Sabtu, 19 September 2009

eBook readers need OpenURL resolvers

Everyone's talking about the next generation of eBook readers having larger reading area, more battery life and more readable screen. I'd give up all of those, however, for an eBook reader that had an internal OpenURL resolver.

OpenURL is the nifty protocol that libraries use to find the closest copy of a electronic resources and direct patrons to copies that the library might have already licensed from commercial parties. It's all about finding the version of a resource that is most accessible to the user, dynamically.

Say I've loaded 500 eBooks into my eBook reader: a couple of encyclopedias and dictionaries; a stack of books I was meant to read in school but only skimmed and have been meaning to get back to; current block-busters; guidebooks to the half-dozen countries I'm planning on visiting over the next couple of years; classics I've always meant to read (Tolstoy, Chaucer, Cervantes, Plato, Descartes, Nietzsche); and local writers (Baxter, Duff, Ihimaera, Hulme, ...). My eBooks by Nietzsche are going to refer to books by Descartes and Plato; my eBooks by Descartes are going to refer to books by Plato; my encyclopaedias are going to refer to pretty much everything; most of the works in translation are going to contain terms which I'm going to need help with (help which theencyclopedias and dictionaries can provide).

Ask yourself, though, whether you'd want to flick between works on the current generation of readers---very painful, since these devices are not designed for efficient navigation between eBooks, but linear reading of them. You can't follow links between them, of course, because on current systems links must point either with the same eBook or out on to the internet---pointing to other eBooks on the same device is verboten. OpenURL can solve this by catching those URLs and making them point to local copies of works (and thus available for free even when the internet is unavailable) where possible while still retaining their

Until eBook readers have a mechanism like this eBooks will be at most a replacement only for paperback novels---not personal libraries.

Selasa, 15 September 2009

Thoughts on koha


The Koha community is currently undergoing a spasm, with a company apparently forking the code.
As a result a bunch of people are looking at where the community should go from here and how it should be led. In particular the idea of a not-for-profit foundation has been floated and is to be discussed at a meeting early tomorrow morning .
My thoughts on this issue are pretty simple:
  • A not-for-profit is a fabulous idea
  • Reusing one of the existing software not-for-profit (Apache, Software in the Public Interest, etc) introduces a layer of non-library complexity. Libraries are have a long history with consortia, but tend to very much flock together with their own kind, I can see them being leary of a non-library entity.
  • A clear description of a forward-looking plan written in plain language that everyone can understand is vital to communicate the vision of the community, particularly to those currently on the fringes