A basic reference statistics webapp is finally up for testing. The code leverages littleware's new task-tracker APIs. I should be able to update the click-counter and cat-request apps to use the same engine. The new code also ports the entire AuCataloging site to java EE 6 including facelets and JSF annotations, so we need to upgrade our server to run glassfish v3. The following e-mail has more details.
From: rdp0004@auburn.edu To: libhelp@auburn.edu Subject: setup 'glassfish' user on www - give Reuben password Hello LibHelp! Would you setup a glassfish user on napoleon with a valid home directory (/home/glassfish or whatever), and send me the password, so I can install and configure the new glassfish v3 server ? https://glassfish.dev.java.net/ I have several updates to the AuCataloging webapp nearly ready to release that require the glassfish upgrade. http://lib.auburn.edu/AuCataloging/ If you just setup a 'glassfish' user for me, then I can take care of most of the setup, so I won't have to pester Jon so much. Or - if you prefer, I can install the new glassfish on some other server (maybe repo), then we can just add a 'proxy' rule to www's Apache config. Once I have the v3 server ready to go, then we can shutdown the old v2 server installed under /glassfish. What do you think ? Thanks for the help! Cheers, Reuben --- Reuben Pasquini 4/20/2010 1:59 PM Great - thanks for the feedback! :-) Let me know when you're ready to meet to polish this thing up to work the way you want. Hopefully we'll have time to beta test before the next reference-stats collection. I'm going to include what I have now as part of an update to the AuCataloging tools that I'll try to release by next week: http://lib.auburn.edu/AuCataloging/ I'll go ahead and add an "output data to csv" link, so we can pull the data into Excel too - like the click-counter. The reference data is saved to a database - so it won't go away on server restart. I'll eventually update the click counter to use the database too. Cheers, Reuben --- Liza Weisbrod 4/20/2010 1:47 PM This is great. Not that I don't love my paper forms, but this is better.... --- Marcia Boosinger 4/20/2010 1:19 PM Yes, I could get to it and WOW! This is fabulous! Liza and I are actually going to be talking in her evaluation tomorrow about starting this as a project so this is perfect timing. I had no idea you were working on it in this form. Thanks so much and we'll be back in touch very soon. Marcia --- Reuben Pasquini 4/20/2010 12:48 PM Hi Marcia! Can you connect to this link ? http://lib_au15798.ad.auburn.edu:8080/AuCataloging/en/refStat/statForm.jsf If so, then what do you think ? Cheers, Reuben
Aaron, Marliese, and I exchanged the brief e-mail thread below discussing a recent study of the changing role of academic libraries. I want to try to put together some concrete ideas that express a coherent strategy for the library that addresses the issues in the e-mail. Once I have my thoughts in order, then we can schedule some meetings to see what other people in the library think. Hopefully we can articulate an update to the library's strategic plan with action items that move the library in some new directions.
--- Aaron Trehub 4/19/2010 9:49 PM Interesting exchange. Will add my $.02 when I get back. Aaron --- Marliese Thomas 4/19/2010 10:58 AM Not so fast! I do agree with what you're saying. My thought was more, I guess, from the point of view of how it seems many librarians anticipate innovation. It seems so much of what we do and discuss is how to react to trends and devices than actually being involved in their creation or development. As you say, most people see us as a delivery system, not the innovators themselves. So, not so much with the beginning of Joe's comments, more how we prepare for something we don't know exists or isn't immediately relative (and incorporated) to current functions. :) Marliese -----Original Message----- From: Reuben Pasquini To: lib_systemsTo: Marliese Thomas To: Aaron Trehub Sent: 4/19/2010 10:50:03 AM Subject: Re: Fwd: One Report, Two Findings: Library Roles Changing, Open Access Not Compelling Marliese and Reuben disagree again! ;-) I think the trends in the report are probably right - faculty and students view the library as a purchaser of online databases, and faculty are not interested in open access unless it will help get tenure. Joe is overly optimistic. I don't think Joe's iPod argument applies. We're more like horse-buggy makers at the dawn of the automobile age. I don't see the iBuggy on the horizon. In fact we're already changing. The MDRL and Study Commons have little to do with supporting research. A lot of the online work we do could just as easily be done by OIT. Suppose we group MDRL, e-journal and database management (ez-proxy, link resolver, ...), web site and server admin (ETD, Voyager, Vufind), and transfer all that responsibility and budget to an "online resources" subgroup under OIT. OIT gets almost all the materials budget, the systems department, and a group of 4 or 5 e-journal and database specialists (Jack, Paula, ...). What's left for the library ? A staff budget over $4 million to manage a book budget under $250K, reference, and ILL. We need a new plan. Cheers, Reuben --- Marliese Thomas 4/19/2010 7:49 AM I would agree with Joe's observation. It is difficult to see how far something can be taken if you don't even know what the new variables are. I think one of the challenging things about working with VuFind is grasping how much can realistically be done to it and how much are we asking Reuben and Clint to accomplish. Additionally, I believe many librarians err on the side of being cautious of how change will affect students (and jobs) because we can't anticipate how new things will be received and/or if they will become ubiquitous (iWhatevers). In the realm of teaching, there is an extra caution about teaching something that potentially will not be there or will be greatly changed, and that change will not be fully understood by the students. Interesting. Thanks, Aaron. Marliese --- Aaron Trehub 4/18/2010 10:19 AM Folks, Some more comments on the Ithaka report, which can be found at: http://www.ithaka.org/ithaka-s-r/research/faculty-surveys-2000-2009/faculty-survey-2009 Aaron --- Joseph Esposito 4/16/2010 3:44 PM One could argue that the survey got it right or wrong, but I hope no one puts too much time into surveys. People don't know what they think. They can't imagine innovations. A survey of physicists 20 years ago would not have given us arXiv. That took Paul Ginsparg. A survey of anyone 10 years ago would not have offered us the iPod, iPhone, and iPad (though someone could have predicted the dumb names). Those products, which are transformative in modern society, required Steve Jobs. The future of libraries and the status among faculty is something that must be invented. Find the inventor. Joe Esposito --- Philip Davis 4/15/2010 5:06 PM One Report, Two Findings: Library Roles Changing, Open Access Not Compelling by Kent Anderson Scholarly Kitchen April 15, 2010 http://j.mp/92pRAi quote: "It's been a fear among librarians for decades, a perception among publishers for years, and now a survey shows it's now a clear opinion among faculty and researchers -- libraries are increasingly viewed as information purchasing agents inside academic institutions rather than intellectual partners. An unrelated perception that's been argued for years is that open access is of dubious value to scholars, with their dedication to its ideals hardly rising above lip service."
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