►
From YouTube: Kohathon Part 4
Description
B
A
B
D
D
The
project
was
to
ease
the
way
that
our
patrons
accessed
our
databases,
I'm
gonna,
go
ahead
and
talk
about
the
project
itself
as
a
whole,
and
then,
since
Kelly
was
our
graphic
designer
and
web
dev,
she
did
most
of
the
development
at
the
backend
and
she'll
get
to
talk
about
that
p-side.
So
the
first
thing
I
want
to
talk
about
is
what
the
issue
was
that
we
were
trying
to
resolve.
D
We
had
a
number
of
databases
that
were
available
through
a
number
of
different
resources,
either
ones
that
we
subscribe
to
individually
or
databases
that
we
subscribe
through
through
the
state
and
other
consortium
means.
As
a
result
of
that,
that
means
there
we
go
slides
are
a
little
slow.
That
means
that
there
are
a
number
of
different
access
points
for
the
different
databases
that
one
screen
too
far.
D
No
sorry,
the
a
lot
of
our
databases
that
we
access
through
the
tech
share
system
required
individual
passwords
and
logins
due
to
contractual
agreements
with
those
vendors
all
through
the
state,
others
that
we
had
ourselves.
We
could
allow
them
to
login
to
in
a
number
of
different
needs,
so
we
had
our
website
that
they
could
go
to
find
the
database,
then
that
would
link
them
for
you
to
a
page
one
this
that
would
give
them
a
list
of
different
databases.
They
would
see
and
find
the
database
that
they
want.
D
Then
they
would
go
ahead
and
click
on
that
database
name
once
they
clicked
on
that
it
took
them
to
a
screen
like
this.
That
was
a
tad
confusing.
It
asked
them
to
log
in
to
the
page
using
a
password,
but
yet,
if
they
hadn't
already
selected
their
library,
it's
generated
more
confusion
and
it
was
just
a
general
problem.
D
So
what
we
decided
is
we
started
looking
at
different
ways
to
resolve
this.
The
first
thing
we
thought
about
was
using
something
like
ezproxy,
and
so
we
looked
into
that.
Did
some
research
thought
yeah?
Okay,
I've
got
to
get
our
IT
department
to
spin
up
something
for
easy
proxy
gotta
find
some
place
to
host
easy
proxy,
then
configure
it
manage
all
of
its
configuration.
We
had
all
of
that
learning
curve
there.
D
D
D
Databases
were
built
out
that
way
from
there.
They
could
simply
click
on
that
database
and
they
would
be
there.
It
eased
that
process,
but
this
was
the
way
to
go.
So
we
started
seeing
how
we
were
going
to
do
this
worked
fine
in
my
little
private
test
environment
started
moving
it
over
to
our
production
thing.
D
There
were
some
steps
that
we
had
to
go
through
and
first
of
all,
there
are
a
number
of
system
preferences
that
you
have
to
address.
So
we
began
with
the
first
one
here
which
I'm
going
to
let
Kelly
talk
mostly
about
here
in
a
minute.
This
was
the
system
preference
where
you
add
in
all
your
HTML
content.
That's
the
system,
preference
that
allows
you
to
build
that
page.
It's
the
restricted,
page
content.
The
next
system,
preference
seemed
like
the
easiest
to
me.
D
We
put
in
our
list
of
IP
addresses
that
are
going
to
automatically
authenticate
pass
that
through
for
our
library,
in
our
different
libraries,
our
branches
staff,
side,
public
side
of
networks,
all
of
those
things
then
the
last
system.
Preference
here
is
simply
naming
the
page
that
your
that
you've
created.
Okay,
put
all
this
in,
went
to
test
it
and
it
worked
the
problem:
was
it
didn't
automatically
allow
any
of
our
on-site
computers
to
automatically
be
passed
through
so
came
in
here.
D
Looked
at
this
verified
that
my
IP
addresses
were
correct,
submitted
a
ticket
to
buy
water
by
water
and
Kyle
did
some
digging
around
who
discovered
that,
because
of
a
network
infrastructure
that
buy
water
is
using
that
it
was
causing
some
problems.
Within
this
system,
reference
Kyle
jumped
all
over.
It
submitted
a
patch
to
the
community.
The
community
has
accepted
the
patch
it
is
in
1911,
so
it
will.
D
E
E
Okay,
so
yeah,
this
is
gonna,
be
kind
of
behind
the
scenes
under
the
design
and
code,
part
of
it
and
the
user
interface
plan
so
like
it
showed
you,
the
code
lives
in
the
restrictions
section
of
the
koha
page,
and
so
this
is
kind
of
when
I
met
the
page.
This
is
where,
when
I
was
hired
on
where
it
was
so,
it
started
with
a
bootstrap
Jumbotron
template
pretty
simple.
It
just
had
a
header
on
the
top
and
then
a
couple
rows
of
icons.
E
We
were
linking
images
from
the
texture
page
that
he
mentioned
earlier,
so
a
little
bit
problematic
anytime
that
they
might
change
their
links.
We
would
lose
the
image
link
and
have
to
go,
find
another
resources,
google
images
and
stuff
like
that.
So
that
was
another
problem
that
we
wanted
to
address
and
as
far
as
the
links
they
were
provided
to
us
by
a
tick
share
rep
in
a
spreadsheet,
so
it
was
just
a
matter
of
taking
those
links
and
putting
them
straight
to
the
HTML.
E
This
is
kind
of
a
code
sample
of
that
bootstrap
template
I'm,
not
gonna,
show
you
the
whole
thing,
because
it's
an
entire
HTML
document,
but
this
is
basically
the
meat
of
it.
It's
this
div
and
it
just
repeats
over
and
over.
So
basically,
this
highlighted
in
red
is
the
resource
itself,
so
show
you.
This
is
where
we
would
link
in
our
pre
authenticated
link.
Image
link
is
wrapped
inside
that
and
then
a
paragraph
tag
for
the
description
of
it
so
yeah.
E
Not
a
lot
of
styling
happening,
not
a
lot
of
organization,
so
I
wanted
to
address
that
as
well
as
get
more
uniform
images
going
so
yeah
too
many
icons
on
one
page
when
we
started
to
plug
in
the
stuff
we
realize
patron
is
not
patron
planet-friendly
for
them
to
search
through
this
page.
If
there
was
no
organization
behind
it,
so
I
came
up
with
a
UI
plan,
and
that
was
we
had
92
resources,
I
separated
those
into
ten
subject
lines.
So
just
research
subjects
like
articles,
health
and
medical,
legal,
educational.
E
Any
of
those
subject
lines
that
they
could
discover
the
resources
that
they
needed
and
I
wanted
it
to
not
be
just
a
whole
bunch
of
images
or
icons
on
a
page.
So
I've
made
it
nav
style
and
had
it
basically
a
menu
upon
load.
So
all
they
saw
was
the
subject
line
and
then
they
would
discover
the
icons
as
they
kind
of
clicked
around.
So
the
subject
line
would
be
example
and
collapsible
as
they're
clicking
around
on
the
page
yeah.
E
So
I
didn't
want
to
overwhelm
the
page
by
putting
a
whole
bunch
of
text
and
images,
so
I
just
decided
to
do
this
on
hover
with
CSS,
so
one
one
description
at
a
time
per
icon
and
only
when
you
hover
over
the
icon
so
yeah.
This
is
more
of
what
the
actual
document
would
look
like
at
subject
headline
at
the
top
to
h3
line.
E
So
it
just
has
a
simple
function:
ties
to
the
heading
class
and
then
make
sure
that
when
you
expand
one
section
you
close
another.
So
it's
not
not
too
many
icons
on
the
page
at
one
time,
it's
just
one
section
or
subject
at
a
time
and
a
nice
little
slide
animation
to
revealed
icons
as
well
so
yeah
and
that
required
making
some
design
assets
and,
like
I
mentioned,
we
were
linking
to
tech
share
before
and
we
were
getting
some
broken
image
links.
E
So
I
decided
to
go
ahead
and
create
the
images
myself
as
far
as
icons
went
and
plug
them
in,
and
we
came
up
with
a
better
strategy
on
that
by
putting
them
just
in
our
own
github
page.
That
way
we
could
avoid
broken
links,
yeah
and
color
coded
based
on
the
hosts.
Pretty
simple
just
wanted
a
cleaner
look
as
far
as
all
the
logos
went.
E
E
So
I
wanted
to
make
it
easy
to
read
and
clear
that
it's
functionable
with
the
plus
and
minus
to
open
and
close
the
accordion,
and
this
was
kind
of
a
last-minute
touch
that
wasn't
in
the
original
plan,
but
as
we
were,
adding
new
stuff
and
realizing
that
patrons
had
more
popular
stuff
that
they
were
looking
for.
We
decided
to
add
this
new
resources
slider
at
the
top,
so
it's
very
similar
code
with
a
div
structure,
just
a
different
animation
as
far
as
sliding
left
and
right
and
the
description
is
not
hover,
it
always
displays.
E
E
E
C
E
So
this
is
the
top
slider
that
I
was
talking
about
the
left
and
right.
This
is
the
up
and
down
accordion
the
slide
feature,
and
when
you
hover,
you
see
the
descriptions
one
at
a
time.
So
it's
not
too
overwhelming
each
of
these
is
pre
authenticated.
So
it
goes
straight
to
the
resource
it's
gonna
take
a
while
to
load
but
yeah
big,
it's
picture
and
then
yeah
when
you
close
one,
the
other
clip
opens
and
vice
versa.
So
that's
about
it
on
the
design
side.
D
Yeah,
as
we
got
down
this
process,
is
we
got
you
know
down
this
road?
We
discovered
there
are
some
issues
that
we're
gonna
have
moving
forward
periodically,
especially
with
the
databases
that
are
provided
to
it.
Can
do
this
state
consortium
or
text
share.
They
change
every
year,
so
there's
some
years
that
a
database
goes
away
and
it
comes
back
another
year.
They
don't
notify
us
of
that
as
readily
as
we
would
like.
So
we
need
to.
We
need
to
be
on
top
of
managing
those
URLs
and
those
resources.
D
Another
issue
that
we
faced
when
we
started
this
process,
the
the
folks
at
the
State
Library
and
some
of
the
vendors
when
I
mentioned
that
I
was
going
to
use
a
restricted
page
in
Koha
to
authenticate
our
users
and
then
move
them
on
through
they
had
no
idea
what
I
was
talking
about.
Most
of
our
vendors
were
under
the
impression
that
that
is
not
possible
within
coop,
so
I
had
to
build
some
test.
D
Things
I
had
to
come
up
with
some
ways
to
prove
to
them
that
it
was
actually
going
to
restrict
the
users
restrict
access
and
once
I
got
over
that
Hill
through
most
of
the
tech
share.
Folks,
it
worked
out
turns
out
most
of
the
vendors
as
I
kept
saying
to
them
are
accustomed
to
doing
this
they're
just
accustomed
to
doing
it
through
easy,
proxy
or
some
other
means
and
to
come
through
them
that
we
were
using
cooperatives
that
that
was
the
first
term
second
hurdle
like
I
mentioned.
D
Is
we
have
to
maintain
all
of
these
URLs,
so
we're
tracking
that
managing
that
Kelly
also
has
the
task
of
managing
all
the
images
as
the
databases,
change,
we've
got
to
create
new
images,
remove
those
kind
of
manage
all
of
that
so
there's
it
has
increased
our
back-end
management,
but
I
think
the
overall
result
of
allowing
patrons
the
single
username
password
access
has
really
improved.
Our
statistics
it'll
be
interesting
to
see
throughout
by
the
end
of
this
next
fiscal
year.
How
much
things
have
changed
from
the
previous
year
and
open
up
for
questions?
Todd?
B
Did
remark
so
far
it
just
never
gonna
Amos
said
the
navigation
organization
is
really
cool.
She
really
appreciated
that
and
I
think
it's
pretty
cool,
it's
kind
of
neat
to
see
what
you
guys
have
done
with
that,
but
that
organization
with
organize
I
hope
I
can
say
this
organizing,
but
you
guys
are
working
on
is.
Are
there
any
questions
out
there
from
the
38
people
that
we
got
out
there
watching
right
now?
Any
questions
in
regards
to
what
ed
and
Kelly
have
accomplished.
B
Okay,
well,
we
really
appreciate
you
guys
and
your
presentation
was
fantastic.
Yeah
and
Chris
says
no
questions
just
to
say
he
really
liked
what
he
learned
some
stuff
also.
D
B
B
You
well,
let's
see
we
are
I,
think
just
a
little
bit
behind
schedule
at
this
point,
looks
like
we're
going
to
go
to
the
30,
but
we're
pretty
darn
close
George
is
next
up
on
deck,
so
George
I
don't
know
if
you
want
to
go
ahead
and
enter
the
room,
but
you
know
if
anybody
needs
to
break
away
real
quick
and
if
you
need
a
quick
drink
or
you
can
need
to
excuse
yourself
just
for
a
couple
minutes.
Please
feel
free.
B
B
You've
got
a
real,
easy
lucky
go
away
of
just
kind
of
getting
right
into
something,
Georgia
like
it.
So,
hey
everybody!
Welcome
back
thanks
for
sticking
around
we've
got
George
Williams
up,
he's
gonna
be
talking
to
us
again
he's
made.
This
is
his
third
presentation
today,
he's
probably
a
little
looked
at.
This
point
wants
to
go
home,
but
we're
gonna
take
advantage
of
him
and
all
his
knowledge
is
one
more
time
when
he's
gonna
tell
us
about
using
open
refine
to
clean
up
address
data
Georgian.
F
F
We
have
a
lot
of
address
data
that
is
kind
of
messy.
There
are
things
that
we
asked
staff
to
do
and
our
member
libraries,
you
know
we
try
to
get
them
to
when
a
patron
has
a
different
mailing
address
from
their
street
address.
We
tell
them
to
put
the
peel
box
in
one
spot
and
street
address
in
another
one
and
they
always
get
that
backwards.
Well,
not
always
about
you
know
it's
fifty
percent
of
the
time
they
get
it
backwards.
F
F
But
you
can
also
take
the
patrons
that
you
have
in
Koha
export
them
and
then
re-import
them
and
overwrite
the
data
and
use
that
as
a
method
to
get
the
patrons
out
into
something.
Where
it's
easier
than
to
do
some
database
cleanup
and
then
you
can
push
it
all
back
into
into
koha
through
the
patron
import
tool.
F
So
you
can
find
open,
refine,
open,
refine
orj
and
they
have
several
videos
there.
That
will
introduce
you
to
how
to
use
it.
I
also
there
was
in
in
the
u.s..
We
have
a
amigos
is
a
library
they
do
a
lot
of
trainings
for
librarians
and
I
think,
through
amigos
or
some
other,
some
other
group
that
does
library
training.
F
F
Part
of
this,
but
policy
map
allows
us
to
take
patron
data
and
put
it
on
a
map,
and
then
policy
map
has
all
of
these
other
things
that
we
can
add
in
that
we
can
add
into
the
map
to
help
us
figure
out
where
the
patrons
are
and
maybe
where,
in
a
given
area,
we
might
need
to
try
to
focus
marketing
or
we
can
try
and
figure
out.
You
know
which
patrons
and
what
parts
of
towns
aren't
being
served
and
for
us,
like
I,
said,
we've
got
a
big
area.
F
Some
of
our
libraries
are
municipal
libraries,
they're,
they're,
tied
to
a
city
government.
Some
of
them
are
library,
districts
where
they're
tied
to
different
regions,
and
some
of
them
are
Township.
Libraries,
where
you
know
most
of
the
United
States
of
America,
is
chopped
into
what
chopped
up
into
what's
called
townships,
where
you
have
these
big
large
rural
areas
that
are
bigger
than
a
city,
usually
they're
about
what
is
it
they're,
six
by
six,
so
they're
about
36
square
miles
and
the
in
a
lot
of
places,
form
up
governing
bodies?
F
And
we
have
quite
a
few
township
libraries
in
our
in
our
area
and
so
open
roof
policy
map
helps
us
look
at
you
know,
township
areas,
city
city,
limits,
county
borders
and
we
can
also
put
data
in
there.
Like
you
know
what
are
the
census
data
from
the
US
Census?
You
know
where
are
their
poverty
issues?
How
close
are
people
to
hospitals,
a
lot
of
data
and
policy
map?
F
F
So
I
run
a
report
and
I
get
the
data
out
of
Quahog
and
then
I
clean
up
the
data
and
open
or
find
and
then
I
import
the
data
back
into
koha.
But
then
I
run
another
report
in
koha.
That's
the
policy
map
report
and
then
I
import
data
into
policy
now,
so
there
seems
to
be
some
extra
steps
here
because
it
seems
like
I
could
run
a
report
in
Quahog
and
then
I
could
clean
up
the
data
and
Oprah
fine
and
then
I
could
just
import
it
directly
into
policy
map.
F
F
So,
while
that's
loading
up,
let
me
do
that
what
I
did
last
night,
when
I
decided
that
I
was
going
to
do
a
live
demo
with
this
I
figured
I
would
just
run
a
report
and
get
the
data
right
out
of
Koha
and
then
I
started.
Thinking
about
that
and
it's
well
I
can't
very
well
run
open
or
find
with
patron
data.
That's
straight
out
of
our
server,
because
it's
going
to
have
patron
names,
patron
addresses
and
patron
card
numbers
and
a
whole
bunch
of
private
data
in
it.
F
So
what
I
did
is
last
night
I
ran
there,
we
go
it's
firing
up
now.
I
ran
a
report
and
then
I
went
through
and
anonymized
all
the
data.
So
when
we
do
open
this
and
open
refine,
my
god,
this
is
taking
forever
there.
We
go
it's
moving
along
a
little
faster
now,
so
what
I
did
is
I
just
changed.
F
All
of
the
patron
names
to
the
same
name:
I
changed
all
of
the
addresses
all
of
the
cities,
so
that
the
city
data
is
is
not
the
true
data
for
the
patrons
and
then
I
am
just
ransom.
I
used
to
open
refine
to
modify
card
numbers
and
zip
code
in
cities,
so
that
the
data
that
you're
gonna
see
is
not
live
data
from
actual
from
actual
patrons.
F
F
I'm,
not
sick,
I
mentioned
this
before
I.
Just
this
is
the
beginning
of
allergy
season
for
me.
So
so
here
we
go.
I've
got
the
data
into
oka
refine
and
it
looks
a
lot
like
Excel.
It
looks
a
little
out
like
a
spreadsheet.
So
let
me
go
over
here
to
my
other
notes
and
see
what
it
is
that
I
wanted
to
I
was
trying
to
think
all
the
things
that
I
could
show
you
how
to
do,
and
so
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
I
had
those
so
notes
on.
F
That's
that
I
don't
make
any
mistakes
here.
So
so
I
changed
all
the
city
names
I
changed
all
the
zip
codes.
I
changed
all
the
branch
codes
and
I
made
them
all
in
category
code.
That
doesn't
exist
and
they
all
have
our
name
Beavis
Smith,
because
I
was
watching
beavis
and
butt-head.
The
other
night
and
Smith
seems
like
a
good
generic
name.
So
so
what
I
can
do
here
with
openrefine
is
at
the
top
of
each
column.
F
Header
I've
got
filters
going
on
and
if
I
click
on
one
of
these
filters,
it
gives
me
a
lot
more
options
than
what
you
see
in
Excel.
So
the
most
common
thing
that
I
can
do
with
these
is
I
can
click
on
text
facet
and
this
will
open
up
over.
On
the
left
hand,
column
I
can
see
all
of
the
different
options
that
I
have
in
the
zip
code.
Column
I
can
see.
All
of
the
different,
unique,
grouped
fields
are
grouped
entries
into
that
column
and
I
can
see
that
you
know
a
lot
of
them.
F
It'll.
Give
me
a
count
here
like
for
this.
Theoretically,
almost
all
of
these
should
have
a
nine
nine
zero
zero
one,
zip
code
and
I
can
see
that
I've
got
out
of
six
thousand
five
hundred
and
six
rows.
I've
got
five
thousand
five
hundred
and
fifty
three
of
those
have
that
zip
code.
So
my
guess
is:
if
I
look
up
here,
nine
one
zero
one,
one,
nine
109
one-
those
are
all
potentially
misspelled,
zip
codes
and
I've
got
here.
I've
got
eight
of
these
that
all
say
there:
nine
one
zero
zero
one.
F
So
if
I
click
on
edit
I,
don't
even
remember
what
I
was
supposed
to
make
these,
it
was
nine
nine
zero,
zero
one
I
can
just
click
on
edit
there
and
I'm
editing
that
whole
group
at
once,
so
it'll
take
a
second
or
two
for
that
server
to
run
yeah.
So
now
all
of
those
are
now
going
to
be
down
here
in
this
field.
F
So
if
I
look
at
my
list
over
here
of
what
they
faceted
out,
I've
got:
Kansas
I've
got
capital
K
capital
last
6200
in
one
of
those,
and
then
I've
got
small
K
small
as
as
four
and
capital
K
small
s.
One
of
those
I
can
change
these
all
by
clustering
them
by
clicking
on
this
link
here
that
says
cluster.
Now
what
its
gonna
do
is
it's
gonna
say
all
of
these:
this
K
capital,
K
capital
s,
small
K,
small
s,
capital
K,
smallest.
Those
are
all
really
some
similar.
F
It's
gonna
take
a
second
to
load,
but
I
can
see
that
most
of
these
say
that
they're
Springfield,
what
I
can
do
here
is
I,
can
click
on
include,
and
it's
only
going
to
show
me
results
where
Springfield
is
the
city,
but
then
I
can
further
refine.
That
and
I
can
say
just
show
me
the
ones
where
Springfield
is
the
city
and
Kansas
is
the
state,
and
then
I
can
see
that
all
of
these.
F
5530
of
them
do
but
then
there's
all
these
other
ones
where
there
are
discrepancies,
and
so
now
that
I've
got
those
all
there.
I
can
the
quickest
way
that
I
can
think
of
to
do
this
and
open
refine
as
I
can
click
on
zip
code
and
I
can
go
down
and
do
a
transformation,
and
there
are
a
list
of
common
transformations
and
I
can
just
make
these
all
no
and
so
I'm.
Just
erasing
all
of
these
zip
codes
and
then
I
can
edit
the
top
one.
F
The
reason
for
that
is
because
invariably,
what
happens
is
they
put
the
nine
digit
in
zip
code
in
for
a
patron
and
then
the
next
time
that
patron
comes
to
the
library
they
say?
Oh
I've,
moved
and
staff
will
update
the
address
the
phone
number
everything,
but
then
they
forget
that
the
nine
digit
zip
code
will
also
need
to
be
updated.
F
There
are
other
a
whole
bunch
of
other
common
transformations
that
openrefine
can
do
and
I'll
just
show
you
some
of
those
it
has.
You
know,
there's
some
things
that
you
always
need
to
deal
with
data,
there's
a
common
transformation
for
trim,
leading
and
trailing
white
spaces,
so
any
white
spaces
you
want
to
get
rid
of
the
before
and
after
a
field
that
will
automatically
get
rid
of
them.
F
I
don't
have
any
in
there
because,
because
apparently,
I
was
playing
I
saved
this
when
I
was
playing
with
the
with
the
CSV
file
last
night,
but
I
can
also
do
other
collapse.
Consecutive
white
spaces
is
another
common
transformation.
I
can
make
these
all
lowercase.
It
just
changed.
6320
cells,
so
now
these
are
all
lowercase.
I
could
go
back
to
a
common
transformation
for
uppercase
and
I
could
even
do
what
I
want
them
to
be,
which
is
title
case
where
each
word
has
capital
at
the
at
the
beginning.
F
F
So
the
the
searching
is
faster
and
any
changes
I
make
will
only
affect
the
ones
that
are
selected.
So
if
I
tell
open
refine
to
go
in
and
change
P
o,
so
that
P
o
is
all
capital
wherever
it
appears.
If
I've
got
the
filter
set
to
just
show
me
the
things
that
start
with
P
o
space,
then
it's
only
going
to
make
the
changes
to
the
things
that
meet
that
criteria,
that's
a
little
bit
harder
to
do
when
you're
working
with
Excel
I.
There
are
also
some
things
that
we
can
use
over
here.
F
I
can
tell
open,
are
fine
to
add
a
star
to
each
of
these
rows
and
that's
usually
what
I
do
once
I
finished
with
doing
some
bulk
editing
is
a
lot
of
start
of
those
rows
and
then
I
can
tell
it
to
always
I
can
facet
by
star
and
then
tell
it
not
to
show
me
so
down
here.
I
can
see
that
there
are
69
things
that
are
starred
and
I
can
include
those
and
then
invert
the
results,
and
so
I'm
only
gonna
see
the
things
that
don't
have
a
star
that
meet
my
other
criteria.
F
So
those
are
just
some
of
the
things
that
I
can
do
with
openrefine,
and
it's
really
worked
great
for
creating
these
maps
in
policy
map
that
we
have
interest
in
from
some
of
our
member
libraries.
So
let
me
show
you
a
map
that
we
used
open
refine
to
to
clean
up
the
data.
Our
library
in
Eudora
just
changed
the
way
that
their
library
is
structured,
and
so
they
wanted
a
map
that
showed
patrons
with
a
home
library
of
Eudora
who
live
in
the
city
of
Eudora
versus
ones
who
live
in
the
township
Eudora
I'm.
F
So
here
is
I've,
got
the
boundaries
set
to
show
County
subdivisions.
So
this
little
area
here
where
the
cluster
of
information
is
this
is
Eudora
Township
and
in
the
middle
of
that,
underneath
the
big
blob
of
dots,
that's
the
city
of
Eudora
and
over
here
I've
got
these
broken
down
into
active
adults,
active
minors,
inactive
adults
and
inactive
minors.
So
the
little
triangles
are
adults,
the
circles
and
minors.
The
green
ones
are
active.
Patrons
of
the
blue
ones.
Are
inactive
patrons
and
active?
F
So
let
me
get
back
here
to
my
presentation
screen,
so
I
do
have
in
the
slides,
which
will
be
shared
later
I've
got.
This
is
the
report
that
I
currently
that
I
use
to
get
this
data
out?
There
are
some
things
like
like
Rocio
and
Andrew
mentioned.
There
are
some
problems
with
the
patron
import
tool
when
you're
dealing
with
things
sometimes
like
the
the
patron
import
tool
does
not
like
it.
F
If
the
card
number
is
no,
it
also,
depending
on
what
you're
doing
having
leading
zeros
in
a
card
number
I
found
can
also
cause
problems
when
you
re
importnat
aback
into
Koha
and
I.
Never
import
patron
I
never
use
this
process
on
Highland
Community
College
students,
because
all
of
those
students
have
cards
that
begin
with
a
zero
and
I.
F
Also
don't
do
it
on
the
Prairie
Hills
schools
because
they
have
issues
with
their
cards
too,
but
this
is
the
report
that
I
use
to
get
the
data
out
of
Koha
and
then
I
have
a
different
report
that
I
use
to
output.
The
data
in
policy
map
and
I
have
a
link
to
that
in
this
in
this
presentation,
because
the
the
actual
SQL
fills
up
the
page
and
I
couldn't
fit
it
all
on
the
slide.
F
B
That
was
pretty
cool
thanks
for
sharing
just
some
people
and
thought
it
was
pretty
neat
I,
see
Heather
and
thought
it
was
pretty
super
cool.
So
I'm
I
think
that
that
looks
like
one
of
those
things
that
is
going
to
be
reviewed
once
we
get
it
up
again,
so
people
can
use
that
those
demographics
are
important
to
know
where
you
need
to
put
your
items,
and
you
know
what
libraries
are
busy
and
then
how
to
promote
those
libraries,
more
outreach
and
stuff,
so
that
serves
a
huge
purpose.
Yes,.
F
The
other
thing
I
would
say
about
open,
refine
is
open
or
flying
can
also
be
used
to
bulk
edit
mark
Dania.
That's
my
understanding.
I've
never
actually
used
it
for
that,
but
open
refine
has
tools
built
into
it
for
editing,
mark
data
issues.
I
have
I
currently
have
absolutely
no
idea
how
to
do
that.
Well,.
F
G
H
H
H
C
H
Do
some
stuff
good,
but
I,
put
together
a
group
of
stuff
that
I
like
playing
with
what
I
want
to
make
a
report
a
little
bit
more
useable
or
a
little
bit
nicer
to
look
at
just
some
basic
yeah
tricks.
You
can
pull
in
a
report
and
for
that
I'm
gonna
jump
over
to
my
test
system
here.
H
H
So
the
first
thing
I
want
to
talk
about
is
that
grab
my
two
saved
reports
and
then
also
the
reports,
library
and
I
just
want
to
say
I
know,
you've,
probably
all
been
here,
a
bunch
you've
probably
spent
some
time.
Looking
at
this
tips
section
up
at
the
top,
you
absolutely
should
spend
more
time
in
this
tip
section
read
it
and
reread
it,
it's
full
of
wonderful
goals.
The
first
thing
I
want
to
look
at
is
the
section
of
links
which
is
pretty
simple.
H
These
are
all
places
where
we're
cheating
to
make
a
live
link
in
a
report
result.
So,
for
instance,
this
first
one
is
to
make
a
borrower
number
link
after
that
borrower
record
and
what
it's
really
ultimately
doing
is
concatenating
together.
Some
HTML
with
bits
of
our
report,
results
to
make
a
link,
because
when
that
report
shows
to
us
in
Koha
it
renders
as
a
web
page,
which
means
any
HTML
we
snuck
in
there
renders
as
it
would
if
it
were
just
built
into
the
web
page
natively.
H
There
are
a
bunch
of
examples
in
here
and
this
doesn't
even
scratch
the
surface
of
what
you
can
link
to
I've
been
trying
to
add
stuff
here
as
I
stumble
across
it
or
write
it
out.
I,
don't
always
remember
or
have
time
to
do
that,
but
just
because
something
isn't
listed
here
absolutely
does
not
mean
you
can't
get
it
to
link
in
the
report.
Any
koha
page
where
you
can
look
at
this
URL
and
see
that
it's
got
a
predictable
string
with
a
bit
in
there.
That
is
like
an
ID
number
from
some
koha
table.
H
H
D
H
Did
with
the
borrower
number
I'm
in
this
case,
I'm
not
giving
the
Shelf
number
as
the
display
value
I'm,
giving
the
name,
because
I
wanted
to
be
a
little
bit
fancier,
but
these
link
off
here
whoo-hoo.
So
that's
fun!
Yeah!
Just
remember
that
you
can't
even
build
whatever
you
want
there
and
you
can
also
get
fancier
still,
because
Co
has
got
a
lot
of
very
specific
pages.
H
So,
like
this
next
report,
I
want
to
show
you
is
one
I,
actually
cribbed
off
of
Lisette
I,
don't
know
if
she's
here
I
had
this
report
that
lists
the
highest
card
numbers
in
your
system.
She
made
it
so
much
cooler
because
she
made
the
link
off
of
it.
So
this
gives
you
your
card
number,
don't
link
to
the
borrower
number.
She
made
that
link
go
not
just
to
the
borrower
and
not
just
to
the
borrower
edit
screen,
but
actually
specifically
to
the
part
of
the
borrower
at
its
green.
H
That
contains
the
card
to
change
that
which
is
totally
cool
and
and
is
not
anything
very
advanced.
If
you're
in
the
borrower
record
right
here,
each
one
of
these
individual
edit
buttons
gives
you
a
separate
edit
screen,
so
she
just
took
the
URL
that
you
get
from
that
edit
button
and
made
that
into
a
link
per
serving
preserving
that
and
step
three.
So
awesome,
yeah
and,
as
she
says
in
the
chat
in
May,
changing
140
card
numbers,
much
faster,
it
was
great.
I
was
really
happy
when
she
sent
it
back
to
me.
H
C
H
C
H
H
Now,
when
I
ran
this
just
as
one
report
to
say
these
changes
were
made
and
here's
all
the
details
of
those
changes,
he
was
really
big
and
ugly
and
kind
of
more
than
I
wanted
to
look
at
in
one
go
so
in
here
I've
got
a
column
of
click
for
details,
and
that
is
actually
going
to
take
me
into
a
second
report.
It
takes
the
output
of
this
report
and
feeds
it
into
a
second
report
as
a
runtime
parameter,
because
every
time
you
and
you
can
see
that
actually
up
here.
H
I
entered
so
in
my
new
report
that
I'm
linking
off
to
the
parameter
it
asked
for
which
we
haven't
did
never
ever
see
was
just
the
ID
number
from
the
action
log.
So
let
me
copy
that
when
I
hit
run
here,
it
asks
me
for
action.
Id
I,
put
that
in
it
gives
me
this,
but
I
skip
that
whole
step.
My
first
report
fed
that
parameter
into
my
second
report
and
just
walked
me
right
over
there.
H
H
So
we
can
see
that's
the
HTML
once
it's
all
ready
to
get
squished
together.
Html
can
do
more
than
that.
You
can
also,
if
you're
sticking
HTML
and
your
page,
you
can
use
that
to
format
your
data.
So
my
next
one
I've
got
here
with
I'm
out
of
order.
Is
this
hold
skew
report?
I?
Don't
remember
why
I
wrote
this.
It
was
sitting
in
my
my
big
file
of
saved
reports
that
I
keep
on
my
computer.
Somebody
asked
me
for
a
new
version
of
the
whole
skew
and
so
I
concatenated
HTML
into
that
report.
H
To
do
some
of
the
formatting
that
you
get
in
the
native
holds
queue,
so
this
call
number
column
is
just
like
in
the
holds.
Q
is
your
shelving
location
italicized,
then
a
line
break
then
your
call
number
and
we
can
see
that
up
in
a
in
the
sequel,
my
eyes
always
cross
a
little
bit.
Here
we
go.
We
have
concatenated
together
italicized
location
and
at
alice's
italian
cessation
line
break
call
number.
H
We've
done
a
similar
thing
over
here
in
bar
code,
where
I've
put
the
bar
code
in
in
bold
and
then
I
have
added
a
note
that
actually
uses
an
if
function.
You
can
see
up
here
to
either
say
if
this
is
an
idle
item,
level
request,
don't
do
anything,
but
if
it's
a
bit
level
hold
put
in
that
little
italicized
or
any
available
so
yeah.
Absolutely
there
are
times
when
just
spinning
all
that
data
out
gives
you
a
pretty
unreadable
report,
but
you
can
sneak
in
a
little
bit
of
HTML.
H
H
From
there,
I
want
to
pivot
a
little
bit
to
playing
with
authorized
value
juice,
because
this
is
my
another
thing
that
I
really
enjoy
fiddling
around
with
in
reports
all
right.
So
here's
a
real,
quick
and
easy
example
weeding
report
right.
It
asks
how
many
years
has
it
been
since
this
thing
was
last
checked
out
and
which
one
of
my
collection
codes
does
it
belong
to
and
again
back
on
that
reports,
library
page,
it
gives
you
some
tips
about
runtime
parameters,
how
to
tie
those
to
your
authorized
values.
H
H
H
I've
got
my
collection
codes
and
this
is
actually
something.
I
first
came
up
with
with
a
library
that
had
a
bunch
of
branches
with
a
very
structured
list
of
branch
codes,
but
adapting
them
to
collection
code.
I
made
collection
codes
in
here
of
sort
of
sets
of
them
juvenile
fiction,
graphic
novel
nonfiction
that
are
all
J,
something
and
adult
collection,
cuz,
they're,
all
a
something
that
means
I
can
set
up.
H
Definitely
this
only
works
if
your
existing
collection
codes
support
it.
So
your
data
structure,
my
not
work
well
for
this,
but
with
those
I,
can
make
a
new
report
weeding
by
collection
group
and
actually
open
this
one
up
here.
So
you
can
see
it
first
same
report
except
now.
Instead
of
asking
for
collection
code,
I've
asked
for
secret
group,
so
we're
looking
at
that
other
authorized
value.
H
Azam
also
changed
it
from
an
equals
tool
like
because
we're
we're
going
to
put
that
wild
card
in
there,
so
it
needs
to
be
a
like,
rather
than
equal
and
equals
I
run
it.
It
asks
me
for
just
those
two
options
now
adulterer
Juvenal
I,
say
juvenile,
also
just
been
in
0
there's
the
whole
three
whole
items
that
are
in
that
collection
code.
Cuz
I
just
made
it
this
morning,
but.
H
C
H
H
When
I
was
running,
weeding
reports
than
follow
in
my
crew
guidelines.
That
really
meant
that,
for
every
different
area
of
the
collection,
there
was
a
different
sort
of
benchmark
of
how
many
years
old
it
should
be
before
you
start
looking
at
it,
and
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
trying
to
remember
like
okay
I'm
in
the
800s.
That
means
I
go
three
years
well,.
H
H
The
one
thing
that
frustrates
me
here
is
authorized.
Values
need
to
be
unique,
so
I
can't
make
a
one
for
popular
fiction
and
another
one
for
mystery
fiction.
If
it
is
also
one
year,
those
would
need
to
be
all
listed
together
in
the
description,
but
it
does
mean
that
I
can
again
yeah
have
my
parameters,
sort
of
labeled
in
here
to
remind
me
I'm
doing
my
popular
nonfiction
in
the
adult
collection.
I.
Don't
think
this
is
gonna
return,
anything!
Oh,
we
did
oh,
oh,
and
it
did
because
it's
not
giving
me
just
my
age
so.
I
H
H
B
Said
wonderful,
witchery,
Andrew!
Thank
you
so
much.
It's
always
wonderful
to
hear
what
you
have
to
tell
us
and
entrain
us
on
your
some
give
us
some
teaching,
no
questions,
just
some
good
responses
and
we
look
forward
to
the
next
time
that
we
get
a
presentation
from
you.
B
G
G
G
Well,
I'm
sure
we're
down
to
a
lot
of
veterans
in
here,
so
this
might
not
be
news
for
a
number
of
you,
but
hopefully
we've
still
got
some
fresh
faces
and
everyone
watching
the
live
stream
after
the
broadcast
will
get
to
enjoy
a
tease.
So
these
are
really
my
five
tips
and
tricks
all
here
and
then
I
will
demo
my
way
through
them
and
let's
do
a
nice
throwback
to
you,
Andrews
reference
to
the
schema
for
anyone.
That's
not
familiar
with
it.
G
You
can
think
of
this
schema
as
the
index
in
a
nonfiction
book
to
kind
of
tell
you
where
all
the
important
things
are
you're
not
going
to
start
the
book
by
reading
the
index
most
of
the
time,
maybe
if
you're
doing
a
college
paper,
but
probably
not
where
you're
going
to
start
for
the
content,
but
incredibly
useful
when
you're
doing
a
book
report
on
it.
The
cohort
reports,
library,
I
like
to
say,
is
like
the
encyclopedia,
which
again
you
don't
always
sit
down
to
read,
cover
to
cover,
but
there's
very
important
information
in
there.
G
When
you
want
to
look
at
a
specific
subject,
area,
specific
topic,
that's
what
you're
going
to
turn
to
number
three
is
use
mana
to
make
your
life
a
lot
easier.
It's
this
awesome
knowledge
base,
that's
still
relatively
new
to
Quahog
that
the
community
is
contributing
to
to
make
it
even
easier
to
pull
in
that
crowd-sourced
knowledge
and
reports
to
make
your
report
writing
a
lot
easier.
G
My
tip
number
four
is
start
small.
You
are
not
expected
to
write
a
report
from
scratch.
Every
time
you
log
into
the
reports,
module
and
really
that's
a
lot
of
work.
You
don't
have
to
reinvent
the
wheel.
You
just
learn
how
to
add
fancy
new
hubcaps
to
it
and
number
five
is
organize:
keep
yourself
organized
by
grouping
reports
in
your
quahog
clients
and
also
save
a
list
for
yourself.
G
Whatever
agency
you
need
to
talk
to.
So,
let's
get
started
with
kind
of
a
guided
tour
through
what
utilizing
those
tips
looks
like
in
the
first
place.
I'm
going
to
go
is
the
lovely
schema
which
is
intimidating
on
first
glance,
there's
204
tables,
there's
thousands
of
columns
where
on
earth
do
you
even
start
and
I
like
to
start
with
just
the
search?
G
This
search
will
drill
down
to
the
columns
that
you're
interested
in
like
you're
going
into
that
index.
You
can
find
things
by
looking
alphabetically
and
kind
of
by
looking
at
which
things
are
grouped
together
and
I
know
I'm,
usually
starting
out
with
bibliographic
information
partners.
Asking
me
questions
about
what
bibs
and
where
and
when,
and
where
did
they
go?
G
The
next
place
on
the
guided
tour
is
going
to
be
the
sequel
reports,
library
and,
like
Andrew,
said
it's
a
wonderful
wealth
of
knowledge
that
is
available
from
coha
itself.
It
links
out
to
both
the
schema
and
the
reports
library
from
the
client,
so
it's
never
more
than
a
click
away
and
it
is
a
wiki.
So
if
you've
been
able
to
use
Wikipedia
in
the
past,
you
can
use
this.
No
problem.
I
recommend
taking
a
look
just
briefly
at
the
table
of
contents.
G
There's
a
lot
of
useful
things
in
here,
such
as
the
links
that
you
can
customize
with
just
as
Andrea
was
talking
about,
but
if
you're
not
quite
there.
Yet
comfort,
wise,
just
knowing
it's
here,
means
that
eventually
down
the
road
after
you
practice,
you'll
be
able
to
come
back
here
and
really
make
use
of
those
various
sequel,
hacks
that
seem
mind-blowing
right
now
on
the
first
page
of
the
coho
reports,
wiki
is
cataloging
reports
a
lot
of
the
general
stuff,
because
Holtz
patrons
and
circulation
have
all
been
broken
out
into
their
own
pages.
G
So
if
I
do
the
word
catalog
it's
going
to
highlight
in
my
browser
all
the
times
that
that
is
mentioned,
and
it's
an
awful
lot,
so
put
something
a
little
bit
more
narrow.
Let's
go
with
action
logs,
just
keep
putting
in
your
terms
the
things
you're
interested
in
to
drill
down
into
the
reports
that
have
already
been
written
on
the
topics
you're
looking
at,
so
you
don't
have
to
reinvent
the
wheel
and
there's
even
some
fun
stuff
in
here,
I'd
say
too
and
I'll
hop
over
to
the
patrons
one.
G
Just
as
an
example,
you
can
open
up
patrons
browse
through
all
of
the
reports
already
crafted
stop
by
patrons
gone
wild
and
chuckle
at
the
naming
conventions
that
we've
used
for
these
section
headers,
and
these
are
the
kind
of
reports
that
can
be
pretty
tricky
to
craft
out
of
the
built
in
reports
in
Quahog,
but
it's
a
great
place
to
start.
So
maybe
you
want
to
work
on
your
outreach
and
communication
and
emails
well,
how
many
patrons
are
just
not
populated
with
an
email
address
in
your
system.
G
Now,
there's
so
many
it's
here,
you
can
click
and
grab
as
many
as
you
want.
Add
them
to
your
own
Koha
instance
at
your
leisure
and
it's
still
a
fair
bit
of
copy
pasting
and
I
know:
I,
don't
have
a
100%
success
rate
was
I
copy
pasting,
not
even
clicks.
So
let's
hop
over
to
my
Koha
instance
and
I'm
on
a
purple
seeing
this
week.
So
this
is
where
I
wanted
to
talk
about
mana
the
knowledge
base,
where
several
things
but
specific
to
this
topic.
Kaha
reports
are
being
shared
internationally.
G
So
if
you
want
to
elect
to
use
mana
and
share
your
reports
with
the
global
Kohath
community,
you
can
activate
those
settings
today
and
get
access
to
all
of
the
reports
from
the
library
and
from
community
contributions
from
libraries
already
using
the
knowledge
base
to
create
more
reports
to
pull
in
that
crowd,
source
community
generated
resources
into
Koha
without
even
having
to
go
outside
of
your
own
Koho
site.
So
this
is
just
the
mana
administration
settings
page
when
are
all
enabled
so
when
I
go
over
to
reports.
G
And
goto
for
me
saved
reports
I
like
to
see
what
I've
already
got
in
my
collection.
I
can
choose
from
the
drop-down
menu
if
I
want
to
use
a
guided
report,
SQL
report
from
scratch
or
to
an
SQL
report
from
mana
and
the
one-stop-shop
ability
of
this
I
think
is
great
and
it's
something
that
everyone
should
turn
on
and
start
using,
so
not
too
different
from
when
we
were
over
on
the
cohort
reports.
Library.
What
keywords
am
I
interested
in?
That's
where
you
have
to
start
you're
not
presented
with
a
wall
of
text?
G
G
And
it
brought
back
442
reports
for
me,
but
it
just
not
a
very
small
amount.
There
are
a
lot
of
reports
out
there
on
borrowers
that
give
you
a
great
starting
point
to
start
making
that
report
for
yourself
for
your
library
and
the
next
thing
is,
you
can
get
a
little
preview
of
what's
in
the
contents
of
all
these.
G
G
C
G
And
it's
there
now.
This
report
has
been
added
to
your
safe
reports.
You
can
start
playing
around
with
it
customize
it,
but
just
taking
it
a
second
touch.
Look
at
it
read
it
see
if
it's
gots
the
values
that
you're
interested
in
the
parameters
that
you
want.
I'd
usually
said,
that's
the
first
step
and
we
can
always
clean
this
up
just
by
clicking
edit.
G
And
start
separating
out
the
various
parts
of
the
report
select
from
where,
once
you
get
those
broken
out
into
paragraphs
I
find
it
it's
a
lot
more
readable
and
we
can
run
it
see
how
it
works
in
our
system,
save
it
and
it
will
occasionally
throw
you
an
error
message.
So
cohosts
error
messages
for
the
reports
are
they're
bright,
yellow
they
jump
out
at
you
can't
be
surprising,
but
they're
absolutely
really
useful.
G
So
in
this
case,
I've
got
an
authorized
value
category
in
this
report
that
I
pulled
from
the
community
and
I
don't
have
this
set
up
in
my
system.
This
is
my
test
site.
It's
just
not
got
that
particular
value,
so
I
can
save
it.
Anyways
or
I
can
go
back
and
edit
it
and
remove
that,
since
that's
not
a
value,
that's
going
to
work
with
my
particular.
G
G
G
And
I
was
using
the
notes
field
to
keep
track
of
the
things
that
I
wanted.
To
add
to
this
report
so
noted
it's
for
colophon,
so
why
on
earth?
It's
in
my
reports
catalog
well!
This
is
why,
and
what
do
I
need
to
add
to
it?
I
want
the
oldest
issue
dates
the
latest
or
newest
issue
date:
I'd,
love
to
see
total
fines
and
I'd
really
like
to
be
able
to
filter
by
branch.
G
G
And
I
also
recommend
just
do
control
fines
on
this
community
as
well
to
find
exactly
what
values
you're
looking
for
and
how
you
need
to
enter
them
into.
The
SQL
reports
editor,
so
I
know
that
the
correct
word
for
the
last
states
or
the
earliest
issue
date
is
issue
date
clear
enough
and
can
always
copy
paste
data.
There.
G
My
n
or
minimum
and
I
know
I,
want
the
issue
date
and
I've
said
that
issues
is
going
to
be
I
for
its
kind
of
initial,
a
way
of
shortening.
Instead
of
writing
issues
out
the
whole
way,
you
just
give
it
a
little
initial.
Instead,
caseydate
close
that
parentheses
and
then
the
next
one
I
want
to
be
the
latest
one.
So
what's
the
opposite
of
minimum
X.
G
G
The
sequel
will
tell
you,
the
schema
will
tell
you
what
is
connected
to
this
table
where
to
look
and
right
at
the
top
account
mines.
Account
lines
is
where
we're
going
to
find
that
financial
component
to
the
patrons
record.
How
much
do
they
owe
or
how
much
is
been
paid
off
in
their
history
and
what
item
was
associated
with
so
I
know:
I
want
kind
of
the
amount
outstanding
how
much
money
do
they
still
owe
for
potentially
these
items
they
have
checked
out.
G
So
remember
the
coma
and
I'll
do
some
amount
outstanding
and
the
last
one
I
wanted
was
curious
about
the
filtering
by
branch,
so
we're
going
to
go
down
to
from
where
it's
telling
Co
Hall
what
tables
that
I
want
it
to
look
at
in
order
to
bring
me
the
information
I'm
interested
in
and
as
soon
as
you
start,
adding
little
bits
and
pieces
to
the
report.
That's
when
you're
going
to
want
to
double
check
that
you
have
all
the
tables
that
you
need
to
reference
in
there.
G
G
G
Right
and
since
I
put
an
A,
they're
gonna
put
an
A
there.
Now,
for
those
of
you
following
along
carefully
you'll,
know,
there's
going
to
be
an
error
message
as
soon
as
I
save
this
one,
but
we'll
see
if
anyone
in
the
chat
can
guess
what
it's
going
to
be.
I
also
wanted
to
add
a
way
to
filter
by
the
branch
and
that's
kind
of
similar
to
the
parameters.
Andrew
was
just
showing
us
before
they're,
not
too
hard
to
do,
there's
a
lot
of
them
in
the
coho
reports
library.
G
G
G
B
I
just
got
scolded
by
George.
He
said
that
Johnny
both
got
it,
but
I
was
in
theater
mode
and
I
was
trying
to
find
out
what
was
going
on.
If
anybody
was
saying
anything
trying
to
see
what
you
were
doing,
cuz
it
was
blurry,
so
I
didn't
have
enough
time
to
get
back
to
it,
but
George
and
John
they
pinged
it
excellent.
G
G
I'm
still
interested
in
seeing,
what's
at
my
main
branch
and
I,
get
results.
Lots
of
test
patrons,
but
here
they
all
are
I've
got
their
names.
How
many
issues
they
currently
have
gary
here
seems
to
be
quite
in
the
red
with
his
issues
and
amounts,
so
we
really
need
to
have
a
talk
with
gary.
Maybe
I'll,
add
email
address
phone
number
anything
from
the
patrons
record
here,
so
I
can
go
in
and
contact
these
individuals
about
yeah
they're.
G
G
It
hasn't
sentimental
meaning
to
me,
because
I
did
it
at
Cal
con
with
you
lovely
book,
so
keep
track
of
the
work
you
do.
Keep
it
organized.
If
you
want
to
put
this
report
into
a
specific
group,
make
sure
the
notes
are
up
to
date.
When
you
make
changes,
it's
a
great
way
to
keep
track
of
what
you've
done.
So
I'm
going
to
put
this
one
and
my
patrons
report
group
and
save
it.
G
So
it
can
be
a
text
file,
it
can
be
a
Notes
app
of
any
kind.
I've
got
colleagues
who
use
ever
notes,
I've
got
Google
capes
or
my
notes,
whatever
you
like
for
just
SQL
files
saved
to
your
own
computer,
just
keep
track
of
the
hard
work
you
do
and
it's
going
to
pay
off.
You'll,
be
recalling
a
report
that
you've
done
in
the
past,
and
you
can
search
a
note-taking
app
that
you
haven't
recorded
in
the
documents
that
you
have
saved.
G
Title
that
you
are
working
on
any
notes
from
it,
and
it
is
an
extra
step
to
kind
of
save
this,
but
it
pays
off.
It
saves
you
time
down
the
road
and
it's
also
a
really
nice
way
to
Waypoint
how
far
you've
come
those
mile
markers
on
starting
out
with
those
really
simple
reports
and
seeing
your
progress
as
you
attempt
more
and
more
complicated,
SQL
or
more
and
more
columns,
different
sequel
functions.
It
all
adds
up.
It's
cumulative
it'll
work
to
feel
really
comfortable
with
it
and
get
good
at
it.
G
But
that's
all
it
is
it's
practice
time
and
taking
the
effort
to
learn
it
piece
by
piece
and
then
you'll
be
surprised
in
a
year
six
months,
how
much
more
comfortable
you
are.
Writing
these
reports
getting
that
to
edit
out
and
being
able
to
well
and
blow
the
minds
off
of
your
cupcakes,
your
staff,
when
they
ask
you
for
something
that
sounds
like
it's
going
to
be
impossible
to
pull
out
of
the
ioss
data,
and
you
get
it
done
because
you
already
had
the
tools
in
your
toolbox
so
nicely.
B
B
B
B
It's
waiting
for
Jason
to
come
back
in
when
he
does
he'll,
be
kicking
us
off
and
we'll
be
talking
about
using
Quahog
public
reports
from
ELQ
elections.
Be
a
word
press
thanks.
Everybody
for
sticking
around
thanks
for
participating
and
thanks
for
making
a
successful,
koa
thong
2020
greatly
appreciate
it.
I
B
I
I
I
I'm
happy
to
be
here
presenting
once
more
okay
I'm
getting
some
yep
sounds
good.
So
once
again
my
name
is
Jason.
Rabe
I
am
the
secant
line
coordinator
at
the
southeast
Kansas
library
system
in
Iola
Kansas,
and
also
the
Koha
US
Secretary
and
running
the
stream
right
now.
So
things
malfunction
you
can
blame
everything
on
me:
a
shoot!
A
few
shoutouts.
I
We
have
had
a
few
donations
via
the
stream
labs
link,
which
is
awesome,
I,
think
we
kind
of
miss
Spencer
in
the
in
the
shuffle
of
shutting
down
and
bring
coming
back
up,
so
I
think
I
can
make
that
go
again.
Maybe
see
that
beating
heart
Thank
You
Spencer,
if
you're
interested
in
donating-
but
you
don't
want
your
name
highlighted-
which
it's
understandable,
our
regular
donate
link,
does
still
work
so
and
John
will
be
able
to
tell
by
the
date
that
I
was
a
co-op
on
donation,
so
feel
free
to
visit
that
as
well.
I
That
link
in
the
chat,
I'm
kind
of
rambling
on,
because
I
know
this
presentation
probably
isn't
going
to
take
30
minutes
so
well,
we'll
see
how
it
goes
so
today
for
my
presentation.
I
wanted
to
talk
about
using
coal,
has
public
reports
to
promote
collections
using
a
wordpress
site
with
some
different
plugins.
I
Keeping
in
the
same
vein
as
reports
up
with
Margaret
and
Andrew,
this
is
something
that
I've
played
with
public
reports
were
kind
of
a
mystery
to
me
for
a
while.
Then
I
saw
its
presentation,
ik,
Cola,
thong
and
or
not
going
on,
kohai
us
conference
and
when
he
talked
about
transparency
and
I
I
had
been
working
on
using
public
reports
in
a
different
fashion
and
I
I
kind
of
came
up
with
a
way
to
to
do
that
to
push
out
information
so
from
directly
from
Kohath
so
to
get
started.
I
Why
use
public
reports
to
promote
connect
collections?
I
have
been
up
since
7
o
clock
my
time,
so
sorry
lunacy
might
be
setting
it
a
little
bit.
The
efficiency
is
one
one
reason
the
data
will
update
dynamically.
So
when
you
delete
things
in
Koha
your
your
list,
if
you
have
you,
can
set
the
caching
on
it,
so
I'll
show
you
where
that's
at
but
like
say
you
have
a
list
of
items
that
your
new
items
that
you're
promoting
on
your
your
website,
anytime,
you
add
or
delete
to
koha.
I
That's
gonna
dynamically
change
on
your
webpage
as
well.
So
you
don't
have
to
go
in
there
and
edit
your
WordPress
site
every
time
you
need
to
make
an
update,
and
that
has
to
do
with
the
criteria
on
their
reports.
So
the
way
you
filter
the
report
is
the
way
it's
gonna
display
the
data.
So
if
you,
if
you
did
a
new
item
list,
for
example-
and
you
set
your
accession
date
to
cut
off
after
a
month
say
then
that's
gonna
keep
dynamically
updating
any
time.
I
You
add
an
item
to
Quahog,
because
it's
just
looking
at
the
accession
dates
discoverability
we're
using
right
now
the
reports
to
highlight
our
puppet
kit
collection
at
the
office.
So
the
southeast
Kansas
library
system
is
the
Regional
Library
System
and
have
a
selection
of
different
collections
available
for
librarians
to
use.
So
we
have
a
public
8
collection
that
they
can
borrow
from
to
do
story
times
with.
We
have
a
professional
collection
with
library
related
books.
I
I
So
if
you
post
this
on
your
website
and
it's
a
static
page
on
on
your
WordPress
site
and
it's
dynamically
updating
used
you've
got
that
static
link.
You
can
share
out
to
people
so
here's
my
new
book
list.
Of
course,
you
can
do
this
all
within
kawatche
you
and
send
out
a
link
from
the
OPAC,
but
it's
if
you
get
more
traffic
on
your
website
than
euro
pack,
for
example,
then
it's
a
good
way
to
kind
of
push
things
out
of
coop
out
to
the
public
I
into
a
public
space.
I
That's
a
little
easier
than
like
digging
through
an
advanced
search
or
digging.
We
have
got
so
many
bliss
think
a
lot
of
the
patients
have
made
public
lists
and
private
lists,
so
referring
them
to
a
list
is
okay,
but
again
this
dynamically
update.
So
it's
it's
less
maintenance
as
well,
and
then
customizability,
of
course,
with
a
an
external
site,
you
can
do
anything
with
HTML
Javascript
CSS,
whatever
you
can
make
it
look.
However,
you
want
do
whatever
you
want.
I
Do
backflips
spin
around
in
circles,
carousel,
add
lots
of
different
options,
lots
of
flexibility
and
again
you
can
do
that
directly
within
the
coal
pack,
but
you
can
also
do
it
externally
and
present
the
data
exactly
how
you
want
it
with
with
those
tools.
So
here's
my
sample
case
and
I
put
the
link
in
here.
I
So
one
thing
that's
broken
right
now
is
the
font
awesome,
which
is
why
there's
weird
squares
instead
of
little
icons,
but
you
get
the
idea
so
for
puppet
kits
I'm
using
four
different
public
reports
filtered
down
to
different
criteria,
and
each
report
is
actually
filtering
on
the
300
field.
I
believe
because
that's
I
I
went
through
and
cleaned
up
the
data
so
that
it
was
consistent.
I
The
jobs
JavaScript
object,
notation
whatever
we'll
get
that
to
so
I
can
pull
that
out
and
then
display
those
directly
on
my
web
page
as
well,
and
then
just
as
a
kind
of
extra
usability
features,
I
put
in
hole,
placement
buttons
for
the
staff,
client
and
the
OPAC,
which
also
just
generate
in
with
the
JSON
we
do
have.
We
have
47
libraries
in
our
consortium,
but
we
also
have
several
libraries
outside
of
our
consortium
and
we
want
to
make
these
available
to
all
of
them
and
lots
of
school.
I
We
don't
need
like
lower
lower
ed
schools
in
our
consortium,
but
they
can
benefit
from
this.
So
and
some
of
them
do
have
accounts
within
our
consortium,
so
they
can
go
place
their
own
holds
and
then
we
can
pull
them
for
him.
So
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
there
was
an
option
for
our
non
non
consortium.
I
Member
libraries
to
still
place
holds
easily
from
just
looking
at
the
picture
clicking
on
it
to
going
out,
and
then
the
picture
is
actually
linked
out
to
when
you
click
it,
it
blows
up,
and
the
title
takes
you
to
the
Oh,
but
that's
all
it's
all
configurable
with
your
HTML.
Of
course
everything
is
customizable
here,
so
it's
just
a
different
way
to
present
things
single
them
out
with
the
report
and
push
them
out
to
people.
So
how
do
you
make
a
report
public,
it's
fairly
simple
when
you're
editing
or
creating
a
new
report?
I
There's
there
are
these
two
options
here.
So
the
report
is
public.
You
change
that
to
yes
and
then
your
cache
expiry
you'll
want
to
pay
attention
to,
because
that's
gonna
determine
how
often
the
report
is
gonna
refresh.
So
if
you
only
want
to
refresh
it
once
a
day
for
your
new
items
or
something,
then
you
would
you
would
change
that
there.
If
you
want
it
to
be
more
instant,
more
dynamic,
you
would
lower
the
cache
expiry
so
that
it's
refreshing
more
often,
okay,
so
just
a
little
puffier
public
reports
are
public.
I
So
I
do
want
to
caution
you
from
using
that
box.
I
just
showed
you
anytime.
You
set
that
to
public
there's
potential
for
anybody
out
there
in
the
whole
wide
world
to
see
the
data
that
you're
pulling.
So
you
want
to
make
sure
that
when
your
engineering
public
reports
and
writing
them,
you
don't
want
any
like
identifiable
public
patron
information
in
there.
I
have
respect
patient
privacy
down
there.
So
that's
a
big
no-no,
I'm
pretty
sure
everywhere.
I
I
So,
just
just
keep
that
in
mind
before
you
toggle
that
on
and
off-
and
you
can
always
write
your
reports.
Look
at
them
see
how
the
results
look
then
determine
whether
it's
safe
to
make
it
public
or
if
you
need
to
pull
some
information
all
of
it
before
you
do
make
it
public,
as
I
mentioned,
tailoring
the
reports
to
pull
exact
results
so
we're
using
a
wear
statement
to
filter
down
to
exactly
what
I
want.
I
So
in
my
example,
I
used
a
wear
statement
to
filter
John,
exactly
two
kids
that
had
a
puppet
and
a
book
and
then
I
had
one
tab.
My
second
report
filtering
down
to
kids
that
just
had
a
puppet
and
then
there
were
a
few
other
categories,
so
we're
doing
that
in
the
where
statement
and
then
also
be
mindful
of
your
order
by
statement.
I
When
it's
displaying
on
the
page
as
far
as
images
go
like
I,
said
the
for
the
puppets,
I
pulled
local
images
that
we
had
uploaded
to
Koha,
which
are
also
displaying
in
our
Oh
pack,
which
is
really
handy
that
we
can
get
that
all
from
the
same
place.
I
do
have
a
report
that
I
cobbled
together
a
while
back
that
will
let
you
it
basically
reverse-engineered
the
amazon
cover
images
code.
I
So
it's
it's
tricky
because
you
have
to
like
trans
trans
figure,
the
ISBN
to
make
make
it
into
an
amazon
cover
image,
but
I
do
have
a
report
that
does
that.
So
I
was
that's
another
project
that
I
haven't
touched
in
years.
I
haven't
actually
touched
this
one
since
last
year.
Sometimes
so,
I
do
retrain
myself
on
what
I
did,
but
one
thing
that
I
was
trying
out
was
like
a
shopping
type
of
interface
with
public
reports.
I
I
So
you
can
check
that
out
with
the
dump
truck
and
do
your
storytime
that
way
so
I
I
started
working
on
a
report
that
would
pull
in
the
list
the
items
from
the
list
and
then
generate
cover
images
from
Amazon,
and
then
it
kind
of
got
off
the
rails
after
I
started,
adding
a
little
checkboxes
and
stuff
and
I
think
it's
definitely
doable.
It's
not
gone
back
to
it.
I
Where
you
get
going
to
do
multiple
holds
at
once
kind
of
shop
through
there
and
pick
pick
which
books
you
want
to
place
holds
on
all
at
once.
So
I
think
that
would
be
a
good
another
good
thing
to
put
out
on
our
website
for
our
librarians
to
help
just
help
them
discover
things.
So
the
last
thing
here
handles
for
generating
links
just
just
another
thing
to
keep
in
mind
if
you're
going
to
link
back
to
your
catalog
you'll
want
to
include
Biblio,
of
course,
so
that
you
can
put
or
biblio
so
you
can
generate.
I
Those
links
like
andrew
was
telling
us
earlier
the
same
thing
with
the
item
number.
If
you
want
to
do
like
an
item
specific
holes,
you're
gonna
need
both
the
Biblio
number
and
the
item
number
in
that
concatenated
statement.
So
you
want
to
be
sure,
you're
pulling
that
data
as
well,
and
you
can
always
pull
more
than
you
need
and
then
present
just
what
you
want
so
like
see
so
here's
my
example
of
my
sequel
for
for
one
of
those
puppet
kit
reports.
You
can
see
that
I'm
I'm
doing
actually
have
a
fallback
on
this
one.
I
So
if
I
do
an
if
null
concatenate
I'm
trying
to
pull
the
cover
image
from
my
o
pack,
which
is
the
local
image
we
uploaded
and
I'm
using
the
Biblio
I
used
for
Biblio
images,
so
Biblio
images,
image
number
and
then
the
if
null
is
kind
of
falling
back
to
this
placeholder
image.
I
have
in
Dropbox,
so
while
we
were
building
this
code,
we
were
still
in
the
process
of
adding
images.
Some
of
the
public
kits
were
still
checked
out,
so
we
couldn't
take
pictures.
I
Yet
so
I've
made
a
fallback
image
on
that,
so
that
if
we
didn't
have
an
image
in
Colo,
then
it
would.
It
would
have
a
little
coming
soon
square
since
since
then
all
of
them
have
images,
but
that's
a
handy
bit
of
code.
If
you're
thinking
about
using
images
in
your
in
your
display,
I
also
pulled
the
Biblio
number
bar
code,
title
item
number
image
number
and
then
the
I'm
pulling
the
data
from
the
300
field
so
that
I
can
I.
I
Don't
actually
have
to
do
that
here,
but
I
wanted
to
see
what
it
looked
like
to
help
me
determine
what
I
wanted
to
put
in
my
wear
statement
so
and
then
you
can
see
where
I
joined
everything
in
my
shelf
location
that
I
wanted
to
limit
it
to
the
shelf
location,
professional
collection
kit.
So
I
did
that
I
also
wanted
to
limit
it
to
only
things
that
puppet
in
the
call
number,
because
we
do
have
other
items
in
the
in
that
kit,
shelf
location
and
then
for
this
report.
I
I
wanted
to
look
for
things
that
books
puppets
and
dolls
and
those
are
some
standardized
languages
that
we
used
in
the
records
to
make
sure
that
it
was
pulling
everything
accurately
and
if
we
add
a
new
public.
Yet
we
want
to
make
sure
that
that
these
terms
are
in
the
300
I'm,
showing
on
that
page.
You
can
see
that
I
commented
owl
toy
here.
That's
an
experimentation.
I
I
also
notice
that
I
didn't
not
like
on
the
doll
instead
of
a
light,
because
I
didn't
want
the
dolls
here,
so
we're
trying
to
divide
it
out
into
just
puppets
or
just
stuffed
animal
toy
type
things
and
that's
kind
of
the
terminology.
We
ended
up
using
there
so
again,
probably
stepping
on
some
archaic,
cataloging
rules
by
using
my
own
descriptions
here,
but
I
think
with
the
physical
items
I'm
allowed
to.
Maybe
so
here's
what
the
staff
client
looks
like
when
you
were
in
the
report.
You
can
see
I've
generated
a
URL
for
the
image.
I
I've
got
my
biblio
barcode
title
I've
got
an
item,
call
number
and
you
can
see
it's
the
only
things
with
puppet
in
it.
I
also
pulled
the
image
number
because
I
wanted
to
generate
a
secondary
link
using
the
image
number
I
think
either
that
or
it
was
troubleshooting
alright,
the
other,
and
then
you
can
see
my
my
data
fields
here.
So
you
can
see
I've
got
things
with
puppets.
I
I
So
the
JSON,
which
is
not
me,
I'm,
J's,
Jason,
J
JSON,
is
the
data
that
is
publicly
accessible
in
the
report.
So
this
is
what
it
looks
like,
and
this
is
the
magic
link
that
makes
it
happen.
So
you
just
you're
you're
pulling
it
from
the
the
OPAC,
because
it's
public
now
so
you've
got
your
o
pack
URL
here
and
then
this
is
the
but
that
you
would
need
it's
referencing.
I
This
report,
that
I
was
just
showing
you
2680
and
then
I've
also
put
the
annotation
on
there
so
that
you
can
see
it's
giving
these
names
here.
So
biblio
number
item
call
number
image
number.
You
can
only
see
the
first
two
objects
in
this
screenshot,
so
the
first
zero
index,
so
the
first
one
is
zero
and
that's
the
Alexander
in
the
windup
mouse
and
then
the
next
one
is
object.
I
Number
one
and
you
can
see
that's
armadillo
rodeo,
coming
through
alphabetically
like
I,
wanted
the
data
doesn't
sort
the
same
I,
don't
know
why
so
titles
first
year,
titles.
Second
to
last
there
it
doesn't
really
matter,
but
that's
what
the
JSON
looks
like
and
that
these
are
the
chunks
of
data
that
you're
gonna
pull
over.
I
I
So
it's
got
your
address
to
your
OPAC
and
the
report
number
are
the
big
things
that
you
have
to
change
there
and
then
you're
gonna
write
some
HTML
to
contain
your
data
and
then
within
that
HTML
you're,
referring
to
your
data
objects
by
their
field
names.
So
and
not
that
happened
thing
in
curly
brackets.
So
these
are
the
fields
we
saw
in
the
JSON,
the
biblio
number,
the
title,
the
image
number.
I
So
that's
the
data
we're
getting
from
the
public
report
and
then
you
just
close
it
with
this
and
I've
kind
of
highlighted
those
down
here
in
this
sample.
Vlog
I
did
remove
a
bunch
of
junk
down
here
to
make
it
fit
on
the
page,
so
I
can't
guarantee
copying
and
pasting.
The
sample
block
will
work,
but
I
do
have
a
link
to
my
dump
of
it
and
get
that
should
work
if
you
want
to
play
with
it.
I
My
Mike,
my
HTML
strategy,
is
very
messy
I
like
to
put
coal
on
everything
when
I'm
doing
stuff
on
our
website.
Just
so
that
everybody
knows
that
it's
me
messing
with
it
did
that's
just
your
personal
preference,
so
you
can
see.
I've
got
Quahog
grade
item
for
this
project.
I
I
went
out
and
copied
kind
of
a
grid
that
I
liked
and
then
started,
manipulating
it
with
the
the
data
here.
So
one
thing
I
did
was
linked
out
to
the
OPAC
image
using
the
image
number.
So
that's
that's.
I
I
The
image
source
is
just
that
link
that
I
generated
in
JSON
data,
so
I
I
can
just
choose
image
there
and
then
we're
referencing,
the
biblio
number
here
and
here,
as
well
as
the
title
here
so
and
those
are
those
links.
So
this
link
goes
out
to
just
to
the
record
on
the
OPAC.
This
link
goes
to
the
place
hold
area
on
the
OPAC,
and
then
I
cut
out
the
second
place
hold
button,
but
it's
basically.
I
I
So
that's
really
the
end
of
my
presentation.
I
didn't
go
into
the
whole
details
of
what
I
did
with
the
J's
CSS
and
JavaScript
I
mostly
wanted
to
highlight
how
I
got
the
data
out
of
Koha
and
onto
WordPress
using
that
JSON
content
importer
I
did
include
in
my
presentation
here
links
to
all
of
that.
So
there's
there
again
is
the
HTML,
the
CSS
that
I
use
javascript
in
the
sequel,
and
it's
just
that
one
report,
but
it's
something
to
look
at
and
work
off
of.
I
B
I
B
It
is
the
way
the
world
turns
yep.
Well,
that's
fantastic!
Well,
next,
on
deck
is
we've
got
Chris
Chris
Brannon
wait
for
him
to
come
into
the
queue
and
once
he
gets
in
there,
then
we
can.
You
can
get
him
to
start.
This
presentation
chris
is
gonna,
be
presenting
on
customizing
our
self-checks,
but
only
they
customized
their
self
check.
Oh,
be
fun.
To
see,
want
to
see
what
that's
about
George
likes
a
shark.
I
I
Something
about
maybe
we're
we're
still
making
full
profit,
even
though
the
sales
sale
prices
are
there,
so
any
profits,
we
get
it
from
the
Threadless
shop
as
well
as
donations
that
you
guys
are
graciously
giving
us
I
thought
three
come
through
during
or
two
at
least
during
a
presentation.
All
that
goes
into
the
kohai
u.s.
development
fund
and
education
fund.
So
we
can
keep
putting
on
things
like
this,
and
also
we
can
help
improve
koha.
So
plus
you
get
a
cool
thing
to
remember
this
awesome
day
by.
I
I
I
I
I
F
F
Tonight,
I'm
going
to
be
talking
about
self
check,
the
Koha
self
check
to
be
more
precise,
and
it's
kind
of
funny
that
I'm
actually
doing
a
presentation
on
Koho
self
check,
because
we
don't
actually
use
the
Koha
self
check
that
I
maintain
a
third-party
open-source
self
check.
But
the
cohosh
self
check
is
a
good
system.
It
is
something
that
I
myself
have
a
lot
of
interest
in
and
wanted
to
see.
F
It
continue
to
grow
and
get
better
so
I
have
you
know,
I
off
and
on
through
the
year
I
try
to
put
a
little
time
into
it
and
see
how
things
are
progressing
and
see
what
I
can
do
with
it.
And
so
I
want
to
share
some
of
the
things
that
that
I've
learned
this
past
year
with
the
cell
check
and
if
you
are
using
the
self
check,
just
want
to
show
you
a
little
bit
about
it
and
how
you
can
make
it
even
better
than
it
is.
F
See
if
I
can
advance
my
slide
here
there
we
go
so
some
of
the
things
that
I
will
be
covering
in
this
hour.
I
will
be
talking
about
automating,
the
startup
or
the
self
check,
adding
patron
privacy,
removing
unwanted
link,
links
or
escape
routes
for
patrons
centralizing,
the
log
in
and
adding
an
on
screen.
Keypad
modifying
logins
login
instructions
modifying
the
log
in
to
show
that
something
that's
happening.
Sometimes
you
on
something
you
don't
know.
F
F
Alright,
so
this
is
pretty
much
what
self
check
looks
like
out
of
a
box
the
the
the
border
across
the
top
of
the
screen,
the
header.
The
self
check
is
fairly
basic
and
it's
in
its
presentation,
but
pretty
straightforward.
You
do
have
a
place
to
log
in
and
you
can
configure
whether
you're
logging,
in
with
just
a
card
number
or
with
your
card
number
and
a
password
I,
am
going
to
log
in
with
my
test
account.
F
And
when
you're
logged
in
you'll
see
some
information
about
the
the
patron
a
place
to
scan
your
items
and
down
at
the
bottom
you'll
see
a
list
of
things
that
are
checked
out.
You'll
also
see
if
you
have
any
holds
or
if
you
have
any
findings,
ignore
the
fines.
This
is
my
test
account.
This
is
a
really
bad
patron
and
I
do
have
one
item
checked
out,
I'm
actually
going
to
because
I'm
gonna
use
that
again
in
a
minute.
So
let
me
go
over
and
check
that
in
real
quick.
F
F
There
are
some
things
that
are
being
revealed
that
I
really
don't
want
people
to
see
out
in
the
open,
and
also
there
are
some
things
that
could
be
tweaked
a
little
bit
so
that
it
works
a
little
bit
better
for
environment,
particularly,
we
have
a
self
check
that
it
has
a
touch
screen
and
we
can't
type
anything
we
we
can
scan
it,
but
not
everybody
brings
a
occurred
with
them
when
they
come
into
the
library.
Some
people
are
out
jogging
and
you
decide.
F
Oh
I
want
to
pick
up
a
book
or
something
and
they
can't
enter
anything
because
we
don't
have
keyboards
at
our
computers
and
I've
also
noticed
that
trying
to
use
the
built-in
keyboards,
whether
it's
through
Firefox
or
through
windows,
can
be
a
little
tricky
at
times.
So
there
are
ways
to
incorporate
a
on-screen
keyboard
with
this
and
when
you
find
the
right
one,
it
works
fairly
well,
I
did
have
to
tweak
it
a
little
bit
but
walk
through
some
of
those
things
before
we
get
started
in
those
modifications.
F
F
F
So
you
want
to
make
sure
that
that
is
enabled
now
one
of
the
first
things
that
I
had
mentioned
on
my
my
slides
was
that
you
want
to
make
sure
that
you
automatically
log
in
to
the
system.
Basically,
when
you
don't
have
it
log
into
the
system,
see
if
I
can
do
this,
I'm
gonna
have
to
do
it
in
a
different
browser,
though
forgive
me
for
for
using
something
other
than
Chrome
or
Firefox
here.
Actually,
I
can
use
Firefox
here,
I.
F
F
Now
I
guess
I
should
show
you
this
before
I.
Do
that
and
go
back
here
I'm
on
the
admin
screen,
if
you're
going
to
when
you're
going
to
actually
navigate
to
that
a
self-check,
you're
gonna.
Add
this
to
your
domain
you're!
Actually,
your
catalog
don't
mean
it's
gonna,
go
through
your
catalog,
the
interface
so
I'm
gonna
copy
that
I'm
gonna
switch
back
over
to
my
other
browser
for
a
moment
and
our
this
is
our
catalog
I'm
going
to
add
on.
F
F
This
is
this
is
one
of
the
the
stoppers
for
us
when
we
were
looking
at
Koha
because
and
we
decided
to
go
to
another
self
check,
because
there's
only
one
method
of
authentication
or
you
know,
who's
gonna
sign
in
for
the
the
circulation
who's
going
to
be
the
circulating
user
for
the
self
check.
So
you
only
have
one
account
associated
with
that
at
this
time.
F
There
are
some
tricks:
I'll
talk
about
it
later
briefly,
because
I'm
still
a
little
bit
quality
on
those
tricks,
but
there's
some
tricks
on
how
to
get
multiple
sites
to
sign
in
differently.
Some
sites
want
to
sign
in
differently
because
they're
trying
to
track
how
much
traffic
is
going
through
a
self-check
at
a
particular
location,
if
they're
all
signing
in
it
as
the
same
user,
and
then
it
all
looks
like
the
same
user
at
all
locations,
not
patron,
but
the
user
behind
that
patron.
That's
it's
like
the
virtual
staff
member.
F
That's
circulating
the
materials,
so
you
have
to
have
a
login
in
order
to
do
this
and
the
the
other
downside
to
this
is,
if
you
don't
have
this
automated
is
it
will
timeout?
The
timeout
is
usually
the
same
as
your
snap
interface
timeout,
and
so
if
it
goes
unused
or
whatever
length
of
time
that
you
had
that
timeout
set
for
you'll
have
to
log
back
in
so
another
plus
to
having
this
this
part
automated.
F
So
let
me
go
back
to
the
admin
and
so
I
have
my
timeout
set
220.
Second
sport.
This
timeout
is
for
the
patron
part,
not
the
staff
trying
out
part
the
part
will
be
login.
As
you
know,
who's
circulating
the
materials
I'm
going
to
go
back
up
here
to
allow
this
to
automatically
log
in
I
have
an
account
already
set
up
with
some
basic
circulation
credential
credentials.
F
If
the
password
is
already
in
there,
so
I'm
going
to
save
that,
and
now,
if
I
were
to
go
to
that
address
flip
back
over
here,
I'm
just
going
to
refresh
it's
automatically
logged
in
interesting
that
it
took
our
header
a
little
bit
longer
to
load
there.
But
now
it's
automatically
logged
in
under
the
the
circulation
user
and
now
a
patron
can
actually
come
up
to
the
screen
and
use
the
self
check.
F
One
of
the
things
that
I
had
talked
about
was
the
automatic
startup.
It's
always
good
to
have
this
automatically
start
up,
so
you
don't
have
to
have
you
don't
have
to
monitor
this?
You
don't
have
to
log
back
in
under
that
staff
account
in
order
to
get
to
the
patron
part.
One
of
the
things
that
I
mentioned
earlier
is
patron
privacy.
F
The
self
check
here
is
this
place
where
you
type
in
your
your
library
card
number
part
number
is
not
masked.
So
if
you
have
somebody
standing
behind
you
they're
not
adhering
to
the
six-feet
rule
they're,
seeing
your
library
card,
and
so
this
is
something
that
I
thought.
We
need
to
mask
this,
so
I
go
back
over
to
the
admin
and
I'm
going
to
there.
F
There
are
a
couple
things
that
are
that
are
really
helpful
for
the
self
check
it
has
its
own
CSS
we're
going
to
be
adding
some
CSS
with
some
of
the
the
changes
here,
but
not
just
yet,
and
then
the
jas
that
this
is
where
we're
gonna,
throw
in
some
jQuery
I
already
have
the
the
beginning
and
end
line
for
for
jQuery
set
up
in
here
doesn't
usually
come
pre-loaded
like
this,
but
I've
done
that
already.
So
it
is
ready
for
me
to
insert
my
jQuery
I'm
gonna
go
grab
my
first
snippet
of
code.
F
F
This
text
box
with
different
attributes
so
I
cloned
it
and
gave
it
the
same
ID
and
then
I
I
removed
the
original.
So
basically
I
made
a
copy
of
it
with
the
atributes
that
I
wanted
basically
password
so
that
it
would
mask
and
then
I
removed
the
original.
So
I'll
say
it's.
My
work
here
and
I'm
gonna
go
back
over
to
the
self-check
and
I'm
going
to
reload
that
page,
okay,
okay,
now
when
I
type
it
numbers,
they
are
masked
so
privacy
issue
number
one
has
been
dealt
with
so
now
you
actually.
F
Log
in
here
issue
number
two
you'll
notice
that
this
patrons
full
name
is
showing
here
yeah,
really
great
name.
There
have
been
really
testing,
so
the
full
name
of
this.
This
patron
is
showing
a
lot
of
patrons
like
to
have
their
own
have
some
privacy.
They
don't
like
their
full
name,
showing
especially
their
last
name,
because
in
our
system
the
last
name
is
used
for
various
pieces
of
my
identity
for
getting
into
the
accounts.
F
F
This
bit
of
code
adds
patron
privacy,
no
last
names.
So
what
it's
basically
doing
is
it's
looking
for
that
line
that
says
that
you're
logged
in
as
and
grab
the
name
at
the
end
of
it
and
it's
going
to
break
it
into
pieces.
So
it's
basically
looking
for
the
spaces
to
divide
it
into
names,
and
then
it
is
grabbing
the
first
name
in
that
bunch.
So
basically
it's
turning
it
into
a
new
string
here
called
new
welcome
and
then
I
paste
that
text
over
the
old
text,
with
just
that
name.
F
F
Now
I
have
a
table
down
below
my
my
bar
code
text
box
talks
about
checkouts,
folds
and
bindings
and
charges.
The
checkouts
is
now
populated
and
you'll
notice
that
it
has
a
line
here.
It
says
checkout,
it's
four
and
then
it
gives
the
patrons
full
name
again
and
also
its
yep,
showing
this
running
total
here.
F
So
it
says
one
total
item
checked
out:
you'll
also
notice
that
that
total
is
right
up
here
in
the
tab.
I
can't
highlight
it,
but
so
the
totals
into
place
is
a
little
bit
redundant.
So
what
I'm
going
to
do?
Let
me
close
out
of
this
I'm
gonna
grab.
Another
snippet
of
code
and
I
will
make
these
available
on
the.
F
Alright,
so
another
section
here
patron
privacy,
privacy,
remove
redundant
name
and
count
so
I'm,
just
gonna
hide
that
line
all
together.
There's
nothing
on
that
line.
That
needs
to
be
shown.
They
already
know
their
name.
It
already
says:
welcome,
then,
in
there
what
I
want
to
login
has
been
and
the
counts
already
there
in
the
tab.
So
there's
no
reason
to
show
that
a
second
time
so
I'm
just
going
to
hide
that
line
altogether,
so
I'll
save
that
log
back
in
and
now
that
line
is
gone.
F
F
F
Consortium
and
also
a
link
that
goes
to
Koha
and
if
I
click,
the
header
it
links
to
our
catalog.
These
are
there
because
this
is
tied
in
with
our
catalog,
it's
using
our
catalog
interface
in
order
to
build
the
self-check.
So
there's
some
inherent
issues
with
being
part
of
the
catalog,
because
it's
carrying
over
these
things
that
we
don't
want
people
to
go
to.
We
don't
want
people
going
to
the
header
and
clicking
on
it
and
logging
image
catalog
and
going
elsewhere
outside
of
the
self-check.
F
F
F
F
Guess
I'm
kind
of
Google
izing
it
you
know
whenever
you
go
to
a
website
that
wants
something
front
and
center
it's
going
to
be
in
the
middle
of
the
screen
and
it's
off
to
the
side
here.
I
want
it
to
stand
out.
I
want
it
to
be
obvious,
so
I
want
it
in
the
center
of
the
screen,
but
I
also
wanted
to
add
a
keypad
I'm
kind
of
mushing.
These
things
together,
because
I'm
making
modifications
to
the
same
thing
and
when
I
designed
it
they're
kind
of
these
adjustments
are
kind
of
intertwined.
F
So
forgive
me
on
this
part
here
so
I'm,
going
to
add
some
code
that
I
looked
around
looked
around
for
some
jQuery
that
I
could
easily
add
to
Koha
to
add
an
on-screen
keyboard.
I
had
first
work,
you
know
trying
to
play
with
windows
built-in
keyboards,
and
that
proved
a
little
bit
of
problematic
plus.
You
know
it
also
added
keys
that
weren't
necessary
the
tried
doing
some
of
the
functionality.
That's
supposed
to
be
built-in
with
Firefox
to
bring
that
up,
and
that
was
problematic
as
well.
F
F
So
the
keypad
I
found
this
rendition
was
by
John
Rezac
I
apologize
John
if
I'm
brutalizing
your
name
as
this
was
out
on
the
internet,
and
it
was
the
simplest
one
that
I
could
find
wasn't
too
complicated
to
to
tweak
to
my
needs.
So
I
grabbed
that
code,
and
it
was
easy
enough
to
incorporate
in
just
through
JavaScript
or
jQuery.
F
There
is
a
component
of
it
that
is
in
CSS,
so
I'll
be
adding
those
in
there,
but
also
my
adjustments
were
shipping
that
the
text
box
over
to
center
is
intertwined
in
there
somewhere.
So
it
is
not
part
of
this
actual
script.
Just
so
you
know
so.
I'm
gonna
grab
that
and
this
one
it's
kind
of
BP
grab
the
jQuery
first.
F
And
they
they
have
a
they
have
this
in
a
compact
rendition
I
often
view
the
compact
rendition
of
the
code.
So
yeah
there's
there's
a
lot
there,
don't
get,
don't
get
squeamish
with
it.
You
know
it's
it's
there.
In
this
part,
this
part
is
pretty
much
good
to
go.
I
just
had
to
copy
and
paste
it
in
there.
So
this
code
adds
the
the
on-screen
keyboard.
Now,
if
I
just
left
it
as
is
and
save
it,
it
looks
pretty
ugly
I
have
to
have
the
CSS
part
in
there
as
well.
So
if
I
refresh
this.
F
Or
actually
I
lied,
you
don't
see
anything
yet
did
I
save
it.
I
know
I
saved
it.
Okay,
I
think
you
have
to
have
the
CSS
part
in
there
as
well,
in
order
for
things
to
show
up.
So
let
me
go
back
and
so
the
CSS,
your
self
checkout,
has
a
section
where
its
own
CSS
I'm
going
to
open
that
up
and
then
I'm
gonna
grab
my
code
for
that.
C
F
Darn
you
scroll
wheels,
okay,
so
so
there's
a
bit
there,
but
this
is
what
will
make
it
actually
show
up
so
I'll
save
that
so
I've
got
my
jQuery
and
my
CSS
in
there
I'm
gonna
go
back
here
and
refresh,
and
so
what's
going
on
there,
we
go
okay,
oh
okay,
I
think
I,
know
why
this
is
happening.
Yeah,
my
zoom!
It's
throwing
it
off
a
little
bit.
One
thing
about
CSS
is:
if
you've
got
some
elements
in
there
that
aren't
regularly
in
there,
you
can
throw
some
things
off.
F
F
G
F
A
minute
oh
I
know
it
is.
There
was
a
piece
of
jQuery.
I
was
missing.
It's
part
of
it.
Okay
crossing
my
fingers,
save
that
refresh.
Aha,
there
we
go
yeah,
we
were
missing
a
piece,
so
it's
always
important
to
have
all
of
the
code
there
all
right!
Sorry
about
that.
So
that's
good
Chris!
Oh
thank
you
looks
good
when
you
have
all
of
it
there.
F
So
we've
moved
this
over.
This
is
front
and
center
now,
and
it's
added
this
keypad.
If
I
click
on
it,
a
numeric
pad
opens
up
I'm,
not
a
hundred
percent.
You
know
sold
on
this.
This
is
kind
of
out
of
the
box.
Look
for
the
the
keypad!
There
were
a
couple
of
options.
I
opted
with
this.
One
I
did
not
take
the
time
to
go
and
customize
my
own
buttons
or
colors
I
did
tweak
the
colors
a
little
bit.
F
I
made
the
the
cancel
button
or
the
closed
keypad
button
and
the
erase
all
text
and
the
backspace
button.
I
did
colorize
those,
but
the
only
tweaks
that
I
really
did
aside
from
those
colors
was
to
enlarge
the
keypad.
So
it
was
bigger
for
Battier's.
Like
mine
so
added
the
keypad
so
now
I
can
enter.
In
my
my
library
card
number.
F
And
again,
you
know
this
is
good
for
those
folks,
you
know
you
have
a
touchscreen,
you
don't
have
a
keyboard,
and
you
know
those
folks
that
are
coming
in
last
minute
and
they
don't
have
the
current
on
them.
They
can
still
use
the
self-check.
They
can
key
in
their
card
number
if
they
know
it
and
then
submit.
B
F
You
can
tweak
this
to
add.
It
I
think
there's
some
tweaks
and
instructions
on
how
to
add
other
keys
to
this.
So
if
you
had
a
certain
range
that
you
wanted,
you
could
I
I
can't
remember
if
they
had
an
option
for
a
full
keyboard.
There
are
other.
There
are
other
jQuery
keyboards
out
there
with
a
full
keyboard
right.
C
F
F
F
I
mean
using
a
modified
Eric,
Milton
yeah
I've,
actually
reposted
the
Eric
Milton,
with
with
some
modifications
that
that
worked
well
with
koha.
Oh
no
King,
you
reposted
that
yeah
I
did
if
good
job
I
think
it
was
on
the
latest
I
think
it's
on
github,
it's
been
a
while
since
I've
touched
it
I
haven't
needed
to
do
a
lot
with
it
over
the
years.
So
it's
held
up
well,
but
you
know
this
self
check
has
aspects
of
it.
Aspects
that
that
subject
is
not.
You
can't
see
your
holds.
C
F
B
F
It's
great
one
of
the
things
I
also
wanted
to
tweak
was
the
login
instructions,
you'll
notice
that
says
just
please
enter
your
your
card.
Number
I
wanted
to
make
I
wanted
to
to
stand
out
that
you
could
key
it
in
not
just
scan,
and
it
doesn't
say
anything
about
scanning.
We
do
have
a
scanner
at
the
self-checks,
so
go
back
here.
F
So
you
know
we
have
some
things
on
the
opec
and
self
check
where
you
can
add
information,
but
this
particular
piece
of
information
does
not
have
that,
so
we
do
have
to
use
some
jQuery
to
tweak
those
instructions.
So
it's
just
looking
for
that
particular
label
and
it's
adding
this
text
in
its
place.
So
I'll
save
that.
F
C
F
My
card
number,
you
know,
did
it
go
or
not.
You
have
to
look
up
the
spinner,
you
know,
and
this
there's
a
spinner
on
the
tab,
and
you
know
some
of
our
systems
are
slower
than
others.
This
goes
pretty
fast.
This
this
was,
you
know
pretty
decent,
but
there
are
those
accounts
out
there
that
have
a
lot
of
items
and
when
there's
a
lot
of
items
or
a
lot
of
things
tied
to
the
account
it
will
be
slower
and
I
have
seen
that
this
loads
slower.
F
F
As
I
said,
there's
a
there's,
a
spinner
on
the
tab
up
here,
but
on
our
cell
checks,
we've
hidden
the
address
bar
and
all
the
tabs,
so
you're,
just
seeing
the
main
screen
itself
and
you're
not
getting
any
indication
that
it
actually
took
them
did
anything.
So
you
might
be
click
on
there.
Few
times
on
the
submit
button
to
see
if
it
took
so,
my
answer
was
to
make
some
modifications
to
tweak
it
so
that
it
actually
showed
you
I
was
doing
something.
F
F
So
if
a
spinner
is
the
icon,
but
if
you
add
FA
spin,
you
make
any
of
your
icons,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
a
spinner.
You
can
make
anything
spin
by
adding
a
face
spin
in
there
when
you're
using
fun
awesome,
which
is
really
fun
so
I'm,
adding
fun
awesome.
Spinner
I
chose
the
particular
particular
spinner
and.
F
This
will
not
only
change
the
button
so
that
it
has
a
spinner
but
it'll
also
add
the
text.
It'll
change
the
text
from
submit
to
searching
so
I'm
gonna
save
that
and
I
can't
use
my
accounts.
The
account
that
we
have,
unfortunately,
that
has
50
items
checked
out
on
it
and
I
did
not
bother
to
look
up
one
of
our
our
in-house
accounts
at
the
time
I.
That
would
have
been
a
good
thing
to
do,
but
you'll
briefly
see
it
here,
I'm.
Sorry,
it's
so
brief.
F
F
F
You'll
see
that
spinner
and
searching
there
as
well,
so
very
nice,
yeah
I
like
that
spinner.
In
fact,
in
fact,
I've
used
it
in
another
location
and
if
I
have
a
couple
minutes,
I
mean
I
may
show
that
off
here,
but
anyways
those
are
might
might
might
weeks
to
self
check.
This.
Oh
I
almost
forgot
this.
Don't
you
dare
one
last
thing:
I
wanted
to
enhance
the
background
to
dress
up
the
screen
a
little
bit.
F
You
know
the
it's
it's
an
okay
screen,
but
I
can
I
can
do
better
with
this,
and
so
this
part
is
going
to
be
done
in
the
CSS
I
try
to
do
CSS
things
where
I
can,
because
CSS
is
more
instantaneous
and
not
covering
or
not
redoing.
Something
that's
already
done.
So
CSS
is
the
way
to
go.
If
you
can
so
I'm
going
to
add
another
line
here
and
go
grab
my
CSS
code.
F
And
I'm
going
to
do
this
in
a
couple
parts
here
grab,
so
this
first
part
actually
adds
the
image
and
I'm
telling
it
to
cover
up
the
the
background.
So
it's
going
to
stretch
it
out
and
cover
up
the
background.
So
it's
not.
You
know
missing
a
chunk
here
or
there
and
also
fixed
it's
not
scrolling.
If
we're
first
screen
is
longer,
it's
not
going
to
scroll
anywhere
I'm
just
pointing
to
it
the
same
background
that
I
use
elsewhere
for
our
websites.
F
And
so
we
have
this
nice
background.
It's
part
it
part
of
our
actual
logo.
Up
at
the
top
I
did
a
washout
of
it
makes
a
very
nice
background.
The
one
thing
I
didn't
like,
though,
is
that
the
tabs
actually
get
kind
of
lost
drowned
out
by
it,
and
so
does
the
the
list
the
table
down
below
so
I
added
one
more
I'm
going
to
add
one
more
piece:
that's
gonna
fix
that
and
grab
that
this
will
just
add
a
background
behind
that
table
in
the
tabs,
make
it
stand
out
a
little
bit
better
if.
F
F
Back
in
and
now
the
table
stands
out
a
little
bit
better,
with
our
cabs
show
up
a
little
bit
better,
although
when
you're
hovering
over
them,
I
might
change.
Yeah
I
might
change
me
the
cupboard
color
of
if
you
can't
see
what
what's
being
highlighted,
it
kind
of
blends
in
with
the
background
a
little
bit,
but
it's
more
its
it'll.
It's
more
easy
to
read
much
easier
to
read
on
this.
This
background,
yeah.
G
F
F
Love
making
tweaks
like
this,
you
know
it's
always
great
to
to
do
something
like
this.
So
I'll
show
you
a
little
bonus
in
just
a
second
here,
but
let
me
go
back
here.
So
I
covered
the
things
that
that
I
wanted
to
cover
here,
for
you
know
what
what
I
thought
was
important
to
really
make
this
stand
out
and
be
a
sharper
product.
There's
other
ways
that
you
can
enhance
the
self-check
user
feedback
and
test
message
with
test
messages
and
Sam.
Excuse
me
it
should
say
text
messages.
Excuse
me
so
I
get
for
brushing
through.
F
F
Can't
remember:
oh
yeah,
okay,
so
the
span
the
the
one
here
that
says
span
SEO
SEO
is
self
check
check
out.
So
this
is
self
check
out,
alert
warning
so
anytime
it
comes
up
with
an
alert
warning.
Then
it's
going
to
play
feedback.
So
when
you
check
something
out
you're
getting
some
audio
feedback
which
is
going
to
help
the
person
know
it
went
through
it
did
its
thing.
If
there
is
an
alert
that
says
sorry,
you
know
it
gives
the
warning
sound.
F
So
if
there's
a
block
for
whatever
reason
there
they're
getting
some
feedback,
that
lets
know
something
happened
and
it
wasn't
a
good
thing.
So
you
know
that
audio
feedback
is
a
really
key
thing
and
so
I
had
to
go
through
the
I
had
to
go
through
the
code
and
find
out
what
things
will
to
link
it
to
in
these
alerts
to
sound
off
properly.
So
you
can
add
sound
alerts,
it's
nice
that
you
can
that
this
ties
in
with
with
the
self-checkout,
so
you
can
add
sound.
F
F
F
There's
no
there's
only
one
place
for
your
your
login.
You
can
only
log
in
as
one
thing
and
so
this
self
check
this
particular
user.
A
circulation
user
is
tied
in
with
with
our
branch,
but
if
any
of
the
other
libraries
that
are
not
our
branch
want
to
use
this
self
check,
you
know
anything
checked
out
on
it.
It's
gonna
look
like
it's
checked
out
from
our
branch.
You
know,
and
so
that's
that's.
That
was
one
of
the
big
drawbacks.
F
With
this
with
you
know,
and
why
we
went
to
Eric
mountains
because
we
could
customize
a
login
per
location.
You
could
customize
it
per
station,
which
is
really
nice.
It
just
you
just
create
as
many
users
as
you
need
and
logon
is
that
particular
user
on
that
station,
which
is
really
helpful,
so
I'm,
hoping
I'm,
hoping
hoping
hoping
koha
community
that
somebody
down
the
road
will
enhance
this
so
that
you
can
have
multiple
checkouts
based
on
maybe
an
ID
or
an
IP
address.
You
know
it
I
hope
there's
some
way
to
do
that.
F
It
would
be
nice
if
you
could
narrow
it
down
per
station,
because
you
know,
for
example,
we
like
to
know
how
many
people
are
using
it
in
the
adult
section,
as
opposed
to
the
children's
section
you
know.
Is
it
getting
used
more
in
the
children's
to
where
we
need
to
add
into
their
self
check
station?
Those
kinds
of
things
are
important:
Chris.
B
F
B
One,
the
first
one
he
said
was
you
don't
have
to
set
that
to
allow.
Then
he
says
we
have
five
or
six
libraries
using
self
checked
with
different
logins
at
each
login.
It
doesn't
login
automatically,
which
is
inconvenient,
but
it
works.
Then
NBL
says
just
have
different
logins
and
they
log
in
per
day
yeah
and
George
said
it.
I
thought
you
left.
F
Yeah,
that
is
something
that
you
can
do.
I
know
that
you
could
have
it
I,
don't
know
if
they're,
if
they're
talking
about
having
the
browser.
Remember
that
wall
again,
but
there
is
a
drawback
with
that
too,
because
I
noticed
I
was
just
playing
with
it
on
on
Firefox
and
if
you
don't
have
it
set
right,
a
person
could
go
in
that.
You
know,
because
you
know
if
it's
on
that
screen
to
log
in
it
in
Firefox.
F
F
If
you
don't
have
it
set
up
right,
if
you
don't
have
things
locked
down
properly,
so
I
don't
know
if
they're
using
the
the
browser
to
remember
the
the
log
you
know
on
that
and
the
other
drawback
to
that
is
you
have
to
have
a
staff
member
remember,
you
know
we
have
things.
Automated
computers
come
up,
they're
ready
to
go.
F
That
means
that
you
know
if
we
use
this,
we
would
have
to
have
staff
members
remember
to
go
to
those
stations
and
log
them
in
the
other
thing
that
I
don't
know
and
because
I
haven't
spent
time
testing.
This
is
in
probably
George
or
it
would
know.
Is
you
know
when
that
users
timeout
whatever
it
is
our
snap
or
timed
out
at
1
or
2
hours,
I
can't
remember
which?
But
if
it
goes
unused,
it
goes
back
to
that
that
login
screen
that
staff
member
has
to
log
back
in.
B
I
agree:
even
George
says
they
have
a
staff
log
into
the
cam
when
they
open
the
library,
the
more
I'm
trying
to
remember
with
Erik
Mountain,
but
we're
able
to
set
the
parameters
where
you
could
log
in
once.
Then
he
had
to
log
in
at
the
end
of
the
day
or
if
you
could
set
it
to
where
it
would
automatically
log
out
on.
F
B
Yeah
because
we
were
able
to
pull
them
numbers
on
each
one
of
those
different
stations-
hey
man,
I
hate
to
cut
you
off
were
already
in
an
hour,
and
you
know
what
I
think
it's
funny
here
we
are.
This
is
this:
is
your
second-to-last
time
last
time,
I
talked
about
fundraising,
but
I
think
yours
was
really
significant,
but
of
course
that's
my
interest
in
the
self
check.
You
and
I
both
put
a
lot
of
effort
into
that,
but
this
has
been
fantastic.
Chris
thanks,
I
really
look
forward
to
the
shared
information
and
yep.
F
C
F
Gotten
a
little
bored
so
there's
a
little
theme
going
on
with
our
Facebook
page
for
teddy
bears
doing
different
things
in
the
library
so
but
other
than
that.
You
know
we're
plugging
along
we're,
trying
to
keep
our
selves
going
online
and
I'm
tweaking
things
on
our
Koha
system
and
we've
just
upgraded
to
one
of
the
testers
for
elastic
search
and
elastic
search.
We'll
do
it
for
you
and
so
done
so
we're
moving
on.
B
B
B
Alright
thanks
everyone
for
everyone
who
hung
in
there
throughout
the
day,
it's
been
a
wonderful
day.
It's
our
first
KOA
thought.
It's
been
a
couple
years
that
we've
talked
about
doing
this
and
we
wanted
to
bring
something
to
our
community,
especially
our
cohosh
us
partners
and
community,
but
we
wanted
to
make
sure
that
you
know
we
offered
it
to
everybody,
because
that's
who
we
are
that's
what
we
embody
right.
We
we
give
what
we
have
to
everybody
out
there.
B
That's
something
that's
ingrained
in
me
and
I
think
it's
got
to
be
something
ingrained
and
just
about
every
one
of
us
that
belongs
to
this
community.
It's
an
incredible
community
belong
to.
Let
me
thank
you
for
the
donations
that
came
in
today
and
the
people
that
were
buying
our
swag
greatly
appreciated.
So.
B
Todd,
goat
Lee,
toggled
Leigh
seals
seals
partners
for
my
wife.
She
wouldn't
have
it
any
other
way.
She
want
to
make
sure
we
had
the
hyphen
in
there.
I
work
for
by
water
solution
been
with
them
for
the
past
six
plus
years.
Incredible
company
love
the
company
I,
also
I'm,
a
co
high
us
member
evangelist
lead
support,
work
for
the
fundraising
committee
and
if
anyone
is
interested,
please
feel
free
to
ping
me
and
we'll
get
you
in
there.
B
If
you've
got
some
knowledge
about
fundraising,
we'd
like
to
have
you
so
probably
no
reason
for
this
group
cuz
we're
down
16
now,
I
think.
But
everybody
knows
what's
been
going
on
with
kohai
us
where
we
started
and
where
we're
at
right
now
but
started
off
as
Kohana.
If
you
guys
remember,
it
was
Quahog
North
America
and
we
had
to
make
that
change
to
kohai
us
just
because
we
got
some
grumbling,
north
and
south
of
the
border.
B
So
we
decided
to
go
ahead
and
just
isolate
to
us,
but
we
don't
look
at
ourselves
as
being
isolated.
We
like
to
offer
what
we
have
to
everybody
again.
We
are
an
open
community
with
an
open
source
product
that
anybody
can
use
and
I,
don't
think
there
is
anyone
in
this
community
that
doesn't
enjoy
talking
about
it
with
someone
and
making
sure
that
if
they
need
the
resources
to
take
advantage
of
Kohath
that
they
find
those
resources,
we
are
a
501c3.
B
B
You
need
educational
resources,
you
need
development,
you
need
to
be
able
to
go
to
conferences,
you
want
to
tell
people
about
who
you
are,
what
you
stand
for
and
why
they
need
to
listen
to
you
why
they
need
to
be
a
part
of
you,
it's
fun
to
be
able
to
show
that
enthusiasm
and
still
that
and
other
people
when
you
you
know
when
you
are
part
of
a
fundraising
committee
and
you're
looking
for
people
to
participate,
it's
not
a
matter
of
trying
to
drag
them
and
it's
it's
a
matter
of
making
an
ask
and
it's
about
trying
to
get
them
to
understand
what
your
purpose
is
and
what
your
intent
is.
B
And
if
they
see
that
in
you
and
they
see
that
in
what
you're
doing
then
it's
easy
for
them
to
go
ahead
and
join
and,
and
those
are
the
people
that
we're
looking
for.
You
know
so
fundraising
in
particular,
I'm
going
to
talk
to
you
about
memberships
and
donations
and
talking
about
membership
in
particular,
and
this
particular
slide
when
you
choose
to
be
a
member
and
membership
on
the
next
slide.
B
I'll
show
you
it's
$25
per
year
for
membership,
but
you
know
when
you
make,
even
though
that
dollar
number
is
low
and
$25.00,
you
know
you
usually
get
a
membership,
you
get
a
gym
membership.
You
play
quite
a
bit
more
than
that.
Sometimes
the
membership
is
indicative
of
how
much
focus
and
passion
you
have.
B
Last
year
we
had
80
members
this
year,
we've
got
80
plus
members
and
we
continue
to
grow.
Today.
It's
incredible
I
watched
I
think
in
our
YouTube
channel
we
had
less
than
20,
and
now
we've
got
100
and
I
can't
see
the
number,
but
we've
got
close
to
over
a
hundred
and
thirty-five
140
people
that
you
know
they
went
ahead
and
subscribe
to
our
YouTube.
So
that's
that's
great.
You
know
people
can
start
getting
the
information
they
can
find
the
resources
they
can
come
to
our
website
and
they
can
take
advantage
of
it.
B
Having
an
open
community
like
this
and
having
an
organization
like
coha
us,
it's
not
limiting,
and
we
offer
everything
information
wise,
an
educational,
wise.
We
offer
everything
that
somebody
could
possibly
need
if
they
want
to
spin
up
a
version
of
Koha,
as
you
saw
today,
Alyssa
she
was
showing
people
how
to
go
ahead
and
spin
that
up
and
she's
got
the
documentation
that
they
can
use.
So
it's
great,
you
know
to
be
a
part
of
something
that
one
is
is
big
and
it's
it's
all-encompassing.
It's
it's
global
and
it's
something
that
people
desire.
B
You
can
also
see
here
that,
with
your
membership,
you
get
access
to
all
the
educational
materials
you
you
know
you
can
participate
all
the
different
meetings
that
we
have
from
the
board
of
directors,
the
committees,
the
different
SiGe
meetings
that
we
have.
You
know
you
also
have
an
option
as
as
a
member
to
be
a
part
of
the
annual
conferences
that
we
have,
you
can
actually
host
it,
but
I
digress.
We'll
talk
about
that,
probably
here
in
just
a
little
bit
more
so
waste.
That's
we
offered
to
donate
through
kohai
us.
B
We
do
have
a
donation
page.
You
can
see
the
link
right
here,
no
need
to
click
on
that
we're
short
on
time,
but
we
do
take
a
couple.
Different
forms,
the
donation.
If
you
want
to
make
a
paypal
or
if
you
want
to
make
a
donation
through
cheque,
you
can
do
that.
We
also
have
Amazon
smiles.
Now.
Amazon
smiles
is
really
good
to
us.
Last
year
they
donate
a
half
percent
of
all
the
eligible
purchases.
You
can
see
there
and
last
year
we
were
able
to
raise
over
three
hundred
dollars.
B
So
if
you
are
using
Amazon,
please
go
to
smiled
on
amazon.com
and
select
kohai
us,
and
if
you
continue
to
use
that
all
of
your
purchases
will
5.5,
half
percent
will
go
to
support
kohai
us
and
we
can
use
everything
that
you
give
us
again.
We
you
know
we
use
that
towards
education.
We
use
that
towards
development
conferences,
we'd
love
to
be
able
to
help
support
libraries
that
are
out
there
if
they,
if
they
need
some
kind
of
financial
assistance.
B
These
are
the
things
that
we
want
to
do
in
our
community
and
you
guys
saw
the
swag
and
my
understanding
is
that
we
did
have
some
purchases
today.
So
thank
you
very
much.
If
you're
still
in
this
in
this
chat
in
this
presentation
in
this
con
conference,
then
we
appreciate
you
making
your
purchase.
So
what
do
you
get?
B
I
think
I've
talked
mostly
about
that,
but
you
can
see
that
if
you
do
become
a
part
of
and
a
member
of
kohai
us,
you
have
an
opportunity
become
a
part
of
or
a
member
of
the
board
of
directors,
and
you
can
see
I've
got
listed
there,
the
different
positions
that
we
have
and
you
can
also
be
a
part
of
the
different
committees.
These
committees
are
very
busy
and
there's
a
number
of
people
in
them.
B
There's
a
lot
of
great
information
that
comes
out
and
a
lot
of
great
information,
that's
shared,
so
it's
very
exciting
to
be
a
part
of
the
committee's.
They
can
be
very
active,
you
can
be
as
active
as
you
want
to
and
or
you
can
take
a
back
seat
and
you
can
kind
of
ride
and
enjoy
what's
going
on
around
you
and
participate
when
you
want.
But
those
are
your
options
number.
B
He
cigs
they're,
really
growing
and
there's
a
lot
of
desire
for
them.
We've
got
as
you
can
see.
The
different
cigs
that
exist
right
now
are
listed
right.
There,
there's
seven
of
them.
One
that's
going
to
be
coming
online
is
demonstration.
John
is
working
that
up
and
it's
going
to
be
a
full-on
koha
ILS,
so
they're
going
to
be
setting
that
up
and
we're
going
to
be
offering
it
to
people
to
be
able
to
take
advantage
of,
go
in
and
check
out
and
see
how
Koha
works,
and
so
that's
an
exciting
new
cig.
B
That's
just
started
up
that
Beals
got
the
Systems
Administrator
web
development
is
with
Lucas
and
he
works
for
bottled
water
solutions.
We've
got
a
number
of
different
people
that
are
in
these
different
six
and
you
know
it
would
be
great
if
you're,
not
a
part
of
them
right
now
to
please
just
look
into
them.
You
don't
have
to
be
a
permanent
fixture
in
there,
but
if
you
want
to
jump
in
every
now
and
again
when
these
things
are
taking
place,
they'd
love
your
company
and
they'd
love
to
have
your
input.
B
That's
it
told
you
it'd
be
rather
quick,
that's
us
and
we
were
in
Monterey
California,
so
one
of
the
best
things
that
happens
every
year
and
I'm,
hoping
that
it's
gonna
happen
this
year,
because
if
it
does
it's
going
to
be
taking
place
in
the
Keeney
Texas
and
if
anyone
knows
Spencer
and
I'm
sure
we're
gonna
be
in
for
a
great
conference.
This
was
at
Monterey
and
it
was
a
great
time,
and
these
are
the
kinds
of
times
that
we
look
forward
to.
B
These
are
the
particular
types
of
things
that
we'd
love
to
be
able
to
do
fundraising,
for
so
we
can
help
with
these.
With
these
outreach
conferences
and-
and
we
hope
that
we
hope
that
you
take
the
time
and
take
a
look
at
our
donation
page
and
if,
if
you
have
it
in
in
and
you
can
spare
it
we'd
appreciate
whatever
you
can
donate.
A
A
I
A
A
A
So
today
we
had
over
one
thousand
one
hundred
and
eighty-seven
views
at
least
last
time,
I
checked
according
to
the
YouTube
analytics,
and
we
had
over
seven
hundred
and
eighteen
point
nine
hours
a
few
time
and
one
of
the
videos
was
like
still
processing
and
didn't
give
me
a
view
time,
even
though
I
know
that
there
were
reviews,
because
it
had
a
bunch
of
views
on
it.
It
just
hadn't
like
properly
calculated
how
many
hours
a
few
time
those
views
were
yeah.
It
was
a
ton
we
had
26
presentations.
A
We
had
at
least
two
hundred
and
sixty-five
dollars
raised
between
the
Threadless
store
for
kohai
us
and
the
donations
here,
I
think
I
heard
there
were
also
some
donations
through
PayPal,
maybe
which
we
don't
have
the
numbers
for
those
yet
so
we
should
have
more
solid
numbers
next
week.
Also,
if
the
t-shirt
sales
from
last
fall
from
Threadless
were
any
indication,
we
did
end
up
getting
some
orders
like
after
the
conference
and
while
we
were
at
the
conference,
so
we
might
get
a
little
more
rolling
in
from
that.
A
So
the
one
thing
that
I
was
doing,
that
I
was
hoping
to
that
I
didn't
think
I'm
tell
too
late
that
I
was
hoping
to
do
was
to
count
all
the
questions
in
the
chat.
There
were
a
lot
and
I
thought.
I
should
have
been
counted
as
we
went
along
so
I
could
say
over
300
questions
or
whatever,
but
I
didn't
count
them
so
I
don't
know,
but
maybe
I'll
count
them
later,
when
I'm
going
through
and
doing
not
timestamp
links
for
all
the
videos,
so
we
can
have
them
separate
it
out.
A
Maybe
I'll
just
count
the
questions
when
I
do
that,
so
that
we
can
have
information
since
it's
available,
I
also
saw
there
was
some
discussion
in
the
IRC
throughout
the
day,
pretty
much
starting
some
time
after
I
went
on
the
IRC
in
the
first
meeting
I
know
it
was
like
smile
you're
on
the
zoom
or
you're
on
the
YouTube
live,
and
so
we
got
a
lot
of
great
yeah.
I,
wouldn't
count
the
snarky
comments,
just
the
questions.
A
So
thank
you,
everybody
who
showed
up
and
who
subscribed
and
donated
and
watched
and
I
know
you
know
a
lot
of
you
have
been
in
the
chat
all
day.
It's
a
long
conference.
It's
15
hours,
I've
been
here
the
whole
time
other
than
you
know.
When
my
computer
decided
to
crash
a
couple
times
and
I
was
figuring
that
out
so
I
actually
ended
up
putting
it
on
on
my
phone
to
keep
watching.
Well,
I
was
troubleshooting
because
it
turned
out.
A
It
was
not
my
internet,
but
my
computer
running
at
a
hundred
percent
disk
usage
the
whole
time
I
was
streaming
cash,
cash
yeah,
so
whoa
John
said
in
the
chat.
The
preliminary
total
rays,
excluding
Threadless,
was
seven
hundred
and
seventy-five
dollars
whoo-hoo
indeed,
and
the
Threadless
was
about
forty
eight
dollars
when
I
checked
John.
A
B
A
At
least
$800
raised
excluding
Threadless
now
so
with
Threadless
at
least
840.
Thank
you.
So
that's
awesome.
Absolutely
thank
you.
Everybody
who
contributed
who
showed
up
and
was
in
the
discussion
who
just
showed
up
and
listened
cuz
like
George,
talked
about
in
his
you
know.
It's
you
know
just
showing
up
and
listening
is
a
great
set.
A
Heather
said
in
the
chat.
This
was
wonderful,
I'm,
so
looking
forward
to
Kohath
on
2021,
it
said
next
time
extend
the
time.
Next,
one
extend
the
time
to
include
more
international
folks.
Yes,
it
would
be
nice
to
include
more
international
folks
and
that's
probably
what
we'll
end
up
doing.
It's
gonna
be
hard
on
the
people
like
me
who
are
going
to
want
to
come
to
all
of
them.
A
A
A
Will
it
decide
if
he
wants
to
do
that,
but
Heather
said
you
know,
there's
lots
of
us
and
so
many
time
zones
in
the
US,
so
we
could
get
more
people
to
help
out
and
I
think.
Definitely
you
know
having
a
having
a
one
under
our
belts
and
kind
of
a
format.
A
It
gives
us
some
ideas
of
what
works
and
what
doesn't
and
that
like
how
we
can
split
up
the
day
and
yeah
if
we,
since
we
have
things
in
place
now,
if
we
wanted
to
get
more
people
involved
in
the
you
know
running
of
it
next
year.
You
know:
we've
already
got
kind
of
a
framework
and
that'll
be
really
helpful.
Yes,.
C
A
I
I
I
A
A
Heather
said:
love
the
hypnotic
backgrounds
and
David
said,
did
get
some
sleep,
but
missed
some
good
ones.
I
think
we'll
watch
them
when
the
videos
are
available,
so
the
all
the
videos
I
think
are
already
available.
As
in
the
big
chunks,
which
is
just
from
the
chats
I've
had
with
some
of
the
conference,
people
will
probably
keep
them
in
the
big
chunks
to
help
keep
those
statistics,
and
you
know,
maybe,
if
someone
goes
and
watches
one
they
might
roll
into
more
that
they
didn't
think
about
watching
you
know.
A
So
that
might
be
good,
but
we
are
planning
on
doing
timestamp
links
for
all
of
them,
which
will
help
I
Pro
I'm,
not
gonna,
do
it
tomorrow,
but
probably
early
next
week
do
timestamp
links
on
the
Kohath
on
20/20
website
so
that
those
are
accessible.
If
someone
wants
to
go,
find
specific
ones
to
watch,
but
they
should
all
all
of
the
videos
are
available.
A
This
one
might
not
be
available
in
whole
right
away
like
the
one
this
morning
at
first
only
the
last
two
hours
of
it
were
available
because
it
was
still
processing
the
first
two
hours
and
25
minutes.
So
this
one
might
not
be
fully
available
right
away,
but
everything
else
should
be
processed
already
so
I
guess.
The
last
thing
is
thank
you
to
everyone
who
showed
up
and
participated
and
donated
and
listened
like.
We
talked
about
so
I
think
that
that
brings
us
to
the
end
of
Kohath
on
2020.