83
edits
Changes
→Tentative Friday, July 24th
===Logistics===
'''Event Code Of Conduct '''
* [http://wiki.code4lib.org/images/b/be/C4lmw_CodeOfConduct4Lib.pdf '''Code4LibMW 2015 Code of Conduct''']
'''Suggested Hotels'''
-The Varsity Inn South is roughly 1.7 miles from the Thompson Library.
* [http://www.uhdcolumbus.com/ '''Columbus Hospitality District'''] -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''' * [http://osu.campusparc.com/home/visitors-patients/visitor-parking/garage-parking '''CampusParc Visitor Parking'''] Parking Maps and information for finding Parking on the Ohio State University Campus. * [http://wireless.osu.edu/guests.php '''OSU Visitor Wifi'''] The Ohio State University has a guest WIFI service, and for a number of reasons, this is going to be the easiest method for attendees to get WIFI access. Let's cross our fingers and hope this works for everyone.
=== Schedule ===
==== Tentative Thursday, July 23rd ====
8:30 - 9:0015: Check-in/Coffee<br />
9:00 15 - 9:20: Welcome and House Keeping<br />
9:20 - 9:40: Presentation #1<br />Jeffrey Mudge and David Malone (Wheaton College)<br />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.<br />
9:40 - 10:00: ActiveSierra<br />Presentation #2: https://github.com/jamesvanmil/ActiveSierra-c4libmw15/blob/master/slides.pdf <br />Sean Crowe and James Van Mil<br />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<br />
10:00 - 10:20: Presentation #3Building Linked Data into your MARC records<br />Presentation: http://www.slideshare.net/reese_terry/practical-approaches-to-entification-in-library-bibliographic-dataTerry Reese (Ohio State University) -- I'll discuss how MarcEdit does this linking, and share the C# source code that the tool is utilizing within the linking plug-in/assembly.
10:20 - 10:40: Break/Networking<br />
10:40 - 11:00: Presentation #4<br />Brittany Adams (Wheaton College) <br />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.<br />
11:00 - 12:00: Lightening Lightning Talks<br />
12:00 - 1:3000: Lunch<br />
1:30 00 - 51:0020 : Hands <br />Victor Replogle <br />Title: Ball State Libraries Data Warehouse and DashboardDescription: Gathering and presenting upon library statistics – a success story. User-selectable widgets share highlights from various system uses; custom reporting pages allow in-depth exploration of services consumed.Most recently our inter-library loan application (ILLiad) is having its data extracted and transformed to facilitate quick and accurate calculations such as fill rate (able to be segmented by user category, request type, etc).The presentation will highlight the steps that brought together various disparate data sources into one location, challenges overcome, and open-ended sharing based on audience interest.<br /> 1:20 - 1:40: Remediating Loss: emerging roles for librarians<br />Angela Galvan (Ohio State) <br />Presentation: http://slides.com/angelagalvan/deck-3#/Technology complicates grief and loss in unexpected ways which researchers are only beginning to understand. This presentation discusses thanatosensitive information management, and a growing need to frame the dead as a user group. This talk can form around the interests of attendees. (20 minutes, either day.) 1:40 - 3:00: Workshop(this time is fungible -- it might move slightly)<br />Eric Lease Morgan (University of Notre Dame)<br />This presentation will describe and demonstrate how to "automagically" provide text mining services against content from the HathiTrust, EEBO, and JSTOR.Given specific metadata reports from these services, collections can be automatically created, indexed, analyzed, reported upon, and visualized.The result is the ability to "read distantly" against given reader-defined topics.tentative topic; supporting Eric advocates this sort of service can help refine the definition of curation in a digital humanitieslibrary context.<br /> 3:00 - 3:30: Break 3:30 - 5:00: Group Breakouts
look at topics related to text mining, topic models, n-grams, visualization<br />
6:30 - ? Social??<br />
==== Tentative Friday, July 24th ====
8:00 30 - 89:3000: Checkin<br />89:30 00 - 89:4510: Housekeeping<br />89:45 10 - 9:4530: Lightening Talks #2Break Out reports<br />9:45 30 - 9:50: <br />Paul Butler, Ball State University <br />Presentation: https://github.com/prbutlerEZProxy – The Canary in the Coal Mine for Compromised User Credentials <br />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 customization, and custom code Ball State University Libraries uses to identify compromised user credentials.<br />9:50 - 10:0010: Break<br />Mike Shallcross (Bentley Historical Library) <br />ArchivesSpace-Archivematica-DSpace Workflow Integration - : Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, this project seeks to expedite the ingest, description, and overall curation of digital archives by facilitating the creation and reuse of descriptive and administrative metadata among emerging platforms and streamlining the deposit of fully processed content into a digital preservation repository. This presentation will provide an overview of project goals and objectives and an update on current development work. <br />10:00 10- 10:20: Presentation #530 -- Lightning talks<br />10:20 30 - 10:4050 -- break<br />10: Presentation #650 -11:10 -- Lightning Talks<br />11:10- 11:40 30: <br />Building a PHP code library for Interacting with an Linked Data- based Discovery API - Karen Coombs (OCLC): The WorldCat Discovery API has the typical abilities you’d expect for building your own local discovery world: search access to WorldCat bibliographic and article data, facets, a variety of search indexes, and links to holdings. Because an RDF-based model is fairly new to libraries, we decided we could increase the adaptability of the API by providing a code library that would streamline the development process. This presentation will discuss the process of creating object-oriented PHP code library which would make the semantically rich entities and data available in a fashion that was more familiar to programmers used to working in OO PHP.<br />11:0030 - 11:50: Presentation #7<br />An OLE Deployment Architecture<br/>Tod A. Olson, University of Chicago<br />In the August 2014, The University of Chicago Library migrated from its legacy ILS to Kuali OLE (Open Library Environment) as an early adopter. This talk will describe the deployment architecture we settled on for OLE, including myriad integrations points with external systems.<br />11:00 50 - 12:0030: Lightening Lightning Talks #3 / Tech petting zoo?/Closing<br />12:00 30 - 12:30: Closing<br />- For those interested -- Tour of Thompson Library
===Social Media Goodness===
'''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.
'''Hands-on With Automagic Text mining: An introductionMining''' - This hands-on workshop will introduce provides a venue for participants to create their own "automagically" created text mining reports from the use of Python's Natural Language Toolkit ([http://www.nltk.org NLTK])HathiTrust, EEBO, and through this process participants JSTOR. Participants will learn the rudiments create a set of text mining. While content from the HathiTrust and "feed" it may sound trivialto system which will harvest, index, analyze, visualize, and report on the workshop content. The process will count then be repeated with content from EEBO and tabulate wordsJSTOR. How many words Participants are in expected to have their own laptops, complete with an SSH terminal application and SFTP client. Access to a given document? What are those wordsremote Linux machine will be provided. Familiarity with the Bash Shell is a plus but not necessary . --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 how may have limited access to common tools and operating systems often do they occur? How significant are 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 words compared unwilling or unable to a similar sent dive in the deep-end of the Linux pool. '''Handle: getting a different document? Visualize 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 comparisonneed to manage associated URLs. Identify where selected words appear in Part of the management is to address issues of resource transience and attempts to create persistence. The Handle System is a document specification for assigning, managing, and visualize resolving persistent identifiers for digital objects. This presentation will provide background on Handle as well as some user tools thatWheaton College has created to simplify the creation, management, and deletion of Handles. After identifying significant words in a text '''ArchivesSpace-Archivematica-DSpace Workflow Integration''' - Mike Shallcross (Bentley Historical Library): Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, use this project seeks to expedite the ingest, description, and overall curation of digital archives by facilitating the creation and reuse of descriptive and administrative metadata among emerging platforms and streamlining the deposit of fully processed content into a simple keyworddigital preservation repository. This presentation will provide an overview of project goals and objectives and an update on current development work. (20 min. should suffice; Friday works fine.) '''Remediating Loss: emerging roles for librarians''' -in-context Angela Galvan (concordanceOhio State) application : Technology complicates grief and loss in unexpected ways which researchers are only beginning to understand who . This presentation discusses thanatosensitive information management, and a growing need to frame the words are used in dead as a user group. This talk can form around the textinterests of attendees. Using these simple techniques (20 minutes, either day.) '''Building a person can "read" PHP code library for Interacting with an Linked Data-based Discovery API''' - Karen Coombs (OCLC): The WorldCat Discovery API has the typical abilities you’d expect for building your own local discovery world: search access to WorldCat bibliographic and article data, facets, a large corpuse variety of materials quickly search indexes, and easilylinks to holdings. Participants will be expected Because an RDF-based model is fairly new to have their own computers with libraries, we decided we could increase the NLTK previously installedadoptability of the API by providing a code library that would streamline the development process. --Eric Lease Morgan (University This presentation will discuss the process of Notre Dame)creating object-oriented PHP code library which would make the semantically rich entities and data available in a fashion that was more familiar to programmers used to working in OO PHP.
===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:
'''Linked Data Fragments''' - James Van Mil - a small group in the Hydra world has started some work to address the issue of low availability of SPARQL endpoints. I can talk about the Linked Data Fragments concept and the work we're doing to apply it
'''Custom Reports in Google Analytics''' - Amelia Mowry
'''ILLiad at Ohio State''' - Angela Galvan - In 2014, the OSU Health Sciences Library migrated its Borrowing operation to University Libraries. This effectively ended the practice of using DOCLINE, the National Library of Medicine's interlibrary services platform, to obtain materials for health sciences patrons. I'll talk about why we made this decision and the wider impact to our users.
==Registration==
# Angela Galvan - Ohio State University (galvan.as@gmail.com)
# Carrie Preston - Ohio University (prestonc@ohio.edu)
# Daniel Weddington - Berea College (Daniel_Weddington@berea.edu)
# Ken Irwin - Wittenberg University (kirwin@wittenberg.edu)
# Nathan Tallman - University of Cincinnati (tallmann@ucmail.uc.edu)
# Sean Crowe - University of Cincinnati (crowesn@ucmail.uc.edu)
# Jeffrey Mudge - Wheaton College (jeffrey.mudge@wheaton.edu)
# Karen Coombs - OCLC (coombsk@oclc.org)
# Ann Schoenenberger - Kenton County Public Library (Ann.Schoenenberger@kentonlibrary.org)
# Eric Lease Morgan - University of Notre Dame (emorgan@nd.edu)
# Peter Murray (jester@dltj.org)
# Jon Shank - Northwestern University (j-shank@northwestern.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)# Heidi Dowding - Indiana University (heidowdi@indiana.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)# Beth Snapp - Ohio State (snapp.6@osu.edu)# Sarah Reid - Ohio State (reid.419@osu.edu)# Ousmane Kebe - Ohio State (kebe.4@osu.edu)# Dwight Scott - Ohio State (scott.1379@osu.edu)# Russell Schelby - Ohio State (schelby.1@osu.edu)# Chris Bartos - Ohio State (bartos.25@osu.edu)# Friday only Michelle Gerry - Ohio State (gerry.8@osu.edu)# Sue Rahnema - Ohio State (rahnema.3@osu.edu)# Mike Shallcross - Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan (shallcro@umich.edu)# Stephen Schindehette -- OCLC (schindes@oclc.org)
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.