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Zotero Sharing

When I talk about RefWorks and Zotero, the one feature mentioned that RefWorks can do and Zotero can’t is sharing. Right now, the only way to share materials in Zotero is to export and re-import. Even this has some major advantages over RefWorks: you can export the materials themselves, and your notes and annotations, not just the citations. However, the RefWorks method of sharing bibliographies, especially within an institution, is useful.

So I was excited to see the first article about Zotero’s sharing feature (at least, the first I have seen). I was curious about how the sharing would work, and this article answered a lot of my questions. It’s better than I had hoped. Easy uploading of scholarly materials, and, get this, the Internet Archive will run Optical Character Recognition and store the materials. How cool is that?

Laura Cohen picked up on one particular quote on her blog: “an effort at George Mason University seeks to bypass libraries entirely.” I read the quote as an offhand comment. Obviously, scholars are going to still need libraries- the new sharing system will only handle copyright free materials. Scholars will have to “complete an online form with legal assurances” that the work can legally be uploaded. The majority of materials don’t fit into this category… yet. My hope is that the system will be so fantastically awesome that people will want to use material they can upload- say, open access.

Laura said: “I see no evidence that academic libraries have it in them to band together to sponsor a project like Zotero Commons. We don’t have the group vision.” I think we do. I hear librarians talking about Zotero all the time. They’re promoting it to their students, featuring it on their web pages. Many are supporting Zotero. I’m guessing that many will support this new initiative as well. (Side thought: could this supplant, bolster, or even replace institutional repositories? Drag and drop uploading is an improvement over the current system.)

There are a lot of questions, still. The most pressing one for me, right now, is that I have not kept track of which materials in my Zotero database can be shared and which can’t. There has to be a method of tagging sharable items- and a way for scholars to mark their own content as sharable (by the way, Creative Commons is running a donation drive until December 31st). I am optimistic that these ideas will be addressed, and that librarians will be part of the conversation. Now, whether that means that libraries can be part of the conversation remains to be seen. I certainly hope so.

Edit: Dan Cohen has posted on his blog: Zotero and the Internet Archive Join Forces.

Design for Librarians - video

I meant to post this before, but, well, I didn’t. This is the video I created for my Library Use Instruction class. I wish I could link to my classmate’s tutorials, because they were very good.

Design video from karindalziel on Vimeo.

If you link over to the vimeo page, on the bottom right, you can download the full size Windows Media version. Feel free to do with it as you will.

I am a little ambivalent about this project. I think the concept was good, but I feel I could have illustrated my points more clearly.

I used CamStudio and I may have used recordMyDesktop to record the screen. I used Inkscape for the design of the flier, and Windows Movie Maker to put it all together. I also used Power Point for the slides (I just got Office 2007 and wanted to play) but I could have used Open Office Impress just as easily.

I started out trying to do this entirely with open source software, but settled for free (as in free beer) software. Video editing, unfortunately, still has a ways to go. But it is getting better- I have no doubt that soon I’ll be able to ditch Windows Movie Maker as well.

I did it.

OLPC

I couldn’t help it.


ccgd. (2007). OLPC - Mesh Network testing. Retrieved November 17, 2007, from http://flickr.com/photos/ccgd/491123493/

(citation generated with Zotero, using the new ability to capture citation information from Flickr.)

More thoughts on Zotero and proselytizing

Zotero up closeI wrote previously about Zotero proselytizing, and I think my choice of words was somewhat unfortunate. Some have seemed to take the term “proselytizing” in a negative light, while I didn’t mean it negatively. I also said that I feel like a traitor for mentioning Zotero, which has been quoted a couple of places. I’ll clarify on that below.

What’s been said

It started with Scott McLemee’s “Mark of Zotero” review in Inside Higher Ed. Stephen Bell commented, saying “Don’t Overlook Refworks.” On darcusblog, Bruce D’Arcus talks about librarian resistance to Zotero. Dan Cohen followed up with The Strange Dynamics of Technology Adoption and Promotion in Academia and Steve Lawson gave some good reasons for not promoting Zotero- including investment (monetary and human) in RefWorks, ease of use of RefWorks (since it’s web based there are fewer compatibility issues), and the fact that RefWorks allows easy export. (Whew! That’s a lot of links.)

My quote

Bruce D’Arcus quoted me in his post:

“I don’t talk about Zotero too much at work because we subscribe to, and are busy promoting- RefWorks. I feel sorta like a traitor”

and he replied:

“It’s really a shame, since it seems that the only thing this student is betraying in promoting Zotero is a rather narrow-minded organizational group think; not their end users.”

Zotero I agree it is a shame, but it’s really all on me, not on my organization. It’s not like I’ve met with resistance, it’s all in my head. For one thing, I’m not really in a position to promote Zotero to users. I mention it whenever I can, to fellow students, co-workers, etc., but my position doesn’t involve contact with patrons. Mostly, I’m met with blank stares, not resistance.

What can I do?

The conversation taking place has made me realize that I really want to do more to raise awareness at my library. So, I proposed a brown bag for next semester in which I will talk about Zotero and RefWorks and the differences between them. I don’t intend the presentation to be Zotero proselytizing. I just want to inform what Zotero is, how it is similar and how it is different from RefWorks, and how I use Zotero in my own research.

Expect more posts from me (probably in December, when I’m done with homework for the semester) on differences between Zotero and Refworks and how I use Zotero. In the meantime, the folks at Zotero have created a very nice screencast of using Word and Zotero (I finally tried this and it’s great!) Oh, and if you want to use the Zotero plugin in Open Office Portable, check out this page.


Photo Zotero Plate from flickr user smleon.

Thanks for your help, everyone!

Portable Applications are running in Ubuntu under Wine, including FSCapture and Thunderbird.

Screenshot of portable apps in Ubuntu through Wine

Terminal is up for show. :)

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