Transformations in Technology:

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TRANSFORMATIONS IN TECHNOLOGY: Marshall Breeding Independent Consult, Author, Founder and Publisher, Library Technology Guides http://www.librarytechnology.org/ http://twitter.com/mbreeding September 25, 2012 MODERNIZING THE TOOLS TO SUSTAIN TRANSFORMED LIBRARY STRATEGIES LIANZA Conference 2012

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Marshall Breeding Independent Consult, Author, Founder and Publisher, Library Technology Guides http://www.librarytechnology.org/ http://twitter.com/mbreeding. Transformations in Technology: . Modernizing the tools to sustain transformed library strategies. September 25, 2012. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Transformations in Technology:

Page 1: Transformations in Technology:

TRANSFORMATIONS IN TECHNOLOGY:

Marshall BreedingIndependent Consult, Author, Founder and Publisher, Library Technology Guideshttp://www.librarytechnology.org/http://twitter.com/mbreeding

September 25, 2012

MODERNIZING THE TOOLS TO SUSTAIN TRANSFORMED LIBRARY STRATEGIES

LIANZA Conference 2012

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Summary Marshall Breeding, based on his ongoing research, will present some of

the latest trends in the realm of library technologies that help libraries sustain their services in the most efficient and innovative ways.  All types of libraries face major challenges introduced by ever increasing emphasis on electronic and digital content, in addition to their ongoing support of print materials in addition to ever-heightening customer expectations.  One of the significant recent activities in library technology involves the emergence of a new genre of library management platforms built to support complex, multi-format library collections.  Interest in broad index-based discovery services also continues to build.  One of the anticipated dynamics in the next cycle involves possibilities of recoupling discovery services with library management systems.  Other trends include evolving strategies to support easier access to e-books and full integration of those services into online catalogs and discovery interfaces.  As libraries see a reshaping of their collections and services, the supporting technologies likewise are under significant transformation. 

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Library Technology Guides

www.librarytechnolog

y.org

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Automation in NZ Academic Libraries

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Automation in NZ Public Libraries

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Mergers and Acquisitionshttp://www.librarytechnology.org/automationhistory.pl

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Overarching concern

Library success depends on technical infrastructure well

aligned with its strategic missions

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Key Context: Each type of library faces unique challenges

Academic: Emphasis on subscribed electronic resources

Public: Engaged in the management of print collections Dramatic increase in interest in E-books

School: Age-appropriate resources (print and Web), textbook and media management

Special: Enterprise knowledge management (Corporate, Law, Medical, etc.)

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Key Context: Libraries in Transition Academic Shift from Print > Electronic

E-journal transition largely complete Circulation of print collections slowing E-books now in play (consultation > reading)

Public: Emphasis on Customer Engagement Increased pressure on physical facilities Increased circulation of print collections Dramatic increase in interest in e-books

All libraries: Need better tools for access to complex multi-format

collections Strong emphasis on digitizing local collections Demands for enterprise integration and interoperability

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Key Text: Changed expectations in metadata management Moving away from individual record-by-record creation Life cycle of metadata

Metadata follows the supply chain, improved and enhanced along the way as needed

Manage metadata in bulk when possible E-book collections

Highly shared metadata knowledge bases drive new-generation automation

Great interest in moving toward semantic web and open linked data Very little progress in linked data for operational systems AACR2 > RDA MARC > RDF & Linked Data (Library of Congress Bibliographic

Framework Transition Initiative)

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Key Context: Technologies in transition

Client / Server > Web-based computing Beyond Web 2.0

Integration of social computing into core infrastructure

Local computing shifting to cloud platforms Application Service Provider offerings standard New expectations for multi-tenant software-as-a-

service Full spectrum of devices

full-scale / net book / tablet / mobile Mobile the current focus, but is only one example of

device and interface cycles

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Fundamental technology shift Mainframe computing Client/Server Cloud Computing

http://www.flickr.com/photos/carrick/61952845/http://soacloudcomputing.blogspot.com/2008/10/cloud-computing.html

http://www.javaworld.com/javaworld/jw-10-2001/jw-1019-jxta.html

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Software as a Service Multi Tennant SaaS is the modern

approach One copy of the code base serves multiple

sites Software functionality delivered entirely

through Web interfaces No workstation clients

Upgrades and fixes deployed universally Usually in small increments

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Data as a service SaaS provides opportunity for highly shared data

models WorldCat: one globally shared copy that serves all

libraries Primo Central: central index of articles maintained by

Ex Libris shared by all libraries implementing Primo / Primo Central

KnowledgeWorks database of e-journal holdings shared among all customers of Serials Solutions products

General opportunity to move away from library-by-library metadata management to globally shared workflows

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Strategic Cooperation and Resource sharing

Efforts on many fronts to cooperate and consolidate

Many regional consortia merging (Example: Illinois Heartland Library System)

State-wide or national implementations New Zealand: Kōtui, Te Puna

Software-as-a-service or “cloud” based implementations Many libraries share computing

infrastructure and data resources

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Open Source Library Management Systems Major thread in library systems

development Koha Evergreen Kuali OLE

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Koha Originally developed in New Zealand First full-featured open source ILS Worldwide presence

Solid position in North America: United States, Canada

Dominant in many developing nations: Philippines, Argentina

Ranks among the top integrated library systems worldwide

Strong community of developers and commercial support organizations

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Koha Libraries Worldwide

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Koha in the United States

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Open Systems Achieving openness has risen as the key

driver behind library technology strategies Libraries need to do more with their data Ability to improve customer experience and

operational efficiencies Demand for Interoperability Open source – full access to internal

program of the application Open API’s – expose programmatic

interfaces to data and functionality

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Mobile Computing

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Challenge: More integrated approach to information and service delivery Library Web sites offer a menu of unconnected silos:

Books: Library OPAC (ILS online catalog module) Search the Web site Articles: Aggregated content products, e-journal collections OpenURL linking services E-journal finding aids (Often managed by link resolver) Subject guides (e.g. Springshare LibGuides) Local digital collections

ETDs, photos, rich media collections Metasearch engines Discovery Services – often just another choice among many

All searched separately

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Online Catalog

Books, Journals, and Media at the Title Level

Not in scope: Articles Book Chapters Digital objects Web site content Etc.

Scope of SearchSearch:

Search Results

ILS Data

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Next-gen Catalogs or Discovery Interface (2002-2009) Single search box Query tools

Did you mean Type-ahead

Relevance ranked results (for some content sources)

Faceted navigation Enhanced visual displays

Cover art Summaries, reviews,

Recommendation services

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Discovery Interface search modelSearch: Digital

Collections

ProQuest

EBSCOhost

…MLA

Bibliography

ABC-CLIO

Search Results

Real-time query and responses

ILS Data

Local Index

Metasearch Engine

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Discovery Products

http://www.librarytechnology.org/discovery.pl

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Differentiation in Discovery Products increasingly specialized

between public and academic libraries Public libraries: emphasis on engagement

with physical collection + e-books Academic libraries: concern for discovery of

heterogeneous material types, especially books + articles + digital objects

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Discovery from Local to Web-scale Initial products focused on technology

AquaBrowser, Endeca, Primo, Encore, VuFind, LIBERO Uno, Civica Sorcer, Axiell Arena Mostly locally-installed software

Current phase is focused on pre-populated indexes that aim to deliver Web-scale discovery Primo Central (Ex Libris) Summon (Serials Solutions) WorldCat Local (OCLC) EBSCO Discovery Service (EBSCO) Encore Synergy (no index, though)

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Web-scale Index-based DiscoverySearch:

Digital Collections

Web Site ContentInstitution

al Repositori

es

…E-Journals

Reference Sources

Search Results

Pre-built harvesting and indexing

Consolidated Index

ILS Data

Aggregated Content packages

(2009- present)

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Web-scale Search ProblemSearch:

Search Results

Pre-built harvesting and indexing

Consolidated Index

???

Non Participating

Content SourcesProblem in how to deal with

resources not provided to ingest into consolidated index

Digital Collections

Web Site ContentInstitution

al Repositori

es

…E-Journals

ILS Data

Aggregated Content packages

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Populating Web-scale index with full text

Citations or structured metadata provide key data to power search & retrieval and faceted navigation

Indexing full text of content amplifies access Every title, phrase, term becomes an

access point Important to understand depth indexing

Currency, dates covered, full-text or citation Many other factors

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Full-text Book indexing HathiTrust: 11 million volumes, 5.3

million titles, 263,000 serial titles, 3.5 billion pages

HathiTrust in Discovery Indexes Primo Central (Jan 20, 2012) [previously

indexed only metadata] EBSCO Discovery Service (Sept 8 2011) WorldCat Local (Sept 7, 2011) Summon (Mar 28, 2011)

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Challenge for Relevancy Technically feasible to index hundreds of

millions or billions of records through Lucene or SOLR

Difficult to order records in ways that make sense

Many fairly equivalent candidates returned for any given query

Must rely on use-based and social factors to improve relevancy rankings

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Challenges for Collection Coverage To work effectively, discovery services

need to cover comprehensively the body of content represented in library collections

What about publishers that do not participate?

Is content indexed at the citation or full-text level?

What are the restrictions for non-authenticated users?

How can libraries understand the differences in coverage among competing services?

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Evaluating Index-based Discovery Services Intense competition: how well the index covers the

body of scholarly content stands as a key differentiator

Difficult to evaluate based on numbers of items indexed alone.

Important to ascertain now your library’s content packages are represented by the discovery service.

Important to know what items are indexed by citation and which are full text

Important to know whether the discovery service favors the content of any given publisher

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Open Discovery Initiative NISO Work Group to Develop Standards

and Recommended Practices for Library Discovery Services Based on Indexed Search

Informal meeting called at ALA Annual 2011

Co-Chaired by Marshall Breeding and Jenny Walker

Term: Dec 2011 – May 2013

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Balance of ConstituentsLibraries

Publishers

Service Providers

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Marshall Breeding, Vanderbilt UniversityJamene Brooks-Kieffer, Kansas State University Laura Morse, Harvard UniversityKen Varnum, University of Michigan

Sara Brownmiller, University of OregonLucy Harrison, College Center for Library Automation (D2D liaison/observer)Michele Newberry

Lettie Conrad, SAGE PublicationsBeth LaPensee, ITHAKA/JSTOR/PorticoJeff Lang, Thomson Reuters

Linda Beebe, American Psychological Assoc

Aaron Wood, Alexander Street Press

Jenny Walker, Ex Libris GroupJohn Law, Serials SolutionsMichael Gorrell, EBSCO Information Services

David Lindahl, University of Rochester (XC)Jeff Penka, OCLC (D2D liaison/observer)

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ODI Project Goals: Identify … needs and requirements of the three

stakeholder groups in this area of work. Create recommendations and tools to streamline

the process by which information providers, discovery service providers, and librarians work together to better serve libraries and their users.

Provide effective means for librarians to assess the level of participation by information providers in discovery services, to evaluate the breadth and depth of content indexed and the degree to which this content is made available to the user.

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Timeline

Milestone Target Date Status

Appointment of working group December 2011

Approval of charge and initial work plan March 2012

Agreement on process and tools June 2012

Completion of information gathering October 2012

Completion of initial draft January 2013

Completion of final draft May 2013

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ODI Survey: www.surveymonkey.com/s/QBXZXSB

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The rise of e-books Academic libraries: e-books included in

aggregated content packages E-books used primarily for research and

consultation, not long reading Public Libraries: Subscriptions to e-book

services that provide an outsourced collection of loanable e-books

K-12 Schools, Colleges, Universities: interest in electronic textbooks

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Integrating e-Books into Library Automation Infrastructure

Current approach involves mostly outsourced arrangements

Collections licensed wholesale from single provider

Hand-off to DRM and delivery systems of providers

Loading of MARC records into local catalog with linking mechanisms

No ability to see availability status of e-books from the library’s online catalog or discovery interface

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E-book Technology Issues Access to materials controlled through Digital Rights

Management Closed ecosystems that control content through

identity management and rights policies Imposes significant overhead on the user

experience: Download an install DRM components Establish user credentials in site trusted by DRM Works only with devices that comply with DRM

restrictions Library backlash against DRM, but stands as current

reality

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New Generation Management

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Appropriate Automation Infrastructure

Current automation products out of step with current realities

Increasing proportions of library collection funds spent on electronic content

Majority of automation efforts support print activities Management of e-content continues with inadequate

supporting infrastructure New discovery solutions help with access to e-

content Library users expect more engaging socially aware

interfaces for Web and mobile

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Library Automation in the Cloud Almost all library automation vendors offer

some form of “cloud-based” services Server management moves from library to

Vendor Subscription-based business model Comprehensive annual subscription

payment Offsets local server purchase and maintenance Offsets some local technology support

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Leveraging the Cloud Moving legacy systems to hosted

services provides some savings to individual institutions but does not result in dramatic transformation

Globally shared data and metadata models have the potential to achieve new levels of operational efficiencies and more powerful discovery and automation scenarios that improve the position of libraries overall.

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Is the status quo sustainable? ILS for management of (mostly) print Duplicative financial systems between library and campus Electronic Resource Management (non-integrated with ILS) OpenURL Link Resolver w/ knowledge base for access to

full-text electronic articles Digital Collections Management platforms (CONTENTdm,

DigiTool, etc.) Institutional Repositories (DSpace, Fedora, etc.) Discovery-layer services for broader access to library

collections No effective integration services / interoperability among

disconnected systems, non-aligned metadata schemes

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Integrated (for print) Library System

Circulation

BIB

Staff Interfaces:

Holding / Items

CircTransact User Vendor Policies$$$

Funds

Cataloging Acquisitions Serials OnlineCatalog

Public Interfaces:

Interfaces

BusinessLogic

DataStores

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LMS / ERM: Fragmented Model

Circulation

BIB

Staff Interfaces:

Holding / Items

CircTransactUserVendor Policies$$$

Funds

CatalogingAcquisitionsSerials OnlineCatalog

Public Interfaces:

Application Programming Interfaces`

LicenseManagement

LicenseTerms

E-resourceProcurement

VendorsE-JournalTitles

Protocols: CORE

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Common approach for ERM

Circulation

BIB

Staff Interfaces:

Holding / Items

CircTransactUserVendor Policies$$$

Funds

CatalogingAcquisitionsSerials OnlineCatalog

Public Interfaces:

Application Programming Interfaces

Budget License Terms

Titles / Holdings

Vendors

Access Details

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BibliographicDatabase

Library System A

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

BibliographicDatabase

Library System B

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

BibliographicDatabase

Library System C

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

BibliographicDatabase

Library System D

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

BibliographicDatabase

Library System F

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

BibliographicDatabase

Library System E

Branch 1

Branch 2

Branch 3

Branch 4

Branch 5

Branch 6

Branch 7

Branch 8

HoldingsMain Facility

Resource Sharing Application

BibliographicDatabase

Discovery and Request Management Routines

Staff Fulfillment Tools

Inter-System Communications

NCIP SIP ISO

ILLZ39.50

NCIP

NCIP

NCIP

NCIP

NCIP

NCIP

Search:

Consortial Resource Sharing System

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Gaps in Automation Almost no systematic automation

support for references and research services Customer Relationship Management?

Resource sharing / Interlibrary loan management

Collection development support

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Comprehensive Resource Management No longer sensible to use different software

platforms for managing different types of library materials

ILS + ERM + OpenURL Resolver + Digital Asset management, etc. very inefficient model

Flexible platform capable of managing multiple type of library materials, multiple metadata formats, with appropriate workflows

Support for management of metadata in bulk Continuous lifecycle chain initiated before

publication

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Library Services Platform Library-specific software. Designed to help libraries

automate their internal operations, manage collections, fulfillment requests, and deliver services

Services Service oriented architecture Exposes Web services and other API’s Facilitates the services libraries offer to their users

Platform General infrastructure for library automation Consistent with the concept of Platform as a Service Library programmers address the APIs of the platform to

extend functionality, create connections with other systems, dynamically interact with data

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Library Services Platform Characteristics

Highly Shared data models Knowledgebase architecture Some may take hybrid approach to accommodate

local data stores Delivered through software as a service

Multi-tenant Unified workflows across formats and media Flexible metadata management

MARC – Dublin Core – VRA – MODS – ONIX New structures not yet invented

Open APIs for extensibility and interoperability

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Consolidated indexUnified Presentation LayerSearch:

Digital Coll

ProQuest

EBSCO…

JSTOR

Other Resour

ces

New Library Management Model

`API Layer

Library Services Platform

LearningManageme

nt

Enterprise ResourcePlanning

StockManageme

nt

Self-Check /

Automated Return

Authentication

Service

Smart Cad /

Payment systems

Discovery

Service

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Development / Deployment perspective

Beginning of a new cycle of transition Over the course of the next decade,

academic libraries will replace their current legacy products with new platforms

Not just a change of technology but a substantial change in the ways that libraries manage their resources and deliver their services

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Traditional Proprietary Commercial ILS Aleph, Voyager, Millennium, Symphony, Polaris BOOK-IT, DDELibra, Libra.se, Open Galaxy LIBERO, Amlib, Spydus, NCS

Traditional Open Source ILS Evergreen, Koha

New generation Library Services Platforms Ex Libris Alma Kuali OLE (Enterprise, not cloud) OCLC WorldShare Management Services, Serials Solutions Intota Innovative Interfaces Sierra (evolving)

Competing Models of Library Automation

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Convergence Discovery and Management solutions will

increasingly be implemented as matched sets Ex Libris: Primo / Alma Serials Solutions: Summon / Intota OCLC: WorldCat Local / WorldShare Platform Except: Kuali OLE, EBSCO Discovery Service

Both depend on an ecosystem of interrelated knowledge bases

API’s exposed to mix and match, but efficiencies and synergies are lost

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Concluding thoughts Urgency to align technology with library

missions Innovate locally Collaborate aggressively collectively Drive strategic development

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Questions and discussion