Hi Ross and Amy,

Thanks for your replies - ILL software was in fact our first thought 
(channeling everything through ILLiad) but we wanted to apply automation and 
metadata enrichment more efficiently than we could within the available web 
interface. 

As for multiple requesting, Ross, you're right, that's the weird part. It's 
really driven by special collections - we want a user to be able to collect as 
many diverse objects as they'd like and review them *before* they submit 
(partly to have an opportunity to make decisions given request limits and 
restrictions information not available in the finding aid). These then need to 
be routed to various physically (and administratively) separate special 
collections units. For most special collections this aggregation would be 
handled in the finding aid, but we have some that are cataloged in the ILS and 
requested through the OPAC which does not natively handle any type of 
multi-requesting, necessitating this function in the requesting interface. As 
for why multi-requesting - it was in the project requirements for two separate 
projects and requested by another unit in GC Access Services around the same 
time so it seemed like the resolver + cart for physical items was the most reus!
 able approach.

Hope this informs a bit about why it might be useful in our case?

Thanks,
Steelsen




-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of Ross 
Singer
Sent: Friday, March 6, 2015 2:10 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Get It Services / Cart

Actually it doesn't seem like a terribly obvious use case: how would a user be 
in a position to send multiple things for enrichment? What happens after 
they're enriched?

Ümlaut seems kind of a perfect intermediary for this, but you'll need to work 
out the before and after (mainly the use case!)

-Ross.

On Friday, March 6, 2015, Smith, Steelsen <steelsen.sm...@yale.edu> wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> I'm new to this list, so if there are any conventions I'm ignoring I'd 
> appreciate someone letting me know.
>
> I'm working on a project to allow requests that will go to multiple 
> systems to be aggregated in a requesting interface. It would be 
> implemented as an independent application, allow a "shopping list" of 
> items to be added, and be able to perform some back end business logic 
> (availability checking, metadata enrichment, etc.).
>
> This seems like a very common use case so I'm surprised that I've had 
> trouble finding anyone who has published an application that works 
> like this - the closest I've found being Umlaut which doesn't seem to 
> support multiple simultaneous requesting (although I couldn't get as 
> far as "request" in any sample system to be certain). Is anyone on the 
> list aware of such a project?
>
> Thanks,
> Steelsen
>
>
>
> ___________________________
> Steelsen Smith
> Fulfillment Systems Specialist
> Enterprise Systems Group
> Yale Library IT
> 203.432.3333
>

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