VALA2006 Session 15 Brooks

VALA2006If you can’t buy it, build it: adapting a generic commercial application to meet specific organisation goals

VALA 2006 CONCURRENT SESSION 15: Application Customisation and Open Source
Friday 10 February 2006, 14:35 – 15:05
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2006-proceedings/vala2006-session-15-brooks

VALA Peer Reviewed PaperTony Brooks

Training/Website Services Officer, City Library, Melbourne, Victoria
http://www.citylibrary.org.au

Zan Li

IT Services Officer, City Library, Melbourne, Victoria
http://www.citylibrary.org.au

Sarah Field

Information Services Coordinator, City Library, Melbourne, Victoria
http://www.citylibrary.org.au

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blob posts about this session: #VALA2006

Abstract

What do you do if you need solutions to ensure the equitable use of computing facilities in a public context, have pre-purchased a commercial package to ensure this happens but realised that due to software compatibility issues beyond your control it will not function at present? The answer for City Library was to utilise the technical, logistical and project management skills that existed in-house, use a Microsoft product and transform it into a robust automated computer booking system with the features that were needed in less than three months. This paper outlines the steps that were taken by the City Library Information Services Team in developing that system including the strategic, technical, training and operational challenges that were encountered and how they were overcome.

 

VALA2006 Session 14 Laurie

VALA2006Reviving the past: the Early New Zealand Books Online Project at the University of Auckland Library

VALA 2006 CONCURRENT SESSION 14: Digitisation and Managing Digital Objects
Friday 10 February 2006, 14:35 – 15:05
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2006-proceedings/vala2006-session-14-laurie

VALA Peer Reviewed PaperJohn Laurie

Subject Librarian, Anthropology, Applied Language Studies and Linguistics, University of Auckland Library
http://www.library.auckland.ac.nz

Please tag your comments, tweets, and blob posts about this session: #VALA2006

Abstract

The aim of the ENZB project at the University of Auckland Library is to provide a corpus of significant material published about New Zealand in the first two thirds of the 19th century. This paper looks at design parameters for the database and technical processes used to convert printed text and images to electronic format for presentation on the web. The ENZB is an in-house project using FineReader 7 OCR software to produce TEI-compliant XML files. b-engine software produces HTML for the web and links text to images of the original pages.