Library Geeks 012 - LibLime and Koha

Joshua Ferraro, Debra Denault, and Chris Cormack (see two of their smiling faces here) of LibLime joined me to discuss their work at LibLime and on koha in particular. I've been watching koha for the better part of eight years, since it was first released (if you don't believe me, check here). That this "gift" has led to hundreds of implementations in many countries worldwide in 27 languages is a remarkable testament to the power of free/libre/open source software in libraries.

The most exciting thing to me is that they're growing a healthy company around the koha project and related services without sacrificing anything about what made this one of the first important library free software projects. It's just as available to everyone today as it was back in 2000 when they first started sharing it with all of us, and it's better than ever.

Listen in to hear this whole story, and in particular, to hear about the latest and greatest features coming in the soon-to-be-released koha 3.

Some things we mentioned included:

It's been a while since I've done one of these, so I'll apologize to Josh, Debra, and Chris and anyone listening for the audio being a bit uneven, and for the annoying echo you'll hear sometimes. I'll iron out the gear upgrades and things will sound better next time around.

Oh, one last thing - I've installed the encl_remote module for drupal which should allow me to *finally* link to the podcast audio directly from this blog with enclosure-style links. So if you're subscribed here, you should get the 'cast files, too! And the link to the audio file is just below these very words a few centimeters or so. Let me know if these work for you.

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History of Library Automation

Thanks for the reminder. I have updated the history of library automation graphic on Library Technology Guides for 2007, showing the new companies supporting open source automation systems.

Very cool - thanks for

Very cool - thanks for posting that here. I've gone looking for that page of yours many times when trying to remember how various entities split, merged, or otherwise went away. It's a great resource!

Do you have a page describing your criteria for inclusion on that page? On the one hand, I could see how adding OCLC and all the companies it has swallowed over the years would complicate things, to say the least. On the other hand, maybe IndexData should be there, too, dating back 10 years or more?

Great Show

Great show, and welcome back.

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