David,

2 email lists that you can start with, although neither one of them is
truly a place to discuss implementation issues.

1. The ILS-DI discussion list on google. See http://groups.google.com/group/ils-di.

I created this group to foment discussion surrounding the technical recommendation being developed by DLF's ILS Discovery Interface Task Group (now published on the DLF site). We have not had a lot of technical discussion on this list in the past, but we certainly could.

2. The jangle-discuss discussion list on google. See http://groups.google.com/group/jangle-discuss

There's lots of technical discussion going on on this list. Jangle is really not an implementation of ILS-DI, but they are interested in using ILS-DI connectors to the local ILSs. It's an interesting conversation, regardless. Personally, I'd like to see Jangle *be* an implementation of ILS-DI, but I know Ross wants to have a little more freedom to develop a uniform interface.

-emily

Walker, David wrote:
Hi all,

I'm working on converting a screen-scraping class, written in PHP, I have for 
looking-up bib and availability information in an Innovative systems to the new 
ILS-DI specification, and had a couple of questions:

1. Is there a place (other than the workshop) to discuss issues or questions I 
might have?  A listserv perhaps?

2. Is anyone else thinking about, or currently working on, an implementation 
for Innovative?

Since the company has not agreed to work with the library community on this, 
we're kind of on our own.  I've got a pretty good scraper that can accommodate 
most of the abstract functions in the spec.  But wanted to see if others did 
too, so we might combine efforts.

Thanks!

--Dave

==================
David Walker
Library Web Services Manager
California State University
http://xerxes.calstate.edu
________________________________________
From: Code for Libraries [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Emily Lynema [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2008 9:22 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Update: DLF ILS-DI Developers' Workshop Aug 7

Now that the DLF technical recommendation is officially published [1], DLF
is trying to help maintain momentum and build a community of implementation
around this project. Toward that end, an ILS-DI Developers' Workshop has
been organized in August for folks to hash out questions and answers about
implementing the first level of the recommendation, Basic Discovery
Interfaces. While this meeting is invitation only to keep the size down,
feel free to let me know if you are involved in this type of implementation
and think you could contribute to this meeting.

Of course, a summary of the outcome of the meeting will be made available in
its aftermath. It is even possible there may be some suggested revisions or
clarifications to the recommendation as we actually begin to write code.

I've included the text of the original inviitation below for all to see. We
hope to keep this topic of APIs and interoperability for our integrated
library systems fresh on your mind, especially as some many of you are
building these types of APIs literally as we speak....

-emily lynema

[1] http://diglib.org/architectures/ilsdi/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Greetings -

As you may know, the Digital Library Federation has released
the technical recommendation of its ILS Discovery Interface
(ILS-DI) Task Group.  This document recommends basic, standard
interfaces -- known as the Berkeley Accord -- for integrating
the data and services of integrated library systems (ILS) with
new applications supporting user discovery.  The documentation
is available at : http://diglib.org/architectures/ilsdi/ .

The basic discovery interfaces permit libraries to deploy new
discovery services to meet ever-growing user expectations in
the Web 2.0 era, take full advantage of advanced ILS data
management and services, and encourage a strong, innovative
community and marketplace in next-generation library management
and discovery applications.

DLF is planning a developer's workshop for Thursday, August 7,
at the Berkeley Faculty Club on the UC Berkeley campus, in
which parties supporting the Basic Discovery Interfaces can
learn more about the interfaces and how they should be
implemented, meet with potential development partners, and
begin the formation of a community building effective software
services.  Because of the nature of this meeting, we recommend
that staff with a high degree of technical knowledge of your
platform and bibliographic standards and protocols receive
priority for attendance.

The Berkeley Accord and the DLF ILS-DI recommendation are
important first steps in building advanced, interoperable
architectures for bibliographic discovery and use in the
networked world.

--
Emily Lynema
Systems Librarian for Digital Projects
Information Technology, NCSU Libraries
919-513-8031
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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