home Staff news MOspace and DSpace News

MOspace and DSpace News

MOspace news

Digital Services is working on two new MOspace collections:

Global Journalist. Working with Journalism, we will be adding about 200 shows in the Global Journalism series to MOspace.  https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/72322

LIS radio. The Library School hosted a radio show from 2003-2015 in which librarians, state and national leaders, and others were interviewed about topics of interest to the library community. Radio show series included: On the job, Voice of literacy, and EDgeTech (K-12). In conjunction with SISLT, we are creating an archive of the shows in MOspace. We have uploaded many files already and more are pending. Metadata will be added next. It isn’t much to look at now, but check back in a month or two. https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/68701

Other MOspace work

We are continuing to process and add other items to MOspace, too. For example, before Ellis closed, we quickly digitized Extension guides that were easy to do and which could be added to MOspace remotely. This was a project we were working on, but WFH gave us a jump on the project. We added 250+ in March. https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/49797

 

DSpace news: DSpace 7 coming soon!

MOspace uses the DSpace software platform. DSpace code is undergoing a major rewrite and is scheduled to be released this summer as DSpace 7. The is an update we have been waiting for. The major advantage to DSpace 7 is that it will provide it is a more flexible system and will allow improvements to the design and functionality of the system. Right away, two changes will benefit MOspace.

  • New “entity” records. We will be able to create records for people, granting agencies, corporate bodies, etc. Creating records for our authors will enable us (and them) to see all the works they have in MOspace in one place.
  • We will be able to use these entity records to create records for collections, too. We use collections to organize material in MOspace now, but this new way pulling together related articles, presentations, etc., will provide a lot more flexibility.

We use Atmire (a company that manages DSpace sites) to do some of our MOspace programming work and we are working with them to evaluate MOspace and to plan for our upgrade to DSpace 7. Optimistically, the upgrade could happen late this fall.

A demonstration version of DSpace 7 is available. Note that it is still being developed, with a new beta version coming out each month through June. After June, outstanding issues will be addressed with a goal of having it ready for implementation by the end of the summer.

More information, including technical information, from a recent email to the DSpace community:

New features to look for

  • A completely new User Interface. This is the new Javascript-based frontend, built on Angular.io (with support for SEO provided by Angular Universal). This new interface is themable via HTML and CSS (SCSS). For early theme building training, see the “Getting Started with DSpace 7 Workshop” from the North American User Group meeting: slides or video recording.
  • A completely new, fully featured REST API (provided via a single webapp backend). This new backend is not only a REST API, but also still supports OAI-PMH, SWORD (v1 or v2) and RDF.
  • A newly designed search box. Search from the header of any page (click the magnifying glass). The search results page now features automatic search highlight, expandable & searchable filters, and optional thumbnail-based results (click on the “grid” view).
  • A new MyDSpace area, including a new, one-page, drag & drop submission form, a new workflow approval process, and searchable past submissions. (Login, click on the profile icon, click “MyDSpace”). Find workflow tasks to claim by selecting “All tasks” in the “Show” dropdown.
  • Dynamic user interface translations (Click the globe, and select a language)
  • A new Admin sidebar. Login as an Administrator, and an administrative sidebar appears. Use this to create a new Community/Collection/Item, edit existing ones, and manage registries. (NOTE: A number of Administrative tools are still missing or greyed out. They will be coming in future Beta releases.)
  • Optional, Configurable Entities feature. DSpace now supports “entities”, which are Items of a specific ‘type’ which may have relationships to other entities. These entity types and relationships are configurable, with two examples coming out-of-the-box: a set of Journal hierarchy entities (Journal, Volume, Issue, Publication) and a set of Research entities (Publication, Project, Person, OrgUnit). For more information see “The Power of Configurable Entities” from OR2019: slides or video recording. Additionally, a test data set featuring both out-of-the-box examples can be used when trying out DSpace 7 via Docker.
  • Support for OpenAIREv4 Guidelines for Literature Repositories in OAI-PMH (See the new “openaire4” context in OAI-PMH).
home Staff news New Muse Posts

New Muse Posts

New Merriam-Webster Dictionary Words

Make a Face Mask

home Staff news Library Management Team Information and Action Items 3/24/20

Library Management Team Information and Action Items 3/24/20

LMT Information and Action Items 3/24/20

home Staff news Work From Home Survival Guide

Work From Home Survival Guide

 

home Staff news Send Us Your Work From Home Selfies

Send Us Your Work From Home Selfies

We want to keep connected during this time of remote work. One way to do this is to share photos of your work from home setups, and photos and video of your new co-workers (AKA kids, pets and whoever you share your space with). Even if you are on administrative leave, we would love to see what you are up to. So if you would like to share some photos or video, please send to Shannon Cary carysn@missouri.edu or Taira Meadowcroft meadowcroftt@missouri.edu. Due to some WordPress issues that make it difficult to post photos right now, we will be posting these photos on the Libraries’ main social media feeds. Links to those feeds are listed below. Thanks and happy working from home!

Facebook: MizzouLibraries

Instagram: @mizzou.libraries

Twitter: @MizzouLibraries

home Staff news Send Us Your Work From Home Selfies

Send Us Your Work From Home Selfies

We want to keep connected during this time of remote work. One way to do this is to share photos of your work from home setups, and photos of your new co-workers (AKA kids, pets and whoever you share your space with). Even if you are on administrative leave, we would love to see what you are up to. So if you would like to share some photos, please send to Shannon Cary carysn@missouri.edu or Taira Meadowcroft meadowcroftt@missouri.edu. We will post these in News Notes. If you give us permission, we will also post on the Libraries’ social media feeds. Thanks and happy working from home!

home Staff news In the News

In the News

“UPDATE: Campuses adjust dining and residential halls as classes move online”
Columbia Missourian, March 18, 2020

home Staff news New Muse Posts

New Muse Posts

Food During the Pandemic

COVID-19 Information

home Staff news Work From Home Survival Tips

Work From Home Survival Tips

If you have questions or want to share tips about working from home, please send them to Shannon Cary at carysn@missouri.edu. I will post questions, answers and tips each week in News Notes. (Send urgent HR/IT questions to appropriate library staff.)

Here’s some advice from Laura Schopp, professor and chair of the department of health psychology in the School of Health Professions.

5 Ways to Maintain Community While Social Distancing

home Staff news Digital Services update: Current digitization projects

Digital Services update: Current digitization projects

Digital Services is carrying out several digitization projects to meet the needs of different units in the library and on campus. This is a quick overview of most of our current projects, several of which are long-term.

Typography books. The Journalism Library reviewed the University Libraries collections and identified books on typography which were not yet in the HathiTrust. We are digitizing these volumes and are contributing them to the HathiTrust.

HathiTrust collection: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/mb?a=listis;c=1491577794

Early British pamphlets. This project supports the goal of making resources in the English Short Title Catalog (ESTC) available in the HathiTrust. Special Collections and Rare Books has identified 15,000 titles in their collection that meet the criteria of ESTC. We have added 900+ titles to the HathiTrust so far and  have several items in the process of being added.

HathiTrust collection: https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/mb?a=listis;c=1689078988

MU Extension material. We received copies of older Extension publications when Agricultural Economics weeded their collection of resources and from the duplicates SHS didn’t retain. We seized this opportunity to digitize these duplicates, because we can disbind and scan them quickly. We have added 800+ titles to MOspace since Summer 2019.

MU Extension collection in MOspace: https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/355

Missouri Place names theses. Under the direction of advisory Robert L. Ramsey, students in the 1920s and 1930s completed theses documenting the origins of places names in Missouri, including names for “counties, townships, post offices, rivers. branches, creeks, ridges, prairies, mounds, hills, valleys, gaps, churches, and mills.” We have completed digitization of twelve of the eighteen so far, and they are available in MOspace. We have gotten requests to make these available from the general public and from Missouri government agencies.

Example: Place names in six of the west central counties of Missouri  https://hdl.handle.net/10355/64422

University of Missouri course catalogs. Partnering with the Registrar’s Office, we have been digitizing MU Course Catalogs. Early volumes included histories and reports of departments and the university. For some years, we have catalogs for individual schools and colleges, too. We are currently digitizing catalogs from the 1990s, and are filling in gaps for other decades.

MOspace collection: https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/60693

University Missourian. This serial publication was added to the University Libraries collections in 2019. It began publication in 1871; we have issues through 1880. We have completed scanning it and It will be available in MOspace soon.

MERLIN record: http://merlin.lib.umsystem.edu/record=b2057091~S8

Shamrock. The Engineering Library had a duplicate set of the Engineering yearbook and asked to have them added to MOspace. These volumes provide an interesting look at the history of Engineering over the years.

MOspace collection: https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/68822

Muse. We are partnering with the Museum of Art and Archaeology to make all issues of the MUSE, the annual publication of the Museum, available online. We are digitizing copies not in digital form and sharing copies with the Museum and are harvesting issues we need that are already available online.on the Museum site.

MOspace collection: https://mospace.umsystem.edu/xmlui/handle/10355/66433
Museum website: https://maa.missouri.edu/muse

Focus. At the request of HSL, we have digitized over 300 articles published between 1967-2001 under the banner, “Highlights” or “Focus” in the periodical, Missouri Monthly Vital Statistics. This series of articles covers a range of topics related to the health and vital statistics of Missourians, and include statistical information. We hope to make these available in the HathiTrust, but will host them locally if full view cannot be provided in the HathiTrust.

As you can tell, we have been busy. We also are wrapping up other projects and processing one-time requests, on top of processing current MU theses and dissertations (Fall 2019 were added to MOspace this week) and other MU publications to MOspace.