18 Jul 22:49
Re: RE: vendors and usability
On Mon, Jul 18, 2005 at 01:38:36PM -0700, David Walker wrote: > Unless, of course, Koha 3.0 will provide that. In which case I will be > happy to eat my words and up the timeline to conversion.![]()
. Koha 3.0 and as far back as 1.0 has a terminal interface (on the librarian side). We're investigating options for web-based clients that are based on DHTML (XMLHttp for instance) to lower the HTML overhead and increase the usability of the interface. That's the direction that the PINES Evergreen project has taken (the other large player in the open-source ILS world) and the results there are quite impressive. But to be honest, Koha now is more usable than many of the proprietary systems out there. Everything you need to do is neatly layed out on a resident navigational bar and short-cut keys control all actions so a staff member rarely needs to use a mouse. You can try out the circ functions here: http://koha.liblime.com But you're right that Koha 3.0's interface will be much better. The thing is, Koha 3.0 will include a lot of great features only because libraries who have vision are sponsoring them. I can't tell you how many libraries have said 'well if Koha did X we could use it'. Koha could easily do X ... but someone needs to step forward and sponsor it before it's going to happen. None of the libraries who have have turned back ... it's kinda like switching from IE to Firefox ... how many proprietary vendors can say that?
Cheers, -- -- Joshua Ferraro VENDOR SERVICES FOR OPEN-SOURCE SOFTWARE President, Technology migration, training, maintenance, support LibLime Featuring Koha Open-Source ILS jmf@... |Full Demos at http://liblime.com/koha |1(888)KohaILS _______________________________________________ Web4lib mailing list Web4lib@... http://lists.webjunction.org/web4lib/
. Koha 3.0 and as far back as 1.0 has a terminal interface
(on the librarian side). We're investigating options for web-based
clients that are based on DHTML (XMLHttp for instance) to lower the HTML
overhead and increase the usability of the interface. That's the
direction that the PINES Evergreen project has taken (the other
large player in the open-source ILS world) and the results there
are quite impressive.
But to be honest, Koha now is more usable than many of the proprietary
systems out there. Everything you need to do is neatly layed out on a
resident navigational bar and short-cut keys control all actions so a
staff member rarely needs to use a mouse.
You can try out the circ functions here:
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