Archive for the ‘Conferences’ Category

The Square of Engagement: Fully-baked Theory

Friday, January 2nd, 2009

Best BiscuitsRecently, over on the eIFL website, Randy Metcalfe posted “The Square of Engagement,” a terrifically well-crafted and fully-baked discourse on the many facets of engagement with open source.

To over-simplify one of his main points, Randy is saying something that needs to be part of our open source advocacy for 2009: engagement takes many shapes.

People new to OSS assume (incorrectly) that to participate, to be part of the community, they must get hands-on with the code (from installing it to actually helping develop it). But there are many ways to participate — from simply using the software to assisting with documentation, engaging with developers about the future path of the software, providing usability reviews, funding “bounties” (work for hire), or simply chiming in when a question comes up on a list.

The upcoming, first-ever Evergreen Conference (May 20-22, Athens, Georgia — website and calls for programs to debut next week!) is its own form of engagement — of learning, sharing, networking!

The more active forms of open source engagement can seem alien to libraries accustomed to using software “off the shelf,” where software seemingly pops out of the great biscuit can in the sky. But as we who like to putter in the kitchen know, there’s no substitute for experience — and the people who use recipes are just as important as the people who write them.

Experience doesn’t just teach you more about baking biscuits — or creating software for our users; it makes you more committed to the process — and that process brings us closer to our communities and their needs.

Evergreen Newsletter Debuts

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Over on the Evergreen project blog you can find Volume 1, Number 1 of the Evergreen newsletter, a new monthly publication for all things Evergreen. This month’s issue updates you on the 1.4 release candidate, acquisitions, save the dates” for Evergreen events, the most recent libraries to “go Evergreen,” URLs for recent webinars, and more. (Except — d’oh — any mention of the Evergreen Conference next May, in Athens, Georgia. My dumb omission!)

You can blame John Fink and Dan Scott for suggesting this newsletter way last spring, even before I began working at Equinox. I held back for a little while before launching the newsletter so I could get to know the community better.

This turned out to be wise, because through the part of my job that can roughly be described as “external relations” I am learning that the seemingly monolithic open source “community” is really a series of communities with their own distinct needs, interests, goals, habits, and special contributions.

Jim Cooper at West Georgia Regional Library System The Evergreen community includes some very dedicated developers, but it also includes people such as Robert Soullier of Mohawk College, who took the time to gussy up the recording of the most recent Evergreen webinar, and the librarians who on- and off-list, in webinars, and in small-group discussions, and in opening their libraries to Equinox, have offered many thoughtful and important ideas about the direction of Evergreen’s development and documentation, and training. In this picture you can see Jim Cooper of West Georgia Regional Library System, who recently opened his library and set aside plenteous time to help Equinox and PINES staff better understand his library’s observations about Evergreen.

Out in the field, I hear some refreshing twists on some of the hallowed assumptions about OSS development — or for that matter, development at large.

For example, in a variety of jobs in my past I’ve heard developers complain that nobody participates in testing software.

But in talking to librarians, it’s clear that call is often too fuzzy and open-ended. Narrow the request to specific features-for example, “ensure the new Frobbinator displays the Doomaflatchies in the staff client”-and at least a few willing victims will gladly step up to the plate. I’m hoping with the next release of 1.4 we can put out a laundry-list of things to test and ask people to commit to bits and pieces they have the most at stake in.

Because it does take a village — and that village has many interesting neighborhoods.

– Karen, Equinox Community Librarian

Equinox at Midwinter ‘08

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

Bob Molyneux, Bill Erickson, and I (Brad LaJeunesse) will be traveling to Philadelphia for ALA Midwinter ‘08. I’ve described this trip as sublime and viral to some folks because we don’t have a booth or really any substantial official presence at the conference. We have numerous meetings scheduled with libraries interested in Evergreen, and if you’d like to arrange a time to chat, just drop us an email at info@esilibrary.com.

We’ll also be at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, which is a very short walk from the conference center, admiring works such as The Gross Clinic on Sunday the 13th from 2:30 - 5:00 PM if anyone wishes to join us.

Access Really Is All That and A Bag Of Chips

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

I still have food on the brain … more on that later.

They count by tens up northBill and I spent a heady 5-ish days in Victoria, BC a week ago attending Access 2007, and let me tell you, it was a wonderful experience. It’s the first time I haven’t presented while at a conference I’m attending, and it was amazingly relaxing and stimulating at the same time. I think I’ll try to do that again from time to time.

On a sad note, this was the first Access that Art Rhyno has not attended in 10 years. I have a theory that the real reason Art didn’t come this year is that there’s actually a rule about having all the smart library people in one place, similar to how at least one Cabinet member has to leave town whenever everyone in the executive and legislative branches of the US government gets together for a big party. In other words, Art’s our Secretary of the Veterans Affairs. (Yes, I know that Secretary of Homeland Security is actually last in line, but I won’t compare Art to the current incumbent. This joke only needs to go so far … ;) )

Now, back to the happy. First we must discuss the really important stuff: food. That was, by far and in any industry, the best conference food I’ve ever had occasion to consume. A colleague of mine was joking that he usually tries to lose some weight at conferences because the food tends to be less than stellar, so, well, why not? Well, not this time.

Now that I’ve got the high priority information out of the way I can discuss a bit of the content. There were several themes that ran through a great many of the hackfest projects, presentations and thunder talks, chief among these being

OMG! Mark Leggott is at UPEI!Mark Leggott moved to UPEI in October of 2006

The rabbits are breading like rabbitsUVic has tonnes (that’s metric, ’cause it’s in Canada) of rabbits on campus

And I though Brad was the only one...A surprising number of attendees know about and appreciate the ins and outs of goat farming

Evergreen ... yeah, you knew it was comingA certain Open Source ILS

OK, so the first three of those were jokes (though the audience did vote to name 2007 Year of the Leggott at the close of the conference) but the last one was just as unexpected — at least to me — as the goat farming.

Wednesday — Hackfest

It started at the Hackfest, where the two proposals for Evergreen projects (Evergreen implementation in a day (and a bit) and Evergreen settings tester & fixer-upper (Evergreen STFU), neither of which were proposed by Bill or me) garnered a nearly embarrassing level of support, with the longest lists of interested (though not ultimately participating) parties of any projects proposed. A good amount of useful code came of those projects, but that’s a topic for another day, and perhaps another poster.

That evening we were all treated to a lovely reception at a local brewpub where I ate my fill of some of the most beautifully and gently smoked salmon I’ve ever had. Yeah … the food. Again. We also had the chance to answer many questions about Evergreen and Equinox, as well as catch up with colleagues we haven’t seen in person for quite some time. We met some of the new and growing BC Pines central staff for the first time; they are excited and ready to go.

Thursday

On the first day of the conference proper there was a talk entitled ILS Options for Academic Libraries which covered both the major proprietary players left in the market as well as Evergreen, its status and progress, and near term viability for use in Canadian academic libraries. There was a good bit of Q&A surrounding the Evergreen portion of this talk, and the crowd seemed very interested.

That evening we had dinner at Los Taquitos, a local Mexican restaurant. I was disappointed to learn that apparently there’s been a run on poblano peppers in BC, but I enjoyed my chorizo con huevo none the less. Ask Brandon Uhlman from BC Pines about the spicy chorizo from Los Taquitos sometime if you need a good laugh.

A little while later, and after giving up on bridged ad-hoc wireless from Brandon’s laptop, Dan Scott, Brandon Uhlman, Bill and I met down in the conference hotel bar to continue hacking on our hackfest projects. There was beer, Pavement and Superchunk; some records were processed and bugs were fixed; and a good time was had by all.

Then … we slept.

Friday

The first presentation of the morning was from Ben Hyman of BC Pines and Beth Jefferson of BiblioCommons. Ben focused on the Evergreen implementation that is in progress consortially for libraries in BC. He discussed the causes of urgency (30+ ILSs, many of which have reached EOL already, or are on the home stretch, and some libraries that have yet to be automated), the process by which Evergreen was selected, and the reasons for that selection. Beth then gave a good overview of BiblioCommons and a live demo, which was my first glimpse of BiblioCommons beyond wireframes. BiblioCommons is being offered through the Provincial government as an opt-in add-on for any BC libraries that are interested.

Certainly the biggest new announcement of the day, and probably of the conference, came at around 11:15am from Dan Scott, the most recently added Evergreen commit-team member. He announced the existence of Project Conifer simultaneously during a thunder talk and on his blog, which is a project between Laurentian University, Windsor University and McMaster to build and maintain a shared, consortial Evergreen instance. Dan has been tapped to be the project manager for this endeavor. Go LU, Windsor and McMaster, and go Dan!

They look like a menswear commercial, eh?
Visual interlude — my posse striking a pose by the bay.

The conference day ended with Birds of a Feather sessions proposed and requested by attendees. Again, Evergreen was requested, and again, not by Bill or me. (You really don’t have any idea how great that feels, by the way. :) ) We sat next to the Solr BoF, and although they were louder, we outlasted them. To anyone that missed the Wax Museum tour because the BoF session ran a bit long, please accept my humblest apologies. Kidding aside, and on a personal note, thank you for the chance to put names and mailing-list persona’s to faces. Some of you were exactly as I had expected. Some of you were not. I leave it as an exercise for the reader (and the attendees) to decide who is in which group, but I enjoyed meeting all of you.

Then we had an adventure. Suffice it to say that it involved several sets of nearly identical directions, all of which failed to bring us to our initially chosen destination. So, instead of beer we went for Thai. I had some very excellent medium spicy seafood Pad Thai (or Putt Thai, as it was Romanized in this particular establishment), and if you ever find yourself craving some good rice noodles or curry while killing time in downtown Victoria, I heartily recommend the Thai Bistro.

The Thai and the talk of documentation and acquisitions wore us out, so we called it an early night after that.

Saturday

Closing day was very laid back. I came downstairs to a beautiful breakfast (yes, I truly am a fan of delicious flavor) and listened to some interesting usability related talks from Peter Binkley (design oriented) and Jane Burke (user behavior research).

Roy Tennant (or as we in the know call him, “Ray”), newly minted OCLC Senior Program Officer, rounded out the conference by talking about OCLC’s new Worldcat Grid initiative, a developing attempt to expose many of OCLC’s internal web services to the outside world. Because it’s Roy pitching this, I’m more than willing to wait and see what comes of this before passing any judgement for or against, but while there are no “explicit revenue goals” (as mentioned by Roy and corroborated by Bess) I’m not going to hold my breath for free beer — see: xISBN.

Epilogue

Thus ended the my first library conference in which I did not actively participate (excepting the hackfest, of course, but that’s kinda the point of hackfest, now isn’t it?). Like I said, I need to make a point of doing that once in a while. Thanks, Victoria and UVic, for a wonderful time. Hopefully I’ll see all of you next year when Access takes over Project Conifer’s own McMaster University.

–miker