Like many others recently I came across Koha as a result of the article in February 2003 Linux Journal. Whilst I have library catalogue issues with all the books, journals, papers, CDs, CD-ROMs, DVDs, videos and such in my study (aka home) the article was more of a provocation to thinking about other applications. A similar market sector to library automation is museum inventory systems; they're not identical but enough synergy exists that many of the proprietary library systems have museum modules. Also there is additional stimulus as my wife works for one the national museums here in Great Britain. The stories she tells me of the inflexibilty of their in-house system would turn your stomach. So since the publication of the LJ paper I've been musing on how Koha might be used as a base for a museum system. For the last 30 years my role has been programmer/consultant of text retrieval systems. A cross industry product that I've deployed in research libraries and museums. Including a recent bid to a museum-come-library for cataloguing and loan management of a non-book collection. Wonder whether there is any interest from others in such a museums module? Regards, Trevor British Sign Language is not inarticulate handwaving; it's a living language. Support the campaign for formal recognition by the British government now! Details at http://www.fdp.org.uk/ -- <>< Re: deemed!
yes museum support would be good! Please check our web site at http://www.smecc.org to see other engineering fields, communications and computation stuff we buy, and by all means when in Arizona drop in and see us. address: coury house / smecc 5802 w palmaire ave glendale az 85301 thanks Ed Sharpe archivist for SMECC ----- Original Message ----- From: "Trevor Jenkins" <trevor.jenkins@suneidesis.com> To: <koha@lists.katipo.co.nz> Sent: Friday, February 14, 2003 8:10 AM Subject: [Koha] Introductions and spin-offs
Like many others recently I came across Koha as a result of the article in February 2003 Linux Journal. Whilst I have library catalogue issues with all the books, journals, papers, CDs, CD-ROMs, DVDs, videos and such in my study (aka home) the article was more of a provocation to thinking about other applications. A similar market sector to library automation is museum inventory systems; they're not identical but enough synergy exists that many of the proprietary library systems have museum modules. Also there is additional stimulus as my wife works for one the national museums here in Great Britain. The stories she tells me of the inflexibilty of their in-house system would turn your stomach.
So since the publication of the LJ paper I've been musing on how Koha might be used as a base for a museum system. For the last 30 years my role has been programmer/consultant of text retrieval systems. A cross industry product that I've deployed in research libraries and museums. Including a recent bid to a museum-come-library for cataloguing and loan management of a non-book collection.
Wonder whether there is any interest from others in such a museums module?
Regards, Trevor
British Sign Language is not inarticulate handwaving; it's a living language. Support the campaign for formal recognition by the British government now! Details at http://www.fdp.org.uk/
--
<>< Re: deemed!
_______________________________________________ Koha mailing list Koha@lists.katipo.co.nz http://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha
Hi, all. I also found out about Koha from the Linux Journal article. I'm donating my time as a web designer and computer consultant to a small air museum starting up in central Texas, and would also like to use Koha to manage the museum collection, as well as their library. Once I'm a bit more familiar with Koha, I'll be happy to help develop such a module. Roger Trevor Jenkins wrote:
Like many others recently I came across Koha as a result of the article in February 2003 Linux Journal. Whilst I have library catalogue issues with all the books, journals, papers, CDs, CD-ROMs, DVDs, videos and such in my study (aka home) the article was more of a provocation to thinking about other applications. A similar market sector to library automation is museum inventory systems; they're not identical but enough synergy exists that many of the proprietary library systems have museum modules. Also there is additional stimulus as my wife works for one the national museums here in Great Britain. The stories she tells me of the inflexibilty of their in-house system would turn your stomach.
So since the publication of the LJ paper I've been musing on how Koha might be used as a base for a museum system. For the last 30 years my role has been programmer/consultant of text retrieval systems. A cross industry product that I've deployed in research libraries and museums. Including a recent bid to a museum-come-library for cataloguing and loan management of a non-book collection.
Wonder whether there is any interest from others in such a museums module?
Regards, Trevor
British Sign Language is not inarticulate handwaving; it's a living language. Support the campaign for formal recognition by the British government now! Details at http://www.fdp.org.uk/
participants (3)
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ed sharpe -
Roger Ritter Consulting -
Trevor Jenkins