Hello Rebecca, koha is very simple to use and maintain. Being a community software you get support from all community members.
I strongly suggest koha. On 7 Mar 2017 8:00 p.m., "Rebecca Shtasel" <rebeccashta...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello > > We are a small group of volunteers (one of whom is a retired school > librarian) who run our synagogue's library in the UK. We would like to > produce an online catalogue and are interesting in using Koha for this > purpose as we haven't much money. The library has about 4000 books > covering a variety of classifications (fiction, history etc) all related to > Judaism. The original accessions book was lost when the library had to be > moved a year ago and we have a notebook with handwritten entries for the > accessions we have received since the library moved to its new home. > Looking at the information to do with koha it appears very technical and we > are wondering if we will be able to use it for our catalogue. We would > literally be taking books off the shelves to input their information, not > importing the data from elsewhere and none of us has anything more than > basic computing knowledge. > > Given this, do you think koha is too complicated for us to use or amongst > all the information related to using koha is there a very basic guide that > would suit beginners like us? > If you think we would struggle using koha, could you advise us on software > that you think would be more user-friendly and is not too expensive? > > Thanking you all very much in advance for any advice you can give. > > Rebecca (on behalf of the group) > _______________________________________________ > Koha mailing list http://koha-community.org > Koha@lists.katipo.co.nz > https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha > _______________________________________________ Koha mailing list http://koha-community.org Koha@lists.katipo.co.nz https://lists.katipo.co.nz/mailman/listinfo/koha