Code4Lib Chicago
A "hyperlocal" Code4Lib chapter, which has been in existence since around 2010.
Resources
- Google Group
- Use this to chat about local issues, propose meetings, and let us know about local events.
- Sign up for an account on this wiki by emailing Ryan Wick.
Spring 2016 Meeting
- Monday, May 23rd, 2016, 9am-5pm
- Illinois Institute of Technology - Paul V. Galvin Library. 35 W. 33rd St. Chicago, IL Upper level - north end.
Getting to Galvin
Public Transit
Accessible by CTA trains: Take the Red Line to the Sox/35th stop or the Green Line to the 35th/Bronzeville/IIT stop. At either stop, exit at the North end of the platform to decrease your walking time. The #29 bus also has a stop close to the library at 33rd Street.
Parking
Visitor parking is available. View locations and fees. Lot B5 is the closest visitor lot to the library. Alternatively, there should be ample free parking along Michigan Avenue (which is one-way southbound) and Indiana Avenue (one-way northbound) between 31st and 34th streets.
Registration
Register for the event. Space is limited to 50 seats.
Lightning Talks Plus
Sign up to give a talk. Slots of 5, 10, 15, and 20 minutes are available.
Breakout Sessions
Please post topics you'd like discussed here (add your name if you're filling to lead or facilitate this session)
Data Visualization - Allan Berry
UX/Design Thinking - Christine McClure
Institutional Repositories - Paul Go
Fall 2015 Meeting
- November 23, 2015
- Daley Library, UIC, Room 1-470
- Watch this space for details.
- Register via EventBrite
- At this point, all tickets are taken; you are welcome to sign up for the waitlist. Allan will let you know as soon as anyone cancels.
Feedback Form
Here's a Google Form to collect your opinions about this event. It's anonymous and the results are public: for all of our benefit, to make the next meeting of this group better. Please fill it out.
Context
- A history of the UIC campus, designed by Walter Netsch
- Stats about the UIC Library
Schedule
- 8:30
- assemble / coffee
- 9:00
- start / welcome
- schedule remaining lightning talks
- vote and assign rooms for breakout sessions
- 9:15
- lightning talks (see below)
- 10:30
- break
- 10:45
- lightning talks (continued)
- if lightning talks run short, we can commence with the Group Activity before lunch (see below)
- 12:00
- group photo / lunch
- 1:00
- library tour (Meet in 1-470)
- 1:30
- Group activity; begin Breakout/Hackathon Sessions when complete (see below)
- 2:30
- break
- 2:45
- Breakout/Hackathon Sessions (continued)
- 4:15
- wrap-up in 1-470 (sustaining energy & engagement?)
- 4:30
- end
- 5:00
- social at Jak's Tap http://jakstap.com/bar_and_grill_location_chicago_il.html
Lightning Talks
- If you have an idea, please sign up for a slot! These are quick, low-pressure talks, and you'll get good karma.
- Examples of lightning talks given at the last national Code4Lib.
- These are set as five minute slots, but at least a few will go over. So there's some flex time at the end.
Slots
- 9:15-9:20
- Using LibCal for Library Hours--the easy way and the hard way
- Margaret Heller, Loyola University Chicago
- 9:20-9:25
- Using the OCLC API to Address the Challenge of Special Collections Backlog
- Brittany Adams, Wheaton College
- 9:25-9:30
- Metadata Hopper Overview
- Tracy Seneca, UIC
- 9:35-9:40
- Automatic Classification in Metadata Hopper
- Kate Flynn, Chicago Collections/UIC
- 9:40-9:45
- Catholic Portal
- Eric Lease Morgan, University of Notre Dame
- 9:45-9:50
- Capturing Tables of Content data from non-OCLC sources
- David Malone and Brittany Adams, Wheaton College
- 9:50-9:55
- -
- 9:55-10:00
- -
- 10:00-10:05
- -
- 10:05-10:10
- -
- 10:10-10:15
- -
Break
- 10:45-10:50
- Distant reading of texts from the HathiTrust, JSTOR, and/or EEBO
- Eric Lease Morgan (Librarian-At-Large)
- 10:50-10:55
- -
- 10:55-11:00
- Creating Simple Event Displays from an RSS Feed using JavaScript
- Paul Keith, Chicago Public Library
- 11:00-11:05
- On EAD
- Esther Verreau, University of Illinois at Chicago
- 11:05-11:10
- TopicHub: identify content of interest in one repository and deposit it in another
- Jeremy Prevost, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- 11:10-11:15
- Building History: exploring campus history with Neatline and Omeka
- Adam Strohm, Illinois Institute of Technology
- 11:15-11:20
- Garage Sessions: Automating deployment of CUNY's DH Box at the UWM Libraries' DH Lab
- Ann Hanlon, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
- 11:20-11:25
- -
- 11:25-11:30
- -
- 11:30-11:35
- -
- 11:35-11:40
- -
- 11:40-11:45
- -
Group Activity
- We're planning to try something a little different: a group mind-map, to warm up for the Breakout sessions.
- Write down on the specified Post-It color (provided): Your name, and one of the following topics:
- Green: the thing which made me most proud this week
- Orange: the library technology I'm most excited about right now
- Pink: the most annoying thing about my library's website
- Blue: something I'd like to see at the next Chicago Code4Lib meetup
- Stick your post-it on the whiteboard in 1-470, close to another topic which you consider related. Please feel free to move other peoples' post-it notes around!
- Now do another one! Do several!
- Talk amongst yourselves.
Breakout/Hackathon Sessions
- Up for debate: these are just some possible topics. We need four total.
- If you have an idea, add it to the list! If we end up with more than four, we will conduct a straw poll to determine the most relevant/popular.
- For inspiration, here is the list of pre-conference workshops at the last national Code4Lib
- Rooms are still in flux; they will depend upon interest.
Meteor.js tutorial
- In web dev circles, Meteor is the new hotness. It lets you make single-page apps which synchronize automatically between clients/users and the cloud/server. It also lets you kick out iOS and Android apps easily. It's pretty slick.
- Let's get a Meteor.js installation up and running. We'll do this tutorial, at least as much as we can. Be prepared for things not to work; let's figure them out together!
- No prior experience necessary, although familiarity with JavaScript will be useful.
- Macintosh/Linux only, unless you have experience using Cygwin on Windows.
- Allan Berry will lead (for better or worse)
Metadata/data hackathon
- A discussion around tools and workflows for cleaning up messy data; bring your own data sets to work on if you like.
- We will bring some metadata to share, but please bring your own if you have some! Messier the better!
- Kate Flynn will lead.
User Experience breakout
- Card Sorts and Accessibility and WIreframes Oh My!
- Got some websites you want to analyze for good UI/UX? Bring a list of URLs!
- Tara Wood will lead.
???
- -
Evening social
- Join us at Jak's Tap at 5:00pm, for beer and further discussion!
- Jak's is within walking distance of UIC, a block or two north, across the freeway. Parking can be challenging up there, although meters are usually available on Jackson Blvd.
UIC Environs: Lunch and Parking
- Lunch and parking map
- Food options are mostly clustered in three places: Greektown (N of the freeway along Halsted), Taylor street (SW of campus), and University Village (S along Halsted).
- There are several parking lots available (marked on the above map).
- Parking works like this:
- We have some 25 parking passes available for free parking: first come, first served. Otherwise parking will cost $13 for a full day.
- Make sure you park in a UIC-branded lot with a person on duty. When you enter, a machine will give you a ticket/receipt.
- Upon check-in at the Daley Library, I'll give you a sticker which you can attach to your receipt.
- At the end of the day, when you leave, hand this receipt/sticker to the attendant on duty. They should just wave you through.
Getting to UIC
- Public Transit: Take the Blue Line west from the Loop; get off at the UIC-Halsted stop. Exit via Morgan Street (to your right as you exit the train). Walk south. The library will be on the left after you cross Harrison Street (address: 801 S Morgan St).
- More information on visiting UIC, including (better) mass-transit directions
Circle Interchange difficulties
- Circle Interchange (the confluence of I-90 and I-290 just NE of campus) construction is ongoing.
- Construction is causing traffic havoc nearby, especially near the corner of Harrison and Halsted. The Harrison bridge over I-90 doesn't currently exist. Best to avoid this area if possible.
- The Morgan street exit from I-290 has been closed for some time. According to IDOT:
- Exiting access is prohibited from Westbound I-290/Congress Parkway
- From Southbound I-90/94 - exit Adams Street
- From Northbound I-90/94 - exit Ashland Avenue, backtrack east via Jackson Boulevard or Harrison Street