Code4Lib Chicago

Revision as of 18:34, 21 March 2016 by Camcclure (Talk | contribs) (Spring 2016 Meeting)

Revision as of 18:34, 21 March 2016 by Camcclure (Talk | contribs) (Spring 2016 Meeting)

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
  • Illinois Institute of Technology - Paul V. Galvin Library. 35 W. 33rd St. Chicago, IL Upper level - north end.

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

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

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