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A Guide for the Perplexed

4,384 bytes added, 18:43, 12 May 2016
METS, IIIF
Advice in this guide should focus on concrete, immediately applicable skills whenever possible. This document should be a curriculum guide, not a textbook, so before attempting to write an article on a broadly applicable subject, check to see if wikipedia has one to which you could link and contribute.
 
Samples of Curriculums:
 
* [https://docs.google.com/document/d/122dK_3JpK5URdNBfRG_CPiwP9m_Imc1gD3vnPV-C4Mo/edit?hl=en&authkey=CK-a5M8K Google Doc for Hydra Curriculum]
* [http://interact.webstandards.org/curriculum WaSP InterACT Curriculum.]
== Who is this for? ==
=== People with a background in libraries / archives / museums ===
Learning about technology can be intimidating, especially when it is a departure from the areas you're used to studying. You may have been put into a situation where you are responsible for managing or completing a technology project, but you don't understand the technology involved, and you're having a hard time finding information about it. Don't worry, this is surprisingly common and you are not alone. Many of the members of the code4lib community are self-taught, and we're here to help. Here's a good blog post aimed at people in this category: [http://onebiglibrary.net/story/advice-to-a-library-school-student Advice to a Library School Student by Dan Chudnov]
=== People with a background in technology / computer science ===
 
=== People hiring programmers into library technology ===
 
<blockquote>
Focus more on the why and use-cases rather than the technology. From a
programming perspective much of the technology isn't terribly
difficult and is well known at a basic level. How it's used, why
certain choices were made is the most important information to convey.
If you hired a programmer for a specific task, don't focus on
dictating technology, they should tell you what is current, but rather
what you need and want from the application. Helping them understand
how the data is accessed by your end-users if probably the most
valuable information you can convey.
 
Be prepared to answer questions and frustrations with library
standards that aren't really machine actionable. One older example is
METS, while it is XML, there is very little you can do to infer higher
a higher level of organization without extensive best practice
description or profiles.
 
-- [http://www.mail-archive.com/code4lib@listserv.nd.edu/msg11061.html Mike Smorul]
</blockquote>
== Why is it necessary? ==
== Broad areas of library technology ==
 
=== Data Formats ===
 
Data formats and protocols.
 
* [http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/~jenlrile/metadatamap/ Seeing Standards: A Visualization of the Metadata Universe]
 
==== MaRC ====
 
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MARC_standards MaRC] stands for Machine Readable Cataloging, and many folks in the code4lib community find themselves working with MARC records at some point.
 
* [http://wiki.code4lib.org/index.php/Working_with_MaRC Working with MaRC]
* [http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3832 Interpreting MARC: Where's the Bibliographic Data?]
* [http://rocky.uta.edu/doran/charsets/marc.html Coded Character Sets: A Technical Primer for Librarians]
 
==== METS ====
 
See https://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/ for the standard.
 
Tools and software:
* https://www.loc.gov/standards/mets/mets-tools.html
* http://www.cdlib.org/services/access_publishing/dsc/tools/mets_toolkit.html
 
==== IIIF ====
 
* http://iiif.io/
 
==== ONIX for Books ====
 
The [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onix_%28publishing_protocol%29 ONIX] family of standards includes the ONIX for Books Product Information format, which functions much like MaRC in the publishing, wholesaling, distribution and retail businesses.
 
* [http://www.editeur.org/83/Overview/ Overview of ONIX for Books]
 
Much of the data in a MaRC record can in principle be derived from the ONIX record for the same ISBN; see the recent mapping from ONIX to MaRC21:
 
* [http://www.editeur.org/96/ONIX-and-MARC21/ONIX 3.0 to MaRC21 mapping report and crosswalk spreadsheet]
=== Integrated Library Systems ===
* [http://open-ils.org/ Evergreen]
* [http://www.koha-community.org/ Koha]
* [http://www.kuali.org/ole KualiOLE]
* [http://OpenLibMan.sf.net Open Library Management System]
=== Discovery Interfaces ===
* [http://projectblacklight.org Blacklight]
* [http://vufind.org/ VuFind]
=== Article Databases ===
=== EAD / Archival Finding Aids ===
 
=== Web Archiving ===
[[Wikipedia:Web ARChive|Web ARChive]] ecosystem is ''the'' standard.
 
== Specific Technologies ==
 
=== Solr/Lucene ===
* [http://lucene.apache.org/solr Solr]
* [http://lucene.apache.org Lucene]
 
searches at http://lucidimagination.com include wikis, email lists, etc.
 
=== Git & Distributed Version Control ===
 
[http://git-scm.com/ Main Git Website]
 
[http://github.com/ GitHub]
 
[[Libraries with Github Organizations]]
 
=== Ruby on Rails (Blacklight, Hydra) ===
[http://guides.rubyonrails.org Ruby on Rails Guide]
 
[https://github.com/projectblacklight/blacklight Blacklight]
 
[https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/hydra/The+Hydra+Project Hydra]
 
=== Islandora ===
 
[http://islandora.ca/ Islandora]
 
== Resources ==
 
* [http://dewey.library.nd.edu/mailing-lists/code4lib/ Code4Lib Mailing List]
* [http://code4lib.org/irc Code4Lib IRC channel] (chat room) The channel is a less formal and more interactive alternative to the code4lib mailing list for the discussion of code, projects, ideas, music, first computers, etc..
* [http://journal.code4lib.org/ Code4Lib Journal]
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