FROM BIBFRAME TO THE CLOUD The Future of the ILS
FROM BIBFRAME TO THE CLOUD
The Future of the ILS
PresentersElayna Turner
■ Librarian/ILS Administrator for the Gloucester County Library System
■ ILS Experience– Horizon (SirsiDynix)– Symphony (SirsiDynix)
Tim Dewysockie■ Application Specialist for Rowan University Libraries
■ ILS Experience– Horizon (SirsiDynix)– Polaris (Innovative)– Voyager (ExLibris)
Where We Are: The Integrated Library System (ILS)
Where We’re Going: ■ Shaped by current technology landscape
– Software as a Service (SaaS)
– API’s/Web Services
– Open source software
■ Shaped by libraries’ needs
– Differs by type of library
Software as a Service:
API’s:
Public Library Considerations
■ Focus on circulation of physical materials
■ Focus on user experience
■ Focus on electronic resources
Academic Library Considerations■ Focus on user experience
■ Focus on electronic resources
■ Problem: Traditional ILS was designed for print
■ Result: Products have been developed to fill this void
Where We’re Going: Trends in Library Technology■ The “Future” of the ILS:
– Library Services Platforms (LSPs)
– “Hybrid” Solutions
– Open Source Solutions
■ Related developments in library technology
– Discovery layers
– BIBFRAME/Linked Data Integration
Library Services Platforms■ Software as a Service (SaaS)
■ Built on API’s/web services
■ Designed to manage multiple types of resources from single application
■ Examples
– Alma (ExLibris),
– OCLC WorldShare
– Insignia Library System
OCLC WorldShare:
“Hybrid” Solutions■ Hybrid of ILS and LSP
■ Builds on existing ILS technology
– Still dependant on ILS
– Can be self-hosted or SaaS
■ Examples
– Sierra (Innovative),
– Symphony or Horizon &
BLUEcloud (SirsiDynix)
Example: SirsiDynix BLUEcloud LSP
Open Source Solutions■ Predates development of LSP’s
■ Alternative to proprietary solutions
■ Development community
■ Note: Open source solutions are neither free nor cheap
■ Examples– Koha, Evergreen
Example: Koha
Related Library Technology
Developments
Where We Are:The Online Public Access Catalog (OPAC)
Where We’re Going: Discovery Layers■ Index-based discovery layers
– Central index: crosswalk data into single shared schema, then index it
■ API’s
■ Possible uses
– Use in conjunction with traditional OPAC, replace existing OPAC
Discovery Layers■ Positive
– Integrates previously siloed resources into single search interface
■ Negative
– Results set too large, too imprecise
■ Proprietary
– Summon (ProQuest), EDS (EBSCO), Enterprise (SirsiDynix), Primo (ExLibris)
■ Open source
– VuFind, Blacklight
– Apache Solr index
Bento Box
■ Done using open source tools; no currently available proprietary solutions
■ Positive: User does not have to choose what type of material to search
■ Negative: User initially sees less results; must click a source to see more
BIBFRAME and Linked Data Integration
MARC
BIBFRAME and Linked Data Integration
BIBFRAME
Bibliographic Records in a Google Search
BIBFRAME & Linked Data Integration
■ Many ILS’s are working to allow linked data integration to make library materials
more discoverable
■ This means taking collections out of traditional catalogs and making them findable
on the web.
■ Extracting MARC data and outputting it to BIBFRAME
■ Examples: BLUEcloud Visibility (SirsiDynix), Innovative Linked Data, EBSCO Linked
Library Service
Questions For the Future■ What needs are not addressed by these trends in library technology?
– Academic libraries: integration with learning management systems (LMS’s)?
■ Will traditional ILS’s coexist with LSP’s, or will LSP’s become the new standard?
■ Do these new trends create problems that didn’t exist before? – Privacy and security concerns with cloud-based applications
■ Will the decoupling of the user interface (OPAC/discovery layer)from the ILS/LSP become the norm?