2015 Code4Lib Midwest Meeting
Code4Lib Midwest 2015 Meeting
Mark your calendars -- The Ohio State University Libraries will be hosting the Code4Lib Midwest 2015 meeting in Columbus, OH.
Location
Code4Lib MidWest meeting will be hosted by The Ohio State University Libraries.
- When - July 23 and July 24, 2015
- Where - Thompson Library, room 165 at OSU
- Who - contact person: Terry Reese (reese.2179@osu.edu )
Logistics
Suggested Hotels
- The Blackwell Inn (2110 Tuttle Park Place, Columbus, OH 43210 :: +1 (614) 247-4000)
-The Blackwell Inn is located on campus, roughly 0.2 miles from the Thompson Library.
- The Varsity Inn South (1445 Olentangy River Road, Columbus, OH 43212 :: +1 (614) 291-2983)
-The Varsity Inn South is roughly 1.7 miles from the Thompson Library.
-Given the size of the University and University community, the University has it's own hospitality district, with lists to hotels and vendors that work closely with the University.
Directions, restaurants, and more
Schedule
Tentative Thursday, July 23rd
8:30 - 9:00: Check-in
9:00 - 9:20: Welcome and House Keeping
9:20 - 9:40:
Jeffrey Mudge and David Malone (Wheaton College)
The print/analog library transition to thousands upon thousands of digital resources has brought with it the need to manage associated URLs. Part of the management is to address issues of resource transience and attempts to create persistence. The Handle System is a specification for assigning, managing, and resolving persistent identifiers for digital objects. This presentation will provide background on Handle as well as some user tools that Wheaton College has created to simplify the creation, management, and deletion of Handles.
9:40 - 10:00: ActiveSierra
Sean Crowe and James Van Mil
While waiting for a useful API from III, we've modeled useful bits of the Sierra database for use in Rails apps and in vanilla ruby. We'd be able to present the SierraDNA and ActiveRecord/ActiveModel frameworks with some of the tools we're building
10:00 - 10:20: Presentation #3
10:20 - 10:40: Break/Networking
10:40 - 11:00:
Brittany Adams (Wheaton College)
Code4LIb has many full-fledged coders, but there are others who are new to the library coding environment and may have limited access to common tools and operating systems often found in the coder's toolbox. As someone new to coding, Brittany Adams will show how PowerShell, which is part of the Windows OS, can be applied to various metadata projects. PowerShell can serve as the entry point for those unwilling or unable to dive in the deep-end of the Linux pool.
11:00 - 12:00: Lightning Talks
12:00 - 1:30: Lunch
1:30 - 5:00: Hands on Workshop...tentative topic; supporting digital humanities.
look at topics related to text mining, topic models, n-grams, visualization
6:30 - ? Social
Tentative Friday, July 24th
8:00 - 8:30: Checkin
8:30 - 8:45: Housekeeping
8:45 - 9:45: Lightning Talks #2
9:45 - 10:00: Break
10:00 - 10:20:
Paul Butler, Ball State University
Victor Replogle, Ball State University
EZProxy – The Canary in the Coal Mine for Compromised User Credentials
EZProxy is one of the most used, and exposed, applications that library IT supports. Libraries use EZProxy to restrict access to some of our most coveted resources. As such, EZProxy can be used as one of the frontlines in identifying compromised user credentials. In this presentation Paul Butler (Library Technologies Support Analyst at Ball State University) will discuss the techniques, EZProxy customizations, and custom code Ball State University Libraries uses to identify compromised user credentials.
10:20 - 10:40: Presentation #6
10:40 - 11:00: Presentation #7
11:00 - 12:00: Lightning Talks #3 / Tech petting zoo?
12:00 - 12:30: Closing
Social Media Goodness
Twitter hash tag: #c4lmw
Technical Details
- We'll have a Projector station with hookups, as well as a community PC Laptop with Powerpoint.
- Both a wired and wireless mic
- Wifi
Programming Sign-up
Code4Lib Midwest programming depends on the folks attending the conference. Please consider giving a presentation or lightning talk, or submitting your ideas for the hackfest/workshop.
Share what you are working on! Add your name and a description below. Please also let us know how long you'll need, and whether you prefer Wednesday or Thursday (or if it doesn't matter)
Presentations or Workshops
ActiveSierra - Sean Crowe and James Van Mil: while waiting for a useful API from III, we've modeled useful bits of the Sierra database for use in Rails apps and in vanilla ruby. We'd be able to present the SierraDNA and ActiveRecord/ActiveModel frameworks with some of the tools we're building (~1 hour?). If folks have access to their home III database systems, we could also host a workshop/hackfest around these tools.
Text mining: An introduction - This hands-on workshop will introduce participants to the use of Python's Natural Language Toolkit (NLTK), and through this process participants will learn the rudiments of text mining. While it may sound trivial, the workshop will count and tabulate words. How many words are in a given document? What are those words, and how often do they occur? How significant are those words compared to a similar sent in a different document? Visualize the comparison. Identify where selected words appear in a document and visualize that. After identifying significant words in a text, use a simple keyword-in-context (concordance) application to understand who the words are used in the text. Using these simple techniques a person can "read" a large corpuse of materials quickly and easily. Participants will be expected to have their own computers with the NLTK previously installed. --Eric Lease Morgan (University of Notre Dame)
PowerShell - Brittany Adams (Wheaton College): Code4LIb has many full-fledged coders, but there are others who are new to the library coding environment and may have limited access to common tools and operating systems often found in the coder's toolbox. As someone new to coding, Brittany Adams will show how PowerShell, which is part of the Windows OS, can be applied to various metadata projects. PowerShell can serve as the entry point for those unwilling or unable to dive in the deep-end of the Linux pool.
Handle: getting a grasp on URL management - Jeffrey Mudge and David Malone (Wheaton College): The print/analog library transition to thousands upon thousands of digital resources has brought with it the need to manage associated URLs. Part of the management is to address issues of resource transience and attempts to create persistence. The Handle System is a specification for assigning, managing, and resolving persistent identifiers for digital objects. This presentation will provide background on Handle as well as some user tools that Wheaton College has created to simplify the creation, management, and deletion of Handles.
Lightning Talks
Have something cool to share but you don't want to be in front of the room for more than 5 minutes? Lightning talks are for you. Sign up now or at the conference:
Suggested topic:
Benefits and risks of attempting user driven development : Early Adopters --> Use Cases --> Agile. Is this an art or a science, a structured process or a dialectic? (Linda Newman and team from UC)
Registration
Registration is free. 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.
Contact Ryan Wick (ryanwick@gmail.com) with your preferred username to set up a Code4Lib wiki account, or ask Terry Reese (reese.2179@osu.edu) to add your name to this list if you prefer not to set up an account.:
- David Malone - Wheaton College (david.malone%wheaton.edu)
- Ralph LeVan - OCLC (levan@oclc.org)
- Britain Woodman - University of Michigan (britainwumichedu)
- Angela Galvan - Ohio State University (galvan.as@gmail.com)
- Carrie Preston - Ohio University (prestonc@ohio.edu)
- Laurie Lee Moses - Center for Black Music Research at Columbia College Chicago (lmoses@colum.edu)
- Sasha Griffin - Denison University (griffins@denison.edu)
- Daniel Weddington - Berea College (Daniel_Weddington@berea.edu)
- Ken Irwin - Wittenberg University (kirwin@wittenberg.edu)
- Jane Wu - Otterbein University (jwu@otterbein.edu)
- James Van Mil - University of Cincinnati (vanmiljf@ucmail.uc.edu)
- Nathan Tallman - University of Cincinnati (tallmann@ucmail.uc.edu)
- Sean Crowe - University of Cincinnati (crowesn@ucmail.uc.edu)
- Linda Newman - University of Cincinnati (newmanld@ucmail.uc.edu) (If we reach 50 and UC has more than it's share of attendees let me know.)
- Jeffrey Mudge - Wheaton College (jeffrey.mudge@wheaton.edu)
- Karen Coombs - OCLC (coombsk@oclc.org)
- Ann Schoenenberger - Kenton County Public Library (Ann.Schoenenberger@kentonlibrary.org)
- Megan Kudzia - Albion College (moneill@albion.edu)
- Eric Lease Morgan - University of Notre Dame (emorgan@nd.edu)
- Peter Murray (jester@dltj.org)
- Jon Shank - Northwestern University (j-shank@northwestern.edu)
- Graham Hukill - Wayne State University (graham.hukill@wayne.edu)
- Amelia Lauren Mowry - Wayne State University (amelia.mowry@wayne.edu)
- Mark Baggett - University of Tennessee (mbagget1@utk.edu)
- Rebecca Karlis - Marygrove College (rkarlis6534@marygrove.edu)
- William G. Cowan - Indiana University (wgcowan@iu.edu)
- Carol Bean - University of Illinois at Chicago (NN/LM GMR) (cielbie@uic.edu)
- Heidi Dowding (dowdingh@gmail.com)
- Ranti Junus (ranti.junus@gmail.com)
- Charlotte Steffani - Wayne State University (ac7316@wayne.edu)
- Victor Replogle - Ball State University (vreplogle@bsu.edu)
- Paul Butler - Ball State University (prbutler@bsu.edu)
- Brittany Adams - Wheaton College (brittany.adams@wheaton.edu)
- Tod Olson - University of Chicago (tod@uchicago.edu)
- Kara Reuter - Worthington Libraries (kreuter@worthingtonlibraries.org)
- Stefan Langer - Worthington Libraries (slanger@worthingtonlibraries.org)
- Remington Steed - Hekman Library, Calvin College (rjs7@calvin.edu)
- Dan Wells - Hekman Library, Calvin College (dbw2@calvin.edu)
- Bill McMillin - University of Cincinnati (mcmillwh@ucmail.uc.edu)
- Carolyn Hansen - University of Cincinnati (hansencn@ucmail.uc.edu)
The capacity of our venue requires us to cap participation at 50. Beyond that, please put your name, affiliation and email address on the wait list and we'll email you if a spot opens up for you.