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- Sounds like fun. Have you been to a BarCamp before?
- ...and who are the guys and gals who get blamed from nearly everything from the Internet being down to the coffee maker not working to someone stealing the Any Key. :-) If it doesn't work we...
- Regarding your suggestion of having publishers provide metadata in machine-readable form, here is what I wrote in 1999: "Finally, not to forget cataloguers, whose meticulous task is essential...
- Fernando, I had not seen your project before: it is very interesting and exciting. It looks as if we have adopted some of the same techniques (not to mention, javascript framework). I will read...
- Frederic, Thank you for your comment; I think these are good suggestions. In fact I think Biblios should allow callbacks at all important events in the record life cycle: on retrieval from z3950...
LibLime Developers' Blog
The LibLime Developers’ Blog is a place for LibLime’s programmers and analysts to briefly tear themselves away from specs and code and talk about free and open-source library software including Koha.
During her interview, one of the people who’s starting at LibLime next week asked for a list of books to purchase. I’ve put up a short reading list at LibraryThing and asked other LibLimers to contribute.
Of course, not everything worth reading is found in a book. Lin ... Continue reading »
Of course, not everything worth reading is found in a book. Lin ... Continue reading »
1 year ago
An answer: CiteULike @ http://www.citeulike.org/
Try a search on "koha"
From the CiteULike FAQ:
"What is CiteULike?
CiteULike is a free service to help you to store, organise and share the scholarly papers you are reading. When you see a paper on the web that interests you, you can click one button and have it added to your personal library. CiteULike automatically extracts the citation details, so there's no need to type them in yourself....CiteULike has a flexible filing system based on tags....Groups are collections of users creating shared libraries of links. They are useful for keeping track of a particular topic or what everyone else in a lab, class or academic department is reading. You can start your own groups and join existing groups."