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  • LISWire: Code4Lib Journal Issue 10 now available!

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    June 22nd, 2010LISWire aggregatorLISWire

    I am pleased to announce the availability of Code4Lib Journal, Issue 10.
    Please feel free to share this announcement! - Edward M. Corrado

    The articles in Issue 10 are....

    Editorial Introduction: The Code4Lib Journal Experiment, Rejection
    Rates, and Peer Review
    Edward M. Corrado

    Code4Lib Journal has been a successful experiment. With success,
    questions have arisen about the scholarly nature and status of the
    Journal. In this editorial introduction we take a look at the question
    of Code4Lib Journal’s rejections rates and peer review status.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3277

    Building a Location-aware Mobile Search Application with Z39.50 and HTML5
    MJ Suhonos

    This paper presents MyTPL (http://www.mytpl.ca/), a proof-of-concept web
    application intended to demonstrate that, with a little imagination, any
    library with a Z39.50 catalogue interface and a web server with some
    common open-source tools can readily provide their own location-aware
    mobile search application. The complete source code for MyTPL is
    provided under the GNU GPLv3 license, and is freely available at:
    http://github.com/mjsuhonos/mytpl
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/2947

    OpenRoom: Making Room Reservation Easy for Students and Faculty
    Bradley D. Faust, Arthur W. Hafner, and Robert L. Seaton

    Scheduling and booking space is a problem facing many academic and
    public libraries. Systems staff at the Ball State University Libraries
    addressed this problem by developing a user friendly room management
    system, OpenRoom. The new room management application was developed
    using an open source model with easy installation and management in mind
    and is now publicly available.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/2941

    Map it @ WSU: Development of a Library Mapping System for Large Academic
    Libraries
    Paul Gallagher

    The Wayne State Library System launched its library mapping application
    in February 2010, designed to help locate materials in the five WSU
    libraries. The system works within the catalog to show the location of
    materials, as well as provides a web form for use at the reference desk.
    Developed using PHP and MySQL, it requires only minimal effort to update
    using a unique call number overlay mechanism. In addition to mapping
    shelved materials, the system provides information for any of the over
    three hundred collections held by the WSU Libraries. Patrons can do more
    than just locate a book on a shelf: they can learn where to locate
    reserve items, how to access closed collections, or get driving maps to
    extension center libraries. The article includes a discussion of the
    technology reviewed and chosen during development, an overview of the
    system architecture, and lessons learned during development.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3072

    Creating a Library Database Search using Drupal
    Danielle M. Rosenthal & Mario Bernardo

    When Florida Gulf Coast University Library was faced with having to
    replace its database locator, they needed to find a low-cost, non-staff
    intensive replacement for their 350 plus databases search tool. This
    article details the development of a library database locator, based on
    the methods described in Leo Klein’s “Creating a Library Database Page
    using Drupal” online presentation. The article describes how the library
    used Drupal along with several modules, such as CCK, Views, and
    FCKeditor. It also discusses various Drupal search modules that were
    evaluated during the process.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/2920

    Implementing a Real-Time Suggestion Service in a Library Discovery Layer
    Benjamin Pennell and Jill Sexton

    As part of an effort to improve user interactions with authority data in
    its online catalog, the UNC Chapel Hill Libraries have developed and
    implemented a system for providing real-time query suggestions from
    records found within its catalog. The system takes user input as it is
    typed to predict likely title, author, or subject matches in a manner
    functionally similar to the systems found on commercial websites such as
    google.com or amazon.com. This paper discusses the technologies,
    decisions and methodologies that went into the implementation of this
    feature, as well as analysis of its impact on user search behaviors.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3022

    Creating Filtered, Translated Newsfeeds
    James E. Powell, Linn Marks Collins, Mark L. B. Martinez

    Google Translate’s API creates the possibility to leverage machine
    translation to both filter global newsfeeds for content regarding a
    specific topic, and to aggregate filtered feed items as a newsfeed.
    Filtered items can be translated so that the resulting newsfeed can
    provide basic information about topic-specific news articles from around
    the globe in the desired language of the consumer. This article explores
    a possible solution for inputting alternate words and phrases in the
    user’s native language, aggregating and filtering newsfeeds
    progammatically, managing filter terms, and using Google Translate’s API.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3232

    Metadata In, Library Out. A Simple, Robust Digital Library System
    Tonio Loewald, Jody DeRidder

    Tired of being held hostage to expensive systems that did not meet our
    needs, the University of Alabama Libraries developed an XML
    schema-agnostic, light-weight digital library delivery system based on
    the principles of “Keep It Simple, Stupid!” Metadata and derivatives
    reside in openly accessible web directories, which support the
    development of web agents and new usability software, as well as
    modification and complete retrieval at any time. The file name structure
    is echoed in the file system structure, enabling the delivery software
    to make inferences about relationships, sequencing, and complex object
    structure without having to encapsulate files in complex metadata
    schemas. The web delivery system, Acumen, is built of PHP, JSON,
    JavaScript and HTML5, using MySQL to support fielded searching.
    Recognizing that spreadsheets are more user-friendly than XML, an
    accompanying widget, Archivists Utility, transforms spreadsheets into
    MODS based on rules selected by the user. Acumen, Archivists Utility,
    and all supporting software scripts will be made available as open source.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3107

    AudioRegent: Exploiting SimpleADL and SoX for Digital Audio Delivery
    Nitin Arora

    AudioRegent is a command-line Python script currently being used by the
    University of Alabama Libraries’ Digital Services to create
    web-deliverable MP3s from regions within archival audio files. In
    conjunction with a small-footprint XML file called SimpleADL and SoX, an
    open-source command-line audio editor, AudioRegent batch processes
    archival audio files, allowing for one or many user-defined regions,
    particular to each audio file, to be extracted with additional audio
    processing in a transparent manner that leaves the archival audio file
    unaltered. Doing so has alleviated many of the tensions of cumbersome
    workflows, complicated documentation, preservation concerns, and
    reliance on expensive closed-source GUI audio applications.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/2882

    Automatic Generation of Printed Catalogs: An Initial Attempt
    Jared Camins-Esakov

    Printed catalogs are useful in a variety of contexts. In special
    collections, they are often used as reference tools and to commemorate
    exhibits. They are useful in settings, such as in developing countries,
    where reliable access to the Internet—or even electricity—is not
    available. In addition, many private collectors like to have printed
    catalogs of their collections. All the information needed for creating
    printed catalogs is readily available in the MARC bibliographic records
    used by most libraries, but there are no turnkey solutions available for
    the conversion from MARC to printed catalog. This article describes the
    development of a system, available on github, that uses XSLT, Perl, and
    LaTeX to produce press-ready PDFs from MARCXML files. The article
    particularly focuses on the two XSLT stylesheets which comprise the core
    of the system, and do the “heavy lifting” of sorting and indexing the
    entries in the catalog. The author also highlights points where the data
    stored in MARC bibliographic records requires particular “massaging,”
    and suggests improvements for future attempts at automated printed
    catalog generation.
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3154

    Easing Gently into OpenSRF, Part 1 and 2
    Dan Scott

    The Open Service Request Framework (or OpenSRF, pronounced “open surf”)
    is an inter-application message passing architecture built on XMPP (aka
    “jabber”). The Evergreen open source library system is built on an
    OpenSRF architecture to support loosely coupled individual components
    communicating over an OpenSRF messaging bus. This article introduces
    OpenSRF, demonstrates how to build OpenSRF services through simple code
    examples, explains the technical foundations on which OpenSRF is built,
    and evaluates OpenSRF’s value in the context of Evergreen.
    Part 1 of a 2 part article in this issue:
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3284
    Part 2 of a 2 part article in this issue:
    http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3365

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