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Going back to the original topic here a bit . . 
 
> Is their any hope for those of us who 
> rely on our Expect-monkeys in III?

There are, of course, a number of marco-type programs out there that can emulate key strokes and mouse clicks in order to interface with the Millennium Java client.  You could probably use these to achieve the same automated tasks your Expect scripts were performing.
 
I don't really do this stuff myself, but one of our ILS admins here uses a free application called AutoIT to automate loading of data into Innovative by way of the Millennium Java client.
 
--Dave
 
-------------------
David Walker
Library Web Services Manager
California State University
http://xerxes.calstate.edu

________________________________

From: Code for Libraries on behalf of Ken Irwin
Sent: Wed 5/14/2008 4:02 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Life after Expect



Is their any hope for those of us who rely on our Expect-monkeys in III?
My most important Expect scripts use the create-list function, and I
hope that'll stay around for a while. But I'm sure they'll eventually go
away too.

Has III shown any interest in building in their own macros/automation
features to do the sorts of tasks for which we rely on Expect?

Ken

Kyle Banerjee wrote:
> Last week, III announced that they are removing a number of
> circulation functions from the telnet menus in a software update that
> became generally available this month. From what I've been able to
> surmise, functions that will be removed include placing holds and
> checking things in or or out. Removing these menu options will break
> scripts that have been in use for years at institutions in our
> consortium, and lots more staff time will be required to perform
> certain tasks after some systems are upgraded.
>
> Apparently, III recently discovered that a bug involving holds was
> caused by the character-based system, but it is also related to a
> desire to port everything to Millennium. Based on the reasoning behind
> the announcement, future updates are likely result in other mission
> critical scripts breaking as other character-based functionality is
> deprecated.
>
> Just a reminder of the risks of relying on automation that depend on
> interfaces that are losing vendor support.
>
> kyle
>

--
Ken Irwin
Reference Librarian
Thomas Library, Wittenberg University