Injustice - Developers Among Us (SciFiDevCon 2024)
How's it Going?
1. An open source puzzle How the pieces all fell into place Front Row (left to right): Ben Shum- Software Coordinator, [email_address] Melissa Lefebvre- Project Manager, [email_address] Kate Sheehan- Implementation Coordinator, [email_address] Back Row (left to right): Amy Terlaga- Assistant Director, [email_address] Mike Simonds- CEO, [email_address]
36. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Master Database Slave Database Slave Databases Web Server Web Server
37. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Master Database Slave Database Slave Databases Web Server Web Server Evergreen Evergreen
38. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Master Database Slave Database Slave Databases Web Server Web Server Evergreen Evergreen
39. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Slave Database Slave Databases Web Server Evergreen
40. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Slave Databases Web Server Evergreen Slave Databases
41. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Slave Databases Web Server Evergreen Master Database
42. Future Ideas Internet Web Server Evergreen Slave Databases Web Server Evergreen Master Database Web Server
43. Future Ideas Internet Database Slave Database Slave Databases Evergreen Evergreen Evergreen Web Server Web Server Web Server Master Database Master Database Slave Databases Evergreen Web Server
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bindermichi/3473495065/ For libraries, OS is new and cutting edge and cool.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/90146003@N00/666491202/ New is exciting, but change always brings a little FUD. A little FUD (like a little cheese) is a good thing - it’s how we know what kinds of questions to ask and what people need extra assurance about. A lot of FUD (unlike a lot of cheese) is what we want to avoid.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/dayataglance/2282457985/ So, how we combat FUD and built excitement depends on who we’re working with. We’re a consortium of public and school libraries and we’re working with these four small development partners before we bring up the rest of our libraries.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sixmilliondollardan/3488012638/sizes/l/ our members range from small public libraries to suburban school libraries to city libraries. their patrons have online accounts and expectations of staff and patrons are high. they want, need and deserve a better ILS.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zach_manchester/2295839628/ Our dev partners are small and don’t have public OPACs. They’re open to trying something REALLY new. this is a bigger change for them than it is for our members, but it will be a very easy sell to the public (search for books from home is a no brainer and they won’t have any “your account signin has changed to contend with). This will be a huge leap forward.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/practicalowl/392894653/ We’re going to turn them into mad ILS scientists.
The advantage of having tiny libraries as dev partners: beginner’s mind. library technology has been the tail wagging the dog for so long, it’s helpful to have fresh perspective on what an ILS ought to do and how.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/leecullivan/2098453701/ As we work with the dev partners, we’re finding that we need to keep unwinding technology from policy. For small libraries that haven’t had the technology to offer certain services, it can be unclear what’s policy-driven and what’s tech-driven. For libraries that have been enmeshed with an ILS, that distinction is also unclear, so this is good practice for the big migration and can help us shape our development requests.