Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-02-02 Thread Nick Ruest
+1 for me.

-nruest

On Jan 29, 2010, at 5:58 PM, Walter Lewis wrote:

 On 29 Jan 10, at 5:34 PM, Wendy Huot wrote:
 
 +1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May
 
 The dates of 6th and 7th work for me and I think they work for Kingston.  
 Bill: librarian-hunting season begins in the late Fall, so we're in the 
 clear.
 
 +1 for me too.
 
 I should note that while the standard librarian-hunting seasons overlap for 
 public and academic librarians, there is a special sitting duck hunt that 
 co-incides with the municipal budgeting process.  In some communities, like 
 ours, it is actually televised  (think the worst bass-fishing show you've 
 ever flipped past).
 
 Walter 


Nick Ruest
Digital Strategies Librarian

McMaster University
Mills Memorial Library
1280 Main Street West
Hamilton, ON L8S 4L6
Phone: 905.525.9140 ext. 21276
Email: rue...@mcmaster.ca
http://library.mcmaster.ca/contact/ruest-nicholas
http://ruebot.net/


Revolution is not something fixed in ideology, nor is it something fashioned 
to a particular decade.  It is a personal process embedded in the human 
spirit. - Abbie Hoffman


Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-29 Thread Wendy Huot

+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May

The dates of 6th and 7th work for me and I think they work for Kingston.  Bill: 
librarian-hunting season begins in the late Fall, so we're in the clear.

Wendy


--
Wendy Huot
Web Development Librarian
Queen's University Library
Kingston, Ontario Canada K7L 5C4

Phone: (613) 533-6000 ext 75250
Email: wendy.h...@queensu.ca


Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-29 Thread Walter Lewis
On 29 Jan 10, at 5:34 PM, Wendy Huot wrote:

 +1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May
 
 The dates of 6th and 7th work for me and I think they work for Kingston.  
 Bill: librarian-hunting season begins in the late Fall, so we're in the clear.

+1 for me too.

I should note that while the standard librarian-hunting seasons overlap for 
public and academic librarians, there is a special sitting duck hunt that 
co-incides with the municipal budgeting process.  In some communities, like 
ours, it is actually televised  (think the worst bass-fishing show you've ever 
flipped past).

Walter 


Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-28 Thread John Fereira

MJ Suhonos wrote:

+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May here as well.

As long as things don't get started until late afternoon or early 
evening on Thursday that would give those close enough to drive the 
option of driving to Kingston on Thursday morning or even working part 
of the day on Thursday.   Other than that, Thu-Fri 6-7 sounds fine.


Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-28 Thread David Fiander
I concur. Thursday afternoon/evening and all day Friday works for me.

+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May


On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 06:45, John Fereira ja...@cornell.edu wrote:
 MJ Suhonos wrote:

 +1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May here as well.

 As long as things don't get started until late afternoon or early evening on
 Thursday that would give those close enough to drive the option of driving
 to Kingston on Thursday morning or even working part of the day on Thursday.
   Other than that, Thu-Fri 6-7 sounds fine.



Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-28 Thread Edward M. Corrado
Well, the 6'th is bad for me because I have a meeting that I might not 
be able to get out of that is scheduled to end at 5:00 PM. However, I 
could still show up for drinks about 9:00 PM on the 6th, and make the 
7'th. I might miss out on the beginning but as long as Friday is a full 
day (vs. ending at lunch time) it would be worth it for me to drive up there


And who knows, maybe by the time May 6 comes around this meeting won't 
be all that important. If that is the case, it would be best for me if 
it didn't start until after, say 3:00 or 3:30 PM so I could work a half 
day if need-be.


Edward





David Fiander wrote:

I concur. Thursday afternoon/evening and all day Friday works for me.

+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May


On Thu, Jan 28, 2010 at 06:45, John Fereira ja...@cornell.edu wrote:
  

MJ Suhonos wrote:


+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May here as well.

  

As long as things don't get started until late afternoon or early evening on
Thursday that would give those close enough to drive the option of driving
to Kingston on Thursday morning or even working part of the day on Thursday.
  Other than that, Thu-Fri 6-7 sounds fine.




Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-28 Thread Warren Layton
+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May

Warren


[CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-27 Thread William Denton
I went through all the mail about this and counted a + for each of the top 
two choices people made (if they made two; otherwise just one + for their 
single vote).  The results:


Kingston +++
Montreal +++
Ottawa   +
Toronto
Sudbury
Hamilton

(No-one really came out as wanting it in Toronto, though obviously it's 
there and it seems to be a fallback for everyone.)


Kingston came out on top, as a nice city, in the middle of everything, 
with people ready to help, and easy to get to my bus/train/car, if not by 
plane---but then it's expected, being a local chapter, that people will be 
coming from nearby, so that's not really a problem.


So unless people see a need for a more definite vote, it seems like we're 
OK with Kingston.  Is that cool?


Next we need to decide dates.  We had these comments:

  April/May
  not 16 April - 16 May
  not end of April
  not end of April
  after April
  May/June
  second half of May
  not 10-11 May (Canadian ETD and Open Repositories in Ottawa)
  not 9 May-13 May (ELUNA, Fort Worth, Texas)

And there are two long weekends to avoid because people will be busy:

  not Monday 31 May (Memorial Day in US)
  not Monday 24 May (Victoria Day in Canada)

Assuming it will be in Kingston, Wendy, are there any dates to avoid 
because of something happening there, like Annual Everything Is Closed 
Day or a special Hunt the Librarian event?


`cal may 2010` tells me:

  May 2010
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
   1
 2  3  4  5  6  7  8Monday 3?  Thursday-Friday 6-7?
 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22Monday 17?
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 
30 31


Thursday-Friday 6-7 May (perhaps Thursday night and Friday all day?) seems 
like it fits almost all but one date range.  Two Mondays would also work, 
3 May and 17 May.  If we want to keep it to one working day that could 
mean doing it all on Monday, or configuring ourselves Sunday night and 
being around Monday.  I think a Thursday-Friday seems better, 
though---people can travel back Friday night or Saturday, as they want, 
and that means more time for hanging out on Friday night.


How should we do the dates?  Given the April/May range, and the suggested 
restrictions, I think these are the days that work.  Can we vote on the 
list, or should we do a Doodle thingie?


If we can vote here then I say

+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May

Bill
--
William Denton, Toronto : miskatonic.org www.frbr.org openfrbr.org


Re: [CODE4LIB] Kingston? And now the date (was Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?)

2010-01-27 Thread MJ Suhonos
+1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May here as well.

MJ

On 2010-01-27, at 10:50 PM, William Denton wrote:

 I went through all the mail about this and counted a + for each of the top 
 two choices people made (if they made two; otherwise just one + for their 
 single vote).  The results:
 
 Kingston +++
 Montreal +++
 Ottawa   +
 Toronto
 Sudbury
 Hamilton
 
 (No-one really came out as wanting it in Toronto, though obviously it's there 
 and it seems to be a fallback for everyone.)
 
 Kingston came out on top, as a nice city, in the middle of everything, with 
 people ready to help, and easy to get to my bus/train/car, if not by 
 plane---but then it's expected, being a local chapter, that people will be 
 coming from nearby, so that's not really a problem.
 
 So unless people see a need for a more definite vote, it seems like we're OK 
 with Kingston.  Is that cool?
 
 Next we need to decide dates.  We had these comments:
 
  April/May
  not 16 April - 16 May
  not end of April
  not end of April
  after April
  May/June
  second half of May
  not 10-11 May (Canadian ETD and Open Repositories in Ottawa)
  not 9 May-13 May (ELUNA, Fort Worth, Texas)
 
 And there are two long weekends to avoid because people will be busy:
 
  not Monday 31 May (Memorial Day in US)
  not Monday 24 May (Victoria Day in Canada)
 
 Assuming it will be in Kingston, Wendy, are there any dates to avoid because 
 of something happening there, like Annual Everything Is Closed Day or a 
 special Hunt the Librarian event?
 
 `cal may 2010` tells me:
 
  May 2010
 Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
   1
 2  3  4  5  6  7  8Monday 3?  Thursday-Friday 6-7?
 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
 16 17 18 19 20 21 22Monday 17?
 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
 
 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May (perhaps Thursday night and Friday all day?) seems 
 like it fits almost all but one date range.  Two Mondays would also work, 3 
 May and 17 May.  If we want to keep it to one working day that could mean 
 doing it all on Monday, or configuring ourselves Sunday night and being 
 around Monday.  I think a Thursday-Friday seems better, though---people can 
 travel back Friday night or Saturday, as they want, and that means more time 
 for hanging out on Friday night.
 
 How should we do the dates?  Given the April/May range, and the suggested 
 restrictions, I think these are the days that work.  Can we vote on the list, 
 or should we do a Doodle thingie?
 
 If we can vote here then I say
 
 +1 Thursday-Friday 6-7 May
 
 Bill
 -- 
 William Denton, Toronto : miskatonic.org www.frbr.org openfrbr.org


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Jonathan Rochkind
Ha! Are librarians known subversives or something?  Or maybe it just 
sounded like the sort of thing you'd be bringing large amounts of 
merchandise back from, that you might be trying to escape paying import 
taxes on. Sounded erroneously like that, in fact, because even ALA is 
not generally something people buy acquisitions at.   But BOOK trade 
conferences are such, so I bet they search anyone's trunk coming back 
from a publisher trade conference for that reason.


Ryan Eby wrote:

Only thing I would add is that for the detroit crossing coming back
into the US it seems that library conference as your reason is an
automatic trunk search as it has happened both times I've mentioned
it.

eby.

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:28 PM, John Fereira ja...@cornell.edu wrote:
  

David Fiander wrote:


I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
passports, it's more that they can't go home without.

  

It's good that this is being discussed now.  It would be a shame to have
someone not be able to attend because they didn't have adequate documents.
 There *are* immigration sites for both the U.S. and Canada that can provide
up to date information regarding required documents.  I was suggest using
those sites rather than speculate about what might be required based on
responses in this thread.  That said, I probably should check my passport to
see when it expires.  In addition to the likely trip to Montpellier, there
is a fairly high chance that'll be going to Tanzania on business as well.

I have taken the 1000 Island Bridge (incredibly scenic for those that
haven't done it) and have also taken the Wolf Island Ferries.  I've probably
traveled to/from Canada 6-7 times and  got more scrutiny at the Wolf Island
crossing than any other spot.

Ride sharing is a good idea.  With enough people coming from some areas
renting a van might even be a viable option.

--
John Fereira
Cornell University
Twitter: @john_fereira
Google Wave: fere...@googlewave.com




  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Edward M. Corrado
I never had a problem in the couple of times I crossed a border into 
Canada for a library conference, but I tend to make sure I have the 
program and hotel information readily available to show them in case 
they ask (yes, the Canadian border people have looked at it). My guess 
is that some of the border guards think only old ladies with hair buns 
can be librarians so they might be a bit confused when someone that 
doesn't meet that description tries to cross the boarder.


Edward



MJ Suhonos wrote:

Well, according to Michigan's native son, Michael Moore, librarians *are* 
subversive:

I really didn't realize the librarians were, you know, such a dangerous group. They 
are subversive. You think they're just sitting there at the desk, all quiet and 
everything. They're like plotting the revolution, man. I wouldn't mess with them.

http://www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/22778.Michael_Francis_Moore

Might only be an issue crossing at the Detroit-Windsor border, though.  Not 
sure how broadly his opinion may have spread beyond the state.

MJ

On 2010-01-25, at 11:18 AM, Jonathan Rochkind wrote:

  

Ha! Are librarians known subversives or something?  Or maybe it just sounded 
like the sort of thing you'd be bringing large amounts of merchandise back 
from, that you might be trying to escape paying import taxes on. Sounded 
erroneously like that, in fact, because even ALA is not generally something 
people buy acquisitions at.   But BOOK trade conferences are such, so I bet 
they search anyone's trunk coming back from a publisher trade conference for 
that reason.

Ryan Eby wrote:


Only thing I would add is that for the detroit crossing coming back
into the US it seems that library conference as your reason is an
automatic trunk search as it has happened both times I've mentioned
it.

eby.

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:28 PM, John Fereira ja...@cornell.edu wrote:
 
  

David Fiander wrote:
   


I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
passports, it's more that they can't go home without.

 
  

It's good that this is being discussed now.  It would be a shame to have
someone not be able to attend because they didn't have adequate documents.
There *are* immigration sites for both the U.S. and Canada that can provide
up to date information regarding required documents.  I was suggest using
those sites rather than speculate about what might be required based on
responses in this thread.  That said, I probably should check my passport to
see when it expires.  In addition to the likely trip to Montpellier, there
is a fairly high chance that'll be going to Tanzania on business as well.

I have taken the 1000 Island Bridge (incredibly scenic for those that
haven't done it) and have also taken the Wolf Island Ferries.  I've probably
traveled to/from Canada 6-7 times and  got more scrutiny at the Wolf Island
crossing than any other spot.

Ride sharing is a good idea.  With enough people coming from some areas
renting a van might even be a viable option.

--
John Fereira
Cornell University
Twitter: @john_fereira
Google Wave: fere...@googlewave.com

   

 
  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Joe Hourcle

On Mon, 25 Jan 2010, Edward M. Corrado wrote:

I never had a problem in the couple of times I crossed a border into Canada 
for a library conference, but I tend to make sure I have the program and 
hotel information readily available to show them in case they ask (yes, the 
Canadian border people have looked at it). My guess is that some of the 
border guards think only old ladies with hair buns can be librarians so they 
might be a bit confused when someone that doesn't meet that description tries 
to cross the boarder.


I've only been to Canada once (for last year's ASIST), and the only 
question I had difficulty in answering was who do you work for, for 
which I probably confused the guy with an explanation of US government 
contracting.


It's not as bad as Israel, where I've heard some people have been asked to 
give their presentation for the conference, when they said that's why they 
were visiting.


-Joe


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Walter Lewis
On 25 Jan 10, at 11:23 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:

 Might only be an issue crossing at the Detroit-Windsor border, though.  Not 
 sure how broadly his opinion may have spread beyond the state.

I think the key to the troubles at Windsor can be linked either to
a) Art Rhyno confessing at the border crossing he was going to be paid for 
going to a library conference (some XML thing), or
b) an American (name slips my mind) who ran into issues coming to Access when 
it was held in Windsor.

In short, it isn't a general US/Canadian border problem.  The evidence would 
suggest it is directly related the the University of Windsor's Leddy Library 
being too close to the bridge over the Detroit River. 

Walter


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Nick Ruest
I cross quite a few times a year at Sarnia and Windsor to go back home to the 
US to visit. I have a work permit, so that makes things easier. But, just don't 
mention work. Just say, I'm here to visit friends for a couple days in 
Kingston, Montreal, Toronto.

-nruest

On Jan 25, 2010, at 9:31 PM, Walter Lewis wrote:

 On 25 Jan 10, at 11:23 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:
 
 Might only be an issue crossing at the Detroit-Windsor border, though.  Not 
 sure how broadly his opinion may have spread beyond the state.
 
 I think the key to the troubles at Windsor can be linked either to
 a) Art Rhyno confessing at the border crossing he was going to be paid for 
 going to a library conference (some XML thing), or
 b) an American (name slips my mind) who ran into issues coming to Access when 
 it was held in Windsor.
 
 In short, it isn't a general US/Canadian border problem.  The evidence would 
 suggest it is directly related the the University of Windsor's Leddy Library 
 being too close to the bridge over the Detroit River. 
 
 Walter


Nick Ruest
Digital Strategies Librarian

McMaster University
Mills Memorial Library
1280 Main Street West
Hamilton, ON L8S 4L6
Phone: 905.525.9140 ext. 21276
Email: rue...@mcmaster.ca
http://library.mcmaster.ca/contact/ruest-nicholas
http://nruest.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca/


Revolution is not something fixed in ideology, nor is it something fashioned 
to a particular decade.  It is a personal process embedded in the human 
spirit. - Abbie Hoffman


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Tom Keays
I've been listening to the suggested locations for the past few days
and, with the exception of Sudbury, all the suggestions are doable for
me (a traveler who would be coming from central NY). In order of
distance, and therefore preference, Kingston would be my first choice,
followed by Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto, and Montreal.

Tom

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 9:44 AM, David Fiander da...@fiander.info wrote:
 So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
 center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

 - Toronto
 - Kingston
 - Ottawa
 - Sudbury
 - Montreal

 Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
 meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
 interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
 for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
 end up in Toronto, again.

 I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
 But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

 If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
 start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
 made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
 people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
 arrangements.

 - David



Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-25 Thread Roy Tennant
I agree with Nick. The only time I've been hassled (and I have, worse than
when I went to Romania), was when I happened to reply that yes, I was being
paid to speak. Canada seems to be ultra-sensitive to American
carpet-bagging. Not that I can blame them, but frankly I think Canada has
sent more talent our way than otherwise. Do I really need to name them all?
You people just need to stop being so cool. Okay?
Roy


On 1/25/10 1/25/10 € 8:25 PM, Nick Ruest rue...@mcmaster.ca wrote:

 I cross quite a few times a year at Sarnia and Windsor to go back home to the
 US to visit. I have a work permit, so that makes things easier. But, just
 don't mention work. Just say, I'm here to visit friends for a couple days in
 Kingston, Montreal, Toronto.
 
 -nruest
 
 On Jan 25, 2010, at 9:31 PM, Walter Lewis wrote:
 
 On 25 Jan 10, at 11:23 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:
 
 Might only be an issue crossing at the Detroit-Windsor border, though.  Not
 sure how broadly his opinion may have spread beyond the state.
 
 I think the key to the troubles at Windsor can be linked either to
 a) Art Rhyno confessing at the border crossing he was going to be paid for
 going to a library conference (some XML thing), or
 b) an American (name slips my mind) who ran into issues coming to Access when
 it was held in Windsor.
 
 In short, it isn't a general US/Canadian border problem.  The evidence would
 suggest it is directly related the the University of Windsor's Leddy Library
 being too close to the bridge over the Detroit River.
 
 Walter
 
 
 Nick Ruest
 Digital Strategies Librarian
 
 McMaster University
 Mills Memorial Library
 1280 Main Street West
 Hamilton, ON L8S 4L6
 Phone: 905.525.9140 ext. 21276
 Email: rue...@mcmaster.ca
 http://library.mcmaster.ca/contact/ruest-nicholas
 http://nruest.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca/
 
 
 Revolution is not something fixed in ideology, nor is it something fashioned
 to a particular decade.  It is a personal process embedded in the human
 spirit. - Abbie Hoffman
 


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-21 Thread John Fereira

David Fiander wrote:

I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
passports, it's more that they can't go home without.
  
It's good that this is being discussed now.  It would be a shame to have 
someone not be able to attend because they didn't have adequate 
documents.  There *are* immigration sites for both the U.S. and Canada 
that can provide up to date information regarding required documents.  I 
was suggest using those sites rather than speculate about what might be 
required based on responses in this thread.  That said, I probably 
should check my passport to see when it expires.  In addition to the 
likely trip to Montpellier, there is a fairly high chance that'll be 
going to Tanzania on business as well.


I have taken the 1000 Island Bridge (incredibly scenic for those that 
haven't done it) and have also taken the Wolf Island Ferries.  I've 
probably traveled to/from Canada 6-7 times and  got more scrutiny at the 
Wolf Island crossing than any other spot.


Ride sharing is a good idea.  With enough people coming from some areas 
renting a van might even be a viable option.


--
John Fereira
Cornell University
Twitter: @john_fereira
Google Wave: fere...@googlewave.com


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-21 Thread Ryan Eby
Only thing I would add is that for the detroit crossing coming back
into the US it seems that library conference as your reason is an
automatic trunk search as it has happened both times I've mentioned
it.

eby.

On Thu, Jan 21, 2010 at 3:28 PM, John Fereira ja...@cornell.edu wrote:
 David Fiander wrote:

 I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
 passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
 passports, it's more that they can't go home without.


 It's good that this is being discussed now.  It would be a shame to have
 someone not be able to attend because they didn't have adequate documents.
  There *are* immigration sites for both the U.S. and Canada that can provide
 up to date information regarding required documents.  I was suggest using
 those sites rather than speculate about what might be required based on
 responses in this thread.  That said, I probably should check my passport to
 see when it expires.  In addition to the likely trip to Montpellier, there
 is a fairly high chance that'll be going to Tanzania on business as well.

 I have taken the 1000 Island Bridge (incredibly scenic for those that
 haven't done it) and have also taken the Wolf Island Ferries.  I've probably
 traveled to/from Canada 6-7 times and  got more scrutiny at the Wolf Island
 crossing than any other spot.

 Ride sharing is a good idea.  With enough people coming from some areas
 renting a van might even be a viable option.

 --
 John Fereira
 Cornell University
 Twitter: @john_fereira
 Google Wave: fere...@googlewave.com



[CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread David Fiander
So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Edward M. Corrado
I agree that the sooner a space and date can be decided the better. 
While Sudbury would probably be nice, it would be a tough sell because 
of the distance from me (9.5 hrs). The others are all doable. Any ideas 
on how we should decide? Some sort of ranked list? I personally would 
enjoy going back to Montreal and I'd like to visit Ottawa, but Kingston 
is the closest.


As far as dates, I'd personally like it to be on a Monday or Friday, 
this way I would only have to take one (or 1.5) days off from work, and, 
I can take the weekend to explore. (BTW: I'd like Monday better than 
Friday, but either would be better than a Tuesday or Wednesday (Thursday 
being my third choice). I guess I could do a weekend as well, but I 
would think most people would rather it be during the week,


Edward



David Fiander wrote:

So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David
  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Kimberly Silk
I just wanted to chime in from downtown Toronto -- I certainly welcome meeting 
outside of my fair city, and prefer locales that can be reached via train 
(Ottawa, Montreal, Kingston, Sudbury). Porter airlines is also good, but sadly, 
they don't fly to Sudbury.

Kim

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of MJ 
Suhonos
Sent: January 20, 2010 10:17 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

I think mode of transportation is something to consider; for those of us in 
South/Eastern Ontario, most of the cities are relatively reachable within a few 
hours by ground (excepting Sudbury, unfortunately).

However, for those out-of-province coming via air transport, Kingston is at 
least 2h from the closest major airport (Ottawa).  [NB: don't get me wrong; as 
a Queen's graduate, I love Kingston very much].

So, in the name of practicality, one of the larger cities -- Toronto, Ottawa, 
Montreal -- probably makes the most sense.  It may be a bit less interesting 
for some, but at the same time, we could always pick one of the smaller cities 
for our second meet-up.

Just my $0.02CAD.

MJ

PS.  for air travel, Porter airlines is an excellent regional carrier, 
servicing Boston, Chicago, Montreal, Newark, Ottawa, Thunder Bay, and Toronto 
(among others).

On 2010-01-20, at 10:05 AM, Edward M. Corrado wrote:

 I agree that the sooner a space and date can be decided the better. While 
 Sudbury would probably be nice, it would be a tough sell because of the 
 distance from me (9.5 hrs). The others are all doable. Any ideas on how we 
 should decide? Some sort of ranked list? I personally would enjoy going back 
 to Montreal and I'd like to visit Ottawa, but Kingston is the closest.
 
 As far as dates, I'd personally like it to be on a Monday or Friday, this way 
 I would only have to take one (or 1.5) days off from work, and, I can take 
 the weekend to explore. (BTW: I'd like Monday better than Friday, but either 
 would be better than a Tuesday or Wednesday (Thursday being my third choice). 
 I guess I could do a weekend as well, but I would think most people would 
 rather it be during the week,
 
 Edward
 
 
 
 David Fiander wrote:
 So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
 center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:
 
 - Toronto
 - Kingston
 - Ottawa
 - Sudbury
 - Montreal
 
 Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
 meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
 interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
 for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
 end up in Toronto, again.
 
 I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
 But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.
 
 If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
 start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
 made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
 people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
 arrangements.
 
 - David
  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Pascal Calarco
Here are my personal musings from my perspective as one of those on the 
periphery (Indiana).  Thanks for moving this forward!


Sudbury seems too remote; I vacation near there each summer, and even in 
April that can be a challenging drive, and is generally expensive to fly 
into.


For folks from the Midwest, Montreal is probably too far to be honest. 
I love Montreal (it is my fave Cdn. city), but I would likely have to 
fly to get there as that is a two-day drive from Chicagoland where I am 
roughly.  If consensus is Montreal, I know a bunch of people there 
(McGill, UQAM, U.Montreal), and could put likely folks in touch to find 
space.


Ottawa is still doable and Kingston is preferred for me simply because I 
haven't spent much time there.  Ottawa is kind of expensive.


Toronto has good and bad.  Expensive, familiar.  But also central, good 
public transit for getting around and lots of stuff to do.  We had a 
Fedora (linux) Users and Developer's con at York U. back in December and 
it was great.  I could also stay at my sister's place, lowering costs to 
attend for me at least.


April and May are going to be really busy for me.  After mid-May would 
be better for me.  I can't participate between April 16 - May 16, 
basically, but I am only one voice.  If not this time, I'll probably 
attend next year!


  - pascal


Pascal Calarco
Head, Library Information Systems
Hesburgh Libraries of Notre Dame
University of Notre Dame /
Michiana Academic Library Consortium
Notre Dame, IN USA
http://www.library.nd.edu/
-
Fedora Weekly News editor
Fedora Ambassador, Indiana, USA

On 01/20/2010 09:44 AM, David Fiander wrote:

So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Walter Lewis
On 20 Jan 10, at 10:16 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:

 I think mode of transportation is something to consider; for those of us in 
 South/Eastern Ontario, most of the cities are relatively reachable within a 
 few hours by ground (excepting Sudbury, unfortunately).
 
 However, for those out-of-province coming via air transport, Kingston is at 
 least 2h from the closest major airport (Ottawa).  [NB: don't get me wrong; 
 as a Queen's graduate, I love Kingston very much].

As another Queen's grad (a little before MJ, I fear), I am also guilty of 
forgetting that Air Canada has about eight flights a day that drop into the 
airport at Kingston.  As a student it was mostly VIA, the bus or the thumb.  
That said, I would be driving right by Toronto's Pearson Airport on my way down 
and could time passage to do a pickup (or two).

Walter
  who loves Kingston in May and June


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread MJ Suhonos
Walter, once again, has made up for my impetuousness -- I had completely 
forgotten about Norman Rogers airport (YGK).  Apologies.

It's a bit expensive compared to ground transport ($350 from Pearson vs. $40 
Megabus or $120 Greyhound; via Ottawa?) but certainly an option for those 
flying in from elsewhere.

MJ
who also loves Kingston in the spring (but more in the summer when CORK is on)


On 2010-01-20, at 10:32 AM, Walter Lewis wrote:

 On 20 Jan 10, at 10:16 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:
 
 I think mode of transportation is something to consider; for those of us in 
 South/Eastern Ontario, most of the cities are relatively reachable within a 
 few hours by ground (excepting Sudbury, unfortunately).
 
 However, for those out-of-province coming via air transport, Kingston is at 
 least 2h from the closest major airport (Ottawa).  [NB: don't get me wrong; 
 as a Queen's graduate, I love Kingston very much].
 
 As another Queen's grad (a little before MJ, I fear), I am also guilty of 
 forgetting that Air Canada has about eight flights a day that drop into the 
 airport at Kingston.  As a student it was mostly VIA, the bus or the thumb.  
 That said, I would be driving right by Toronto's Pearson Airport on my way 
 down and could time passage to do a pickup (or two).
 
 Walter
  who loves Kingston in May and June


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Anna Headley
Train travel gives you a smaller carbon footprint than air travel! 


Anna
who maybe just leveled in hippie



MJ Suhonos wrote:

Walter, once again, has made up for my impetuousness -- I had completely 
forgotten about Norman Rogers airport (YGK).  Apologies.

It's a bit expensive compared to ground transport ($350 from Pearson vs. $40 
Megabus or $120 Greyhound; via Ottawa?) but certainly an option for those 
flying in from elsewhere.

MJ
who also loves Kingston in the spring (but more in the summer when CORK is on)


On 2010-01-20, at 10:32 AM, Walter Lewis wrote:

  

On 20 Jan 10, at 10:16 AM, MJ Suhonos wrote:



I think mode of transportation is something to consider; for those of us in 
South/Eastern Ontario, most of the cities are relatively reachable within a few 
hours by ground (excepting Sudbury, unfortunately).

However, for those out-of-province coming via air transport, Kingston is at 
least 2h from the closest major airport (Ottawa).  [NB: don't get me wrong; as 
a Queen's graduate, I love Kingston very much].
  

As another Queen's grad (a little before MJ, I fear), I am also guilty of 
forgetting that Air Canada has about eight flights a day that drop into the 
airport at Kingston.  As a student it was mostly VIA, the bus or the thumb.  
That said, I would be driving right by Toronto's Pearson Airport on my way down 
and could time passage to do a pickup (or two).

Walter
 who loves Kingston in May and June



--
Anna Headley
Swarthmore College Library
610.690.5781
ahead...@swarthmore.edu 


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Patrick M. Lozeau
Hi,

I just chatted with a person at McGill (i.e. Amy Buckland), and we would be 
glad to host the event in Montreal. So, you can consider Montreal as a viable 
option in the choices. 

I also know people at U.Montreal and other organizations that could and would 
probably help us with logistics depending on how many people plan on attending.

If you're not convinced about Montreal, go ask Dan Chudnov about poutine.

Patrick


Patrick M. Lozeau
librarian
inlibro.com


Le 2010-01-20 à 10:28, Pascal Calarco a écrit :

 Here are my personal musings from my perspective as one of those on the 
 periphery (Indiana).  Thanks for moving this forward!
 
 Sudbury seems too remote; I vacation near there each summer, and even in 
 April that can be a challenging drive, and is generally expensive to fly into.
 
 For folks from the Midwest, Montreal is probably too far to be honest. I love 
 Montreal (it is my fave Cdn. city), but I would likely have to fly to get 
 there as that is a two-day drive from Chicagoland where I am roughly.  If 
 consensus is Montreal, I know a bunch of people there (McGill, UQAM, 
 U.Montreal), and could put likely folks in touch to find space.
 
 Ottawa is still doable and Kingston is preferred for me simply because I 
 haven't spent much time there.  Ottawa is kind of expensive.
 
 Toronto has good and bad.  Expensive, familiar.  But also central, good 
 public transit for getting around and lots of stuff to do.  We had a Fedora 
 (linux) Users and Developer's con at York U. back in December and it was 
 great.  I could also stay at my sister's place, lowering costs to attend for 
 me at least.
 
 April and May are going to be really busy for me.  After mid-May would be 
 better for me.  I can't participate between April 16 - May 16, basically, but 
 I am only one voice.  If not this time, I'll probably attend next year!
 
  - pascal
 
 
 Pascal Calarco
 Head, Library Information Systems
 Hesburgh Libraries of Notre Dame
 University of Notre Dame /
 Michiana Academic Library Consortium
 Notre Dame, IN USA
 http://www.library.nd.edu/
 -
 Fedora Weekly News editor
 Fedora Ambassador, Indiana, USA
 
 On 01/20/2010 09:44 AM, David Fiander wrote:
 So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
 center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:
 
 - Toronto
 - Kingston
 - Ottawa
 - Sudbury
 - Montreal
 
 Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
 meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
 interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
 for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
 end up in Toronto, again.
 
 I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
 But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.
 
 If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
 start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
 made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
 people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
 arrangements.
 
 - David


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread John Fink
If Hamilton would make logistical sense, I'm quite happy to do some
exploratory poking around.

jf

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 11:00 AM, Patrick M. Lozeau pmloz...@inlibro.comwrote:

 Hi,

 I just chatted with a person at McGill (i.e. Amy Buckland), and we would be
 glad to host the event in Montreal. So, you can consider Montreal as a
 viable option in the choices.

 I also know people at U.Montreal and other organizations that could and
 would probably help us with logistics depending on how many people plan on
 attending.

 If you're not convinced about Montreal, go ask Dan Chudnov about poutine.

 Patrick

 
 Patrick M. Lozeau
 librarian
 inlibro.com


 Le 2010-01-20 ą 10:28, Pascal Calarco a écrit :

  Here are my personal musings from my perspective as one of those on the
 periphery (Indiana).  Thanks for moving this forward!
 
  Sudbury seems too remote; I vacation near there each summer, and even in
 April that can be a challenging drive, and is generally expensive to fly
 into.
 
  For folks from the Midwest, Montreal is probably too far to be honest. I
 love Montreal (it is my fave Cdn. city), but I would likely have to fly to
 get there as that is a two-day drive from Chicagoland where I am roughly.
  If consensus is Montreal, I know a bunch of people there (McGill, UQAM,
 U.Montreal), and could put likely folks in touch to find space.
 
  Ottawa is still doable and Kingston is preferred for me simply because I
 haven't spent much time there.  Ottawa is kind of expensive.
 
  Toronto has good and bad.  Expensive, familiar.  But also central, good
 public transit for getting around and lots of stuff to do.  We had a Fedora
 (linux) Users and Developer's con at York U. back in December and it was
 great.  I could also stay at my sister's place, lowering costs to attend for
 me at least.
 
  April and May are going to be really busy for me.  After mid-May would be
 better for me.  I can't participate between April 16 - May 16, basically,
 but I am only one voice.  If not this time, I'll probably attend next year!
 
   - pascal
 
  
  Pascal Calarco
  Head, Library Information Systems
  Hesburgh Libraries of Notre Dame
  University of Notre Dame /
  Michiana Academic Library Consortium
  Notre Dame, IN USA
  http://www.library.nd.edu/
  -
  Fedora Weekly News editor
  Fedora Ambassador, Indiana, USA
 
  On 01/20/2010 09:44 AM, David Fiander wrote:
  So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
  center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:
 
  - Toronto
  - Kingston
  - Ottawa
  - Sudbury
  - Montreal
 
  Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
  meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
  interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
  for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
  end up in Toronto, again.
 
  I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
  But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.
 
  If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
  start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
  made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
  people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
  arrangements.
 
  - David




-- 
http://libgrunt.blogspot.com -- library culture and technology.


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Glen Newton
+1 for Montreal

-- 
Glen Newton | glen.new...@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca
Researcher, Information Science, CISTI Research
[On assignment: IM Advisor, Canadian Forestry Service, Natural Resources Canada]
http://tinyurl.com/yvchmu
NRCan/CFS: 613-947-9088  -- This one now
NRC: tel 613-990-9163 | fax 613-952-8246
Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (CISTI)
National Research Council Canada (NRC)| M-55, 1200 Montreal Road
http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/
Institut canadien de l'information scientifique et technique (ICIST) 
Conseil national de recherches Canada | M-55, 1200 chemin Montr al
Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0R6  
Government of Canada | Gouvernement du Canada   
--

 
 Hi,
 
 I just chatted with a person at McGill (i.e. Amy Buckland), and we
 would be glad to host the event in Montreal. So, you can consider
 Montreal as a viable option in the choices.  
  
 I also know people at U.Montreal and other organizations that could
 and would probably help us with logistics depending on how many
 people plan on attending. 
 
 If you're not convinced about Montreal, go ask Dan Chudnov about poutine.
 
 Patrick
 
 
 Patrick M. Lozeau
 librarian
 inlibro.com
 
 
 Le 2010-01-20   10:28, Pascal Calarco a  crit :
 
 Here are my personal musings from my perspective as one of those on
 the periphery (Indiana).  Thanks for moving this forward! 
 
 Sudbury seems too remote; I vacation near there each summer, and even in 
 April that can be a challenging drive, and is generally expensive to fly into.
 
 For folks from the Midwest, Montreal is probably too far to be honest. I love 
 Montreal (it is my fave Cdn. city), but I would likely have to fly to get 
 there as that is a two-day drive from Chicagoland where I am roughly.  If 
 consensus is Montreal, I know a bunch of people there (McGill, UQAM, 
 U.Montreal), and could put likely folks in touch to find space.
 
 Ottawa is still doable and Kingston is preferred for me simply because I 
 haven't spent much time there.  Ottawa is kind of expensive.
 
 Toronto has good and bad.  Expensive, familiar.  But also central, good 
 public transit for getting around and lots of stuff to do.  We had a Fedora 
 (linux) Users and Developer's con at York U. back in December and it was 
 great.  I could also stay at my sister's place, lowering costs to attend for 
 me at least.
 
 April and May are going to be really busy for me.  After mid-May would be 
 better for me.  I can't participate between April 16 - May 16, basically, but 
 I am only one voice.  If not this time, I'll probably attend next year!
 
  - pascal
 
 
 Pascal Calarco
 Head, Library Information Systems
 Hesburgh Libraries of Notre Dame
 University of Notre Dame /
 Michiana Academic Library Consortium
 Notre Dame, IN USA
 http://www.library.nd.edu/
 -
 Fedora Weekly News editor
 Fedora Ambassador, Indiana, USA
 
 On 01/20/2010 09:44 AM, David Fiander wrote:
 So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
 center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:
 
 - Toronto
 - Kingston
 - Ottawa
 - Sudbury
 - Montreal
 
 Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
 meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
 interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
 for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
 end up in Toronto, again.
 
 I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
 But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.
 
 If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
 start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
 made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
 people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
 arrangements.
 
 - David


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread John Fereira

Although Kingston is closest to  me...

+1 for Ottawa
+1 for Montreal

I just checked airfare for both cities from Ithaca, NY (where several 
people within 50 miles that are on the list are from) and it's running 
about $540 US r/t.  Fortunately all of the cities (except Sudbury) are 
less than a 5.5 hour drive.


If the meeting was at the end of April I wouldn't be able to attend 
anyway since I'll likely be at a conference in Montpellier, France.




--
John Fereira
Cornell University
Twitter: @john_fereira
Google Wave: fere...@googlewave.com


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Edward M. Corrado

I vote for Montpelier :-).

Seriously though, I do think if it is within driving distance, John is 
correct that there will be some sort of central NY contingent and it 
most likely will involve automobiles.


Edward

John Fereira wrote:

Although Kingston is closest to  me...

+1 for Ottawa
+1 for Montreal

I just checked airfare for both cities from Ithaca, NY (where several 
people within 50 miles that are on the list are from) and it's running 
about $540 US r/t.  Fortunately all of the cities (except Sudbury) are 
less than a 5.5 hour drive.


If the meeting was at the end of April I wouldn't be able to attend 
anyway since I'll likely be at a conference in Montpellier, France.






Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Daniel Chudnov
On Jan 20, 2010, at 12:49 PM, John Fereira wrote:

 Although Kingston is closest to  me...
 
 +1 for Ottawa
 +1 for Montreal

Agreed on the above.  Any reason to return to Montreal is a good one, but I'd 
consider heading up for any of these locations.  I'll be busy in late April so 
if you end up pushing the schedule back a bit I might crash the party.

Great that you're doing this!


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Tim Ribaric
Hello all,
  Chiming in a bit late but my vote would be for Kingston.  Also for those 
driving it would be possible to arrange some ride sharing, ala code4lib 2009... 
I'd find the link on the wiki but the code4lib site is running pokey right now.


Tim

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of David 
Fiander
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 9:45 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Glen Newton
Hmmm. No one has brought up how increasingly onerous it has become to
travel to the U.S., as a Canadian or non-U.S resident (and
particularly for non-Canadian, non-US residents who are fingerprinted
on each visit!). This should should not be discounted, as much as I
enjoy visiting place like Montpelier, close to where I have some good
friends...

-glen

 On Jan 20, 2010, at 12:49 PM, John Fereira wrote:
 
  Although Kingston is closest to  me...
  
  +1 for Ottawa
  +1 for Montreal
 
 Agreed on the above.  Any reason to return to Montreal is a good
 one, but I'd consider heading up for any of these locations.  I'll
 be busy in late April so if you end up pushing the schedule back a
 bit I might crash the party. 
 
 Great that you're doing this!


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread John Miedema
Ottawa (first choice). If it's in Ottawa anytime soon, and someone 
volunteers a location, I will help organize.


Order of preference from there: Kingston, Montreal, Toronto.

John




Tim Ribaric wrote:

Hello all,
  Chiming in a bit late but my vote would be for Kingston.  Also for those 
driving it would be possible to arrange some ride sharing, ala code4lib 2009... 
I'd find the link on the wiki but the code4lib site is running pokey right now.


Tim

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of David 
Fiander
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 9:45 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David


  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread David Fiander
Of course, as a corollary to the fact that all the locations being
discussed are Canadian (well, except for Montreal), any Americans
resident in the USA on the list do need to make sure that their
passports will be valid through to the end of May, at least, in order
to ensure you will be able to attend.

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 14:10, Thomas Dowling tdowl...@ohiolink.edu wrote:
 On 01/20/2010 02:03 PM, Glen Newton wrote:
 Hmmm. No one has brought up how increasingly onerous it has become to
 travel to the U.S., as a Canadian or non-U.S resident (and
 particularly for non-Canadian, non-US residents who are fingerprinted
 on each visit!). This should should not be discounted, as much as I
 enjoy visiting place like Montpelier, close to where I have some good
 friends...


 We could have a joint meeting in Sarnia/Port Huron and just shout across the
 river to each other!  (Windsor/Detroit might be too loud.)



Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Marc Truitt
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

On 2010-01-20 12:10, Thomas Dowling wrote:
 On 01/20/2010 02:03 PM, Glen Newton wrote:
 Hmmm. No one has brought up how increasingly onerous it has become to
 travel to the U.S., as a Canadian or non-U.S resident (and
 particularly for non-Canadian, non-US residents who are fingerprinted
 on each visit!). This should should not be discounted, as much as I
 enjoy visiting place like Montpelier, close to where I have some good
 friends...
 
 
 We could have a joint meeting in Sarnia/Port Huron and just shout across the
 river to each other!  (Windsor/Detroit might be too loud.)
 

While I took the reference to Montpelier to refer to John Fereira's
mention of the city in France (and not to the town in Vermont), Glen's
point is well-taken and, from what I observed on my trip to ALA
Midwinter in Boston, not widely familiar to US residents.  I arrived for
an 8.10am flight from Edmonton at approximately 5.30am last Thursday
morning.  I actually got on the plane at 8.05am, and there were others
still behind me in line.  Quite literally, it took less time for me to
fly the leg from Edmonton to Minneapolis, than it did to board the plane
in Edmonton.  And then to discovery that *none* of this enhanced regime
is currently implemented in the US reduced the entire exercise to optics
of the most cynical sort.

TSA is enforcing on foreign-originated flights levels of intrusive
security and inconvenience that would be unsustainable and politically
unacceptable in the US.  Have we forgotten from where the September 11th
flights originated?

Apologies for the off-topic drift, but you all ought to be aware of this...

- - mt

- -- 
*
Marc Truitt
Associate University Librarian,
Bibliographic and Information   Voice  : 780-492-4770
Technology Services e-mail : marc.tru...@ualberta.ca
University of Alberta Libraries fax: 780-492-9243
Cameron Library cell   : 780-217-0356
Edmonton, AB  T6G 2J8

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She looked down and her outside shell was full.
Sodium cried, What a gas!  Be my bride!
And I'll change your name from Chlorine to Chloride...
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*
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Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Walter Lewis
On 20 Jan 10, at 2:30 PM, David Fiander wrote:

 Of course, as a corollary to the fact that all the locations being
 discussed are Canadian (well, except for Montreal), any Americans
 resident in the USA on the list do need to make sure that their
 passports will be valid through to the end of May, at least, in order
 to ensure you will be able to attend.

Is Canadian customs now requiring US Passports?  Used to be Hotel California:  
you could come over, but without your passport you couldn't go home.

Walter


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Wendy Huot
I'm glad to help with the logistics of meeting Kingston, if that's the 
city we choose.  I'd definitely prefer to meet after April (say May or 
June), as that's when our winter academic term ends and the Canadian 
weather is best.


There are lots of free wireless-enabled spaces on the Queen's campus, 
including the Harry Potter Reading Room (formerly known as the 'purple 
passion pit' before it was renovated):


 http://library.queensu.ca/files/imagepicker/c/central/23room.jpg

Regarding travel to Kingston:

* VIA Rail and the bus run through Kingston several times a day
* Bus lines for Kingston: Montreal and Ottawa = Greyhound,  Toronto = 
Coach Canada
* For an interesting drive from upstate NY, you can get from Cape 
Vincent, NY to Kingston by way of Wolfe Island + ferry.

* Flying into Kingston is an option, but it's always expensive

Wendy

--
Wendy Huot
Web Development Librarian
Queen's University Library
Kingston, Ontario Canada K7L 5C4



John Miedema wrote:
Ottawa (first choice). If it's in Ottawa anytime soon, and someone 
volunteers a location, I will help organize.


Order of preference from there: Kingston, Montreal, Toronto.

John




Tim Ribaric wrote:

Hello all,
  Chiming in a bit late but my vote would be for Kingston.  Also for 
those driving it would be possible to arrange some ride sharing, ala 
code4lib 2009... I'd find the link on the wiki but the code4lib site 
is running pokey right now.



Tim

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf 
Of David Fiander

Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 9:45 AM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

- Toronto
- Kingston
- Ottawa
- Sudbury
- Montreal

Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
end up in Toronto, again.

I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
arrangements.

- David


  





--
Wendy Huot
Web Development Librarian
Queen's University Library
Kingston, Ontario Canada K7L 5C4

Phone: (613) 533-6000 ext 75250
Email: wendy.h...@queensu.ca


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread David Fiander
I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
passports, it's more that they can't go home without.

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 14:36, Walter Lewis lew...@hhpl.on.ca wrote:
 On 20 Jan 10, at 2:30 PM, David Fiander wrote:

 Of course, as a corollary to the fact that all the locations being
 discussed are Canadian (well, except for Montreal), any Americans
 resident in the USA on the list do need to make sure that their
 passports will be valid through to the end of May, at least, in order
 to ensure you will be able to attend.

 Is Canadian customs now requiring US Passports?  Used to be Hotel California: 
  you could come over, but without your passport you couldn't go home.

 Walter



Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Avendano, Patricia
BTW, Montreal IS a Canadian city. 


P. Avendano

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of David 
Fiander
Sent: Wednesday, 20 January, 2010 14:30
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

Of course, as a corollary to the fact that all the locations being
discussed are Canadian (well, except for Montreal), any Americans
resident in the USA on the list do need to make sure that their
passports will be valid through to the end of May, at least, in order
to ensure you will be able to attend.

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 14:10, Thomas Dowling tdowl...@ohiolink.edu wrote:
 On 01/20/2010 02:03 PM, Glen Newton wrote:
 Hmmm. No one has brought up how increasingly onerous it has become to
 travel to the U.S., as a Canadian or non-U.S resident (and
 particularly for non-Canadian, non-US residents who are fingerprinted
 on each visit!). This should should not be discounted, as much as I
 enjoy visiting place like Montpelier, close to where I have some good
 friends...


 We could have a joint meeting in Sarnia/Port Huron and just shout across the
 river to each other!  (Windsor/Detroit might be too loud.)



Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Walter Lewis
On 20 Jan 10, at 2:39 PM, Wendy Huot wrote:

 Regarding travel to Kingston:
 
 * For an interesting drive from upstate NY, you can get from Cape Vincent, NY 
 to Kingston by way of Wolfe Island + ferry.

Driving across the Thousand Islands Bridge is faster, but the interesting 
quotient goes way up via Wolfe Island  (two ferries: one cheap, one free)

Walter


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Jonathan Rochkind
Americans can no longer get into Canada without passports, even driving 
accross the border.  Not even a birth certificate will do anymore.  
Officially this went into effect last spring sometime, but they had a 
delayed grace period, which I'm guessing is up, or at least I wouldn't 
want to risk it.


(And, indeed, i remember when I could get into Canada over the Detroit 
River just saying American, going for lunch.)


David Fiander wrote:

I'm not sure, but everybody entering the US is required to present a
passport or other enhanced ID, so if the Americans don't have
passports, it's more that they can't go home without.

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 14:36, Walter Lewis lew...@hhpl.on.ca wrote:
  

On 20 Jan 10, at 2:30 PM, David Fiander wrote:



Of course, as a corollary to the fact that all the locations being
discussed are Canadian (well, except for Montreal), any Americans
resident in the USA on the list do need to make sure that their
passports will be valid through to the end of May, at least, in order
to ensure you will be able to attend.
  

Is Canadian customs now requiring US Passports?  Used to be Hotel California:  
you could come over, but without your passport you couldn't go home.

Walter




  


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread David Fiander
Walter plans on going to Kingston by way of Buffalo and Cape Vincent,
just so he can take the ferries.

On Wed, Jan 20, 2010 at 14:45, Walter Lewis lew...@hhpl.on.ca wrote:
 On 20 Jan 10, at 2:39 PM, Wendy Huot wrote:

 Regarding travel to Kingston:

 * For an interesting drive from upstate NY, you can get from Cape Vincent, 
 NY to Kingston by way of Wolfe Island + ferry.

 Driving across the Thousand Islands Bridge is faster, but the interesting 
 quotient goes way up via Wolfe Island  (two ferries: one cheap, one free)

 Walter



Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Walter Lewis
On 20 Jan 10, at 2:53 PM, David Fiander wrote:

 Walter plans on going to Kingston by way of Buffalo and Cape Vincent,
 just so he can take the ferries.

I've done just that, ... taking in a few lighthouses and harbours along the 
way!  (and  special collections at Cornell and Syracuse).

Walter


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Michael Vandenburg
And the benefits of coming to Kingston don't end with the well connected
meeting spaces, there's also an excellent collection of shivs on display at
the local prison museum.

http://www.penitentiarymuseum.ca/

Really, what more incentive do you need?

-Michael
_
Michael Vandenburg | Systems Librarian | Queen's University Libraries
Kingston ON, K7L 5C4 | 613-533-6000 x 74536



-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of
Wendy Huot
Sent: January 20, 2010 2:39 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

I'm glad to help with the logistics of meeting Kingston, if that's the 
city we choose.  I'd definitely prefer to meet after April (say May or 
June), as that's when our winter academic term ends and the Canadian 
weather is best.

There are lots of free wireless-enabled spaces on the Queen's campus, 
including the Harry Potter Reading Room (formerly known as the 'purple 
passion pit' before it was renovated):

  http://library.queensu.ca/files/imagepicker/c/central/23room.jpg

Regarding travel to Kingston:

* VIA Rail and the bus run through Kingston several times a day
* Bus lines for Kingston: Montreal and Ottawa = Greyhound,  Toronto = 
Coach Canada
* For an interesting drive from upstate NY, you can get from Cape 
Vincent, NY to Kingston by way of Wolfe Island + ferry.
* Flying into Kingston is an option, but it's always expensive

Wendy

-- 
Wendy Huot
Web Development Librarian
Queen's University Library
Kingston, Ontario Canada K7L 5C4



John Miedema wrote:
 Ottawa (first choice). If it's in Ottawa anytime soon, and someone 
 volunteers a location, I will help organize.

 Order of preference from there: Kingston, Montreal, Toronto.

 John




 Tim Ribaric wrote:
 Hello all,
   Chiming in a bit late but my vote would be for Kingston.  Also for 
 those driving it would be possible to arrange some ride sharing, ala 
 code4lib 2009... I'd find the link on the wiki but the code4lib site 
 is running pokey right now.


 Tim

 -Original Message-
 From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf 
 Of David Fiander
 Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 9:45 AM
 To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
 Subject: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

 So far on the wiki the proposals for the location range from the
 center of known space to let's all visit Dan!:

 - Toronto
 - Kingston
 - Ottawa
 - Sudbury
 - Montreal

 Given some of the far-flung people who have expressed interest in the
 meeting, including some people in Wisconsin (!), it would be
 interesting to figure out the weighted average travel time required
 for all of these locations, but I suspect that that would just mean we
 end up in Toronto, again.

 I just added Montreal to the list, just because, hey, it's Montreal!
 But then, we'd have to find somebody at McGill to act as our host.

 If we're going to be meeting in April/May, then it's probably time to
 start the discussion about site selection so that when the decision is
 made, the hosts will have time to make the arrangements and so that
 people travelling have enough lead time to make cheap travel
 arrangements.

 - David


   



-- 
Wendy Huot
Web Development Librarian
Queen's University Library
Kingston, Ontario Canada K7L 5C4

Phone: (613) 533-6000 ext 75250
Email: wendy.h...@queensu.ca


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread William Denton

My ranked ordering:

Kingston
Montreal
Ottawa
Toronto

It may easier to fly to the non-Kingston cities, but train/bus is easy and 
it's in the middle of the Toronto/Ottawa/Montreal hub.  Ridesharing would 
be easy and people could get there after work for the next day.


Library geeks from around here have probably been to Toronto, Ottawa, and 
Montreal (and Hamilton) fairly recently for conferences.  Not Kingston, 
though.  Plus I want to visit.  And Wendy Huot's ready to help set things 
up, and Michael Vandenburg and Martha Whitehead are there ...


For time, I prefer May/June.  What about the weekend of Friday 14 May - 
Sunday 16 May, maybe starting Friday night and happening Saturday, or 
starting Thursday night and happening Friday?  That's the weekend before 
Victoria Day.  (The 24th of May is actually on the 24th of May this year!) 
Is there any American holiday happening in there?


Bill
--
William Denton, Toronto : miskatonic.org www.frbr.org openfrbr.org


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Pascal Calarco

On 01/20/2010 03:39 PM, William Denton wrote:


For time, I prefer May/June.  What about the weekend of Friday 14 May -
Sunday 16 May, maybe starting Friday night and happening Saturday, or
starting Thursday night and happening Friday?  That's the weekend before
Victoria Day.  (The 24th of May is actually on the 24th of May this year!)
Is there any American holiday happening in there?

Bill


Memorial Day in the US is late this year, May 31st.  That's the only 
holiday in May that I'm aware of.


  - pascal


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Edward M. Corrado
I think Pascal is correct that the only US holiday to worry about in May 
or June is Memorial Day.


The other thing to worry about is other conferences. I know some 
Code4Lib types go to ELUNA, for example. This year ELUNA is, Sunday, May 
9--Thursday, May 13. Since I'm on the ELUNA SC (as is Pascal), I might 
have a tough time with a date that was right after the ELUNA conference 
(esp. since it sounds like we may have post-conference meetings). Maybe 
once a location is decided., something like a Doodle 
(http://www.doodle.com/) can be set up with available dates and people 
can vote on what works for them and whichever dates works for the most 
people is the winner.


Edward


Pascal Calarco wrote:

On 01/20/2010 03:39 PM, William Denton wrote:


For time, I prefer May/June.  What about the weekend of Friday 14 May -
Sunday 16 May, maybe starting Friday night and happening Saturday, or
starting Thursday night and happening Friday?  That's the weekend before
Victoria Day.  (The 24th of May is actually on the 24th of May this 
year!)

Is there any American holiday happening in there?

Bill


Memorial Day in the US is late this year, May 31st.  That's the only 
holiday in May that I'm aware of.


  - pascal


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Tim Ribaric
Further for days that might not be good in May... 

It might be best to avoid May 10 and 11 as that is the date of the 'Canadian 
ETD and Open Repository Workshop' 
http://conferences.uvic.ca/index.php?conference=etdschedConf=etd_May_2010 
I'm sure some code4libers will probably be at that one.  Myself included.

Tim

-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:code4...@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of Pascal 
Calarco
Sent: Wednesday, January 20, 2010 4:18 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

On 01/20/2010 03:39 PM, William Denton wrote:

 For time, I prefer May/June.  What about the weekend of Friday 14 May -
 Sunday 16 May, maybe starting Friday night and happening Saturday, or
 starting Thursday night and happening Friday?  That's the weekend before
 Victoria Day.  (The 24th of May is actually on the 24th of May this year!)
 Is there any American holiday happening in there?

 Bill

Memorial Day in the US is late this year, May 31st.  That's the only 
holiday in May that I'm aware of.

   - pascal


Re: [CODE4LIB] Location of the first Code4Lib North meeting?

2010-01-20 Thread Edward M. Corrado
I guess I am also thinking that I wouldn't worry too much about flight 
patterns/prices for a local Code4Lib. With all of the hassles and 
expense of flying, it is not typically a good option for someone nearby. 
While it would be great to get people from a distance (and I am still 
considering going to Code4Lib NorthWest), I don't see that as the reason 
for local Code4Libs. If someone want to figure out how to get to a local 
from a distance, that's great and they should be welcomed, but I don't 
think that should be a planning concern. I would focus more on local 
modes of transport (trains, buses, cars, motorcycles, bicycles, 
scooters, etc.).


Edward



Patrick M. Lozeau wrote:

I would of loved to get people up to Montreal (bagels anybody?), but I must 
admit that Kingston is dead in the middle for a lot of us (Toronto, Ottawa, 
Montreal, NY state) and could be the easiest and cheapest for traveling.

Second half of May sounds great.

Patrick


Patrick M. Lozeau


Le 2010-01-20 à 15:39, William Denton a écrit :

  

My ranked ordering:

Kingston
Montreal
Ottawa
Toronto

It may easier to fly to the non-Kingston cities, but train/bus is easy and it's 
in the middle of the Toronto/Ottawa/Montreal hub.  Ridesharing would be easy 
and people could get there after work for the next day.

Library geeks from around here have probably been to Toronto, Ottawa, and 
Montreal (and Hamilton) fairly recently for conferences.  Not Kingston, though. 
 Plus I want to visit.  And Wendy Huot's ready to help set things up, and 
Michael Vandenburg and Martha Whitehead are there ...

For time, I prefer May/June.  What about the weekend of Friday 14 May - Sunday 
16 May, maybe starting Friday night and happening Saturday, or starting 
Thursday night and happening Friday?  That's the weekend before Victoria Day.  
(The 24th of May is actually on the 24th of May this year!) Is there any 
American holiday happening in there?

Bill
--
William Denton, Toronto : miskatonic.org www.frbr.org openfrbr.org