[WEB4LIB] ejournals, authentication, and the OPAC - thanks!

Barton Spencer jbspence at ocean.otr.usm.edu
Thu Dec 16 09:51:41 EST 1999


Thanks to the following kind people who gave some great replies
to my questions:

Donald A. Barclay, Stephen Sloan, Eric Hellman, Darryl Friesen,
Jimmy Ghaphery, Kerry Bouchard, Brian Westra and Patricia Husband

I hope I didn't leave anyone out. You gave us a lot of
information to chew on over the holidays.

When we get a little closer to implementing some things (January)
I'll have more information for those folks who wished to hear how
it was going. I know other people have said this in the past, but
this is a GREAT list. Thanks for your help and happy holidays!

Barton Spencer
Assistant to the Dean of Libraries
The University of Southern Mississippi

-----Original Message-----
From: web4lib at webjunction.org
[mailto:web4lib at webjunction.org]On Behalf Of Barton Spencer
Sent: Wednesday, December 15, 1999 9:08 AM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [WEB4LIB] ejournals, authentication, and the OPAC


Hi all,

We've been struggling with the question of how to show the public
which journals we provide electronically, full-text. There are
many single titles and even more titles that we get via
EBSCOHost, SilverPlatter, and other aggregators.

After much discussion we are thinking that placing the records in
our OPAC may be the best way to go, rather than creating a
separate database that we could publish to the web. There will be
URLs in the MARC records so that the patron can go straight to
the ejournal or to the aggregator that provides it. However, once
this idea gained approval, the question of authentication (for
off-campus users) raised its head. (by the way, we have a new
Sirsi Unicorn system)

My multi-part question is:
Are others of you experiencing success in downloading records
from an aggregator, such as EBSCOHost, and loading them into your
OPAC? (In our case, we are talking about 13,000 or so titles from
several aggregators)

Also, what is your model for authenticating off-campus users when
they look at a MARC record for an electronically-available
journal in your OPAC and click on the link? What method do you
use to determine that they are valid users?

We think that we currently have ways to make all of this work,
but I am quite interested to hear your experiences. If some of my
questions aren't clear (they are hard to phrase in an email)
please let me know and I'll try to elaborate.

Thanks in advance,

Barton Spencer
Assistant to the Dean of Libraries
The University of Southern Mississippi
barton.spencer at usm.edu




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