets-b%25C3%25B6cker-i-google.html&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] from Sweedish courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-27 || Calhoun, Karen || [http://www.slideshare.net/amarintha/creating-and-sustaining-communities-around-shared-data-the-case-of-oclc-presentation Creating and Sustaining Communities Around Shared Data: The Case of OCLC] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-27 || Calhoun, Karen || [http://community.oclc.org/metalogue/archives/2009/01/data-sharing-libraries-and-the.html Data Sharing, Libraries, and the Landscape of the Web] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-27 || Oder, Norman, ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6632413.html OCLC Defends Records Policy, Faces Questions, Suggestions, and Criticisms] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-27 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-records-use-policy-1/ Consideration of OCLC Records Use Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-27 || ''York University Libraries Bibliographic Services'' || [http://www.yorku.ca/yul/bibserv/blog/?p=195 Guardian Article on OCLC, Libraries and the Internet]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Lone Wolf Librarian || [http://lonewolflibrarian.wordpress.com/2009/01/28/oclc-yet-againtries-to-defend-controversial-policy-shift012809/ OCLC Yet Again Unsuccessfully Tries to Defend Controversial Major Policy Shift…01.28.09]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || ''LISNews'' || [http://www.lisnews.org/oclc_defends_records_policy_faces_questions_suggestions_and_criticisms OCLC Defends Records Policy, Faces Questions, Suggestions, and Criticisms]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Kellat, Stephen Michael || [http://lisnews.org/reflections_upon_lj_story Reflections upon an LJ story]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/01/28/yet-more-on-copyright-and-cataloging/ yet more on copyright and cataloging]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Ockerbloom, John Mark || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2009/01/28/open-catalog-apis-and-data-ala-presentation-notes-posted/ Open catalog APIs and data: ALA presentation notes posted]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2009/01/28/library-journal-report-on-the-oclc-worldcat-policy/ Library Journal report on the OCLC WorldCat policy discussion]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-records-use-policy-2/ Further Consideration of OCLC Records Use Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-28 || ''liblicense-l mailing list'' || [http://www.library.yale.edu/~llicense/ListArchives/0901/msg00115.html OCLC's New License for Bibliographic Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-29 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/01/29/oclc-license-policy-at-ala-midwinter.html OCLC License Policy at ALA Midwinter]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-01-30 || ''AUTOCAT mailing list'' || [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3c705314404.777621233352002233.JavaMail.root%40sz0136a.westchester.pa.mail.comcast.net%3e Copyright in Bib Records] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0901311900170.1301%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] [http://news.gmane.org/find-root.php?message_id=%3cPine.SOL.4.21.0902010026210.29243%2d100000%40sun8.loc.gov%3e more] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-01 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/02/evil-326.php The evil 3.26%]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-02 || Mijnsbergen, Edwin || [http://www.zbdigitaal.nl/2009/02/te-lui-om-te-begrijpen.html Te lui om te begrijpen] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//www.zbdigitaal.nl/2009/02/te-lui-om-te-begrijpen.html&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-02 || Lone Wolf Librarian || [http://lonewolflibrarian.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/librarything-responds-to-oclcs-monopoly-counter-defense020209/ LibraryThing Responds to OCLC’s Questioning of Motives…02.02.09]<br />
|- <br />
| 2009-02-02 || McNamara, Frances || [http://bdfar.wordpress.com/2009/02/02/oclc-hullaballou-ala-midwinter-2009-monday/ OCLC Hullaballou ALA Midwinter 2009 Monday]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-06 || OCLC || [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/news/releases/200910.htm OCLC Board of Trustees, Members Council name Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship.]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-07 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/02/07/oclc-announces-review-board-members.html OCLC Announces Review Board Members]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-07 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-review-board-members/ Members of the OCLC Review Board Announced]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-09 || ''OCLC Review Board'' || [http://community.oclc.org/reviewboard/archives/2009/02/from-the-review-board.html From the Review Board] (Public comment space)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-10 || Ostrowsky, Ben || [http://blog.benostrowsky.com/2009/02/10/oclc-should-share-worldcat-data-for-commercial-and-noncommercial-use/ OCLC should share WorldCat data for commercial and noncommercial use]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-10 || McNamara, Frances || [http://bdfar.wordpress.com/2009/02/10/oclc-review-board/ OCLC Review Board]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-10 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-review-board-blog/ OCLC Review Board’s Blog]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-18 || Lawson, Steve || [http://stevelawson.name/seealso/archives/2009/02/matters_of_policy.html Matters of Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-19 || ''Miss Information'' || [http://closedstacks.wordpress.com/2009/02/19/big-brother-is-facebook/ Big Brother is Facebook (?)]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-19 || Ivy || [http://catalogsofbabes.wordpress.com/2009/02/19/facebook-or-oclc-perhaps-both/ Facebook or OCLC? Perhaps both.]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-20 || ARL || [http://www.arl.org/bm~doc/oclc-report-jan09.pdf Ad Hoc Task Force to Review the Proposed OCLC Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records: Final Report to the ARL Board, January 30, 2009] (PDF)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-20 || ResourceShelf || [http://www.resourceshelf.com/2009/02/20/arl-recommends-community-wide-process-to-develop-new-oclc-policy-for-use-transfer-of-worldcat-records/ ARL Recommends Community-Wide Process to Develop New OCLC Policy for Use & Transfer of WorldCat Records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-20 || Jastram, Iris || [http://pegasuslibrarian.blogspot.com/2009/02/oclc-question-for-masses.html OCLC Question for the masses]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-20 || Walk, Paul || [http://blog.paulwalk.net/2009/02/20/smoke-and-mirrors-or-good-intentions/ Smoke and mirrors, or good intentions?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-21 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/02/21/oclc-policy-final-report-to-the-arl-board.html OCLC Policy - Final Report to the ARL Board]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-21 || Brantley, Peter || [http://blogs.lib.berkeley.edu/shimenawa.php/2009/02/21/sending-oclc-on-its-way Sending OCLC on its way]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-23 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/02/research-libraries-clobber-oclc-policy.php Research libraries clobber OCLC Policy ]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-23 || Goldstein, Jeremy || [http://geekylibrarian.wordpress.com/2009/02/23/another-blow/ Another Blow]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-23 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/02/23/librarything-on-the-arl-report.html LibraryThing on the ARL Report]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-23 || ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6639210.html ARL Says OCLC Should Revise WorldCat Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-02-23 || Lawson, Steve || [http://stevelawson.name/seealso/archives/2009/02/arl_task_force_report_on_the_oclc_records_policy.html ARL Task Force report on the OCLC records policy]<br />
|- <br />
| 2009-02-24 || Vielmetti, Edward || [http://vielmetti.typepad.com/superpatron/2009/02/pitchforks-for-oclc-rebellion-against-mandatory-licensing-for-cooperatively-developed-catalog-data.html Pitchforks for OCLC: rebellion against mandatory licensing for cooperatively developed catalog data] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-03-09 || Pohl, Adrian || [http://www.uebertext.org/2009/03/ein-artikel-uber-die-oclc-metadaten.html Ein Artikel zu OCLCs Metadaten-Policy] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//www.uebertext.org/2009/03/ein-artikel-uber-die-oclc-metadaten.html&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
|2009-03-09 || Pohl, Adrian || OCLC, WorldCat und die Metadatenkontroverse. In: Bibliotheksdienst 43 (2009), pp. 274-290. [http://www.zlb.de/aktivitaeten/bd_neu/heftinhalte2009/Erschliessung020309BD.pdf Electronic Version] (PDF).<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-03-22 || Voß, Jacob || [http://jakoblog.de/2009/03/22/zwei-artikel-zu-hochschulbibliografien-und-zur-worldcat-policy-im-bibliotheksdienst/ Zwei Artikel zu Hochschulbibliografien und zur WorldCat Policy im Bibliotheksdienst] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//jakoblog.de/2009/03/22/zwei-artikel-zu-hochschulbibliografien-und-zur-worldcat-policy-im-bibliotheksdienst/&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-03-27 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-review-board-survey/ Survey Responses Sought from the OCLC Review Board on Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-03-30 || Cataloging Policy Committee of the OnLine Audiovisual Catalogers, Inc. || [http://www.olacinc.org/drupal/?q=node/350 OCLC’s Proposed Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat® Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-04-02 || Smithsonian Institution Libraries || [http://smithsonianlibraries.si.edu/smithsonianlibraries/2009/04/oclcs-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records.html OCLC's Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-04-08 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/04/07/oclc-record-use-survey-comments/ OCLC record use survey comments]<br />
|-<br />
|2009-04-23 || Frumkin, Jeremy || [http://digitallibrarian.org/?p=59 Open Library Data and OCLC]<br />
|- <br />
|2009-04-24 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/04/oclc-end-game.php The OCLC End Game]<br />
|-<br />
|2009-04-27 || Coombs, Karen || [http://www.librarywebchic.net/wordpress/2009/04/27/on-recent-oclc-announcements/ On recent OCLC announcements]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-11 || International Coalition of Library Consortia (ICOLC) || [http://www.library.yale.edu/consortia/statement-oclcrecorduse.htm Statement on the Proposed OCLC Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-12 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-record-use-policy-update/ OCLC Record Use Policy Issue Coming to a Head]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-12 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2009/05/12/icolc-statement-on-the-proposed-oclc-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records/ ICOLC “Statement on the Proposed OCLC Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records.”]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-13 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/05/oclc-policy-good-night.php OCLC Policy, Good night]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-13 || Rochkind, Jonathan || [http://bibwild.wordpress.com/2009/05/13/well-said-icolc/ Well said, ICOLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-13 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/05/13/icolc-weighs-in-on-oclc.html ICOLC weighs in on OCLC]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-14 || Dibbell, Jeremy || [http://philobiblos.blogspot.com/2009/05/death-blow-to-oclcs-proposed-policy.html Death Blow to OCLC's Proposed Policy?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-15 || Mark Ockerbloom, John || [http://everybodyslibraries.com/2009/05/15/will-oclc-move-to-a-service-oriented-business-model-for-bibliographic-data/ Will OCLC move to a service-oriented business model for bibliographic data?]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-15 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2009/05/15/eluna-uugi-and-codi-endorse-icolc-statement-on-the-proposed-oclc-policy-for-use-and-transfer-of-worldcat-records/ ELUNA, UUGI, and CODI endorse ICOLC Statement on the Proposed OCLC Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat Records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-15 || Baker, Gavin (Open Access News) || [http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/05/icolc-opposes-oclc-data-policy.html ICOLC opposes OCLC data policy] (NC)<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Commentary Following the Members Council May 2009 Review Board Presentation ==<br />
<br />
On [[18 May]] [[2009]], Jennifer Younger (Chair of the [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/worldcat/catalog/policy/board/default.htm Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]) presented preliminary findings to the OCLC Members Council. Two days later, a [http://vidego.multicastmedia.com/player.php?p=v07n97t9 recording] of Dr. Younger's presentation and the [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/worldcat/catalog/policy/20090518-MC-Jennifer_Younger.pdf presentation slides] were posted on the OCLC website.<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|- style="text-align: left;"<br />
! Date !! Author !! Title<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-20 || Corrado, Ed || [http://blog.ecorrado.us/2009/05/20/oclc-review-board-of-shared-data-creation-stewardship-recommends-to-formally-withdraw-the-proposed-worldcat-policy/ OCLC Review Board of Shared Data Creation & Stewardship recommends to “Formally withdraw the proposed (WorldCat) policy”]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-20 || Wallis, Richard || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2009/05/oclc-dumps-new-record-reuse-policy.php OCLC Dumps New Record Reuse Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-20 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/oclc-review-board-initial-recommendations/ OCLC Review Board Recommends the Withdraw of Proposed Policy; Advocates for an Open Process]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-20 || Spalding, Tim || [http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2009/05/non-est-potestas-oclc-policy-withdrawn_21.php/ Non est potestas: OCLC Policy withdrawn]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-22 || Mijnsbergen, Edwin || [http://www.zbdigitaal.nl/2009/05/het-beleid-van-oclc-nieuwe.html Het beleid van OCLC: nieuwe ontwikkelingen] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//www.zbdigitaal.nl/2009/05/het-beleid-van-oclc-nieuwe.html&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English from Dutch] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-22 || Leggott, Mark || [http://loomware.typepad.com/loomware/2009/05/non-est-potestas-oclc-policy-withdrawn.html Non est potestas: OCLC Policy Withdrawn] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-26 || National Diet Library (Japan) || [http://current.ndl.go.jp/node/12962 WorldCatレコード利用・再配布の新ポリシーに対する審査委員会の審査結果] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//current.ndl.go.jp/node/12962&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translation to English from Japanese] courtesy of Google) (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-05-28 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2009/06/oclc-policy.html OCLC Policy - What is the Question?]<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Commentary Following the Release of the Review Board Final Report ==<br />
<br />
On [[26 Jun]] [[2009]], OCLC published the [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/FinalReport_ReviewBoard.pdf final report] of the [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/board/default.htm Review Board of Shared Data Creation and Stewardship] and announced the formal withdrawal of the proposed Policy for Use and Transfer of WorldCat® Records.<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|- style="text-align: left;"<br />
! Date !! Author !! Title<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-28 || Eustis, Jennifer || [http://celeripedean.wordpress.com/2009/06/28/final-report-from-the-review-board-on-shared-data-creation-and-stewardship/ Final Report from the Review Board on Shared Data Creation and Stewardship]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-28 || Murray, Peter || [http://dltj.org/article/record-use-policy-withdrawn/ OCLC Formally Withdraws Proposed Record Use Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-28 || Pohl, Adrian || [http://www.uebertext.org/2009/06/oclc-policy-zuruckgezogen.html OCLC - Policy zurückgezogen] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//www.uebertext.org/2009/06/oclc-policy-zuruckgezogen.html Translated to English from German] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-29 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2009/06/29/oclc-withdraws-records-polic.html OCLC Withdraws Records Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-29 || National Diet Library (Japan) || [http://current.ndl.go.jp/node/13447 OCLC、WorldCatレコード利用・再配布に係る新ポリシーを公式に撤回] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//current.ndl.go.jp/node/13447&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translated to English from Japanese] courtesy of Google) (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-06-29 || Bourg, Chris || [http://chrisbourg.wordpress.com/2009/06/29/oclc-withdraws-proposed-policy-on-use-of-wc-records/ OCLC withdraws proposed policy on use of WC records]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-07-01 || Baker, Gavin (Open Access News) || [http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2009/07/oclc-scraps-worldcat-data-policy-will.html OCLC scraps WorldCat data policy, will write new one] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-07-07 || Ray, MJ || [http://www.news.software.coop/oclc-record-use-reboot/699/ OCLC Record Use: Reboot]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-07-14 || Anglada, Lluís || [http://bdig.blogspot.com/2009/07/sobre-oclc-proposito-del-ala-de-chicago.html Sobre OCLC a propósito del ALA de Chicago] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A//bdig.blogspot.com/2009/07/sobre-oclc-proposito-del-ala-de-chicago.html&hl=en&langpair=auto%7cen&tbb=1&ie=UTF-8 Translated to English from Spanish] courtesy of Google)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-07-29 || Wallis, Richard || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2009/07/jisc-grasp-the-marc-record-re-use-legality-nettle.php JISC Grasp the Marc Record Re-use Legality Nettle]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-09-14 || OCLC || [http://www.oclc.org/us/en/news/releases/200948.htm OCLC Board of Trustees convenes Council to study and develop new WorldCat Record Use Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-09-15 || Hadro, Josh ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6697129.html OCLC Appoints Council to Revamp WorldCat Record Use Policy] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-09-18 || Eustis, Jennifer || [http://celeripedean.wordpress.com/2009/09/18/oclc-back-to-the-review-policy/ OCLC: Back to the Review Policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2009-11-08 || Library 2.0 Gang || [http://www.alatechsource.org/blog/2009/11/library-20-gang-1109-the-cataloguing-services-landscape.html The Cataloguing Services Landscape] (NC)<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Comments on WorldCat Rights and Responsibilities for the OCLC Cooperative ==<br />
<br />
Commentary after the release of the [http://www.oclc.org/worldcat/catalog/policy/default.htm WorldCat Rights and Responsibilities for the OCLC Cooperative] draft on 7-Apr-2010.<br />
<br />
{| class="wikitable sortable"<br />
|- style="text-align: left;"<br />
! Date !! Author !! Title<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-07 || Mason, Rick || [http://www.libology.com/blog/2010/04/07/oclc-and-data.html OCLC and Data]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-07 || Coyle, Karen || [http://kcoyle.blogspot.com/2010/04/oclc-record-use-policy.html OCLC record use policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-07 || Hadro, Josh -- ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6725522.html Library Journal article] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-07 || Morrison, Heather || [http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.com/2010/04/worldcat-rights-and-responsibilites-for.html WorldCat rights and responsibilites ... comments] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-07 || Various || [http://blogs.talis.com/panlibus/archives/2010/04/oclc-talk-with-talis-about-draft-worldcat-rights-responsibilities.php Talking with Talis: OCLC Talk with Talis about Draft WorldCat Rights & Responsibilities]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-14 || University of Melbourne Library staff blog || [http://blogs.unimelb.edu.au/libraryintelligencer/2010/04/13/worldcat-rights-and-responsibilities-for-the-oclc-cooperative%e2%80%94draft-for-community-review/ WorldCat Rights and Responsibilities for the OCLC Cooperative—Draft for Community Review]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-14 || ''carolslib'' || [http://carolslib.wordpress.com/2010/04/14/oclcs-latest-policy/ OCLC’s latest policy]<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-15 || Hadro, Josh -- ''Library Journal'' || [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6726412.html As Record Use Policy Draws Comments, OCLC Reacts Quickly] (NC)<br />
|-<br />
| 2010-04-15 || Pohl, Adrian || [http://www.uebertext.org/2010/04/oclcs-policy-und-die-public-domain.html OCLCs Policy und die Public Domain] ([http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http://www.uebertext.org/2010/04/oclcs-policy-und-die-public-domain.html Translated to English from German] courtesy of Google) <br />
|-<br />
|}<br />
<br />
== Comments on Comments ==<br />
<br />
Sometimes the best insight comes in the comments added to blog postings and other stories. [http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.info?_id=jOpatQmu3RGENlDTBRNMsA This Yahoo! Pipe] (also available as an [http://pipes.yahoo.com/pipes/pipe.run?_id=jOpatQmu3RGENlDTBRNMsA&_render=rss RSS feed]) is a concatenation of comments from the postings and stories listed on this page -- with the exception of those marked "(NC)" because of use of software that doesn't support comment feeds. It was last updated as of [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=OCLC_Policy_Change&oldid=5792 page revision 5792].<br />
<br />
[[Category: OCLC]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2013_Twitter_List&diff=366632013 Twitter List2013-02-12T22:40:32Z<p>Wickr: </p>
<hr />
<div>Put your twitter handle in here, if you're at Code4Lib 2013 Chicago. I'll add you to the [https://twitter.com/code4lib/attendees-2013 Attendees 2013 twitter list] for @code4lib when I get a chance. Thanks! -Sean<br />
<br />
# Becky Yoose (@yo_bj)<br />
# Beatrice Pulliam (@beatricepulliam)<br />
# Cynthia Ng (@TheRealArty)<br />
# Nettie Lagace (@abugseye)<br />
# Erin White (@erinrwhite)<br />
# Maccabee Levine (@maccabeelevine)<br />
# Steven Bassett (@bassettsj)<br />
# Steve Oberg (@techsvcslib)<br />
# Carmen Mitchell (@carmendarlene)<br />
# Christie Peterson (@save4use)<br />
# Jason Casden (@cazzerson)<br />
# Michael Poltorak (@michaelpoltorak)<br />
# Ron Gilmour (@gilmour70)<br />
# James Staub (@jamesstaub)<br />
# Curtis Thacker (@curtisthacker)<br />
# Masao Takaku (@tmasao)<br />
# Colin Watt (@colinmwatt)<br />
# Dave Green (@icookwithwine)<br />
# Alan Dyck (@Alan_Dyck)<br />
# Megan O'Neill Kudzia (@meganoneill)<br />
# Keith Nickum (@keithnickum)<br />
# Matt Critchlow (@mattcritchlow)<br />
# Matt Bernhardt (@morphosis7)<br />
# Zorian Sasyk (@restlesslib)<br />
# May Chan (@msuicat)<br />
# Courtney C. Mumma (@snarkivist, @Archivematica)<br />
# Scott Hanrath (@rshanrath)<br />
# John Barneson (@johnbarneson)<br />
# Jacob Andresen (@jacobandresen)<br />
# Annie Pho (@catladylib) <br />
# Sharona Ginsberg (@linguomancer)<br />
# Ayla Stein (@thestackscat)<br />
# Barbara Hui (@barbarahui)<br />
# Bradley Woodruff (@bofmouais)<br />
# Mads Villadsen (@maxxkrakoa)<br />
# Jørn Thøgersen (@jorntx)<br />
# Raman Chandrasekar (@synthesiser)<br />
# Mark Bussey (@clark_tc)<br />
# Ian Walls (@sekjal)<br />
# Kosuke Tanabe (@nabeta)<br />
# Ranti Junus (@ranti)<br />
# Al Cornish (@alncornish)<br />
# Chad Nelson (@bibliotechy)<br />
# Jon Gorman (@codexmonkey)<br />
# Ryan Wick (@ryanwick)<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2013]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2013_social_activities&diff=364362013 social activities2013-02-12T03:48:58Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Tuesday 2/12 */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
* Aviary: super-crazy cocktails. http://www.molecularrecipes.com/molecular-mixology/aviary-cocktails/ . List your name if you're interested, whether Sunday, Monday, and/or Tuesday (after newcomer dinners) work, and whether you're just interested in stopping by, or doing a 7 cocktail tasting flight.*<br />
** statsfool: sunday/monday/tuesday, either drinks or flight.<br />
** Amyhannah: monday/tuesday, drinks, probably not the flight.<br />
** anarchivist: sunday/monday, prefer drinks over flight but could be convinced<br />
** [[User:highermath|highermath]]: monday (could use 10 cocktails after Drupal subCon, I am sure). Uber now works in Chicago, so I would do the flight.<br />
** [[User:pberry|pberry]]: any night but Wednesday (that's Goose Island night) and I'd be up for drinks or flight, although leaning away from flight.<br />
** [[User:thatandromeda|thatandromeda]] oh my gosh yes, any time, probably not the flight.<br />
** [[User:Gdave|gdave]] beautiful site, I would be interested, Sun,Mon,Tues. either drink or flight.<br />
** [[User:shawnc12|shawnc12]]: sunday/monday, either drink or flight<br />
** wdenton: any night, either drink or flight<br />
** beatricep: sunday/monday drink, highly susceptible to flight by peer pressure..<br />
** ryan hess: sunday/monday drink or flight<br />
** infosoph: sunday/monday yes/yes!!<br />
** [[User:Pfeeley|Pfeeley]]: sunday/monday/tuesday, either drink or flight<br />
** [[User:Ksprague|Ksprague]]: tuesday, drink or flight<br />
** [[User:schwartzray|schwartzray]]: anything on any day<br />
* Brewery tour - some possible candidates would be Goose Island, Brew Bus http://www.chicagobrewbus.com/, Piece, Revolution, Half Acre.<br />
* Library field trips - because we're library geeks. Possible places include Newberry and Read/Write.--Read/Write Library confirmed for February 11.--Newberry Library confirmed for February 14.<br />
* Art Institute of Chicago - Only open until 5pm, but possible for people coming in early enough on Sunday. There seems to be enough interest here to actually have a group, when and where should we meet? I added my email so that we could discuss details off the wiki.<br />
** escowles: I'm getting in around noon on Sunday, and interested in this.<br />
** pgrayove at gmail dot com: I'm getting in around noon on Sunday too. I'm interested.<br />
** ranti: And I am. <br />
** tshearerlib: Coming in at around the same time and hope to get to the museum by 1:00. Lunch first?<br />
* Local Option http://localoptionbier.com/ - So you've heard of Hopleaf, you've heard of Maproom. Come to Chicago's *ahem* best kept secret for good food and an evening session on Monday. We will need a tally to make requisite arrangements. Target for arrival at bar: 7ish. Probably a group gathering to head north around 6:30 in hotel lobby (if you want to take the #8 Halsted bus that is).<br />
** kayiwa<br />
** Linda Ballinger<br />
** Courtney Greene<br />
** John Pillans<br />
** +6 from NCSU incl one Bret Davidson<br />
** Megan Kudzia<br />
** Andrew Darby<br />
** erinrwhite<br />
** Will Clarke<br />
** Cody Hanson<br />
** Jesse Brown<br />
** Matt Cordial +1 (my friend and I were already planning a Monday trip here)<br />
** Ray Schwartz<br />
** Eric Larson<br />
** David Cliff<br />
** Ken Irwin<br />
** Dileshni Jayasinghe<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
===Read/Write Library Field Trip, Monday 2/11===<br />
Field trip to the [http://readwritelibrary.org/ Read/Write Library] 6:30PM-9PM <br />
<br />
Drop in whenever during this time.<br />
<br />
Come help catalog the Read/Write Library catalog and hack on the library catalog. We will get food or go to a nearby restaurant depending on interest. We will also invite friends from Code for America to hang out and talk civic data. Bring your laptop along if you have one.<br />
<br />
Let us know if you are coming so we can figure out food:<br />
* Margaret Heller<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Wayne Schneider<br />
* jrochkind will try to make it<br />
* emily shaw (may be a little late)<br />
* <strike>kenirwin - bailed on acct of pre-conf brain death</strike><br />
* Andromeda - yes, unless someone gets Aviary reservations<br />
* Chris Clement - may attend<br />
(hey, there are great bars in that neighborhood!)<br />
* wdenton<br />
<br />
'''Directions to the library from UIC:'''<br />
<br />
''Bus''<br />
<br />
Take the #8 Halsted Bus north to Chicago (Bus will say "#8 Halsted/79th North to Broadway/Waveland")<br />
Take the #66 Chicago Bus west to California (Bus will say either "#66 Chicago west to Austin" or "#66 Chicago West to Pulaski." You can take either one because both Austin and Pulaski are further west than we are so both stop at California)<br />
The Chicago bus stops on the west side of California, which is the side of the street we're on. On California, walk a block north to Walton.<br />
<br />
''Train + Bus (slightly faster/more reliable, but only by about 5-10 minutes)''<br />
<br />
Walk to the UIC/Halsted Blue Line <br />
Take the O'Hare train (toward the Loop) and go all the way through the Loop and back west. Get off at Chicago and use the exit that says "North side of Chicago Ave" (or something similar — I don't remember exactly).<br />
Take the #66 Chicago Bus west to California (Bus will say either "#66 Chicago west to Austin" or "#66 Chicago West to Pulaski." You can take either one because both Austin and Pulaski are further west than we are so both stop at California)<br />
The Chicago bus stops on the west side of California, which is the side of the street we're on. On California, walk a block north to Walton.<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Tuesday 2/12 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>dongles</strike> XML.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Tuesday evening (2/12)<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants within .25 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.athenarestaurantchicago.com/index.php Athena] (Greek)<br />
<br />
* Al Cornish - v (leader)<br />
* Carolyn Cole - n<br />
* Dileshni Jayasinghe - v<br />
* Will Clark - n<br />
* Adam Constabaris - v<br />
* Patrick Hogan - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.dinerestaurant.com/ Dine] (Contemporary)<br />
<br />
<del>[http://www.girlandthegoat.com/ Girl and the Goat] (American) Top Chef fans take note! This is Stephanie Izard's award-winning resto.</del> Totally booked.<br />
<br />
[http://littlegoatchicago.com/ Little Goat] - Izard just opened a diner across the street from G&G that is walk-in only. (very good, probably a wait but they also have a bar in the back --wickr)<br />
<br />
[http://www.haymarketbrewing.com/ Haymarket Pub & Brewery] (Pub food) - Reservations at 6:30pm. Meet in conference hotel lobby at 6:10pm<br />
<br />
* Ryan Wick (leader) - v<br />
* Sean Purcell - v<br />
* Dan Fehrenbach - n<br />
* Pierre Nault - n<br />
* Minh-Quang Nguyen - n<br />
* Matt Bernhardt - n<br />
* Jim LeFager - n<br />
* '''Capped at 7'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.karynsongreen.com/ Karyn’s on Green] (Vegan)<br />
Completely vegan and close to the conference hotel. We'll meet in the conference hotel at around 6:45 (reservation at 7:00 for 6). Google maps says it is a 5 minute walk.<br />
<br />
*Jason Ronallo (leader)- v<br />
*Alicia Cozine - n<br />
*Mark Mounts - v<br />
*Barbara Hui - n<br />
*Amy Deschenes - n<br />
*Adam Strohm - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://niarestaurant.com/nia-restaurant-mediterranean-cuisine/ Nia] (Mediterranean tapas)<br />
<br />
[http://www.pegasuschicago.com/index.php Pegasus] (Greek)<br />
<br />
[http://www.roditys.com/index.html Roditys] (Greek) -- Reservations made for 6:30pm. Let's meet in the hotel lobby at 6pm and walk over from there.<br />
<br />
* Rosalyn Metz (leader) - v<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] - v<br />
* [[User:Jacobandresen|Jacob Andresen]] - n<br />
* Karen Miller - n<br />
* Dre - v<br />
* Mahria Lebow - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .25 miles and .5 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
Code4lib Chicago Celery Salt Society - [http://www.alsbeef.com/ Al's Beef]<br />
<br />
* Jason Casden (leader) - v - No reservations. We can walk from the hotel at 7.<br />
* Charlie Morris - n<br />
* Cory Lown - v<br />
* Carolina Garcia - n<br />
* Cody Hanson - n<br />
* Ken Varnum - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://avecrestaurant.com/# Avec] (Small plate)<br />
Family-style small plate and tapas. Great Yelp reviews. We'll meet in the conference hotel at 6:00 <strike>6:45</strike> (they don't take reservations, but have stuff to sip on if there's a wait). Less than 10 minute walk from hotel.<br />
<br />
* Shaun Ellis (leader) - v<br />
* Jon Stroop - v<br />
* Paula Gray-Overtoom - n<br />
* Emily Zervas - n<br />
* Cynthia Ng - neither<br />
* Sarah Dooley - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.babavillage.com/ Baba’s Village] (Indian/Pakistani)<br />
<br />
[http://blackbirdrestaurant.com/ Blackbird] (Contemporary)<br />
<br />
(Since the reservation is late, does anyone want to meet for drink in the hotel bar beforehand? There's really no place to wait at the restaurant, and there's no nice bar nearby that I can recall. cm)<br />
* Justin Coyne (reserver) - v - Reservation for Blackbird for 6 at 8:30pm<br />
* Matt Cordial - v<br />
* [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/User:Camcclure Christine McClure - n]<br />
* Devin Higgins - n (devinhiggins at gmail)<br />
* Ken Irwin<br />
* Tad Merchant - n (tadoneus @ gmail)<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.carnivalechicago.com/menu Carnivale] (Nuevo Latino)<br />
<br />
[http://decero.hellotacos.com/ De Cero] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.dragonflymandarin.com/ Dragonfly] (Chinese, sushi)<br />
<br />
[http://giordanos.com/ Giordano's] (Chicago Style Pizza) This place should be able to handle multiple groups...<br />
<br />
* Andrew Nagy (leader) - v<br />
* Virginia Schilling - n<br />
* Jane Sandberg - n<br />
* Richard Aroksaar - n<br />
* Jesse Brown - n (jfbrown78 at gmail dot com)<br />
* James Van Mil - n (james.vanmil at gmail)<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.grangehallburgerbar.com/ Grange Hall Burger Bar] (Local food)<br />
<br />
[http://www.idreamoffalafel.com/ I Dream of Falafel] (Mediterranean) -- No reservations -- this is a casual place. Supposed to be an 8 minute walk from the hotel. Let's meet at 6:20pm in the Crowne Plaza lobby. I have chin-length brown hair and probably will be holding a paper scribbled with 'falafel.'<br />
<br />
* Emily Lynema (leader) - v<br />
* Christie Peterson - n<br />
* James Stuart - v<br />
* Emily Shaw - n (emilyfshaw at gmail dot com)<br />
* Ian Chan - n (ichan@csusm.edu)<br />
* Zeno Tajoli - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.jaipurchicago.com/ Jaipur] (Indian; Reservation made for 6 at 6:30)<br />
-- Let's meet in the crowne plaza lobby @ 6:15; it's supposed to be a 6 minute walk<br />
<br />
* Andrew Darby (leader) - v<br />
* Josh Wilson (joshwilsonnc at gmail) - n<br />
* Tim Thompson - n<br />
* Mariela Hristova - n<br />
* ryan hess - n<br />
* Patrick Feeley - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://lasardine.com/ La Sardine] (French)<br />
<br />
[http://www.mythaitakumi.com/index.html MyThai Takumi] (Japanese Thai) Reservation at 6:15. Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm. Look for the women in a trench coat and hat.<br />
<br />
*Becky Yoose (leader) b dot yoose at gmail - v<br />
*May Chan - n<br />
*David Anderson - newby<br />
*Terry Brady - new<br />
* Dave Menninger - n<br />
*Shawn Carraway -n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.nellcoterestaurant.com/ Nellcôte] (French)<br />
<br />
[http://chicago.provincerestaurant.com/ Province] (American with Central/South American/Spanish influence)<br />
<br />
[http://thepublicanrestaurant.com/ The Publican] (Seafood)<br />
<br />
* Jay Luker (eater) - v - Rezzie is for 8pm<br />
* Mark Matienzo (tweeter) - v<br />
* Devon Smith (pickle eater) - repeat offender<br />
* Chris Sharp (dead horse beater) - v<br />
* Michael B. Klein (greeter) - v<br />
* Bill McMillin (meeter) - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://saigonsisters.tumblr.com/ Saigon Sisters] (Vietnamese) Reservation for 6:15, meet in hotel lobby<br />
* Margaret Heller - v and leader<br />
* Sharon Clapp - n<br />
* Sean Crowe - n<br />
* Meghan Finch - n<br />
* Maccabee Levine - v<br />
* James Griffin - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiurbankitchen.com/ Thai Urban Kitchen] (Thai, sushi)<br />
<br />
[http://www.trattoriaisabellachicago.com/rest.html Trattoria Isabella] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.vivo-chicago.com/homepage-2 Vivo] (Italian) <br />
<br />
[http://www.wishbonechicago.com/dining/westloop/ Wishbone] (Southern Reconstruction)<br />
<br />
* Rachel Shaevel (herder, self-proclaimed dictator, and reservation maker) - n (we're on for 6:15!)<br />
* Myrna E Morales (follower) - n<br />
* Sarah Thorngate - n<br />
* Steven Marsden - n<br />
* David Lacy - v<br />
* Luke Gaudreau - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .5 miles and .75 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://currentsontheriver.com/ Currents on the River] (Eclectic)<br />
<br />
[http://n9ne.com/ N9NE Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://www.verachicago.com/menu Vera Chicago] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .75 miles and 1 mile of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.theberghoff.com/default.aspx The Berghoff] (German)<br />
* Declan Fleming - v (leader) I checked reservations, and for 6 people, the first time open after the conf is 7:30, so I grabbed that.<br />
** Let's meet in the lobby at 7p and cab over (or would people rather walk?)<br />
* Dave Green - n <br />
* Steven Villereal - n<br />
* Peter Murray - v<br />
* Trey Terrell - n<br />
* Mike Giarlo - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.yelp.com/biz/frontera-grill-chicago Frontera] (a Rick Bayliss Mex-American restaurant) Reservations are for 7:30, so perhaps the group could get a drink in the lobby beforehand. Either way, we'll depart at 7pm.<br />
: (''note: the drinks at the bar at frontera are very tasty.'')<br />
*Dan Suchy (leader and over-eater) - v<br />
*Matt Critchlow - v<br />
*Carmen Mitchell - v<br />
*Maureen Callahan - n<br />
*David Cliff - n<br />
* Patrick Berry - 3rd year red-shirt freshman<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.nativefoods.com/ Native Foods] (Vegan) lots of vegan, vegetarian, gluten free options. No reservations needed. We could meet near the convention center or Daley library around 6 and take the train together. Lots of places to get drinks afterwards. <br />
*Annie Pho(potential leader) - n <br />
*Lauren Magnuson - n<br />
'''Restaurants more than 1 mile from the hotel'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.greenzebrachicago.com/index.html Green Zebra] (Vegan)<br />
<br />
[http://honkytonkbbqchicago.com/ Honky Tonk Barbeque] (BBQ)<br />
*Allan Berry (leader) - n<br />
*Dhanushka Samarakoon - v<br />
*Jason Raitz - n<br />
*Brian Wu - n<br />
*<br />
*<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.karynraw.com/cooked Karyn’s Cooked] (Vegan)<br />
<br />
[http://www.latabernatapas.com/ La Taberna Tapas] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://www.morganschicago.com/ Morgan's on Maxwell] (Pub food)<br />
<br />
[http://www.chezjoelbistro.com/ Chez Joël] (French/Tangiers food) I am leaning towards an early dinner of 6:15 as I have to take-off to make sure the Game Night takes off without a hitch. So leave the conference hotel by 5:45 if it is walk weather or 6PM if it is taxi weather.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa (knackered leader) - v<br />
* Megan O'Neill Kudzia - n<br />
* Esther Verreau - n<br />
* Michael Neidhardt - n<br />
* Rikke Willer - n<br />
* Esme Cowles - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
=== Veg*n Dinner ===<br />
<br />
Let's have dinner at a veg*n-friendly place one night of the conference. Folks of all eating styles welcome.<br />
<br />
Max *6* people per party this year.<br />
<br />
'''Party #1: Chicago Diner''', Wednesday Night http://www.veggiediner.com/ "meat free since '83" <br />
Will they easily be able to accommodate 6 folks walking in?<br />
We'll plan on meeting in the conference hotel at 6pm and taking the 8 bus up there (3411 N. Halsted St Chicago, IL 60657). <br />
# Jason Ronallo (jronallo@gmail.com)<br />
# Linda Ballinger (linda dot ballinger at gmail)<br />
# May Chan (msuicat at gmail dot com)<br />
# Demian Katz (demian DOT katz AT villanova DOT edu)<br />
# David Uspal (david dot uspal at villanova dot edu) In for the Country Fried StAEk and/or the Soul Bowl. Ex-Vegetarian (which may make it a crime for me to go), so if the list is full and you still want in, feel free to email me and I'll gladly turn over my spot to an actual Veg*n.<br />
# Cynthia Ng (cynthia dot s dot ng at gmail)<br />
Capped at 6<br />
<br />
=== Code4lib/Goose Island Brewing Pull Request ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM<br />
<br />
More information and sign up at [https://code4lib2013-estw.eventbrite.com/|https://code4lib2013-estw.eventbrite.com/]<br />
<br />
=== Bourbon and barbecue ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, 7:00 PM<br />
<br />
Friend of mine tells me his cousin manages a Chicago restaurant, Chicago q, and I should go there and tell him my friend sent me. [http://www.chicagoqrestaurant.com/menus/dinner.php Menu] keeps talking about artisanal barbecue and extensive bourbon options. DONE.<br />
<br />
Reservation is at 7 for a party of 8. Add yourselves. <br />
<br />
We can take the number 20 bus to the Red Line. We should plan to meet in the lobby at 6:10; that way we can work with the bus tracker and make a leisurely trip over. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
* Andromeda Yelton<br />
* Chris Day [cday2 at saic.edu]<br />
* Abigail Goben <br />
* Rosalyn Metz [rosalynmetz at gmail dot com]<br />
* Dileshni Jayasinghe [d dot jayasinghe at utoronto dot ca]<br />
* Ray Mathew<br />
* Dre (Barbecue, yes. Bourbon... well, we'll see.) akorphan at ncsu.edu<br />
* Sean Chen schen at law.duke.edu<br />
<br />
=== Non-beery get together ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, Meet at hotel lobby at around 6:30 (and take public transport over to the park) OR meet us at the rink at 6:45, skating rink closes at 8 PM<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' [https://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/dca/supp_info/ice_skating_at_themccormicktribuneicerink.html McCormick Tribune Ice Rink]<br />
<br />
'''Contact:''' @dchud, @ranti, @yo_bj (b dot yoose at gmail), @wendyrlibrarian<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' $10 skate rental, people watching free<br />
<br />
Come and (attempt to) skate with us! This is also a good people watching opportunity, so if you don't want to skate, there will be places to hang out around the rink and the park. There is a [http://www.parkgrillchicago.com/cafe/food-menu cafe] near the rink as well, with hot drinks and food.<br />
<br />
FYI - For those of you who want something else to munch on while hanging out, there's a [http://www.garrettpopcorn.com/chicago-locations/4-east-madison-street/ Garrett Popcorn Shop] a couple blocks away.<br />
<br />
# Chris Sharp (indicating interest)<br />
# Becky Yoose (ready to fall on her butt repeatedly for the entertainment of others)<br />
# Peter Murray<br />
# Shawn Carraway<br />
# Karen Coombs<br />
# Michael Levy<br />
# Christie Peterson<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield<br />
# Virginia Schilling<br />
# Al Cornish<br />
# Sibyl Schaefer<br />
# Kalee Sprague<br />
# Luis Baquera (ready to distract everyone with his own fantastic wipeouts while Becky composes herself)<br />
# Maccabee Levine<br />
# Sarah Shealy (I'm pretty sure I'll fall spectacularly as well :) )<br />
# Emily Lynema (interested!)<br />
<br />
=== Flying Trapeze ===<br />
'''When:''' Monday, 2/11, TBD<br />
<br />
'''Contact:''' rosalynmetz at gmail dot com<br />
<br />
'''Class is full.'''<br />
<br />
No this is not a joke. If you haven't heard Rosy is an aspiring trapeze artists and wants to bring the fun to her friends in Code4Lib. There is a trapeze rig in Chicago and she plans on visiting it and hopes that some of you can come along as well. If its your first time taking a trapeze class, they'll start you off learning [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_oqPi_zuX7A a knee hang] and depending on how that goes you might be able to catch it at the end of class. If you have any questions about whether or not this is for you, [http://chicago.trapezeschool.com/classes/trapeze.php TSNY Chicago's website] should have the answer, if not feel free to contact Rosy.<br />
<br />
Trapeze classes are $57, last 2 hours, and are limited to 10 people. Currently TSNY Chicago hasn't release their class schedule for February -- they should be doing that around Jan. 1. If we can get enough people interested before then, we can buy out a whole class. If not it'll be first come, first serve (along with the general public).<br />
<br />
If you're interested in signing up, feel free to add your name and contact info to the list below.<br />
<br />
'''''Sign Up List'''''<br />
# Jay Luker (first!)<br />
# Bill McMillin<br />
# Bess Sadler<br />
# Karen Coyle<br />
# Sibyl Schaefer<br />
# Rosalyn Metz (because I'm organizing)<br />
# Alicia Cozine<br />
# Gabriel Farrell<br />
<br />
=== Game Night! ===<br />
<br />
See the http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_game_night page for the latest details and to sign up for individual games or add games you're willing to lead/teach!<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Moved this from idea to an actual event. Still getting some details, but here's what we know:<br />
<br />
Game Night! Type of games might vary due to interest and what people bring. Looks like interest right now is mostly on light to mediumish games with a dash of abstracts ;). <br />
<br />
<br />
Rough Schedule:<br />
* 7:30 setup<br />
* 7:45 start playing games!<br />
* 10:30 start winding down (don't start new games)<br />
* 11:00 all done, turn off the lights<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
We have a conference room at the UIC library (Richard J. Daley Library MC 234, 801 S. Morgan, Chicago) reserved for 7:30 on Tuesday the 11th. I'll try to show up at the lobby and hang out there for at about 7:15. I'll be the guy with a code4lib nametag and a box of games ;). Not sure how late we'll play, it looks like the library is open till 1:00am, but I suspect I will for now put a rough ending time of 11pm. <br />
<br />
(Note, there's also some discussion on Cards Against Humanity. I will try to make sure there's an alternative game, but I don't know if I want to prohibit any games. I would say though to remember to be respectful and courteous to those around you. I will probably be pondering this issue for a while)<br />
<br />
<br />
The original list of people who signed up is below.<br />
<br />
I (Jon Gorman) will bring some board games and pick up some cards. Add your name to the list below if you're interested in attending. Also not if you can bring games. Bringing games is NOT REQUIRED. If you can bring a game you can teach, that's great and will make sure we're not just stuck playing the games I bring.<br />
<br />
(I've added some comments to the game lists below)<br />
* jtgorman, aka Jon Gorman: I'll bring Time's Up: Total Recall, Tsuro, Hey, That's My Fish, Hive, and some more I haven't decided on yet. (My profile over at http://www.boardgamegeek.com/ is jtgorman as well if you want to browse my games and make requests)<br />
* yo_bj: I have some games I can bring as well (Kill Doctor Lucky, Fluxx, Godzilla: Stomp, Munchkin Zombies, etc.). Monday doesn't have anything major planned... <br />
*danwho: I 'll bring the Cards Against Humanity set.<br />
*escowles (Mon/Tue preferred): I've got lots of games I could bring like Settlers of Catan, Carcassonne, Ticket to Ride, Age of Renaissance, Elfenland, Agricola, Le Havre, Smallworld, RoboRally, etc. etc. <br />
** Take your pick! All good games. I'll try to finalize my list of games before Friday - JonG <br />
*jen_young: I'm local and I have quite a few games. Just about every version of Fluxx, Bananagrams, Gloom, Munchkin Cthulu,Cards Against Humanity, Apples to Apples, Risk, Last Night on Earth, etc.) <br />
**All good games! If you don't mind bringing a box that would be awesome. I particularly like Apples to Apples, Last Night on Earth and Gloom - JonG<br />
* decasm: Interested in Go (aka igo, weiqi, baduk) anytime, not just game night. I can do Catan as well. (And as much as I love it, Cards Against Humanity is probably a violation of the new Code of Conduct.) <br />
** I look forward to losing my first game of Go to you ;) - JonG<br />
** I'd love to learn Go. <del>Perhaps after the newcomer dinner?</del> Oof... won't make for Tues. But would still be interested to learn. --ranti.<br />
* csharp: I'm interested in playing games - whatever people bring. I almost always travel with a pack or two of playing cards ;-). Monday or Tuesday nights are fine.<br />
* moneill: I would love to join in! I have a version of Catchphrase floating around somewhere, and I think I have Battleship...I need to go weed around in that drawer and see what else presents itself. Tuesday would be my preferred night, but I will make it work! <br />
** Don't worry too much about bringing a game if transportation is a problem. One thing I've done w/ stuff like catchphrase is not take the box but to put pieces and cards in a bag - JOn G<br />
* demiankatz: I'm always up for a game. I'm hoping to travel light so probably shouldn't bring anything, but if there's a local game shop, I might be persuaded to pick up something new as a souvenir. <br />
** Don't worry, I think there will be plenty of games - JonG<br />
* sekjal: I've got [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218/dominion Dominion], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/68448/7-wonders 7 Wonders], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30933/bang-the-bullet Bang!], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/18333/ecofluxx EcoFluxx] and [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/116/guillotine Guillotine] that I can bring. ++ on Cards against Humanity! Prefer non-conflict with beer night. <br />
** Also all good games. I have 7 Wonders, but can bring some other games if you bring that. - Jon G<br />
* arty: so totally interested. Unfortunately, I have no games to contribute.<br />
** No prob.<br />
* sanderson: I would be interested. I can bring [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/478/citadels Citadels] (2-7 players)<br />
** Citadels would be awesome and means I don't have to bring it ;) - JonG<br />
* dvdndrsn: Definitely in! Can bring Innovation, Tichu, Dominion, but Cards Against Humanity sounds good. <br />
** I'll put in a vote for Tichu, heard good things about it - Jon G <br />
* smkiewel: I'm likely to join. Can bring Arkham Horror and Munchkin.<br />
** Arkham Horror seems rather bulky to travel with, but if you want to play bring it ;) - Jon G<br />
** mbutler: If someone actually brings Arkham Horror I'd throw down. Otherwise, whateve. <br />
* jkwilson: I'd like to attend Monday or Tuesday. I have a bunch of games but I'd prefer not to travel with them, and anyway it sounds like they're covered above. I'll bring the 5-6 player Catan extension.<br />
* ejlynema: Interested, but will probably attend Newcomer dinner on Tuesday. Like Dominion and 7 Wonders, but probably don't have room to bring in suitcase. Anyone bringing Tsuro? <br />
** I can bring Tsuro - Jon G<br />
* Christie Peterson (save4use): Also interested, but also probably attending newcomer dinner on Tuesday. Can bring [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/11/bohnanza Bohnanza] and one deck of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Set_%28game%29 Set]. <br />
**Bohnanza and Set would be awesome - JonG<br />
**Done! I will bring them both -- C<br />
* dgcliff: I'd be interested. Can bring Ticket to Ride.<br />
* mbklein: definitely interested. Will check on my (currently unpacked) games. I am dying to play Cards Against Humanity. If we can't find a way to reconcile it with the Code of Conduct, we need a different Code of Conduct.<br />
** Considering that this is a public event, and that no one knows everyone's sensitivity levels in the room, it might not be a good idea to break out a crass, adult version of apples to apples in the middle of the gaming room. :cP (yo_bj)<br />
* duspal: In. My board game collection is small but mighty (Arkham Horror, Catan, Vampire: Prince of the City, Deadlands: Battle for Slaughter Gulch, Arabian Nights, Diplomacy, Shogun, and Cosmic Encounter off the top of my head, amongst a few others). Let me know ahead of time if anyone is interested, since they're all relatively big... <br />
** If you really want to play Cosmic Encounter, I can bring my copy (Fantasy Flight edition, 3 expansions), just let me know - JonG<br />
*librarywebchic: I'm willing to bring a set and teach folks how to play Majhong. Need at least three to play though.<br />
**beatricep: Uno gets no respect. ;-) @librarywebchic: I have always wanted to learn to play Majhong. If you're still bringing it, I'm in!<br />
** Agreed, I don't know Majhong and I love learning new games. - JonG<br />
** I actually know a few different rule sets. It's too bad I don't have a travel set or I'd bring a 2nd one -Arty<br />
** I'm local and can bring a mahjong set. I've had no one to play with for years, so have probably forgotten how. -Linda B<br />
* jcraitz: I'm in after the newcomer dinner. I'll bring Citadels and Bang! <br />
**I think someone higher in the list offered to bring citadels, but won't hurt to have two copies just in case one of you don't show ;) - JonG<br />
**Aww no. left my games at the office. Looks like I'll have to jump in someone else's game.<br />
* julia: I'll be the freeloader who showed up and didn't bring any games.<br />
* kenirwin: interested in attending<br />
* sdellis: attending<br />
* ianc: interested in attending, a little rusty but definitely up for a couple rounds of Mahjong, also want to try something new too!<br />
* haschart: Interested in attending, if I can make it work with the newcomer dinner. Big fan of Dominion lately, but probably cannot bring it `cause the "Big Box" with the base game and two expansion sets is bigger than my suitcase. I could bring "Race for the Galaxy" if there's any interest.<br />
* jessebrown: Interested in attending. I can bring Set and Zombie Fluxx.<br />
* terrywbrady: I would like to attend<br />
* dan fehrenbach (dnfehren): I would like to attend, can bring Pandemic if anyone is interested.<br />
* dileshni: interested in attending. <br />
* Corey Harper: definitely interested in attending if space allows.<br />
* saverkamp: interested in attending.<br />
* Emily Shaw: I like games. <br />
* Alan Dyck: I play Carcassonne and Munchkin among others. I see those listed so I'm bringing a game some friends and I have been creating: Wandering Monster.<br />
* Heidi Frank (hf36@nyu.edu) - I love card games like gin/rummy, but am open to anything.<br />
* Sibyl Schaefer - attending, and will bring anything that fits in my carry-on<br />
<br />
-- *Please, please, please, if you're signing up on this list, also sign up for a paritcular game slot to start out the evening or put your game in: http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_game_night<br />
we're having so many people sign up after Jan. 14th we're in risk of overflowing the room. (I should have put in a cap limit, but given how late I realized this, I haven't *<br />
<br />
I have to confess, I started trying to organize what games certain people were bringing, but it got confusing fast and I don't want anyone to feel compelled to bring anything or feel bad if they can't make it. So if there is something you're dying to play, let me know and I'll try to bring it if I have it.<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=213549257652679418473.0004ce6c25e6cdeb0319d&msa=0<br />
<br />
== Layar: augmented reality Code4Lib view of Chicago ==<br />
<br />
There's a "Code4Lib 2013" layer in [http://www.layar.com/ Layar], an augmented reality app that runs on both Android and iOS. You can use it to scan around the city to see two kinds of things: 1) tweets using the #c4l13 or #code4lib hashtag (if the tweets are geolocated so they can be<br />
nailed to a point) and 2) points of interest from the [https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=213549257652679418473.0004ce6c25e6cdeb0319d&msa=0 shared Google Map]. <br />
<br />
To use it:<br />
<br />
* install Layar on your phone<br />
* run it and click to go into Geo Layers mode<br />
* search for "code4lib 2013"<br />
* launch the layer and look around<br />
<br />
See Code4Lib people and events overlaid on top of Chicago, in real time! See an alternate view of the city that's all about libraries and coders!<br />
<br />
To make your own tweets appear, use the #c4l13 hashtag and make sure the tweet is geolocated. In Twitter's client you need to do this by enabling geolocation in settings and then enabling it for each tweet.<br />
<br />
Source code running this: [https://github.com/wdenton/laertes Laertes]. Bill Denton set it up and is very curious to find out if it's useful, so let him know if you try it out.<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
Events Listings<br />
* Chicago Reader http://www.chicagoreader.com/<br />
* The City of Chicago’s Events Guide: http://www.choosechicago.com/ <br />
* Metromix Chicago: http://chicago.metromix.com/events <br />
* Timeout Chicago: http://timeoutchicago.com/<br />
* Chicago Studio Club's [http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?title=LIVE%20MUSIC%20in%20Chicagoland%20via%20Chicago%20Studio%20Club!%20&height=1000&wkst=1&hl=en&bgcolor=%2399ff99&src=info%40chicagostudioclub.net&color=%237A367A&ctz=America%2FChicago Live Music Google Calendar]<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
==Chicago Events Feb 10-14==<br />
<br />
=== Sunday February 10===<br />
Theater - [http://www.neofuturists.org/ Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind] "...with its ever-changing "menu," is an attempt to perform 30 plays in 60 minutes. " 7pm.<br />
<br />
Theater - [http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/chunks/Event?oid=8557720 Chunks] : Funny, Heartbreaking, Gross. 7pm & BYOB!<br />
<br />
===Monday February 11===<br />
<br />
Music - [http://www.hideoutchicago.com/event/208497-robbie-fulks-michael-miles-chicago/ Robbie Fulks at the Hideout]<br />
<br />
[http://fedora4lib.org/ fedora4lib] - 7 pm to whenever<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, February 12===<br />
<br />
Concert - [http://www.thefatbabies.com/ The Fat Babies] playing at an awesome venue, [http://greenmilljazz.com/ The Green Mill].<br />
<br />
[http://fedora4lib.org/ fedora4lib] - 7 pm to whenever<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, February 13===<br />
===Thursday, February 14===<br />
Tour of the [http://www.newberry.org/ Newberry Library] -- 3:30 p.m.<br />
This will be a special tour for Code4Lib attendees, so please sign up below if you are interested, as I'll need to give the tour guide an estimate of how many people will come. Details on how to get to the Newberry will follow. Questions? Contact ballingerl at newberry dot org<br />
<br />
'''''Directions: '''''<br />
The Newberry is at 60 W Walton St. It could take half an hour to get there from the conference hotel via CTA, so those of you who wish to take public transit as a group can meet me in the hotel lobby by 3:00. We will then go to the UIC-Halsted El stop (5 blocks from hotel), change trains in the Loop, then walk 3-4 blocks to the Newberry. Otherwise, plan on making your preferred way there and meet in the Newberry lobby by 3:30.<br />
<br />
'''''Sign Up List'''''<br />
# Michael Doran - doran@uta.edu<br />
# William Denton - wtd@pobox.com<br />
# Wayne Schneider - wschneider@hclib.org<br />
# Matt Cordial - rev3lator [at] gmail.com<br />
# ryan hess - mhess8 [at] depaul.edu<br />
# [[User:ianc|Ian Chan]] ichan@csusm.edu<br />
# Richard Aroksaar - richard_aroksaar@nps.gov<br />
# [name] - [email address]<br />
# Laurie Lee Moses - lmoses [at] colum.edu<br />
# Ray Schwartz - schwartzr2@wpunj.edu<br />
<br />
== Music ==<br />
<br />
There's a [http://www.rdio.com/people/wdenton/playlists/2229053/Code4Lib_2013_in_Chicago/ Code4Lib 2013 in Chicago] collaborative playlist on Rdio. If you're a subscriber, have a look, and add something you think everyone would like to hear or use as their personal soundtrack while they're hacking and exploring Chicago.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2013]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2013_social_activities&diff=364052013 social activities2013-02-11T21:55:30Z<p>Wickr: /* Newcomer Dinner, Tuesday 2/12 */</p>
<hr />
<div>== Ideas ==<br />
<br />
* Aviary: super-crazy cocktails. http://www.molecularrecipes.com/molecular-mixology/aviary-cocktails/ . List your name if you're interested, whether Sunday, Monday, and/or Tuesday (after newcomer dinners) work, and whether you're just interested in stopping by, or doing a 7 cocktail tasting flight.*<br />
** statsfool: sunday/monday/tuesday, either drinks or flight.<br />
** Amyhannah: monday/tuesday, drinks, probably not the flight.<br />
** anarchivist: sunday/monday, prefer drinks over flight but could be convinced<br />
** [[User:highermath|highermath]]: monday (could use 10 cocktails after Drupal subCon, I am sure). Uber now works in Chicago, so I would do the flight.<br />
** [[User:pberry|pberry]]: any night but Wednesday (that's Goose Island night) and I'd be up for drinks or flight, although leaning away from flight.<br />
** [[User:thatandromeda|thatandromeda]] oh my gosh yes, any time, probably not the flight.<br />
** [[User:Gdave|gdave]] beautiful site, I would be interested, Sun,Mon,Tues. either drink or flight.<br />
** [[User:shawnc12|shawnc12]]: sunday/monday, either drink or flight<br />
** wdenton: any night, either drink or flight<br />
** beatricep: sunday/monday drink, highly susceptible to flight by peer pressure..<br />
** ryan hess: sunday/monday drink or flight<br />
** infosoph: sunday/monday yes/yes!!<br />
** [[User:Pfeeley|Pfeeley]]: sunday/monday/tuesday, either drink or flight<br />
** [[User:Ksprague|Ksprague]]: tuesday, drink or flight<br />
** [[User:schwartzray|schwartzray]]: anything on any day<br />
* Brewery tour - some possible candidates would be Goose Island, Brew Bus http://www.chicagobrewbus.com/, Piece, Revolution, Half Acre.<br />
* Library field trips - because we're library geeks. Possible places include Newberry and Read/Write.--Read/Write Library confirmed for February 11.--Newberry Library confirmed for February 14.<br />
* Art Institute of Chicago - Only open until 5pm, but possible for people coming in early enough on Sunday. There seems to be enough interest here to actually have a group, when and where should we meet? I added my email so that we could discuss details off the wiki.<br />
** escowles: I'm getting in around noon on Sunday, and interested in this.<br />
** pgrayove at gmail dot com: I'm getting in around noon on Sunday too. I'm interested.<br />
** ranti: And I am. <br />
** tshearerlib: Coming in at around the same time and hope to get to the museum by 1:00. Lunch first?<br />
* Local Option http://localoptionbier.com/ - So you've heard of Hopleaf, you've heard of Maproom. Come to Chicago's *ahem* best kept secret for good food and an evening session on Monday. We will need a tally to make requisite arrangements. Target for arrival at bar: 7ish. Probably a group gathering to head north around 6:30 in hotel lobby (if you want to take the #8 Halsted bus that is).<br />
** kayiwa<br />
** Linda Ballinger<br />
** Courtney Greene<br />
** John Pillans<br />
** +6 from NCSU incl one Bret Davidson<br />
** Megan Kudzia<br />
** Andrew Darby<br />
** erinrwhite<br />
** [[User:ianc|Ian Chan]]<br />
** Will Clarke<br />
** Cody Hanson<br />
** Jesse Brown<br />
** Sharon Clapp<br />
** Matt Cordial +1 (my friend and I were already planning a Monday trip here)<br />
** Ray Schwartz<br />
** Eric Larson<br />
<br />
== Planned Events ==<br />
<br />
===Read/Write Library Field Trip, Monday 2/11===<br />
Field trip to the [http://readwritelibrary.org/ Read/Write Library] 6:30PM-9PM <br />
<br />
Come help catalog the Read/Write Library catalog and hack on the library catalog. We will get food or go to a nearby restaurant depending on interest. We will also invite friends from Code for America to hang out and talk civic data. Bring your laptop along if you have one.<br />
<br />
Let us know if you are coming so we can figure out food:<br />
* Margaret Heller<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* James Griffin<br />
* Wayne Schneider<br />
* jrochkind will try to make it<br />
<br />
'''Directions to the library from UIC:'''<br />
<br />
''Bus''<br />
<br />
Take the #8 Halsted Bus north to Chicago (Bus will say "#8 Halsted/79th North to Broadway/Waveland")<br />
Take the #66 Chicago Bus west to California (Bus will say either "#66 Chicago west to Austin" or "#66 Chicago West to Pulaski." You can take either one because both Austin and Pulaski are further west than we are so both stop at California)<br />
The Chicago bus stops on the west side of California, which is the side of the street we're on. On California, walk a block north to Walton.<br />
<br />
''Train + Bus (slightly faster/more reliable, but only by about 5-10 minutes)''<br />
<br />
Walk to the UIC/Halsted Blue Line <br />
Take the O'Hare train (toward the Loop) and go all the way through the Loop and back west. Get off at Chicago and use the exit that says "North side of Chicago Ave" (or something similar — I don't remember exactly).<br />
Take the #66 Chicago Bus west to California (Bus will say either "#66 Chicago west to Austin" or "#66 Chicago West to Pulaski." You can take either one because both Austin and Pulaski are further west than we are so both stop at California)<br />
The Chicago bus stops on the west side of California, which is the side of the street we're on. On California, walk a block north to Walton.<br />
<br />
=== Newcomer Dinner, Tuesday 2/12 ===<br />
<br />
First time at code4lib? Join fellow c4l newbies and veterans for an evening of food, socializing, and stimulating <strike>discussions about</strike> demonstrations of the many uses of <strike>bacon</strike> <strike>dongles</strike> XML.<br />
<br />
Code4Lib veterans, you're invited too. Join us in welcoming the newcomers!<br />
<br />
'''Plans'''<br />
* When: Tuesday evening (2/12)<br />
* Time: 6 PM (ish) or whenever you can get your group together<br />
* Mastermind (if you have any questions): [mailto:yoosebec@grinnell.edu Becky Yoose]<br />
<br />
''Guidelines:''<br />
*Max of '''6''' per group<br />
**Please, no waitlisting<br />
*ID yourselves so we can get a good mix of new people and veterans in each group<br />
**New folks - n<br />
**c4l vets - v<br />
*One leader needed for each location (declare yourself! - '''Vets are highly encouraged to lead the group''')<br />
**Leader duties<br />
***Make reservations if required; otherwise make sure that the restaurant can handle a group of 6 rowdy library tech type folks<br />
***Herd folks from hotel to restaurant (know where you're going!)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants'''<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants within .25 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.athenarestaurantchicago.com/index.php Athena] (Greek)<br />
<br />
* Al Cornish - v (leader)<br />
* Carolyn Cole - n<br />
* Dileshni Jayasinghe - v<br />
* Will Clark - n<br />
* Adam Constabaris - v<br />
* Patrick Hogan - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.dinerestaurant.com/ Dine] (Contemporary)<br />
<br />
<del>[http://www.girlandthegoat.com/ Girl and the Goat] (American) Top Chef fans take note! This is Stephanie Izard's award-winning resto.</del> Totally booked.<br />
<br />
[http://littlegoatchicago.com/ Little Goat] - Izard just opened a diner across the street from G&G that is walk-in only.<br />
<br />
[http://www.haymarketbrewing.com/ Haymarket Pub & Brewery] (Pub food) - Reservations at 6:30pm. Meet in conference hotel lobby at 6:10pm<br />
<br />
* Ryan Wick (leader) - v<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.karynsongreen.com/ Karyn’s on Green] (Vegan)<br />
Completely vegan and close to the conference hotel. We'll meet in the conference hotel at around 6:45 (reservation at 7:00 for 6). Google maps says it is a 5 minute walk.<br />
<br />
*Jason Ronallo (leader)- v<br />
*Alicia Cozine - n<br />
*Mark Mounts - v<br />
*Barbara Hui - n<br />
*Amy Deschenes - n<br />
*Adam Strohm - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://niarestaurant.com/nia-restaurant-mediterranean-cuisine/ Nia] (Mediterranean tapas)<br />
<br />
[http://www.pegasuschicago.com/index.php Pegasus] (Greek)<br />
<br />
[http://www.roditys.com/index.html Roditys] (Greek) -- Reservations made for 6:30pm. Let's meet in the hotel lobby at 6pm and walk over from there.<br />
<br />
* Rosalyn Metz (leader) - v<br />
* [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]] - v<br />
* [[User:Jacobandresen|Jacob Andresen]] - n<br />
* Karen Miller - n<br />
* Dre - v<br />
* Mahria Lebow - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .25 miles and .5 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
Code4lib Chicago Celery Salt Society - [http://www.alsbeef.com/ Al's Beef]<br />
<br />
* Jason Casden (leader) - v - No reservations. We can walk from the hotel at 7.<br />
* Charlie Morris - n<br />
* Cory Lown - v<br />
* Carolina Garcia - n<br />
* Cody Hanson - n<br />
* Ken Varnum - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://avecrestaurant.com/# Avec] (Small plate)<br />
Family-style small plate and tapas. Great Yelp reviews. We'll meet in the conference hotel at 6:00 <strike>6:45</strike> (they don't take reservations, but have stuff to sip on if there's a wait). Less than 10 minute walk from hotel.<br />
<br />
* Shaun Ellis (leader) - v<br />
* Jon Stroop - v<br />
* Paula Gray-Overtoom - n<br />
* Emily Zervas - n<br />
* Cynthia Ng - neither<br />
* Sarah Dooley - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.babavillage.com/ Baba’s Village] (Indian/Pakistani)<br />
<br />
[http://blackbirdrestaurant.com/ Blackbird] (Contemporary)<br />
<br />
(Since the reservation is late, does anyone want to meet for drink in the hotel bar beforehand? There's really no place to wait at the restaurant, and there's no nice bar nearby that I can recall. cm)<br />
* Justin Coyne (reserver) - v - Reservation for Blackbird for 6 at 8:30pm<br />
* Matt Cordial - v<br />
* [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/User:Camcclure Christine McClure - n]<br />
* Devin Higgins - n (devinhiggins at gmail)<br />
* Ken Irwin<br />
* Tad Merchant - n (tadoneus @ gmail)<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.carnivalechicago.com/menu Carnivale] (Nuevo Latino)<br />
<br />
[http://decero.hellotacos.com/ De Cero] (Mexican)<br />
<br />
[http://www.dragonflymandarin.com/ Dragonfly] (Chinese, sushi)<br />
<br />
[http://giordanos.com/ Giordano's] (Chicago Style Pizza) This place should be able to handle multiple groups...<br />
<br />
* Andrew Nagy (leader) - v<br />
* Virginia Schilling - n<br />
* Jane Sandberg - n<br />
* Richard Aroksaar - n<br />
* Jesse Brown - n (jfbrown78 at gmail dot com)<br />
* James Van Mil - n (james.vanmil at gmail)<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.grangehallburgerbar.com/ Grange Hall Burger Bar] (Local food)<br />
<br />
[http://www.idreamoffalafel.com/ I Dream of Falafel] (Mediterranean) -- No reservations -- this is a casual place. Supposed to be an 8 minute walk from the hotel. Let's meet at 6:20pm in the Crowne Plaza lobby. I have chin-length brown hair and probably will be holding a paper scribbled with 'falafel.'<br />
<br />
* Emily Lynema (leader) - v<br />
* Christie Peterson - n<br />
* James Stuart - v<br />
* Emily Shaw - n (emilyfshaw at gmail dot com)<br />
* Ian Chan - n (ichan@csusm.edu)<br />
* Zeno Tajoli - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.jaipurchicago.com/ Jaipur] (Indian; Reservation made for 6 at 6:30)<br />
-- Let's meet in the crowne plaza lobby @ 6:15; it's supposed to be a 6 minute walk<br />
<br />
* Andrew Darby (leader) - v<br />
* Josh Wilson (joshwilsonnc at gmail) - n<br />
* Tim Thompson - n<br />
* Mariela Hristova - n<br />
* ryan hess - n<br />
* Patrick Feeley - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://lasardine.com/ La Sardine] (French)<br />
<br />
[http://www.mythaitakumi.com/index.html MyThai Takumi] (Japanese Thai) Reservation at 6:15. Meet in the hotel lobby at 6 pm. Look for the women in a trench coat and hat.<br />
<br />
*Becky Yoose (leader) b dot yoose at gmail - v<br />
*May Chan - n<br />
*David Anderson - newby<br />
*Terry Brady - new<br />
* Dave Menninger - n<br />
*Shawn Carraway -n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.nellcoterestaurant.com/ Nellcôte] (French)<br />
<br />
[http://chicago.provincerestaurant.com/ Province] (American with Central/South American/Spanish influence)<br />
<br />
[http://thepublicanrestaurant.com/ The Publican] (Seafood)<br />
<br />
* Jay Luker (eater) - v - Rezzie is for 8pm<br />
* Mark Matienzo (tweeter) - v<br />
* Devon Smith (pickle eater) - repeat offender<br />
* Chris Sharp (dead horse beater) - v<br />
* Michael B. Klein (greeter) - v<br />
* Bill McMillin (meeter) - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://saigonsisters.tumblr.com/ Saigon Sisters] (Vietnamese) Reservation for 6:15, meet in hotel lobby<br />
* Margaret Heller - v and leader<br />
* Sharon Clapp - n<br />
* Sean Crowe - n<br />
* Meghan Finch - n<br />
* Maccabee Levine - v<br />
* James Griffin - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.thaiurbankitchen.com/ Thai Urban Kitchen] (Thai, sushi)<br />
<br />
[http://www.trattoriaisabellachicago.com/rest.html Trattoria Isabella] (Italian)<br />
<br />
[http://www.vivo-chicago.com/homepage-2 Vivo] (Italian) <br />
<br />
[http://www.wishbonechicago.com/dining/westloop/ Wishbone] (Southern Reconstruction)<br />
<br />
* Rachel Shaevel (herder, self-proclaimed dictator, and reservation maker) - n (we're on for 6:15!)<br />
* Myrna E Morales (follower) - n<br />
* Sarah Thorngate - n<br />
* Steven Marsden - n<br />
* David Lacy - v<br />
* Luke Gaudreau - n<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .5 miles and .75 miles of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://currentsontheriver.com/ Currents on the River] (Eclectic)<br />
<br />
[http://n9ne.com/ N9NE Steakhouse] (Steak)<br />
<br />
[http://www.verachicago.com/menu Vera Chicago] (Spanish)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants between .75 miles and 1 mile of the hotel'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.theberghoff.com/default.aspx The Berghoff] (German)<br />
* Declan Fleming - v (leader) I checked reservations, and for 6 people, the first time open after the conf is 7:30, so I grabbed that.<br />
** Let's meet in the lobby at 7p and cab over (or would people rather walk?)<br />
* Dave Green - n <br />
* Steven Villereal - n<br />
* Peter Murray - v<br />
* Trey Terrell - n<br />
* Mike Giarlo - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.yelp.com/biz/frontera-grill-chicago Frontera] (a Rick Bayliss Mex-American restaurant) Reservations are for 7:30, so perhaps the group could get a drink in the lobby beforehand. Either way, we'll depart at 7pm.<br />
: (''note: the drinks at the bar at frontera are very tasty.'')<br />
*Dan Suchy (leader and over-eater) - v<br />
*Matt Critchlow - v<br />
*Carmen Mitchell - v<br />
*Maureen Callahan - n<br />
*David Cliff - n<br />
* Patrick Berry - 3rd year red-shirt freshman<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.nativefoods.com/ Native Foods] (Vegan)<br />
<br />
<br />
'''Restaurants more than 1 mile from the hotel'''<br />
<br />
<br />
[http://www.greenzebrachicago.com/index.html Green Zebra] (Vegan)<br />
<br />
[http://honkytonkbbqchicago.com/ Honky Tonk Barbeque] (BBQ)<br />
*Allan Berry (leader) - n<br />
*Dhanushka Samarakoon - v<br />
*Jason Raitz - n<br />
*Brian Wu - n<br />
*<br />
*<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
[http://www.karynraw.com/cooked Karyn’s Cooked] (Vegan)<br />
<br />
[http://www.latabernatapas.com/ La Taberna Tapas] (Mediterranean)<br />
<br />
[http://www.morganschicago.com/ Morgan's on Maxwell] (Pub food)<br />
<br />
[http://www.chezjoelbistro.com/ Chez Joël] (French/Tangiers food) I am leaning towards an early dinner of 6:15 as I have to take-off to make sure the Game Night takes off without a hitch. So leave the conference hotel by 5:45 if it is walk weather or 6PM if it is taxi weather.<br />
<br />
* Francis Kayiwa (knackered leader) - v<br />
* Megan O'Neill Kudzia - n<br />
* Esther Verreau - n<br />
* Michael Neidhardt - n<br />
* Rikke Willer - n<br />
* Esme Cowles - v<br />
* '''Capped at 6'''<br />
<br />
=== Veg*n Dinner ===<br />
<br />
Let's have dinner at a veg*n-friendly place one night of the conference. Folks of all eating styles welcome.<br />
<br />
Max *6* people per party this year.<br />
<br />
'''Party #1: Chicago Diner''', Wednesday Night http://www.veggiediner.com/ "meat free since '83" <br />
Will they easily be able to accommodate 6 folks walking in?<br />
We'll plan on meeting in the conference hotel at 6pm and taking the 8 bus up there (3411 N. Halsted St Chicago, IL 60657). <br />
# Jason Ronallo (jronallo@gmail.com)<br />
# Linda Ballinger (linda dot ballinger at gmail)<br />
# May Chan (msuicat at gmail dot com)<br />
# Demian Katz (demian DOT katz AT villanova DOT edu)<br />
# David Uspal (david dot uspal at villanova dot edu) In for the Country Fried StAEk and/or the Soul Bowl. Ex-Vegetarian (which may make it a crime for me to go), so if the list is full and you still want in, feel free to email me and I'll gladly turn over my spot to an actual Veg*n.<br />
# Cynthia Ng (cynthia dot s dot ng at gmail)<br />
Capped at 6<br />
<br />
=== Code4lib/Goose Island Brewing Pull Request ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, 8:00 PM to 11:00 PM<br />
<br />
More information and sign up at [https://code4lib2013-estw.eventbrite.com/|https://code4lib2013-estw.eventbrite.com/]<br />
<br />
=== Bourbon and barbecue ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, 7:00 PM<br />
<br />
Friend of mine tells me his cousin manages a Chicago restaurant, Chicago q, and I should go there and tell him my friend sent me. [http://www.chicagoqrestaurant.com/menus/dinner.php Menu] keeps talking about artisanal barbecue and extensive bourbon options. DONE.<br />
<br />
Reservation is at 7 for a party of 8. Add yourselves. <br />
<br />
We can take the number 20 bus to the Red Line. We should plan to meet in the lobby at 6:10; that way we can work with the bus tracker and make a leisurely trip over. <br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
* Andromeda Yelton<br />
* Chris Day [cday2 at saic.edu]<br />
* Abigail Goben <br />
* Rosalyn Metz [rosalynmetz at gmail dot com]<br />
* Dileshni Jayasinghe [d dot jayasinghe at utoronto dot ca]<br />
* Ray Mathew<br />
* Dre (Barbecue, yes. Bourbon... well, we'll see.) akorphan at ncsu.edu<br />
* Sean Chen schen at law.duke.edu<br />
<br />
=== Non-beery get together ===<br />
'''When:''' Wednesday, 2/13, Meet at hotel lobby at around 6:30 (and take public transport over to the park) OR meet us at the rink at 6:45, skating rink closes at 8 PM<br />
<br />
'''Where:''' [https://www.cityofchicago.org/city/en/depts/dca/supp_info/ice_skating_at_themccormicktribuneicerink.html McCormick Tribune Ice Rink]<br />
<br />
'''Contact:''' @dchud, @ranti, @yo_bj (b dot yoose at gmail), @wendyrlibrarian<br />
<br />
'''Cost:''' $10 skate rental, people watching free<br />
<br />
Come and (attempt to) skate with us! This is also a good people watching opportunity, so if you don't want to skate, there will be places to hang out around the rink and the park. There is a [http://www.parkgrillchicago.com/cafe/food-menu cafe] near the rink as well, with hot drinks and food.<br />
<br />
FYI - For those of you who want something else to munch on while hanging out, there's a [http://www.garrettpopcorn.com/chicago-locations/4-east-madison-street/ Garrett Popcorn Shop] a couple blocks away.<br />
<br />
# Chris Sharp (indicating interest)<br />
# Becky Yoose (ready to fall on her butt repeatedly for the entertainment of others)<br />
# Peter Murray<br />
# Shawn Carraway<br />
# Karen Coombs<br />
# Michael Levy<br />
# Christie Peterson<br />
# Andrew Pasterfield<br />
# Virginia Schilling<br />
# Al Cornish<br />
# Sibyl Schaefer<br />
# Kalee Sprague<br />
# Luis Baquera (ready to distract everyone with his own fantastic wipeouts while Becky composes herself)<br />
# Maccabee Levine<br />
# Sarah Shealy (I'm pretty sure I'll fall spectacularly as well :) )<br />
<br />
=== Flying Trapeze ===<br />
'''When:''' Monday, 2/11, TBD<br />
<br />
'''Contact:''' rosalynmetz at gmail dot com<br />
<br />
'''Class is full.'''<br />
<br />
No this is not a joke. If you haven't heard Rosy is an aspiring trapeze artists and wants to bring the fun to her friends in Code4Lib. There is a trapeze rig in Chicago and she plans on visiting it and hopes that some of you can come along as well. If its your first time taking a trapeze class, they'll start you off learning [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_oqPi_zuX7A a knee hang] and depending on how that goes you might be able to catch it at the end of class. If you have any questions about whether or not this is for you, [http://chicago.trapezeschool.com/classes/trapeze.php TSNY Chicago's website] should have the answer, if not feel free to contact Rosy.<br />
<br />
Trapeze classes are $57, last 2 hours, and are limited to 10 people. Currently TSNY Chicago hasn't release their class schedule for February -- they should be doing that around Jan. 1. If we can get enough people interested before then, we can buy out a whole class. If not it'll be first come, first serve (along with the general public).<br />
<br />
If you're interested in signing up, feel free to add your name and contact info to the list below.<br />
<br />
'''''Sign Up List'''''<br />
# Jay Luker (first!)<br />
# Bill McMillin<br />
# Bess Sadler<br />
# Karen Coyle<br />
# Sibyl Schaefer<br />
# Rosalyn Metz (because I'm organizing)<br />
# Alicia Cozine<br />
# Gabriel Farrell<br />
<br />
=== Game Night! ===<br />
<br />
See the http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_game_night page for the latest details and to sign up for individual games or add games you're willing to lead/teach!<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Moved this from idea to an actual event. Still getting some details, but here's what we know:<br />
<br />
Game Night! Type of games might vary due to interest and what people bring. Looks like interest right now is mostly on light to mediumish games with a dash of abstracts ;). <br />
<br />
<br />
Rough Schedule:<br />
* 7:30 setup<br />
* 7:45 start playing games!<br />
* 10:30 start winding down (don't start new games)<br />
* 11:00 all done, turn off the lights<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
We have a conference room at the UIC library (Richard J. Daley Library MC 234, 801 S. Morgan, Chicago) reserved for 7:30 on Tuesday the 11th. I'll try to show up at the lobby and hang out there for at about 7:15. I'll be the guy with a code4lib nametag and a box of games ;). Not sure how late we'll play, it looks like the library is open till 1:00am, but I suspect I will for now put a rough ending time of 11pm. <br />
<br />
(Note, there's also some discussion on Cards Against Humanity. I will try to make sure there's an alternative game, but I don't know if I want to prohibit any games. I would say though to remember to be respectful and courteous to those around you. I will probably be pondering this issue for a while)<br />
<br />
<br />
The original list of people who signed up is below.<br />
<br />
I (Jon Gorman) will bring some board games and pick up some cards. Add your name to the list below if you're interested in attending. Also not if you can bring games. Bringing games is NOT REQUIRED. If you can bring a game you can teach, that's great and will make sure we're not just stuck playing the games I bring.<br />
<br />
(I've added some comments to the game lists below)<br />
* jtgorman, aka Jon Gorman: I'll bring Time's Up: Total Recall, Tsuro, Hey, That's My Fish, Hive, and some more I haven't decided on yet. (My profile over at http://www.boardgamegeek.com/ is jtgorman as well if you want to browse my games and make requests)<br />
* yo_bj: I have some games I can bring as well (Kill Doctor Lucky, Fluxx, Godzilla: Stomp, Munchkin Zombies, etc.). Monday doesn't have anything major planned... <br />
*danwho: I 'll bring the Cards Against Humanity set.<br />
*escowles (Mon/Tue preferred): I've got lots of games I could bring like Settlers of Catan, Carcassonne, Ticket to Ride, Age of Renaissance, Elfenland, Agricola, Le Havre, Smallworld, RoboRally, etc. etc. <br />
** Take your pick! All good games. I'll try to finalize my list of games before Friday - JonG <br />
*jen_young: I'm local and I have quite a few games. Just about every version of Fluxx, Bananagrams, Gloom, Munchkin Cthulu,Cards Against Humanity, Apples to Apples, Risk, Last Night on Earth, etc.) <br />
**All good games! If you don't mind bringing a box that would be awesome. I particularly like Apples to Apples, Last Night on Earth and Gloom - JonG<br />
* decasm: Interested in Go (aka igo, weiqi, baduk) anytime, not just game night. I can do Catan as well. (And as much as I love it, Cards Against Humanity is probably a violation of the new Code of Conduct.) <br />
** I look forward to losing my first game of Go to you ;) - JonG<br />
** I'd love to learn Go. <del>Perhaps after the newcomer dinner?</del> Oof... won't make for Tues. But would still be interested to learn. --ranti.<br />
* csharp: I'm interested in playing games - whatever people bring. I almost always travel with a pack or two of playing cards ;-). Monday or Tuesday nights are fine.<br />
* moneill: I would love to join in! I have a version of Catchphrase floating around somewhere, and I think I have Battleship...I need to go weed around in that drawer and see what else presents itself. Tuesday would be my preferred night, but I will make it work! <br />
** Don't worry too much about bringing a game if transportation is a problem. One thing I've done w/ stuff like catchphrase is not take the box but to put pieces and cards in a bag - JOn G<br />
* demiankatz: I'm always up for a game. I'm hoping to travel light so probably shouldn't bring anything, but if there's a local game shop, I might be persuaded to pick up something new as a souvenir. <br />
** Don't worry, I think there will be plenty of games - JonG<br />
* sekjal: I've got [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/36218/dominion Dominion], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/68448/7-wonders 7 Wonders], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/30933/bang-the-bullet Bang!], [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/18333/ecofluxx EcoFluxx] and [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/116/guillotine Guillotine] that I can bring. ++ on Cards against Humanity! Prefer non-conflict with beer night. <br />
** Also all good games. I have 7 Wonders, but can bring some other games if you bring that. - Jon G<br />
* arty: so totally interested. Unfortunately, I have no games to contribute.<br />
** No prob.<br />
* sanderson: I would be interested. I can bring [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/478/citadels Citadels] (2-7 players)<br />
** Citadels would be awesome and means I don't have to bring it ;) - JonG<br />
* dvdndrsn: Definitely in! Can bring Innovation, Tichu, Dominion, but Cards Against Humanity sounds good. <br />
** I'll put in a vote for Tichu, heard good things about it - Jon G <br />
* smkiewel: I'm likely to join. Can bring Arkham Horror and Munchkin.<br />
** Arkham Horror seems rather bulky to travel with, but if you want to play bring it ;) - Jon G<br />
** mbutler: If someone actually brings Arkham Horror I'd throw down. Otherwise, whateve. <br />
* jkwilson: I'd like to attend Monday or Tuesday. I have a bunch of games but I'd prefer not to travel with them, and anyway it sounds like they're covered above. I'll bring the 5-6 player Catan extension.<br />
* ejlynema: Interested, but will probably attend Newcomer dinner on Tuesday. Like Dominion and 7 Wonders, but probably don't have room to bring in suitcase. Anyone bringing Tsuro? <br />
** I can bring Tsuro - Jon G<br />
* Christie Peterson (save4use): Also interested, but also probably attending newcomer dinner on Tuesday. Can bring [http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/11/bohnanza Bohnanza] and one deck of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Set_%28game%29 Set]. <br />
**Bohnanza and Set would be awesome - JonG<br />
**Done! I will bring them both -- C<br />
* dgcliff: I'd be interested. Can bring Ticket to Ride.<br />
* mbklein: definitely interested. Will check on my (currently unpacked) games. I am dying to play Cards Against Humanity. If we can't find a way to reconcile it with the Code of Conduct, we need a different Code of Conduct.<br />
** Considering that this is a public event, and that no one knows everyone's sensitivity levels in the room, it might not be a good idea to break out a crass, adult version of apples to apples in the middle of the gaming room. :cP (yo_bj)<br />
* duspal: In. My board game collection is small but mighty (Arkham Horror, Catan, Vampire: Prince of the City, Deadlands: Battle for Slaughter Gulch, Arabian Nights, Diplomacy, Shogun, and Cosmic Encounter off the top of my head, amongst a few others). Let me know ahead of time if anyone is interested, since they're all relatively big... <br />
** If you really want to play Cosmic Encounter, I can bring my copy (Fantasy Flight edition, 3 expansions), just let me know - JonG<br />
*librarywebchic: I'm willing to bring a set and teach folks how to play Majhong. Need at least three to play though.<br />
**beatricep: Uno gets no respect. ;-) @librarywebchic: I have always wanted to learn to play Majhong. If you're still bringing it, I'm in!<br />
** Agreed, I don't know Majhong and I love learning new games. - JonG<br />
** I actually know a few different rule sets. It's too bad I don't have a travel set or I'd bring a 2nd one -Arty<br />
** I'm local and can bring a mahjong set. I've had no one to play with for years, so have probably forgotten how. -Linda B<br />
* jcraitz: I'm in after the newcomer dinner. I'll bring Citadels and Bang! <br />
**I think someone higher in the list offered to bring citadels, but won't hurt to have two copies just in case one of you don't show ;) - JonG<br />
**Aww no. left my games at the office. Looks like I'll have to jump in someone else's game.<br />
* julia: I'll be the freeloader who showed up and didn't bring any games.<br />
* kenirwin: interested in attending<br />
* sdellis: attending<br />
* ianc: interested in attending, a little rusty but definitely up for a couple rounds of Mahjong, also want to try something new too!<br />
* haschart: Interested in attending, if I can make it work with the newcomer dinner. Big fan of Dominion lately, but probably cannot bring it `cause the "Big Box" with the base game and two expansion sets is bigger than my suitcase. I could bring "Race for the Galaxy" if there's any interest.<br />
* jessebrown: Interested in attending. I can bring Set and Zombie Fluxx.<br />
* terrywbrady: I would like to attend<br />
* dan fehrenbach (dnfehren): I would like to attend, can bring Pandemic if anyone is interested.<br />
* dileshni: interested in attending. <br />
* Corey Harper: definitely interested in attending if space allows.<br />
* saverkamp: interested in attending.<br />
* Emily Shaw: I like games. <br />
* Alan Dyck: I play Carcassonne and Munchkin among others. I see those listed so I'm bringing a game some friends and I have been creating: Wandering Monster.<br />
* Heidi Frank (hf36@nyu.edu) - I love card games like gin/rummy, but am open to anything.<br />
* Sibyl Schaefer - attending, and will bring anything that fits in my carry-on<br />
<br />
-- *Please, please, please, if you're signing up on this list, also sign up for a paritcular game slot to start out the evening or put your game in: http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/2013_game_night<br />
we're having so many people sign up after Jan. 14th we're in risk of overflowing the room. (I should have put in a cap limit, but given how late I realized this, I haven't *<br />
<br />
I have to confess, I started trying to organize what games certain people were bringing, but it got confusing fast and I don't want anyone to feel compelled to bring anything or feel bad if they can't make it. So if there is something you're dying to play, let me know and I'll try to bring it if I have it.<br />
<br />
== Social Map - Places of Interest==<br />
<br />
https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=213549257652679418473.0004ce6c25e6cdeb0319d&msa=0<br />
<br />
== Layar: augmented reality Code4Lib view of Chicago ==<br />
<br />
There's a "Code4Lib 2013" layer in [http://www.layar.com/ Layar], an augmented reality app that runs on both Android and iOS. You can use it to scan around the city to see two kinds of things: 1) tweets using the #c4l13 or #code4lib hashtag (if the tweets are geolocated so they can be<br />
nailed to a point) and 2) points of interest from the [https://maps.google.com/maps/ms?msid=213549257652679418473.0004ce6c25e6cdeb0319d&msa=0 shared Google Map]. <br />
<br />
To use it:<br />
<br />
* install Layar on your phone<br />
* run it and click to go into Geo Layers mode<br />
* search for "code4lib 2013"<br />
* launch the layer and look around<br />
<br />
See Code4Lib people and events overlaid on top of Chicago, in real time! See an alternate view of the city that's all about libraries and coders!<br />
<br />
To make your own tweets appear, use the #c4l13 hashtag and make sure the tweet is geolocated. In Twitter's client you need to do this by enabling geolocation in settings and then enabling it for each tweet.<br />
<br />
Source code running this: [https://github.com/wdenton/laertes Laertes]. Bill Denton set it up and is very curious to find out if it's useful, so let him know if you try it out.<br />
<br />
== Local Events ==<br />
Events Listings<br />
* Chicago Reader http://www.chicagoreader.com/<br />
* The City of Chicago’s Events Guide: http://www.choosechicago.com/ <br />
* Metromix Chicago: http://chicago.metromix.com/events <br />
* Timeout Chicago: http://timeoutchicago.com/<br />
* Chicago Studio Club's [http://www.google.com/calendar/embed?title=LIVE%20MUSIC%20in%20Chicagoland%20via%20Chicago%20Studio%20Club!%20&height=1000&wkst=1&hl=en&bgcolor=%2399ff99&src=info%40chicagostudioclub.net&color=%237A367A&ctz=America%2FChicago Live Music Google Calendar]<br />
<br />
== Local Food ==<br />
== Local Drinks ==<br />
==Chicago Events Feb 10-14==<br />
<br />
=== Sunday February 10===<br />
Theater - [http://www.neofuturists.org/ Too Much Light Makes the Baby Go Blind] "...with its ever-changing "menu," is an attempt to perform 30 plays in 60 minutes. " 7pm.<br />
<br />
Theater - [http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/chunks/Event?oid=8557720 Chunks] : Funny, Heartbreaking, Gross. 7pm & BYOB!<br />
<br />
===Monday February 11===<br />
<br />
Music - [http://www.hideoutchicago.com/event/208497-robbie-fulks-michael-miles-chicago/ Robbie Fulks at the Hideout]<br />
<br />
[http://fedora4lib.org/ fedora4lib] - 7 pm to whenever<br />
<br />
===Tuesday, February 12===<br />
<br />
Concert - [http://www.thefatbabies.com/ The Fat Babies] playing at an awesome venue, [http://greenmilljazz.com/ The Green Mill].<br />
<br />
[http://fedora4lib.org/ fedora4lib] - 7 pm to whenever<br />
<br />
===Wednesday, February 13===<br />
===Thursday, February 14===<br />
Tour of the [http://www.newberry.org/ Newberry Library] -- 3:30 p.m.<br />
This will be a special tour for Code4Lib attendees, so please sign up below if you are interested, as I'll need to give the tour guide an estimate of how many people will come. Details on how to get to the Newberry will follow. Questions? Contact ballingerl at newberry dot org<br />
<br />
'''''Directions: '''''<br />
The Newberry is at 60 W Walton St. It could take half an hour to get there from the conference hotel via CTA, so those of you who wish to take public transit as a group can meet me in the hotel lobby by 3:00. We will then go to the UIC-Halsted El stop (5 blocks from hotel), change trains in the Loop, then walk 3-4 blocks to the Newberry. Otherwise, plan on making your preferred way there and meet in the Newberry lobby by 3:30.<br />
<br />
'''''Sign Up List'''''<br />
# Michael Doran - doran@uta.edu<br />
# William Denton - wtd@pobox.com<br />
# Wayne Schneider - wschneider@hclib.org<br />
# Matt Cordial - rev3lator [at] gmail.com<br />
# ryan hess - mhess8 [at] depaul.edu<br />
# [[User:ianc|Ian Chan]] ichan@csusm.edu<br />
# Richard Aroksaar - richard_aroksaar@nps.gov<br />
# [name] - [email address]<br />
# Laurie Lee Moses - lmoses [at] colum.edu<br />
# Ray Schwartz - schwartzr2@wpunj.edu<br />
<br />
== Music ==<br />
<br />
There's a [http://www.rdio.com/people/wdenton/playlists/2229053/Code4Lib_2013_in_Chicago/ Code4Lib 2013 in Chicago] collaborative playlist on Rdio. If you're a subscriber, have a look, and add something you think everyone would like to hear or use as their personal soundtrack while they're hacking and exploring Chicago.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2013]]</div>Wickrhttps://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php?title=2013_preconference_proposals&diff=363772013 preconference proposals2013-02-11T17:57:20Z<p>Wickr: /* UIC Forum, Room F, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11 */</p>
<hr />
<div>Please sign up to attend by January 15th. Doesn't mean you can't change your mind, but we will use the host committee will use these numbers to assign rooms.<br />
<br />
Proposals '''now closed'''.<br />
<br />
Spaces available: 4+ Rooms<br />
<br />
Please follow the formatting guidelines:<br />
<pre><br />
=== Talk Title ===<br />
<br />
* Presenter/Leader, affiliation (optional), and email address (mandatory!)<br />
* Second Presenter/Leader, affiliation, email address, if applicable<br />
<br />
Description.<br />
</pre><br />
<br />
==Full Day==<br />
<br />
===Drupal4lib Sub-con Barcamp===<br />
====UIC Forum, Room E, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Contact [[User:highermath|Cary Gordon]], cgordon@chillco.com or <br />
* [[User:cdmo|Charlie Morris]], NCSU Libraries, cdmorris@ncsu.edu<br />
<br />
This will be a full day of self-selected barcamp style sessions. Anyone who wants to present can write down the topic on an index card and, after the keynote, we will vote to choose what we want to see. Attendees can also pick a topic and attempt to talk someone else into presenting on it.<br />
<br />
If we run out of topics, we will pay homage to the project by testing patches for Drupal 8. It is easy, and we will show you how to do this invaluable task.<br />
<br />
This event is open to the library community. There is a nominal fee ($10) for non-Code4LibCon attendees.<br />
<br />
Local Drupal uber-ninja Larry Garfield had to cancel, but we were very fortunate to get Steve Persch to offer to stop by and answer questions and give us some guidance in the afternoon.<br />
<br />
'''If you have not signed up. just show up and see Charlie or Cary. We will work out the details!'''<br />
<br />
[[resources to help you learn drupal]]<br />
<br />
====I plan on attending:====<br />
<br />
=====All Day=====<br />
*Margaret Heller<br />
*Mahria Lebow, mahria at uw edu<br />
*Paula Gray-Overtoom, pgrayove at gmail.com<br />
*Dhanushka Samarakoon, dhanu80 at g mail com<br />
*Leo Robert Klein <del>(when he figures out what date this is)</del> - 2/11 (9a-5p). P.S. Oh Great One! Who do we hand the 10 bucks to?<br />
*Sarah Shealy, sarah.shealy at gmail.com<br />
*Kelly Lucas krlucas at gee mail<br />
<br />
=====Morning=====<br />
* [[User:Kevenj|Keven Jeffery]]<br />
* Sean Chen<br />
<br />
=====Afternoon=====<br />
* Kevin Reiss, Princeton University Library, kr2 at princeton.edu (afternoon only)<br />
* Christina Salazar (afternoon only)<br />
* Sarah Dooley (afternoon)<br />
* Josh Wilson, joshwilsonnc at gmail (likely afternoon only)<br />
* Ken Varnum, varnum at umich e-d-u<br />
* Cody Hennesy, chennesy at library berkeley edu<br />
* Colin Koteles, koteles at cod dot edu<br />
<br />
==Half Day Morning==<br />
=== Open space session ===<br />
====Boardroom, Crowne Plaza Hotel, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Dan Chudnov, daniel.chudnov at gmail dot etc<br />
<br />
The rest of code4libcon is pretty well structured these days; come in the morning for a few hours of old-school [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-space_technology open space technology] unconference. Bring a rough talk or idea you want to share or questions you have or something you want to learn about or discuss with other people, and be ready to tell us about it. Use it as extra prep time for your upcoming prepared or lightning talk if you want. We'll plan the morning out a little bit at the beginning, but not too much. What we do will be up to the people there in the room.<br />
<br />
If there's interest, we could start with a "welcome to code4lib" introductory session for newcomers.<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Devon Smith<br />
* Esmé Cowles, escowles@ucsd.edu<br />
* Jason Casden<br />
* Ryan Eby<br />
* mark matienzo<br />
* Donald Mennerich<br />
* Patrick Berry, pberry@csuchico.edu<br />
* Kåre Fiedler Christiansen, kfc@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
* Michael Poltorak Nielsen mn at statsbiblioteket dot dk<br />
* Joe Atzberger, ohiocore@gmail.com<br />
* Shawn Carraway carraways at midlandstech dot edu<br />
* Emily F. Shaw emily-f-shaw at uiowa dot edu<br />
* Joe Justice jhjusti at sandia dot gov<br />
* Tom Burton-West tburtonw at umich dot edu<br />
* Jay Luker<br />
* Trey Terrell<br />
<br />
=== Delivery services ===<br />
====1-1010 Richard J. Daley Library, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Ted Lawless, Brown University Library, tlawless at brown edu. <br />
* Kevin Reiss, Princeton University Library, kr2 at princeton edu.<br />
<br />
Are you interested in making it easier for users to obtain copies of known items? Do you feel your OpenURL and Interlibrary Loan software could be streamlined? This pre-conference workshop will focus on providing services that deliver content to users. Discovery systems are doing a better job of exposing library holdings but there's still a lot of work to do actually get the content in the users hands. <br />
<br />
Possible topics/activities include:<br />
* group discussion of what some libraries have done in this area<br />
* comparisons of different approaches to addressing delivery <br />
* overview of tools available <br />
* sharing of strategies and experiences<br />
* time to work with and review open source code in this area. Some possible tools to install and test out [https://github.com/team-umlaut/umlaut Umlaut], [https://github.com/lawlesst/heroku-360link Py360 Link]. <br />
<br />
Resources and background information:<br />
* [https://github.com/team-umlaut/umlaut/wiki/What-is-Umlaut-anyway What-is-Umlaut-anyway] <br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/7308 Hacking 360 Link: A hybrid approach]<br />
* [http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/108 Auto-Populating an ILL form with the Serial Solutions Link Resolver API]<br />
* [http://lawlesst.github.com/notebook/delivery.html Focusing on Delivery]<br />
<br />
Schedule:<br />
* 9:10 - 9:25 - Intros<br />
* 9:25 - 9:40 - Umlaut - Jonathan Rochkind<br />
* 9:40 - 9:55 - Umlaut implementation plans at Princeton - Kevin Reiss<br />
* 9:55 - 10:10 - GWU Launchpad - Rosalyn Metz<br />
* 10:10 - 10:25 - easyArticle and easyBorrow at Brown - Birkin Diana and Ted Lawless<br />
* 10:25 - 10:35 - break<br />
* 10:35 - 10:50 - Cal State Get It Now - Aaron Collier<br />
* 10:50 - 11:05 - Dealing with change at VCU - Erin White<br />
* 11:05 - 11:55 - Installation sessions and break out discussions<br />
* 11:55 - 12:00 - Wrap up<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Ken Varnum, varnum at umich e-d-u<br />
* Curtis Thacker<br />
* Rosalyn Metz rosalynmetz at gmail com<br />
* James Van Mil - james.vanmil at gmail com<br />
* Andrew Nagy<br />
* Ranti Junus<br />
* Aaron Collier - acollier at csufresno edu<br />
* Demian Katz - demian dot katz at villanova dot edu<br />
* Jacob Andresen - jacob at reindex dot dk<br />
* Erin White - erwhite at vcu edu<br />
* Zeno Tajoli tajoli at cilea it<br />
* William Hicks - William{dot}hicks{at}unt{dot}edu<br />
* Beatrice Pulliam bpulliam at providence edu<br />
* David Bietila dbietila at uchicago edu<br />
* James Staub - james dot staub at nashville dot gov<br />
* Cory Lown - cwlown at ncsu dot edu<br />
* Rachel Shaevel - rshaevel at chipublib dot org<br />
* Maura Byrne - byrne at uchicago dot edu<br />
* Kosuke Tanabe - TANABE.Kosuke at nims go jp<br />
* Tim Shearer - tshearer at email dot unc dot edu<br />
* Luke Gaudreau - luke underscore gaudreau at harvard dot edu<br />
<br />
=== Intro to Blacklight CANCELED ===<br />
<br />
PLEASE NOTE: This pre-conference has been canceled in favor of joining forces with the RailsBridge workshop. The afternoon Blacklight session will still be offered.<br />
<br />
=== RailsBridge Intro to Ruby on Rails ===<br />
====UIC Forum, Room D, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
'''coffee and pastries at 8am; start promptly at 9am'''<br />
* Jason Ronallo, North Carolina State University Libraries, jronallo@gmail.com<br />
* Mark Bussey, Data Curation Experts (mark at curationexperts.com)<br />
* Shaun Ellis (helper), Princeton University Library, shaune@princeton.edu<br />
* Ross Singer, Talis, rossfsinger@gmail.com<br />
* Adam Wead (helper), Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, awead@rockhall.org<br />
* Bess Sadler, Stanford University, bess@stanford.edu<br />
* James Stuart <br />
* Jason Stirnaman (helper), University of Kansas Medical Center, jstirnaman@kumc.edu <br />
* Richard Aroksaar, National Park Service, richard_aroksaar@nps.gov<br />
* Anyone else want to come and help folks? Contact Jason.<br />
<br />
RailsBridge comes to code4lib! We'll follow the RailsBridge curriculum (http://railsbridge.org) to provide a gentle introduction to Ruby on Rails. Topics covered include an introduction to the Ruby language and the Rails framework. Participants will build a working Rails application. <br />
<br />
* Note: Attendees can follow up with the Intro to Blacklight afternoon session, which will be tailored for folks new to Ruby<br />
<br />
There is some pre-preconference preparation needed so that we can effectively use our time.<br />
<br />
'''IMPORTANT''': From this point on if you sign up you '''must''' do the following in order to be prepared for the preconference workshop:<br />
# Add your name below<br />
# fill out the [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEpxd0tzU1ZscnU5QUUtd0JGUk9qQkE6MA#gid=0 experience survey]<br />
# read [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lQEvljB6MWOdxqcibYsQDVMT2hCevk7Y5cm3143_eaU/edit the emails you have missed] <br />
<br />
'''Sunday Night installation help''' I didn't get much of a response concerning needing installation help. I'll be in the hotel lobby anyways from 6pm until 7pm. Before then I'll be walking around and getting lost, so if I'm not there right at 6pm be patient. If you need my help after 7pm, please email me.<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
# First and last name and email address<br />
# John MacGillivray<br />
# Christina Salazar - christina{dot}salazar{at}csuci{dot}edu<br />
# Karen Coombs - coombsk{at}oclc{dot}org<br />
# Becky Yoose - b dot yoose at google overlord<br />
# Jeremy Morse - jgmorse at umich<br />
# Julia Bauder - julia{dot}bauder{at}gmail{dot}com <br />
# Chung Kang<br />
# Karen Miller - k-miller3{at}northwestern{dot}edu<br />
# Betsy Coles - bcoles{at}caltech{dot}edu<br />
# Santi Thompson<br />
# Sarah Dooley - sarah{at}nclive{dot}org<br />
# Brandon Dudley<br />
# Ken Irwin<br />
# Dennis Ogg - ogg{at}ucar{dot}edu<br />
# Ian Walls - iwalls{at}library{dot}umass{dot}edu<br />
# Steven Villereal – villereal{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Hillel Arnold - hillel{dot}arnold{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Josh Wilson - joshwilsonnc at gmail<br />
# Cynthia Ng - cynthia [dot] s [dot] ng [at] gmail<br />
# Ian Chan<br />
# Heidi Frank - hf36{at}nyu{dot}edu<br />
# Mark Mounts - mark{dot}mounts{at}dartmouth{dot}edu<br />
# Bill McMillin - wmcmilli{at}pratt {dot}edu<br />
# David Lacy - david dot lacy at villanova dot edu<br />
# Courtney Greene - crgreene at indiana dot edu<br />
# Laney McGlohon - lmcglohon@getty.edu<br />
# Nancy Enneking - nenneking@getty.edu<br />
# Jason Raitz - jcraitz at ncsu dot edu<br />
# Nick Cappadona<br />
# Steven Marsden - steven.marsden@ryerson.ca<br />
# Linda Ballinger - ballingerl at newberry dot org<br />
# Brendan Quinn - brendan-quinn at northwestern dot edu<br />
# Michael Levy - mlevy {at}ushmm {dot}org<br />
# Michael North (m-north at northwestern dot edu)<br />
# Shawn Averkamp - shawnaverkamp{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Allan Berry - allan{dot}berry{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Cody Hennesy - chennesy at library dot berkeley dot edu<br />
# Devin Higgins - higgi135 at msu dot edu<br />
# Emily Zervas - emily{dot}zervas{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Rob Dumas - rdumas {at} chipublib {dot} org<br />
# Evan Boyd - eboyd /at/ ctschicago /period/ edu<br />
# Lauren Ajamie - lauren dot ajamie at nd dot edu<br />
# David Anderson - david dot anderson3 at nih dot gov<br />
# David Bucknum - dabu at loc dot gov<br />
# Dave Menninger - dave.menninger at gmail dot com<br />
# Chris Day - cday2 at saic dot edu<br />
# Corey Harper - corey dot harper at nyu dot edu<br />
# Dileshni Jayasinghe - d dot jayasinghe at utoronto dot ca<br />
# Harish Nayak - hnayak at library dot rochester dot edu<br />
# David Cliff dgcliff@iu.edu<br />
# Cody Hanson codyhanson@umn.edu<br />
# Sean Purcell seanpurc{at}uga{dot}edu<br />
# Laurie Lee Moses lmoses{at}colum{dot}edu<br />
# Sibyl Schaefer sibylschaefer at gmail dot com<br />
# Alisak Sanavongsay asanavongsay{at}ucmerced.edu<br />
# Wayne Schneider wschneider at hclib dot org<br />
# Carolyn Caizzi - carolyn{dot}caizzi {at}northwestern{dot}edu<br />
# Julie Rudder - j-rudder at northwestern dot edu<br />
# Matthew Butler - matthew-butler at uiowa dot edu<br />
# Andromeda Yelton - andromeda.yelton at gmail<br />
# Adam Strohm - adamstrohm at gmail dot com<br />
# Kelly Thompson - thompson {dot} kelly {dot} j {at} gmail {dot} com<br />
# Jane Sandberg - sandbrg2 {at} illinois {dot} edu<br />
# Colin Koteles - koteles at cod dot edu<br />
# George Campbell - campbelg{at}oclc{dot}org<br />
# Sarah Thorngate - scthorngate{at}northpark{dot}edu<br />
# Will Clarke - wfu.edu at clarkewd<br />
# Terry Brady - twb27 at georgetown dot edu<br />
# Patrick Feeley - pgf8 {at} case {dot} edu<br />
# Bennett Magnino - bennett {dot} magnino {at} gmail {dot} com<br />
# Christine McClure camcclure {at} gmail {dot} com<br />
# Cole Hudson - Cole dot Hudson at wayne dot edu<br />
# Audrey Altman - audreykaltman {at} gmail {dot} com<br />
# Luis Baquera - luis [dot] baquera [at] ucr [dot] edu<br />
# Paul Deschner - deschner at law dot harvard dot edu<br />
# Brian Wu - pwu14 {at} illinois {dot} edu<br />
'''IMPORTANT''': From this point on if you sign up you '''must''' do the following in order to be prepared for the preconference workshop:<br />
# Add your name above<br />
# fill out the [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dEpxd0tzU1ZscnU5QUUtd0JGUk9qQkE6MA#gid=0 experience survey]<br />
# read [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lQEvljB6MWOdxqcibYsQDVMT2hCevk7Y5cm3143_eaU/edit the emails you have missed]<br />
<br />
===Intro to NoSQL Databases===<br />
====1-470 Richard J. Daley Library, 9:00 am to 12:00 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Joshua Gomez, George Washington University, jngomez at gwu edu<br />
<br />
Since Google published its paper on BigTable in 2006, alternatives to the traditional relational database model have been growing in both variety and popularity. These new databases (often referred to as NoSQL databases) excel at handling problems faced by modern information systems that the traditional relational model cannot. They are particularly popular among organizations tackling the so-called "Big Data" problems. However, there are always tradeoffs involved when making such dramatic changes. Understanding how these different kinds of databases are designed and what they can offer is essential to the decision making process. In this precon I will discuss some of the various types of new databases (key-value, columnar, document, graph) and walk through examples or exercises using some of their open source implementations like Riak, HBase, MongoDB or CouchDB, and Neo4j.<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Esha Datta<br />
* Trevor Thornton<br />
* Michael Doran<br />
* Ray Schwartz - schwartzr2@wpunj.edu<br />
* Kevin Clarke<br />
* Andreas Orphanides<br />
* Tommy Ingulfsen - tommying{at}caltech{dot}edu<br />
* Harrison Dekker<br />
* Eric James eric dot james at yale dot edu<br />
* Sean Crowe - sean.crowe@uc.edu<br />
* Scott Hanrath - shanrath@ku.edu<br />
* Erin Fahy - erin.fahy at mtholyoke edu<br />
* Karen Coyle - kcoyle at kcoyle.net<br />
* Charles Draper<br />
* David Uspal<br />
* Shawn Kiewel - smkiewel at uga dot edu<br />
* Stephanie Collett - stephanie dot collett at ucop dot edu<br />
* Declan Fleming - declan at declan dot net<br />
* David Gonzalez - d.gonzalez26 at umiami dot edu<br />
* Jeff Peterson - gpeterso at umn dot edu<br />
* May Chan - msuicat at gmail dot com<br />
* Kathryn Stine - kathryn dot stine at ucop dot edu<br />
* Tim Thompson - t.thompson5{at}miami{dot}edu<br />
* Eben English - eenglish [at] bpl dot org<br />
* Marisa Strong - marisa dot strong at ucop dot edu<br />
* Michael Lindsey - mackeral at gmail dot com<br />
* Mike Hagedon - hagedonm at u dot library dot arizona dot edu<br />
* Scott Fisher - first/last name with dot in between at ucop dot edu<br />
* James Griffin - griffinj at lafayette dot edu<br />
* Jesse Brown - jfbrown78 at gmail dot com<br />
* [[User:gdave|Dave Green]] david dot L dot green at dartmouth dot edu<br />
* Michael Poltorak Nielsen mn at statsbiblioteket dot dk<br />
* Mads Villadsen, mv@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
* Jørn Thøgersen, jt@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
* Julien Gibert, gibert at abes dot fr<br />
* Lisa Gonzalez, lgonzalez@ctu.edu<br />
* Charles Ledvina, charles@indexdata.com<br />
* Jim LeFager, jlefager@depaul.edu<br />
* Debbie Maron, dmaron@purdue.edu<br />
* Carolina Garcia - cg116 nyu<br />
* Tracy Seneca- tjseneca@uic.edu<br />
* William Denton - wtd@pobox.com<br />
* Andrew Darby - agdarby at miami dot edu<br />
* Gary Maixner maixner2 at uiuc dot edu<br />
* Jeremy Prevost<br />
* Esther Verreau everreau skokielibrary info<br />
* Matthew Short, mshort@niu.edu<br />
* Kate Flynn, kef@uic.edu<br />
* Jon Stroop - jstroop at princeton<br />
* Mark Redar<br />
* Robert Haschart - rh9ec at virginia dot edu<br />
* Xiaoming Wang - xw5d at virginia dot edu<br />
* Graham Hukill - graham dot hukill at wayne edu<br />
* Susan Price<br />
* Virginia Schilling - virginia dot schilling at ucr dot edu<br />
* Bret Davidson<br />
* Jason Thomale - jason dot thomale at unt dot edu<br />
* Mike Stroming - m-stroming@northwestern.edu<br />
* Nathan Books, nateniu gmail<br />
* Adam Yocum<br />
* Bradley Woodruff - ek7348 at wayne dot edu<br />
* Maccabee Levine - levinem at uwosh dot edu<br />
* Zorian Sasyk - fd5710 at wayne dot edu<br />
* William Panting<br />
<br />
==Half Day Afternoon==<br />
=== Data Visualization Hackfest ===<br />
====1-470 Richard J. Daley Library, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Chris Beer, cabeer at stanford.edu<br />
* Dan Chudnov, dchud at gwu edu<br />
<br />
* Description: Want to hack/design/plan/document on a team of people who enjoy learning by creating? Interested in data visualization? Well, this hackfest is for you. Not familiar with the concept of a hackfest? See Roy Tennant's [http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA332564.html "Where Librarians Go To Hack"] and the page for the [http://access2010.lib.umanitoba.ca/node/3.html Access 2010 Hackfest]. We propose a half-day hackfest with a focus on visualization library data -- think stuff like library catalog data, access/circulation statistics, etc. Here's how it works, roughly: <br />
- we'll (you'll!) do lightning tutorials for some data visualization tools, toolkits (R? d3js? ?), datasets.<br />
- we'll separate into groups and hack on stuff.<br />
- at the end of the day, we'll present our progress.<br />
<br />
Not a code hacker? No worries; all skill sets and backgrounds are valuable! <br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
# Devon Smith<br />
# Esha Datta<br />
# Ray Schwartz - schwartzr2@wpunj.edu<br />
# Karen Coombs - coombsk{at}oclc{dot}org<br />
# Julia Bauder - julia{dot}bauder{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Jason Stirnaman (jstirnaman at kumc.edu)<br />
# Joshua Gomez<br />
# Ayla Stein (astein at uh.edu)<br />
# Harrison Dekker<br />
# Ian Walls - iwalls{at}library{dot}umass{dot}edu<br />
# Scott Hanrath - shanrath@ku.edu<br />
# Annie Pho<br />
# [[User:Kevenj|Keven Jeffery]]<br />
# James Van Mil - james.vanmil at gmail com<br />
# Sean Crowe - sean.crowe@uc.edu<br />
# Karen coyle - kcoyle at kcoyle.net<br />
# David Lacy - david dot lacy at villanova dot edu<br />
# mark matienzo<br />
# David Uspal<br />
# Emily Lynema - ejlynema at ncsu dot edu<br />
# Sean Chen<br />
# Donald Mennerich<br />
# Allan Berry - allan{dot}berry{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# Declan Fleming - declan at declan dot net<br />
# Chick Markley -- chick at qrhino dot com<br />
# Devin Higgins - higgi135 at msu dot edu<br />
# Emily Zervas emily{dot}zervas{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
# May Chan -- msuicat at gmail dot com<br />
# Kathryn Stine - kathryn dot stine at ucop dot edu<br />
# James Griffin - griffinj at lafayette dot edu<br />
# Dave Menninger dave.menninger at gmail dot com<br />
# [[User:gdave|Dave Green]] david dot L dot green at dartmouth dot edu<br />
# Rikke Willer - riwi at dtic dot dtu dot dk<br />
# Michael Poltorak NIelsen mn at statsbiblioteket dot dk<br />
# Mads Villadsen, mv@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
# Jørn Thøgersen, jt@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
# Joe Atzberger, ohiocore@gmail.com<br />
# Julien Gibert, gibert at abes dot fr<br />
# Christie Peterson - cpeterson at jhu dot edu<br />
# Jim LeFager - jlefager@depaul.edu<br />
# Harish Nayak - hnayak at library dot rochester dot edu<br />
# William Denton - wtd@pobox.com<br />
# Shawn Carraway carraways at midlandstech dot edu<br />
# Naomi Dushay - ndushay at stanford dot edu<br />
# William Hicks - William{dot}hicks{at}unt{dot}edu<br />
# Beatrice Pulliam bpulliam at providence edu<br />
# Matthew Short, mshort@niu.edu<br />
# George Campbell, campbelg{at}oclc{dot}org<br />
# James Staub - james dot staub at nashville dot gov<br />
# Will Clarke - wfu dot edu at clarkewd<br />
# Rachel Shaevel - rshaevel at chipublib dot org<br />
# Adam Yocum<br />
# Birkin Diana - birkin underscore diana at brown dot edu<br />
# [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/User:Camcclure Christine McClure]<br />
<br />
=== Intro to Hydra ===<br />
====303 Library of the Health Sciences, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Adam Wead, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (awead at rockhall.org)<br />
* Justin Coyne, Data Curation Experts (justin.coyne at curationexperts.com)<br />
* Mark Bussey, Data Curation Experts (mark at curationexperts.com)<br />
<br />
Hydra (http://projecthydra.org) is a free and open source repository solution that is being used by institutions on both sides of the North Atlantic to provide access to their digital content. Hydra provides a versatile and feature rich environment for end-users and repository administrators alike. Leveraging Blacklight as its front end discovery interface, the hydra project provides a suite of software components, data models, and design patterns for building a robust and sustainable digital repository, as well as a community of support for ongoing development. This workshop will provide an introduction to the hydra project and its software components. Attendees will leave with enough knowledge to get started building their own local repository solutions. This workshop will be led by Adam Wead of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. <br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Jeremy Prevost<br />
* Dennis Ogg - ogg{at}ucar{dot}edu<br />
* Terry Brady<br />
* Betsy Coles - bcoles{at}caltech{dot}edu<br />
* Brendan Quinn - brendan-quinn at northwestern dot edu<br />
* Shawn Kiewel - smkiewel at uga dot edu<br />
* Steven Villereal – villereal{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
* Ryan Eby<br />
* Dean Farrell<br />
* Ian Chan<br />
* Mark Mounts - mark{dot}mounts{at}dartmouth{dot}edu<br />
* Carl Jones<br />
* Laney McGlohon - lmcglohon@getty.edu<br />
* Nancy Enneking - nenneking@getty.edu<br />
* Allan Berry - allan{dot}berry{at}gmail{dot}com<br />
* Andrew Darby - agdarby at miami dot edu<br />
* Kåre Fiedler Christiansen - kfc@statsbiblioteket.dk<br />
* Corey Harper - corey dot harper at nyu dot edu<br />
* Gary Maixner - maixner2 at uiuc dot edu<br />
* Sibyl Schaefer - sibylschaefer at gmail dot com<br />
* Emily F. Shaw - emily-f-shaw{at}uiowa{dot}edu<br />
* Alicia Morris - alicia.morris@tufts.edu<br />
* Tim Thompson - t.thompson5{at}miami{dot}edu<br />
* Kate Flynn, kef@uic.edu<br />
* Shawn Averkamp, shawn-averkamp{at}uiowa{dot}edu<br />
* William Panting<br />
* Aaron Collie, collie@msu .edu<br />
<br />
=== Intro to Blacklight ===<br />
====1-1010 Richard J. Daley Library, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Bess Sadler, Stanford University Library (bess at stanford.edu)<br />
* Jason Ronallo, NC State (jronallo at gmail.com)<br />
* Shaun Ellis (helper), Princeton University Library, (shaune@princeton.edu)<br />
<br />
Blacklight (http://projectblacklight.org) is a free and open source discovery interface built on solr and ruby on rails. It is used by institutions such as Stanford University, NC State, WGBH, Johns Hopkins University, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and an ever expanding community of adopters and contributors. Blacklight can be used as a front-end discovery solution for an ILS, or the contents of a digital repository, or to provide a unified discovery solution for many siloed collections. In this workshop we will cover the basics of solr indexing and searching, setting up and customizing Blacklight, and leave time for Q&A around local issues people might encounter. <br />
<br />
Note: this workshop will be tailored as a follow-on to the morning's RailsBridge Intro to Ruby on Rails workshop, but everyone is welcome<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* John MacGillivray<br />
* Jon Stroop<br />
* Jeremy Morse - jgmorse at umich<br />
* Karen Miller - k-miller3{at}northwestern{dot}edu<br />
* Tommy Ingulfsen - tommying{at}caltech{dot}edu<br />
* Chung Kang<br />
* Santi Thompson<br />
* Brandon Dudley<br />
* Ken Irwin<br />
* Hillel Arnold<br />
* Heidi Frank - hf36{at}nyu{dot}com<br />
* Chris Sharp - csharp{at}georgialibraries{dot}org<br />
* Bill McMillin - wmcmilli{at} pratt{dot} edu<br />
* Jason Raitz - jcraitz at ncsu dot edu<br />
* Linda Ballinger - ballingerl at newberry dot org<br />
* David Gonzalez - d.gonzalez26 at umiami dot edu<br />
* Courtney Greene - crgreene at indiana dot edu<br />
* Evan Boyd - eboyd /at/ ctschicago /period/ edu<br />
* Lauren Ajamie - lauren dot ajamie at nd dot edu<br />
* David Anderson - david dot anderson3 at nih dot gov<br />
* Michael Lindsey - mackeral at gmail dot com<br />
* David Bucknum - dabu at loc dot gov<br />
* Chris Day - cday2 at saic dot edu<br />
* Carolina Garcia - cg116 nyu<br />
* David Cliff dgcliff@iu.edu<br />
* Cody Hanson codyhanson@umn.edu<br />
* Sean Purcell seanpurc{at}uga{dot}edu<br />
* Laurie Lee Moses lmoses{at}colum{dot}edu<br />
* Alisak Sanavongsay asanavongsay{at}ucmerced.edu<br />
* Wayne Schneider wschneider at hclib dot org<br />
* Carolyn Caizzi carolyn{dot}caizzi{at}northwestern{dot}edu<br />
* Julie Rudder - j-rudder at northwestern dot edu<br />
* Andromeda Yelton - andromeda.yelton at gmail<br />
* Adam Strohm - adamstrohm at gmail dot com<br />
* Luke Gaudreau - luke underscore gaudreau at harvard dot edu<br />
* Cole Hudson - cole dot hudson at wayne dot edu<br />
* Sarah Thorngate - scthorngate at northpark dot edu<br />
<br />
=== DPLA Intro/Hacking ===<br />
====Seminar Room A of Richard J. Daley Library, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11==== <br />
* Presenter(s)/Leader(s): Nate Hill (Chattanooga Public Library, DPLA Audience and Participation Co-chair), SJ Klein (Wikimedia, OLPC, DPLA Technical Aspects Co-chair), Jeff Licht (DPLA Technical Development Project Manager)<br />
<br />
The [http://dp.la Digital Public Library of America] (DPLA) is an open source metadata repository that provides read-only access to millions of records from across the United States via an open REST API. All API queries are returned as JSON-LD, a lightweight linked data format, and the metadata is freely reusable under a CC0 public domain license. A front-end portal is currently under development and will be launched in April 2013, though it will serve as but one way into the DPLA’s data. The DPLA encourages the development of applications and tools by developers of all skill levels and backgrounds. In this workshop, participants will actively code against the API to make apps, visualization tools, plug-ins, and other interesting tools that make use of DPLA data. <br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Justin Clark, Berkman Center for Internet and Society<br />
* Anita Patel, Berkman Center for Internet and Society<br />
* Peter Murray, LYRASIS<br />
* Christine McClure, Illinois Institute of Technology<br />
* Richard Aroksaar, National Park Service<br />
* Maura Byrne, University of Chicago Library<br />
<br />
<br />
=== Fail4lib ===<br />
====1-360 Richard J. Daley Library, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Jason Casden, NCSU Libraries (jmcasden at ncsu.edu)<br />
* Andreas Orphanides, NCSU Libraries (akorphan at ncsu.edu)<br />
<br />
The Code4lib community is full of driven people who embrace the risks that are often associated with new projects. While these traits lead to the incredible projects that are presented at Code4lib, creative technical work also often leads to unexpected, vexing, or disappointing results even from eventually successful projects (however you define the term). Learning more about how our colleagues deal with failure in various contexts could lead to the development of better methods for communicating the value of productive failure, modifying project plans ("The Pivot"), and failing more cheaply.<br />
<br />
Hopefully we can define the format as a group, but a fairly high level of participation is crucial if this is to be a worthwhile preconference. Some possible agenda items that could be mixed and matched to fill the afternoon:<br />
<br />
# Given willing presenters, a series of 10-20 minute presentations that go into some depth about specific failures.<br />
# Depending on the number of participants, either a multi- or single-track series of unconference-like themed discussions on various aspects of failure, possibly including themes like:<br />
#* Technical failure<br />
#* Failure to effectively address a real user need<br />
#* Overinvestment<br />
#* Outreach/Promotion failure<br />
#* Design/UX failure<br />
#* Project team communication failure<br />
#* Missed opportunities (risk-averse failure)<br />
#* Successes gleaned from failures<br />
# A panel of participants who have prepared in advance to answer moderator and audience questions about their experience with failure.<br />
# A prepared reading assignment that we could all forget to read, creating a shared fail in order to start the preconference on the right foot.<br />
<br />
I'll serve as a moderator (if needed) and participant and would welcome more organizers. I am happy to be outvoted by participants on any of these points--I just want to get us talking about our screw-ups, blind spots, and anvils dropping from the sky.<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Becky Yoose<br />
* Lisa Rabey<br />
* Cynthia Ng (maybe) - cynthia [dot] s [dot] ng [at] gmail<br />
* Patrick Berry, pberry@csuchico.edu<br />
* Erin White, erwhite at vcu edu<br />
* Ranti Junus, ranti.junus at gmail<br />
* Rosalyn Metz -- rosalynmetz at gmail com<br />
* Bret Davidson<br />
* Maccabee Levine<br />
<br />
=== Solr 4 In Depth ===<br />
====UIC Forum, Room F, 1:30 pm to 5:30 pm on Monday, February 11====<br />
* Contact: Erik Hatcher (erik.hatcher at lucidworks.com)<br />
<br />
The long awaited and much anticipated Solr 4 has been released! It's a really big deal. There are so many improvements, it makes the head spin. This session will cover the major feature improvements from Lucene's flexible indexing and scoring API up through SolrCloud in a digestable half-day format. Sounds like this is an evening thing that might happen at a bar somewhere?<br />
<br />
'''I plan on attending:'''<br />
* Erin Fahy - erin.fahy at mtholyoke edu<br />
* Esmé Cowles, escowles@ucsd.edu<br />
* Jon Stroop<br />
* Adam Constabars<br />
* Kevin Clarke<br />
* Jacob Andresen (jacob at reindex dot dk)<br />
* Ted Lawless (tlawless at brown dot edu)<br />
* Tom Burton-West<br />
* Curtis Thacker<br />
* Eric James eric dot james at yale dot edu<br />
* Bess Sadler (bess at stanford dot edu)<br />
* Michael North<br />
* Charles Draper<br />
* Nick Cappadona<br />
* Stephanie Collett - stephanie dot collett at ucop dot edu<br />
* Kalee Sprague - kalee dot sprague at yale dot edu<br />
* Jeff Peterson - gpeterso at umn dot edu<br />
* Erik Hetzner<br />
* Demian Katz - demian dot katz at villanova dot edu<br />
* Eben English - eenglish at bpl dot org<br />
* Raman Chandrasekar <br />
* Jason Ronallo - jnronall@ncsu.edu<br />
* Eric Larson - elarson@library.wisc.edu<br />
* Mike Hagedon - hagedonm at u dot library dot arizona dot edu<br />
* Jesse Brown - jfbrown78 at gmail dot com<br />
* Steven Marsden - steven.marsden@ryerson.ca<br />
* Zeno Tajoli - tajoli at cilea it<br />
* Charles Ledvina - charles att indexdata dott com<br />
* Tracy Seneca - tjseneca@uic.edu<br />
* Tod Olson - tod at uchicago dot edu<br />
* Esther Verreau - everreau skokielibrary info<br />
* Jane Sandberg - sandbrg2 at illinois dot edu<br />
* Mark Redar<br />
* Robert Haschart - rh9ec at virginia dot edu<br />
* Xiaoming Wang - xw5d at virginia dot edu<br />
* Graham Hukill - graham dot hukill at wayne edu<br />
* Susan Price<br />
* Cory Lown - cwlown at ncsu dot edu<br />
* Nathan Books, nateniu gmail<br />
* Joe Justice - jhjusti at sandia dot gov<br />
* Paul Deschner - deschner at law dot harvard dot edu<br />
* Brian Wu - pwu14 {at} illinois {dot} edu<br />
* Bradley Woodruff - ek7348 at wayne dot edu<br />
* Zorian Sasyk - fd5710 at Wayne dot edu<br />
* Ryan Wick - ryan.wick at oregonstate dot edu<br />
<br />
[[Category:Code4Lib2013]]</div>Wickr