International and Comparative Librarianship
DEDICATED TO PIONEERS INCLUDING:
S. R. Ranganathan, P. N. Kaula, R. N. Sharma, J. F. Harvey, D. J. Foskett, J. P. Danton, M. M. Jackson, etc.
This Blogosphere has a slant towards India [a.k.a Indica, Indo, South-Asian, Oriental, Bharat, Hindustan, Asian-Indian (not American Indian)].
Indo-Canadian Librarian Series - Narendra Passi
In his own voice:
"I attended University of Delhi, School of Library Science and graduated in 1959. I was the first Gold medalist in librarianship at that university. I got encouraged and decided to continue my studies towards M Lib. Sc. which I completed in 1960. I was hired by Vikram University, Ujjain that year and stayed there for five years. I came to Canada in 1965 and found a job at McMaster University. Joined as a Reference librarian, got many promotions and by the year I retired, I was the Head of Reference Services. I also started Library Science courses (part-time) at the U.O.T. and graduated in 1969.
I started doing volunteer work and also became President of the Hindu Samaj of Hamilton. It was during that time that the temple got attacked the week after after the 9-11 in the USA. We had to collect funds and start the temple activities all over again. Now I am the President of the Seniors Seva Mnadal of Hamilton and Region. This programme came about when the Ontatio Government announced "AGING AT HOME " program."
Labels: Canadian Libraries, Indo-Canadian, Librarians, South Asia
Boise Library’s Catalog Emulates Google, Amazon Search
December 7, 2012
By Jessica Renee Napier
The goals of
Boise Public Library’s new Enterprise Discover System,
which was funded by a consortium of more than 15 Idaho libraries, are to
create a positive customer experience, retain key features and options
from the traditional catalog product, and to integrate the new version
with a new website.
The Enterprise system offers a user-friendly experience and additional features. Library visitors can now access:
- Smart searching: As search terms are typed into the search box,
fuzzy logic provides auto-complete, corrects misspellings and offers
dynamic search suggestions based on past successful searches for the
same keywords.
- Precise results: The user can narrow a search by selecting
options for author, format, publication date, availability or holding
library, and can also deselect options of no interest.
- Increased options: Users can multi-select titles for placing
several holds at once or add a group of items to a list, and text or
email results. continue reading
Labels: Catalog, OPAC