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Open source and ILSs Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Open source and ILSs Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

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Open source and ILSs Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009. Open source dates: Koha – 2000 Nelsonville 2002 Evergreen – 2004 PINES 2006. What happened on March 13, 2007?. http://www.librarytechnology.org/automationhistory.pl?SID=20080419458068847. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Open source and ILSs Bob Molyneux

Rowan Public LibrarySalisbury, North Carolina

July 30, 2009

Page 2: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Open source dates:

• Koha – 2000•Nelsonville 2002

• Evergreen – 2004•PINES 2006

Page 3: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What happened on March 13, 2007?

Page 4: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009
Page 5: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

http://www.librarytechnology.org/automationhistory.pl?SID=20080419458068847

Page 6: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Here the market divides1. Traditional ILS vendors

•Terms:•“legacy”•“proprietary”

•Two types:•Founders still around•Founders have sold out to VCs

Page 7: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

1. Traditional Vendors (continued)

Characteristics:•Compiled code (machine readable code)•Intellectual property laws apply•They own the code and you rent it.

•Advantages•“turn key”•comprehensive solution to many problems•documentation and support

Page 8: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

1. Traditional Vendors (continued)

Disadvantages•Slow development cycle•One size may not fit all•Who owns your data?•Restrictive licenses•Forced migrations•vendor lockin

Page 9: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

2. Open source

Page 10: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Reading assignment:

Eric S. Raymond: The Cathedral & the Bazaar

Page 11: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What does “open source” mean?

“A set of principles and practices about how to write software the most important of which is that the source code is openly available....”[additionally] “...one should have the right to use it.”

Wikipedia, “Open source”

Page 12: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What does “source code” mean?“human readable”

What does “compiled code” mean?machine readable

Page 13: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Advantages of the open source method Easy customization for your own local situation Fast development - “release early, release often” Cost—it's free. can have about the same support as proprietary software

Page 14: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Disadvantages of open source

•It's free but it may not be cheap•Support—if you can't, who supports it?

Page 15: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What happens if your ILS won't do something you need?

Proprietary•Wait until the next version

Open source•Do it yourself (or with others in the community)•Either pay someone yourself or get others to contribute •Cajole, persuade, or charm someone into doing it

Page 16: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

State of the OSS US public library marketabout 1-2% ,give or take

no figures for the academic market but they are assuredly lower

Page 17: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

But there is a new wind blowing:• Evergreen

• Indiana Open Source ILS Initiative• Sitka• Michigan Library Consortium

• Koha• MassCat• INCOLSA• WALDO

Page 18: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

OSS opens the way for us to change libraries and their interaction with our users

Evergreen offers one way

Page 19: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

ILSs reflect their beginningsEvergreen started on PINES

Large, resource-sharing consortium with a single catalog

Universal borrower card

Page 20: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What have we learned from the PINES experience?

• Library users LIKE access to the large virtual library

• They don't care about our politics or the difficulties under the hood

• They will bypass libraries without access to consortial resources in favor of libraries with that access

• Welcome to the long-tail, Google world

Page 21: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Silos Separate, barely communicating collections of information

Logic of IT is to break down silos and to integrate these collections

We have these persistent silos for three reasons:Legacy vendor's lack of visionOur lack of vision and/or politics

Think locally, act locallyUntil now, no software to run these large consortia

Page 22: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Traditional cost modelLibrary A Library B Library C

Module X $ $ $

Module Y $ $

Module Z $

Page 23: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Open Source Cost Model Library A Library B Library C

Module X $ X X

Module Y X $ X

Module Z $ X X

Page 24: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Evergreen design parameters

•Had to handle PINES•40+ PL systems, 250+ outlets•14+ million circs•on a statewide resource-sharing network•and scale up from there

Page 25: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Architecture

Open Service Resource Format (OpenSRF)Service oriented architecture

Modern, modular, scalable

The only ILS software that can currently run large and distributed resource-sharing networks.

Page 26: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

FullfILLment (tm)

• Attempt to get past the silos to one dynamic, real time search mechanism

• Evergreen backend, with opportunistic connectors to legacy vendor software

Page 27: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

What other futures are possible in an open source world?

Modular—not one size fits all•More open source choices, perhaps more specialized

•Index Data•VU Find•Blacklight

Mix and match•Why not open source and proprietary?•Code sharing

Page 28: Open source and ILSs  Bob Molyneux Rowan Public Library Salisbury, North Carolina July 30, 2009

Eric S. Raymond: The Cathedral & the Bazaar

Thanks...

Bob [email protected]