Title: The Open Source Movement and Libraries
1The Open Source Movementand Libraries
- Presented by
- Kim Nalette
- August 28, 2007
2What is Open Source Software?
- Open source software is software distributed in
source under licenses guaranteeing anybody rights
to freely use, modify, and redistribute the code. - The Open Source Initiative (OSI) is a non-profit
corporation that acts as a standards body for
open source. To use the Open Source Initiative
Approved License trademark the software must meet
10 criteria, including Free Redistribution and
the Source Code.
3Why Open Source?
- Company Models
- Manufacturing Model (Sale Value)
- versus
- Service Model (Use Value)
4Software Development Manufacturing Model
- Software is developed by a company for sale
- Price of the software is based upon the
development costs - Can lead to little incentive to provide service
and updates - Software is only of value as far as it can be sold
5Software DevelopmentService Model
- Software is developed for use
- Software is free or low cost
- Service is available for a fee
6Software DevelopmentSome Facts
- 95 of code developed is for in-house use and
therefore has no sale value - 75 of a developers time is consumed by
maintaining and debugging existing code - Once expended, development costs are sunk costs
7Software Development Real Life Open Source
Advantages
- Apache Web Server
- Cost Sharing
- Cisco Distributed Print Spooling Software
- Risk-Spreading
8Software Development Real Life Open Source
Advantages
- Apache Web Server
- Cost Sharing
- Cisco Distributed Print Spooling Software
- Risk-Spreading
9Open Source Software Used by Phoenix Public
Library
- Linux (linux.org)
- Operating System created by Linus Torvalds in the
mid 1990s at the University of Helsinki as a
school project - EXIM (exim.org)
- Mail server developed by the University of
Cambridge - Horde Webmail (horde.org)
- Email client
10Open Source Software Used by Phoenix Public
Library
- Postgres (postgresql.org)
- Relational database
- Apache Tomcat (tomcat.apache.org)
- Web application server
11Open Source Integrated Library Systems and Public
Access Catalogs
- Almost every open source product originated
because when conducting marketplace reviews,
libraries found that systems that met their needs
were too expensive or lacked desired features
12Koha
- Koha.org
- A New Zealand consortium commissioned a company
to develop a Web-based system for use in its
libraries - They determined that the software should be open
source so that other libraries could use it and
make further improvements. - Koha is currently in use in several library
systems in the several countries
13eXtensible Catalog
- Extensiblecatalog.info
- Currently being developed by the University of
Rochester with a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon
Foundation. - Focused on academic libraries
14VuFind
- Vufind.org
- Offers faceted results
- Testing at Villanova University
15Evergreen
- Open-ils.org
- Georgia PINESa consortium of 256 public
libraries - Libraries in Canada and the University of Windsor
have committed to migrating to every green
16Other Systems
- LearningAccess ILS
- Avanti
- Chopac
- LiBSUITE
- Cinege
- Emilda
- OpenBiblio
- PMB
- Pytheas
17What can libraries do with open source solutions?
- Low cost to acquire software
- Low maintenance costs with in-house expertise
- Ability to customize application easily and
quickly with in-house expertise or 3rd party
development companies - Portability on most platforms