Endnote as a library catalog

Steve Clancy sclancy at UCI.EDU
Thu Jan 26 13:17:48 EST 2012


Chris, thanks again.

I joined LT in order to check it out. One question: is it possible to 
"lock" the catalog/records so that they can only be edited by one person 
and not everyone who uses it?

I can't seem to find this in the help section.

Thanks.

--steve

--

                    Steve Clancy, MLS
    Research Librarian for Health Sciences and Nursing Science
     Ayala Science Library, Univ. of Calif., Irvine CA. U.S.A.
         949-824-7309 * sclancy AT uci.edu
    http://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=5109
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
"We don't see things as they are...We see things as we are." - Anais Nin


On 1/25/2012 5:32 PM, Chris Magnusson wrote:
> I haven't used that but I use LibraryThing for my church library collection.  It is free and no limit to the number of books.  No server needed either.
>
> Chris Magnusson
> Arena Maintenance
> City of Hibbing
> www.hibbing.mn.us
> http://www.facebook.com/cityofhibbing
> http://www.twitter.com/cityofhibbing
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Web technologies in libraries on behalf of Steve Clancy
> Sent: Wed 1/25/2012 7:16 PM
> To: WEB4LIB at LISTSERV.ND.EDU
> Subject: [WEB4LIB] Endnote as a library catalog
>
> Howdy.
>
> Has anyone had any experience with using EndNote as a low-cost catalog
> for a very small book collection? It would probably run on one dedicated
> workstation.
>
> I'm trying to help someone out who has been put in charge of putting a
> very small occupational health collection online so the staff can search
> it. The department is willing to spend little, if any, money on it.
>
> Thanks.
>
> --steve
>

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2012-01-26



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