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From YouTube: Box Lunch Presentation EBSCOHost Discovery for Ko
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A
A
A
C
Joined
by
my
colleague,
Mike
McKinnon,
he
is
the
director
of
innovation,
good
scope,
and
we're
really
excited
to
be
here
today
to
talk
with
you
about
my
education.
That's
going
to
discover
so
this
yes
for
short,
publication,
finder,
we're
gonna
thank
Chris
and
the
Whopper
Network
for
inviting
us
to
think
of
us.
C
C
C
Think
what
helps
go
for
about
four
and
a
half
years
now,
as
a
library
services
engineer
prior
to
that,
I
worked
in
academic
libraries
without
the
half
years,
working
on
reference
and
instruction
in
positions
and
actually
in
my
last
two
positions.
I
implemented
two
different
discovery
solutions,
so
I
have
experience
working
with
discovery,
solutions
from
the
library
side
of
the
table
as
well
as.
C
Engineer
with
EBSCO
I
do
presentations
for
libraries
that
are
interested,
that's
godiscover
service
and
other
sales
products.
I
also
meet
with
current
customers.
To
talk
about
new
features,
do
you
kind
of
help
the
check
and
then
another
area
of
that
our
team
works
in
is
integrations,
so
I
worked
on
things
like
our
spring
share
integration
and
stakhanov
integration
in
a
colleague
of
mine.
How
that
in
Australia
has
worked.
B
I
come
from
a
technology
side,
so
my
end
will
be
my
focus
within
EBSCO.
It's
the
partnerships
that
we
have
with
different
software
services,
vendors,
as
well
as
the
software
services
that
ESCO
builds
and
supports
so
I'll,
be
talking
about
our
partnership
with
open
athens
so
from
an
authentication
point
we'll
look
at
the
open,
app,
that's
plug
in
and
then
turning
upon
feedback
as
we
get
to
the
end.
B
C
C
C
C
C
With
a
catalog
search
box,
kind
of
front
and
center
there,
so
our
users,
they
don't
type
in
this
title
or
subject,
or
maybe
they
put
in
a
stream.
Oh
sorry,
thank
you.
If
I
do
that
again,
please
either
mail,
something
like
Facebook
bullying,
social
media
teenagers.
What's
mostly
like,
like
research
panel
on.
A
C
This
next
screenshot
really
resonates
for
me,
so
one
of
the
libraries
that
I
worked
out
with
college,
which
is
the
waters
College
of
Western
Massachusetts,
and
one
of
the
things
that
I
hear
from
students.
Often
when
I
was
working
at
the
reference
desk,
is
they
come
up
to
the
reference
desk
and
say
oh
I
tried
to
do
my
research
last
night,
I
got
to
the
library's
website.
I
looked
at
the
databases
and
I
didn't
know
where
to
start,
maybe
some
of
you
even
work
in
academic
libraries.
C
You
hear
and
similar
things
for
your
users,
so
Smith
I
think
we
have
about
170
databases
at
the
time,
so
a
very
long
list
with
funny
names
that
no
one
knew
where
to
start.
We
were
kind
of
lucky
because
we
had
academic
search
complete
and
that's
at
the
top
of
the
alphabet.
So
most
people
were
just
accidents.
The
first
thing
that
also
got
me
thinking
about
how
many
students
never
came
to
the
reference
desk
for
assistance.
They
just
gave
up
and
went
somewhere
else.
C
Another
thing
that
I
saw
a
lot
of
the
desk
students
coming
up,
saying:
I
need
to
find
journal
articles
that
I
can't
find
any
journal,
and,
as
I
mentioned,
we
have
a
catalog
search
box
front
and
center
on
our
library
website.
So
where
were
they
searching
for
journal
articles
and
we
thought
there's
got
to
be
a
better
way
that
we
can
make
it
easier
for
our
users
so
which
is
better?
It's
listed
databases,
one
new
personal
index
and
that's
what
has
been
discovered
services.
C
C
Shows
that
students
and
library
patrons
must
promise
to
turn
to
Google
first,
so
we
create
and
provide
access
to
a
discovery
solution.
We
have
to
make
sure
that's
easy
to
use
that
it's
fast,
it's
smart,
it's
easy
to
navigate
and
it's
beautiful
submitting
about
a
lot
of
those
one
of
the
things
that
I
still
hear
a
lot
is:
oh,
that's,
just
better
research!
You
look
at
that
several
years
ago,
we
weren't
impressed
with
it
that's
what
discovery
services
differently,
better
research.
C
Some
of
the
main
things
like
here
is
it's
slow,
so
it's
going
out
in
real
time
and
taking
different
services
is
pulling
back
on,
because
it's
throwing
that
policy
is
very
limited.
You
can't
fire
relevance
here
across
the
facets
are
illuminated
for
the
same
reason:
the
technology
used
behind
federated
search
is
hard
to
routine,
so
PepsiCo
discovery
service.
C
C
So
he
gets
the
most
weight
on
matching
on
subject
headings
and
you
all
know
the
value
of
subject
headings.
They
tell
us
what
the
item
is
really
about,
as
opposed
to
maybe
you
gets
in
text
or
maybe
an
article
title
that
is
written
in
such
a
way
to
grab
your
attention
rather
than
actually
describing
what
the
article
is
about.
So
we
put
place
the
most
weight
on
matching
on
subject.
C
We
also
have
something
that
we
added
to
that
ingredients
of
value
breaking
that
has
come
from
years
of
working
with
libraries
and
working
with
library,
users
and
understanding
what
they're
looking
for
when
they
come
to
a
search
tool,
and
so
one
thing
that
they
value
is
recency
currency.
Some
things
I
recently
published
score
higher.
C
We
also
have
the
ability
to
weight
higher,
your
local
library,
catalog
or
institution
or
possibly
another
piece
of
our
relevance.
Ranking
is
enhanced
position.
This
is
a
new
feature.
That's
been
out,
so
I
guess
is
not
new
anymore.
It's
been
out
for
about
a
little
over
a
year
now,
so
I
was
really
excited.
C
We
release
this
feature
when
we
look
at
our
search
logs
received
that
topical
searches
done,
they
have
schoo
discovery
surface
probably
doesn't
surprise
to
users,
but
I
just
mentioned
that
one
of
the
strengths
of
EBSCO
discovery
service
is
that
relevance,
ranking
and
that
matching
on
subject
headings
well,
when
a
user
enters
into
the
search
in
EBSCO
discovery
service
may
not
always
match
the
singing
language,
so
the
user
might
type
in
ADHD
where
a
database
might
use
a
10
deficit,
hyperactivity
disorder
even
between
different
controlled
vocabularies.
They
might
use
different
terminology
through
the
same
concept.
C
I
said
why
buy
a
to
use
compulsive
payable
in
is
eccentric
at
another.
One
might
use
pathological.
So
what
are
we
doing
on
the
back
end?
So
we
had
our
tea
context.
Out
of
this
to
netskope
creative
I
see
the
same
people
that
are
creating
the
controlled
vocabularies
for
our
own
databases.
They
create
this
unified
subject
index
that
match
topical
queries
or
users
up
to
the
unified
subject
index
and
then
map
those
unified
subject,
index
concepts
out
to
controlled
vocabularies
that
are
available
to
give
you
a
visual
of
that.
C
C
C
There's
some
ways
that
we
can
do
that
as
well:
to
make
it
easier
for
users,
one
of
those
ways
was
smart
linking
so
we
have
what
we
call
smart
links
which
about
everything
between
full-text
pepsico
databases
to
the
citation.
So
let's
say
you
have
a
record
in
one
database
and
that's
go
discovery
service,
but
you
full-text
is
available
in
another
database.
Smart
leg
will
make
that
PDF
or
HTML
full-text
just
appear.
The
user
doesn't
have
to
worry
about.
Oh
I
need
to
go,
there's
also
smart
lens
plus.
C
C
A
C
C
So
EBSCO
hasn't
been
involved
with
Koha.
Another
focus
or
submission
is
for
many
years
most
recently
we
providing
funding
for
kohat
development
on
2015.
We
had
a
group
believe
those
libraries
Italy
the
reason
co-op
that
approached
interesting
development
work.
So
we
did
providing
grants
to
help
with
that
same
16.
C
A
C
They,
like
that
so
discovering
the
service
they
didn't
want
to
send
their
users
to
a
different
interface.
They
wanted
to
bring
those
benefits
of
EBSCO
discovery
service.
Of
all
my
content
that
I
talked
about
that
smartly
they
went
out
that
all
appear
in
the
earth
go
my
interface,
so
my
colleague
that
another
library
services
engineer
from
catalyst
19
worked
at
this
library
to
develop
a
plugin,
for
that
would
allow
results
from
EBSCO
discovery
service
available
in
the
coma
interface.
C
A
C
C
C
A
C
So
I
have
a
lot
of
the
sites
that
I've
worked
with
by
water
has
done
the
installation
of
the
plug-in.
So
this
may
not
be
as
much
interest
to
some
of
you,
but
just
letting
know
what
we
could
working
on
the
backend.
The
only
version
of
the
plug-in
required
patchi's
for
files,
so
every
time
come
I
was
upgraded.
It
did
disable.
Those
upgrades
dispatch
is
intervene,
enable
the
plug-in.
We
also
enhance
the
admin
section
of
it
as
well,
including
fixes,
where
ebscoadmin
sending
updates
as
well
make
it
easier
to
pull
in
the
sentence.
C
This
is
niwa.
This
is
that
library
that
would
work
very
amusing
to
initially
develop
their
a
research
institution,
so
you're
gonna,
see
a
lot
of
contents
is
their
scholarly
in
nature,
but
the
indexing
for
EBSCO
discovery
service
can
be
customized
for
each
library,
so
we're
getting
some
different
sites,
and
so
you'll
see
the
content
is
different.
The
precisely
search
to
search
at
but
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
so
here,
if
you're
in
a
public
library,
you're
not
turned
off,
when
you
see
all
these
academic
scholars.
C
C
C
C
When
we
dug
into
that
a
little
bit
besides
us,
the
first
thing
that
comes
up
in
a
Google
search
result,
one
of
the
things
that
we
heard
from
users
is
they
like
Wikipedia,
because
it
provides
background
information
for
them
because
it
was
starting
the
morning
they
liked
that
summary,
that's
human
content.
So
what
we
wanted
to
do
in
his
good
discovery
service
thinking
about
to
that
slide.
I
have
earlier
about
making
a
discovery
smarter
easier
for
patrons
to
use,
as
we
wanted
to
give
them
a
benefit
like
Wikipedia,
but
embedded
sources.
C
As
we
kind
of
scroll
through
the
results
again
they've
integrated
their
catalog
results
into
the
result
list.
So
we
see
the
first
couple
of
records
our
catalog
records
book
records
and
you
can
see
the
information
that
we
would
expect
from
those,
but
as
I
scroll
down
a
little
bit,
I
will
come
across
and
then
see
some
particle
results
as
well.
So
you
can
see
the
matching
on
subject
headings
he
never
mentioned.
You
also
see
this
PDF
full-text
links
appear
here
in
the
result
list
that
smartly,
so
those
benefits
and
features
that
I
talked
about.
C
C
C
A
C
C
C
Okay,
thanks
Mike
and
pulling
in
the
Koha
results
into
the
EBSCO
discovery
service
result
list,
so
you
can
see.
I
got
my
research
starter
and
then
I
have
a
book
from
their
catalogue
on
how
to
repair
dishwashers.
We
can
pull
in
the
real-time
visibility,
status
or
television
real
time.
It's
checked
out
or
available
on
the
shelf
and.
A
C
C
C
C
Cups
go
discovery
service,
but
different
from
Monterey
Public
Library.
They
just
have
echo
discovery
service
searching
their
article,
so
they
have
an
including
their
home
on
how
to
log
in
the
result
list.
So
again,
three
different
implementations,
three
different
ways
and
Epico
discovery
service
can
work
directly
in
this
case
belongs.
I.
C
Some
guns
that
jump
in
now
we'll
talk
about
full
text,
finder
and
audience
management
and
publication
finder.
This
is
the
next
point
of
integration.
We
have
a
lot
of
libraries
that
use
these
in
conjunction
with
EBSCO
discovery
service.
So
if
a
sense
to
pull
that
up
into
the
integrations
that
we've
done
with
kohat
as
well
just
little
bit
of
background
on
what
this
is,
so
the
full
text
behind
your
suite
includes
a
knowledge
base.
This
is
where
you
go
in
and
turn
on.
You
know
I
subscribe
to
this,
which
you
could
pack
into
this.
C
Particular
it
has
a
publication
search
service.
So
this
is
where
your
user
would
go
and
say:
oh
I
want
to
see
if
the
library
subscribes
to
the
200
courts
or
the
Journal
of
academic
librarianship,
and
then
it
has
a
link
resolver
component,
where
it
would
take
the
user
from
a
citation
in
a
database
to
the
full
text
by
the
way
of
that
full
text
might
live
irony
database
or
whether
it's
doing
anything,
the
publisher.
C
You
can
kind
of
see
the
benefit
time
as
we
look
through
a
couple
of
screenshots,
so
these
again
are
all
in
integrations
with
the
Koha,
but
you
can
see
so
this
is
exactly
max
baucus
locations.
So
if
the
library
has
turned
on
a
publication
in
their
image
management,
knowledge
base
and
the
user
searches
for
that
particular
publication
in
Koha,
yes,
they
get
a
placard
that
appears
above
the
resource.
C
C
C
C
C
Also
in
the
coma
plug-in,
there's
an
option
for
a
journal
title
search.
The
way
that
use
the
function
of
the
plug-in
is
that
it
would
return
articles
from
that
source.
So,
if
I
search
for
access,
it
would
bring
back
results
from
that
publication,
a
new
feature
in
the
latest
version
of
the
plug-in
it
actually
brings
back
only
complication
finders.
So
it
lets
your
users
through
this
publication's
name
and
then,
if
it's
indexed
with
the
discovery
service,
you
get
that
search
within
the
publication
box.
So
you
can
search
immediately
within
that
complication
and.
C
C
Detailed
view
to
search
within
boxes
there,
as
well
as
more
information
on
the
publication
and
again
that
search
of
thing
box
that
I've
been
showing
this
gives
you
an
example
of
what
happens
if
you
use
that
it
is
limited
to
that
particular
publication
search
for
animals
and
now
I'm
searching
that
publication.
Finder
helps
your
users
get
to
specific
publication.
C
B
Okay,
so
everybody's
totally
excited
by
EDS,
now
right,
yeah,
huge
range
of
collection
in
your
library,
it's
more
than
just
what's
in
the
catalogue.
That's
the
purpose
of
tool
like
EDS
to
be
able
to
discover
everything
that
library
has
access
to
making
part
of
that
presentation
from
David
was
about
linking
right
access
to
the
full-text.
That's
you
big
wins
with
discovery.
If
you
can
discover
it
but
get
access,
so
those
Pedigo
part
and
parcel
with
the
two
services.
We
spend
an
ESCO
a
lot
of
resources
around
knowledge-based
management.
B
Around
tools
like
this
to
provide
users
easy
access
from
where
they
start.
Part
of
that
discussion,
though,
is
with
authentication
how
many
libraries
in
here
use
open,
Athens
as
an
authentication
tool
and
how
many
use
easy
proximate.
What
how
many
you
swam
from
triple-I
anybody
else
anything
there's
some
real
small
ones.
B
Okay,
you
guys
quit
so
there's
there's
definitely
tools
out
there
in
the
market.
Open
Athens
is
much
more
known
internationally
than
it
is
domestically.
It's
built
by
a
juicer
which
is
also
the
same
company
that
built
at
you
Rome
a
Wi-Fi
service
wireless
internet
service
for
a
lot
of
campuses,
universities
out
there,
but
open
athens
is
partnered
with
EBSCO
or
marketing
and
sales
services.
We
do
a
little
bit
of
project
management,
product
management
with
them,
based
on
feedback
from
our
customers,
and
that's
why
I'm
here
today
talking
about
our
partnership
with
the
Helen
athletes.
B
There
are
some
big
differences
between
easy
proxy
all
those
and
weigh
em
versus
open
Athens,
and
that's
what
I
want
to
really
point
out
today,
because
this
is
what's
happening
as
the
way
forward.
Other
tools
like
open
Athens
that
are
what
are
called
sam'l,
compliant
all
right.
If
you're,
an
in
common
library,
which
most
of
you
should
be,
if
you're
part
of
any
common
Federation,
then
you
also
have
access
to
Shibboleth
servers
that
are
also
Samuel
compliant.
Okay,
a
lot
of
acronyms.
B
There
are
how
many
people
are
technical
minded
in
the
authentication
space
that
know
what
I'm
talking
about
handful:
okay,
Sanibel,
basically
meaning
individual
users
accounts
as
opposed
to
IP
authentication,
right
security.
Secure
access,
markup
language
is
what
Samuel
stands
for.
We're
gonna
talk
about
that
so
open,
Athens,
again
largely
known
internationally,
not
necessarily
domestic,
and
you
can
see
the
reach
that
we've
had
em
Scott
has
been
partnered
with
them
now
for
a
couple
years
and
I
really
think
that
probably
at
least
for
me
I
cover
about
half
of
this
continent.
B
So
for
me
more
and
more,
my
conversations
are
about
open
Athens,
probably
as
my
comparative
toad,
what
they
were
about
ETS
in
the
past.
I
think
some
of
that
is
because
this
is
what
libraries
really
need.
So
this
is
a
gap.
The
libraries
have.
You
really
need
to
start
understanding
the
authentication
component
information
about
their
patrons?
Are
they
sitting
in
my
parking
lot
using
my
Wi-Fi
and
not
in
the
library,
or
are
they
in
my
library
and
our
faculty
member
or
an
underclassmen?
If
you're
in
an
academic
space?
B
I
don't
understand
my
patron
behavior,
regardless
of
my
counter
stats
right,
they're
telling
you
anything
of
might
be
our
ones
heat
reports.
This
will
help
open.
Athens
will
help
on
some
of
that
and
its
base.
Open
Athens,
though,
is
a
single
sign-on
solution
is
an
authentication
solution.
So
how
do
we
differentiate
from
easy
see
an
IP
off.