http://archiv.twoday.net/stories/326644/
I read here very few messages on free available sources in
the web but a lot on technical questions I am not
interested in.
Klaus Graf
Dan,
I think there is a lack of open source and user-friendly bibliographic
databases, never mind any with Z39.50 built-in. However, have a look at
http://wwwsearch.sourceforge.net/bib/openbib.htmlhttp://bibliographic.openoffice.org/http://www.theresearcher.ca/index.html
And finally, "A Tool for Bibliography Management and Sharing: The ShaRef
Project" http://www.dlib.org/dlib/september04/09inbrief.html#WILDE
I use Endnote which is proprietary but supports Z39.50. The latest version
can export bibliographies in XML which is again proprietary and can
not be modified as far as I can see, but well-structured and sensible.
Elizabeth
> ---------------------------- Original Message ----------------------------
> Subject: [dm-l] open source z39.5 compatible bibliographic database
> software From: "Daniel O'Donnell" <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
> Date: Sun, September 5, 2004 4:41 am
> To: "Digital Medievalist list" <dm-l(a)uleth.ca>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers:
> http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm ----------------
> Hello all,
> I use Procite (<http://www.procite.com/> to keep my bibliography,
> mostly because it has a good Z39.5 client. Z39.50
> <http://www.loc.gov/z3950/agency/> is an international standard used by
> many libraries (though not the Royal Dutch Library, duizend
> bliksembommen!) for data interchange. In the case of procite, what this
> means is that I can download book information, including call numbers and
> subject fields directly from various libraries. Amongst other things, it
> has made it quite easy to rearrange my personal library using LoC call
> numbers (not a perfect system, of course, but since it comes ready made,
> I can't complain).
>
> Anyway, I want now to built an on-line catalogue of my stuff, so I
> can check if I own something when I am in a foreign library. Originally,
> I was just going to dumpt the procite format to a database (it is built
> on a 45 field database) and use PHP and MySQL to built a simple front
> end. But then I began to wonder if perhaps an open source system already
> existed. Does anybody know of one? Basically what I need is a robust
> bibliographic database with a Z39.50 client built in.
>
> -dan
>
> --
> Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
> Associate Professor of English
> University of Lethbridge
> Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
> Tel. (403) 329-2377
> Fax. (403) 382-7191
> E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
> Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
Dr. Elizabeth Solopova
Department of Special Collections and Western Manuscripts
Bodleian Library
Broad Street
Oxford OX1 3BG
Tel.: +44 (0)1865-277073
E-mail: es(a)bodley.ox.ac.uk
Internet:
http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/
Dear dm-l,
I have the pleasure of announcing that the Digital
Medievalist Project poster was awarded a third place
in the recent poster competition for the Digital
Resources in the Humanities conference which took
place 5-8 September 2004. This placing may have been
affected by my extremely active lobbying when I
discovered the prize for winning the competition was
a digital camera.
(Third place only gets honorable mention *drat*) :-)
There were approximately 22 entrants in the competition
and the winner was the "Cistercians in Yorkshire" project[1]
which had some very sexy virtual reality recreations of
monastic buildings from Yorkshire. I am happy another
medieval entry won, and I think we can be comforted by the
obvious need for the Digital Medievalist Project given the
number of medieval related entries. Out of the 22 entrants
listed in the booklet of poster abstracts, at least 7 of them
are related to the Middle Ages.
One of the plenary speakers at the conference was
Chris Patten[2] who made a breezingly polite tour of
the posters and exhibitions. As he paused at our poster
(maybe the bright background was a good idea...), I
proceeded to explain the project to him. And as politicians
do, he made himself appear very interested before quickly
walking around the rest of them and departing.
I was pleased to find that a number of the other medieval
poster entrants and speakers were already members of this
list. I was pleasantly surprised to find a number of others
who I know have only passing interest in the Middle Ages,
but are interested in such aspects as text encoding also
were lurking on the list.
-James
[1]http://cistercians.shef.ac.uk/
[2]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Patten
---
Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: New website
Date: Tue, 7 Sep 2004 08:19:20 -0500
From: Jim Marchand <marchand(a)UIUC.EDU>
Reply-To: Medieval Texts - Philology Codicology and Technology
<MEDTEXTL(a)listserv.uiuc.edu>
To: MEDTEXTL(a)listserv.uiuc.edu
The latest issue of our German Department newsletter (The Weekly Green) has
a recommendation by Professor Claudia Bornholdt for a new website:
www.mediaevum.de/haupt2.htm. A great new (Sept. 2004) site, well-organized.
Should get better.
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
[Reminder]
Call For Papers:
Making the Old New Again: Digital Medievalism in an Ever-Changing World
The Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford, invites abstracts for
20 minute papers to be delivered in the above sponsored session at the
40th International Congress on Medieval Studies at Western Michigan
University (May 5-8, 2005).
Session Abstract:
This session aims to bring together medievalists working with digital
projects to discuss their experiences with the every-changing and
evolving nature of these resources. As increasingly more electronic
research tools are created and computing technology changes, making
the old resources accessible in new contexts is often extremely
challenging. What do you do when your campus upgrades to a new
operating system and your 'Teach Yourself Old English' software no
longer functions? How do you convert electronic manuscript editions
from a couple decades ago into a format so they will work with new
software? Other related issues which could be included in the session
include: the re-purposing of older material to enable comparability in
new resources, the transformation of legacy data into standards-compliant
formats, the introduction of out-dated material into new online publishing
frameworks, and the special challenges faced by medieval resource creation.
It is hoped that this session will attract those with both negative and
positive experience of data migration and resource creation, and allow them
to share their experience to help medievalists work towards common goals of
preservation of the digital medieval resources we already have and best
practice in future resource creation.
Please send abstracts (max. 500 words) for proposed papers with an even
shorter summary c.v. to: James.Cummings(a)oucs.ox.ac.uk before
1 September 2004. Make sure to include complete contact information
and AV requirements, and note that accepted participants must commit
themselves to attend.
For more information concerning this conference please see:
http://www.wmich.edu/medieval/congress/
Please feel free to circulate this call for papers to anyone you
think might be interested.
-James
---
Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
CALL FOR PAPERS: Digital Medievalism (Kalamazoo) and
Early Drama (Leeds) see http://users.ox.ac.uk/~jamesc/cfp.html
From the horse's mouth:
>Hi Daniel
>
>I don't know why this problem cropped up; naturally the FindGlyph program does not itself muck about with people's operating systems: it's really just a little script bundled up with some MS Visual Basic runtime libraries, and the installation program is all Microsoft's. I ran the installer myself just now (on Win2k) and I noticed that it suggested I shut down other applications in case it had to "install system files" or "update shared files". This is an entirely generic message built into Visual Basic's installer program. Your colleague's report is a bit thin on actual details, so I don't know, but this may be what they're referring to? If so, it is actually quite normal for VB programs to depend on several runtime DLL libraries which are often, but not always, already installed on users' computers. Typically the installer program will pop up a dialog box when there is an existing version file, and offer the user the option to keep their existing file, or replace it with the newer version.
>
>HTH
>
>Con
>
I did get the same warning about shutting down other applications when I
installed, but like Con, didn't see anything unusual.
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
Capital idea!
> Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> ----------------
> To be honest, I was just thinking of maybe organising a meeting (black
> swan-style dinner?) for computer oriented medievalists at K'zoo this
> coming year. Then we could coordinate session proposals for 2006 (and
> have another dinner). What say?
>
> Roberto Rosselli Del Turco wrote:
>
> >Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> >----------------
> >Il ven, 2004-09-03 alle 18:42, Dot Porter ha scritto:
> >
> >
> >>Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> >>----------------
> >>Hello List,
> >>
> >>At Kzoo next year there are at least three groups sponsoring a total of five
> >>sessions with an electronic focus - Digital Medievalist, the Oxford Text
> >>Archive, and Research in Computing for Humanities. Dan O'Donnell and I were
> >>discussing the problem of market saturation that might come from having so
> >>many similar sessions, and he suggested that we look into organizing a mini
> >>DM conference-within-a-conference for next year's (2006) Kalamazoo Congress.
> >>This would bring together all the various people who regularly organize
> >>digital sessions and sell them to the Congress organizers as a group. The
> >>Institute for Cistercian Studies at Western Michigan has been doing
> >>something similar for years (as long as the Congress itself, I believe) with
> >>great success. I think this is a super idea - what do others think?
> >>
> >>
> >
> >I agree, that would great. But were you thinking of Kzoo 2005 or 2006?
> >Can we organize it for Kzoo 2005?
> >
> >Ciao
> >
> >
> >
>
> --
> Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
> Associate Professor of English
> University of Lethbridge
> Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
> Tel. (403) 329-2377
> Fax. (403) 382-7191
> E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
> Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Project web site: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
> dm-l mailing list
> dm-l(a)uleth.ca
> http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
--
_____________________________________________________________
Web-based SMS services available at http://www.operamail.com.
>From your mailbox to local or overseas cell phones.
Powered by Outblaze
Well that was *supposed* to be off list - sorry guys! :-/
Dot
-----Original Message-----
From: "Dorothy C. Porter" <dporter(a)uky.edu>
To: dm-l(a)uleth.ca
Date: Sat, 04 Sep 2004 09:04:49 -0400
Subject: Re: Re: [dm-l] mini-DM conference at Kazoo?
Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
----------------
Hi Roberto - replying off list,
The 2005 meeting has already been organized, so we couldn't do this until 2006 (it's 2004 now! Time sure does fly...)
Dot
-----Original Message-----
From: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco <rosselli(a)ling.unipi.it>
To: Digital Medievalist Community mailing list <dm-l(a)uleth.ca>
Date: Sat, 04 Sep 2004 08:47:01 +0200
Subject: Re: [dm-l] mini-DM conference at Kazoo?
Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
----------------
Il ven, 2004-09-03 alle 18:42, Dot Porter ha scritto:
> Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> ----------------
> Hello List,
>
> At Kzoo next year there are at least three groups sponsoring a total of five
> sessions with an electronic focus - Digital Medievalist, the Oxford Text
> Archive, and Research in Computing for Humanities. Dan O'Donnell and I were
> discussing the problem of market saturation that might come from having so
> many similar sessions, and he suggested that we look into organizing a mini
> DM conference-within-a-conference for next year's (2006) Kalamazoo Congress.
> This would bring together all the various people who regularly organize
> digital sessions and sell them to the Congress organizers as a group. The
> Institute for Cistercian Studies at Western Michigan has been doing
> something similar for years (as long as the Congress itself, I believe) with
> great success. I think this is a super idea - what do others think?
I agree, that would great. But were you thinking of Kzoo 2005 or 2006?
Can we organize it for Kzoo 2005?
Ciao
--
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco roberto.rossellidelturco at unito.it
Dipartimento di Scienze rosselli at ling.unipi.it
del Linguaggio Then spoke the thunder DA
Universita' di Torino Datta: what have we given? (TSE)
Hige sceal the heardra, heorte the cenre,
mod sceal the mare, the ure maegen litlath. (Maldon 312-3)
_______________________________________________
Project web site: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
dm-l mailing list
dm-l(a)uleth.ca
http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
***************************************
Dorothy Carr Porter, Program Coordinator
Collaboratory for Research in Computing for Humanities
University of Kentucky
351 William T. Young Library
Lexington, KY 40506
dporter(a)uky.edu 859-257-9549
***************************************
_______________________________________________
Project web site: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
dm-l mailing list
dm-l(a)uleth.ca
http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
***************************************
Dorothy Carr Porter, Program Coordinator
Collaboratory for Research in Computing for Humanities
University of Kentucky
351 William T. Young Library
Lexington, KY 40506
dporter(a)uky.edu 859-257-9549
***************************************
Hi Roberto - replying off list,
The 2005 meeting has already been organized, so we couldn't do this until 2006 (it's 2004 now! Time sure does fly...)
Dot
-----Original Message-----
From: Roberto Rosselli Del Turco <rosselli(a)ling.unipi.it>
To: Digital Medievalist Community mailing list <dm-l(a)uleth.ca>
Date: Sat, 04 Sep 2004 08:47:01 +0200
Subject: Re: [dm-l] mini-DM conference at Kazoo?
Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
----------------
Il ven, 2004-09-03 alle 18:42, Dot Porter ha scritto:
> Digital Medievalist Journal (Inaugural Issue Fall 2004). Call for papers: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/cfp.htm
> ----------------
> Hello List,
>
> At Kzoo next year there are at least three groups sponsoring a total of five
> sessions with an electronic focus - Digital Medievalist, the Oxford Text
> Archive, and Research in Computing for Humanities. Dan O'Donnell and I were
> discussing the problem of market saturation that might come from having so
> many similar sessions, and he suggested that we look into organizing a mini
> DM conference-within-a-conference for next year's (2006) Kalamazoo Congress.
> This would bring together all the various people who regularly organize
> digital sessions and sell them to the Congress organizers as a group. The
> Institute for Cistercian Studies at Western Michigan has been doing
> something similar for years (as long as the Congress itself, I believe) with
> great success. I think this is a super idea - what do others think?
I agree, that would great. But were you thinking of Kzoo 2005 or 2006?
Can we organize it for Kzoo 2005?
Ciao
--
Roberto Rosselli Del Turco roberto.rossellidelturco at unito.it
Dipartimento di Scienze rosselli at ling.unipi.it
del Linguaggio Then spoke the thunder DA
Universita' di Torino Datta: what have we given? (TSE)
Hige sceal the heardra, heorte the cenre,
mod sceal the mare, the ure maegen litlath. (Maldon 312-3)
_______________________________________________
Project web site: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/
dm-l mailing list
dm-l(a)uleth.ca
http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
***************************************
Dorothy Carr Porter, Program Coordinator
Collaboratory for Research in Computing for Humanities
University of Kentucky
351 William T. Young Library
Lexington, KY 40506
dporter(a)uky.edu 859-257-9549
***************************************