As a nice offset for the ridiculous anti FLOSS FUD coming out of SirsiDynix

So I’m sure most of you are aware that SirsiDynix had a paper leaked on wikileaks (their official line now is that it was never meant to be private anyway, which directly contradicts what a lot of people had been told).

I don’t want to devote much space to it, since others have done so already in a much more eloquent manner than I could. But a good round up of the situation is on the code4lib wiki.

In direct contrast to fear riddled, fact lacking scare mongering I saw this nice writeup on a koha workshop in Malawi. This is the kind of thing that Free Software allows, and to my mind a story of people being enabled to help themselves wipes out all the FUD profit hungry corporates can throw at the FLOSS community.

Fun long weekend

It was Labour weekend in NZ this weekend and finally we got some nice weather.

Saturday Kahurangi was staying with Nan and Koro, so Laurel and Te Po Atarau went out to the hutt to pick him via craft2.0 and savemart. That gave me time to catch up a lot of Koha bits and pieces I had been meaning to do. They stayed out there for dinner and got back just in time to put the kids to bed.

Sunday started with Kahurangi and I going to the markets and then to Te Papa, which is a fairly regular thing for us. We had brunch at the markets and then a late lunch at Te Papa after looking at Kahu’s favourite exhibit the cane-os (volcanoes). That afternoon Kahu and I went to pick up Matt who had tickets to the Phoenix game and went off to the game. Little did we know it was going to be the game of the season with the Phoenix thrashing the Gold Coast 6-0. Kahurangi got a little bit freaked out when the first goal was scored, but he soon got used to it and started yelling “Penix” and clapping madly and saying “Stand up daddy”.

Today was another chilled day, the highlight of the day was when Kahu was reading me a story before bed. We got to a page with 3 penguins, 2 adult ones and a baby one (complete with all the fluffy feathers). Kahu said “Mummy, Daddy and that fat thing”.

All in all a good weekend.

Unsung Koha Heroes – 16

Pierrick Le Gall

Pierrick was only in the Koha community for a short period of time but he made a lasting impression. With 22 patches to his name and 2021 lines of code changed he made a worthy contribution to development.

He also served as Translation Manager and briefly as QA Manager before the company he worked for stopped Koha work. The contribs.koha.org site is also run on software he wrote.

Koha 3.0.4

Thanks to a huge amount of work from Henri Damien Laurent, and all the other developers Koha 3.0.4 has been released. This is a bugfix release on the stable tree.

You can download the release from http://koha-fr.org/content/diffusion-koha-version-304

From the release notes

With Koha 3, version numbering has been changed to use a method similar to
Perl’s:

major.minor[.revision[.build]]

* major:    one digit
* minor:    two-digit
* revision: two-digit
* build:    three-digit

This release of Koha 3.00.04 is versioned 3.00.04.019. Every database change
or significant enough code change requires an update to the ‘build’ number,
and developers will be able to easily upgrade their systems using the built-in
updater.

Koha 3.0.4 Release :

This release of Koha 3.0.4 includes 634 patches with bug fixes :

Acquisitions
Budgets were managed on receiveddate and not on orderdate

Search
Auto_Truncation is managed in zebra
ccl query
Results display improved : adding better display for subtitles
Updating Amazon support

Circulation
holdings support improved and holding queues
Branch transfer limits added
better use of CircControl and HomeOrHoldingBranch system preferences

UNIMARC Support
xsl stylesheets for unimarc

Authentication
Better support for LDAP connections

OPAC
Privacy : name on suggestions removed and replaced by library name
basket and shelves improvements

Overall improvements
Much work on better XHTML compliance
Some work on sorting lists
Improving translatability of all the strings (xsl and js)

There is also a list of bugs fixed, the list is too long to repeat here, but it is in the Release notes in the tarball, or in git.

UPDATED

Changed link to where the correct tarball lives

Changelog for Koha 3.2.0

This isn’t the authoritative list, Galen the release manager has a better idea than me, but this is what I think is going to be in the 3.2.0 release.

This was a question I was asked a few times, as the marketing coming out of Liblime was confusing people as to what is, and what is not in Koha.

So here’s what I know of

  • Offline Circulation
  • Callnumber splitting enhancements
  • Staff search results page enhancements
  • Email checkout slips
  • Hold request targeting
  • Overdue report enhancements
  • Default settings for patron notifications
  • Support for syndetics content
  • Holds on multiple items
  • Tag multiple items in the cart
  • Support for different OPAC interfaces, by url, so different libraries/branches can have different looks
  • OPAC display for UNIMARC using XSLT
  • Can now disable Amazon reviews, without disabling Amazon book covers
  • Many enhancements to patron messaging
  • Huge piles of acquisition enhancements, too many to list here
  • OPAC suggestions (checks the biblio doesn’t already exist)
  • OPAC suggestions allow hold to be placed if item is ordered
  • Searching allow stemming for other languages
  • Bulk changes to items
  • Moving items between MARC records
  • Lots of holds improvements
  • Allow borrowers to manage their privacy settings
  • System preferences big improvements
  • Labels rewrite
  • RFID support code
  • Patron group editing

This is just what I know of, and doesn’t include any partial features, so there is likely a lot more.

    LIANZA Conference 2009

    Well, I’ve now had a day to recover and collect my thoughts so I thought it would be time to do a write up on the LIANZA conference that I was fortunate to be able to attend.

    I arrived at Christchurch on Sunday to a beautiful spring day, which flushed the annoyances of having delayed flights, due to Air NZ’s network being down, right out of my mind. I met up with Jo and we shared a taxi to the hotel we were staying at. We then went and registered for the conference and while Jo had a meeting I made use of the free wifi at the conference centre. Following an early dinner we spent the evening finishing off the presentation and deciding who would say what.

    Day 1

    The day started with a powhiri, and then Hana and Tipene O’Regan spoke, talking about intergenerational knowledge transmission and the endangered state of Kai Tahu reo. It was a great talk, and the byplay between the two of them was something special. Richard Stallman was up next talking about copyright vs community, he made some very salient points and while I don’t think everyone got it , a lot of people did. It was something I think the library world needed to hear and to keep in mind whenever they are making purchasing decisions.

    Keeping with the sharing and empowerment of people through knowledge theme, I went to hear Terehia Biddle from Archives NZ, to talk about the role they play, and about engaging successfully with Maori. She also made a lot of great points, two that I remember well were

    breakdowns in relationships are caused by egos getting in the way, and by people unable to admit they are wrong

    competency in te reo me tikanga adds to your credibility

    Following lunch, I went to listen the Brenda Chawner talk about online identities, and how people are using them for personal and professional usage. Nathan Guy was supposed to be speaking next, but he couldn’t make it, and since there is only one thing worse than a politician reading their speech and that is another politician reading their speech for them, I ducked out and did some Koha work instead.

    To finish the day off, Brenda, Jo, Richard Stallman and I went off to a Bangladeshi restaurant to have dinner. Topics of conversation covered were

    • Koha
    • Software as a Service
    • Kea (and other NZ birds)
    • The use of passive tense in te reo Maori

    All in all, some of the best food and conversation I have had in a while.

    Day 2

    I missed the Keynote on Tuesday, everyone said Claudia Lux spoke well, so I will have to read others reports on her talk. I was busy panicking slightly about Jo and I presenting at 10.

    From what I can tell, the presentation went well and was well received, I felt it was rushed but that we managed to communicate the points we were trying to get across. I spent a good chunk of the rest of the day with Jo doing demos so I can only take that as a good sign.

    After morning tea, and some quick Koha demos I went to listen to Dennis Dutton talk about “Evolution and Aesthetics” and no disrepect to the other speakers or topics but this was definitely my highlight of the conference. I had decided to buy his book ‘The Art Instinct’ within about 5 mins of him starting and by the end I wanted to race out and buy it right then and read it right away. I won’t try to report what he was talking about, as I won’t do it justice, but do read the book if you ever get the chance.

    The rest of the day was spent talking about and demoing Koha. To finish the day off, it was the informal conference dinner and drinking at a variety of bars and restaurants in SOL square (a recently redeveloped couple of lanes). It was a lot of fun, good people, good music, good food and good beer. Ticked all the boxes. And between dancing and drinking I still ended up talking about Koha, which I take as a really good sign there is a lot of interest in it.

    Day 3

    The final day of the conference started with Penny Carnaby (The National Librarian) talking about citizen created content, and the importance of not losing it. Both Koha and Kete got a shout out in her speech. Following her was Jessica Dorr from the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation. Her heart was definitely in the right place and there is no doubt the gates foundation does do a lot of good around the world. The cynic in me sees it as training the next generation of Microsoft dependent users though.

    I didn’t get to any of the next sessions before lunch, I ended up doing another Koha demo and talking to others about it.

    To finish the conference was Tim Spalding of Librarything fame, he covered a lot in his talk and made the point that if libraries want to get to web 1.0 let alone web 2.0 they need to go with free and open source software.

    So while the conference is still dominated by proprietary and locked down software, I think this conference was a big step up from previous LIANZA conferences. I didn’t have to explain Free Software to people before I could start talking about Koha, they already knew what it was (even if they called it open source ;)). It was a really good conference, well organised and well executed, but of course what made it so great was all the people who attended.