Hi Eric, How much work is it for you to write and document a minimal application around your toolbox that would actually work well out of the box, teach others how to use MyLibrary as a toolbox, and get people excited? Alternatively, do you have users of MyLibrary 3.0 as a toolbox who are willing to share their stuff and testify to the utility of MyLibrary? -Raymond Eric Lease Morgan wrote: > One of the biggest problems we have been having with MyLibrary 3.0 is > getting across to people that MyLibrary is more like a toolbox and > not a turnkey system. It is a set of Perl modules used to create > digital library collections and services. It is not a program. > > One one hand, by turning the system into purely object-oriented Perl > modules we have been able to exploit all sorts of cool things with > MyLibrary: SRU interfaces, OAI interfaces, importing and exporting in > various formats (MARC, RSS, email, RDF, etc.). At the same time > people seem to be expecting a turn-key application. A similar > discussion seems to be happening on one of the DSpace lists. > > Given the low numbers of people in Library Land who can write (Perl) > scripts, this could be a serious impediment to adoption. > > In your opinions, what might be some resolutions or work-arounds to > this problem? > > -- > Eric Lease Morgan > University Libraries of Notre Dame > -- -- Raymond Yee 2195 Hearst (250-22) Technology Architect UC Berkeley Interactive University Project Berkeley, CA 94720-3810 [log in to unmask] 510-642-0476 (work) http://iu.berkeley.edu/rdhyee 413-541-5683 (fax)