diff --git a/.tool-versions b/.tool-versions
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..a2e77829
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.tool-versions
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+ruby 3.0.2
diff --git a/CNAME b/CNAME
index 810bdb84..ad4594c3 100644
--- a/CNAME
+++ b/CNAME
@@ -1 +1 @@
-2022.code4lib.org
\ No newline at end of file
+2023.code4lib.org
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/Gemfile.lock b/Gemfile.lock
index 03d17b8e..0f9458cd 100644
--- a/Gemfile.lock
+++ b/Gemfile.lock
@@ -1,111 +1,113 @@
GEM
remote: https://rubygems.org/
specs:
- actionpack (6.0.3.4)
- actionview (= 6.0.3.4)
- activesupport (= 6.0.3.4)
+ actionpack (6.0.6)
+ actionview (= 6.0.6)
+ activesupport (= 6.0.6)
rack (~> 2.0, >= 2.0.8)
rack-test (>= 0.6.3)
rails-dom-testing (~> 2.0)
rails-html-sanitizer (~> 1.0, >= 1.2.0)
- actionview (6.0.3.4)
- activesupport (= 6.0.3.4)
+ actionview (6.0.6)
+ activesupport (= 6.0.6)
builder (~> 3.1)
erubi (~> 1.4)
rails-dom-testing (~> 2.0)
rails-html-sanitizer (~> 1.1, >= 1.2.0)
- activesupport (6.0.3.4)
+ activesupport (6.0.6)
concurrent-ruby (~> 1.0, >= 1.0.2)
i18n (>= 0.7, < 2)
minitest (~> 5.1)
tzinfo (~> 1.1)
zeitwerk (~> 2.2, >= 2.2.2)
- addressable (2.7.0)
- public_suffix (>= 2.0.2, < 5.0)
+ addressable (2.8.1)
+ public_suffix (>= 2.0.2, < 6.0)
builder (3.2.4)
coffee-script (2.4.1)
coffee-script-source
execjs
coffee-script-source (1.11.1)
colorator (1.1.0)
- commonmarker (0.17.13)
- ruby-enum (~> 0.5)
- concurrent-ruby (1.1.7)
+ commonmarker (0.23.6)
+ concurrent-ruby (1.1.10)
crass (1.0.6)
- dnsruby (1.61.5)
+ dnsruby (1.61.9)
simpleidn (~> 0.1)
- em-websocket (0.5.2)
+ em-websocket (0.5.3)
eventmachine (>= 0.12.9)
- http_parser.rb (~> 0.6.0)
- erubi (1.10.0)
- ethon (0.12.0)
- ffi (>= 1.3.0)
+ http_parser.rb (~> 0)
+ erubi (1.11.0)
+ ethon (0.16.0)
+ ffi (>= 1.15.0)
eventmachine (1.2.7)
eventmachine (1.2.7-x64-mingw32)
- execjs (2.7.0)
- faraday (1.1.0)
- multipart-post (>= 1.2, < 3)
- ruby2_keywords
- ffi (1.13.1)
+ execjs (2.8.1)
+ faraday (2.7.1)
+ faraday-net_http (>= 2.0, < 3.1)
+ ruby2_keywords (>= 0.0.4)
+ faraday-net_http (3.0.2)
+ ffi (1.15.5)
+ ffi (1.15.5-x64-mingw32)
forwardable-extended (2.6.0)
gemoji (3.0.1)
- github-pages (209)
- github-pages-health-check (= 1.16.1)
- jekyll (= 3.9.0)
+ github-pages (227)
+ github-pages-health-check (= 1.17.9)
+ jekyll (= 3.9.2)
jekyll-avatar (= 0.7.0)
jekyll-coffeescript (= 1.1.1)
- jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (= 0.1.6)
+ jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (= 0.2.0)
jekyll-default-layout (= 0.1.4)
jekyll-feed (= 0.15.1)
jekyll-gist (= 1.5.0)
jekyll-github-metadata (= 2.13.0)
+ jekyll-include-cache (= 0.2.1)
jekyll-mentions (= 1.6.0)
jekyll-optional-front-matter (= 0.3.2)
jekyll-paginate (= 1.1.0)
jekyll-readme-index (= 0.3.0)
jekyll-redirect-from (= 0.16.0)
jekyll-relative-links (= 0.6.1)
- jekyll-remote-theme (= 0.4.2)
+ jekyll-remote-theme (= 0.4.3)
jekyll-sass-converter (= 1.5.2)
- jekyll-seo-tag (= 2.6.1)
+ jekyll-seo-tag (= 2.8.0)
jekyll-sitemap (= 1.4.0)
jekyll-swiss (= 1.0.0)
- jekyll-theme-architect (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-cayman (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-dinky (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-hacker (= 0.1.2)
- jekyll-theme-leap-day (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-merlot (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-midnight (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-minimal (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-modernist (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-primer (= 0.5.4)
- jekyll-theme-slate (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-tactile (= 0.1.1)
- jekyll-theme-time-machine (= 0.1.1)
+ jekyll-theme-architect (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-cayman (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-dinky (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-hacker (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-leap-day (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-merlot (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-midnight (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-minimal (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-modernist (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-primer (= 0.6.0)
+ jekyll-theme-slate (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-tactile (= 0.2.0)
+ jekyll-theme-time-machine (= 0.2.0)
jekyll-titles-from-headings (= 0.5.3)
jemoji (= 0.12.0)
- kramdown (= 2.3.0)
+ kramdown (= 2.3.2)
kramdown-parser-gfm (= 1.1.0)
liquid (= 4.0.3)
mercenary (~> 0.3)
minima (= 2.5.1)
- nokogiri (>= 1.10.4, < 2.0)
- rouge (= 3.23.0)
+ nokogiri (>= 1.13.6, < 2.0)
+ rouge (= 3.26.0)
terminal-table (~> 1.4)
- github-pages-health-check (1.16.1)
+ github-pages-health-check (1.17.9)
addressable (~> 2.3)
dnsruby (~> 1.60)
octokit (~> 4.0)
- public_suffix (~> 3.0)
+ public_suffix (>= 3.0, < 5.0)
typhoeus (~> 1.3)
- html-pipeline (2.14.0)
+ html-pipeline (2.14.3)
activesupport (>= 2)
nokogiri (>= 1.4)
- http_parser.rb (0.6.0)
+ http_parser.rb (0.8.0)
i18n (0.9.5)
concurrent-ruby (~> 1.0)
- jekyll (3.9.0)
+ jekyll (3.9.2)
addressable (~> 2.4)
colorator (~> 1.0)
em-websocket (~> 0.5)
@@ -123,12 +125,12 @@ GEM
jekyll-coffeescript (1.1.1)
coffee-script (~> 2.2)
coffee-script-source (~> 1.11.1)
- jekyll-commonmark (1.3.1)
- commonmarker (~> 0.14)
- jekyll (>= 3.7, < 5.0)
- jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (0.1.6)
- commonmarker (~> 0.17.6)
- jekyll-commonmark (~> 1.2)
+ jekyll-commonmark (1.4.0)
+ commonmarker (~> 0.22)
+ jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (0.2.0)
+ commonmarker (~> 0.23.4)
+ jekyll (~> 3.9.0)
+ jekyll-commonmark (~> 1.4.0)
rouge (>= 2.0, < 4.0)
jekyll-default-layout (0.1.4)
jekyll (~> 3.0)
@@ -139,6 +141,8 @@ GEM
jekyll-github-metadata (2.13.0)
jekyll (>= 3.4, < 5.0)
octokit (~> 4.0, != 4.4.0)
+ jekyll-include-cache (0.2.1)
+ jekyll (>= 3.7, < 5.0)
jekyll-mentions (1.6.0)
html-pipeline (~> 2.3)
jekyll (>= 3.7, < 5.0)
@@ -151,57 +155,57 @@ GEM
jekyll (>= 3.3, < 5.0)
jekyll-relative-links (0.6.1)
jekyll (>= 3.3, < 5.0)
- jekyll-remote-theme (0.4.2)
+ jekyll-remote-theme (0.4.3)
addressable (~> 2.0)
jekyll (>= 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-sass-converter (>= 1.0, <= 3.0.0, != 2.0.0)
rubyzip (>= 1.3.0, < 3.0)
jekyll-sass-converter (1.5.2)
sass (~> 3.4)
- jekyll-seo-tag (2.6.1)
- jekyll (>= 3.3, < 5.0)
+ jekyll-seo-tag (2.8.0)
+ jekyll (>= 3.8, < 5.0)
jekyll-sitemap (1.4.0)
jekyll (>= 3.7, < 5.0)
jekyll-swiss (1.0.0)
- jekyll-theme-architect (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-architect (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-cayman (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-cayman (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-dinky (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-dinky (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-hacker (0.1.2)
+ jekyll-theme-hacker (0.2.0)
jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-leap-day (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-leap-day (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-merlot (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-merlot (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-midnight (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-midnight (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-minimal (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-minimal (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-modernist (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-modernist (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-primer (0.5.4)
+ jekyll-theme-primer (0.6.0)
jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-github-metadata (~> 2.9)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-slate (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-slate (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-tactile (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-tactile (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
- jekyll-theme-time-machine (0.1.1)
- jekyll (~> 3.5)
+ jekyll-theme-time-machine (0.2.0)
+ jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-titles-from-headings (0.5.3)
jekyll (>= 3.3, < 5.0)
@@ -211,83 +215,87 @@ GEM
gemoji (~> 3.0)
html-pipeline (~> 2.2)
jekyll (>= 3.0, < 5.0)
- kramdown (2.3.0)
+ kramdown (2.3.2)
rexml
kramdown-parser-gfm (1.1.0)
kramdown (~> 2.0)
liquid (4.0.3)
- listen (3.3.1)
+ listen (3.7.1)
rb-fsevent (~> 0.10, >= 0.10.3)
rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.10)
- loofah (2.7.0)
+ loofah (2.19.0)
crass (~> 1.0.2)
nokogiri (>= 1.5.9)
mercenary (0.3.6)
- mini_portile2 (2.4.0)
+ mini_portile2 (2.8.0)
minima (2.5.1)
jekyll (>= 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-feed (~> 0.9)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.1)
- minitest (5.14.2)
- multipart-post (2.1.1)
- nokogiri (1.10.10)
- mini_portile2 (~> 2.4.0)
- octokit (4.19.0)
- faraday (>= 0.9)
- sawyer (~> 0.8.0, >= 0.5.3)
+ minitest (5.16.3)
+ nokogiri (1.13.9)
+ mini_portile2 (~> 2.8.0)
+ racc (~> 1.4)
+ nokogiri (1.13.9-x64-mingw32)
+ racc (~> 1.4)
+ nokogiri (1.13.9-x86_64-darwin)
+ racc (~> 1.4)
+ octokit (4.25.1)
+ faraday (>= 1, < 3)
+ sawyer (~> 0.9)
pathutil (0.16.2)
forwardable-extended (~> 2.6)
- public_suffix (3.1.1)
- rack (2.2.3)
- rack-test (1.1.0)
- rack (>= 1.0, < 3)
+ public_suffix (4.0.7)
+ racc (1.6.0)
+ rack (2.2.4)
+ rack-test (2.0.2)
+ rack (>= 1.3)
rails-dom-testing (2.0.3)
activesupport (>= 4.2.0)
nokogiri (>= 1.6)
- rails-html-sanitizer (1.3.0)
+ rails-html-sanitizer (1.4.3)
loofah (~> 2.3)
- rb-fsevent (0.10.4)
+ rb-fsevent (0.11.2)
rb-inotify (0.10.1)
ffi (~> 1.0)
- rexml (3.2.4)
- rouge (3.23.0)
- ruby-enum (0.8.0)
- i18n
- ruby2_keywords (0.0.2)
- rubyzip (2.3.0)
+ rexml (3.2.5)
+ rouge (3.26.0)
+ ruby2_keywords (0.0.5)
+ rubyzip (2.3.2)
safe_yaml (1.0.5)
sass (3.7.4)
sass-listen (~> 4.0.0)
sass-listen (4.0.0)
rb-fsevent (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.4)
rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.7)
- sawyer (0.8.2)
+ sawyer (0.9.2)
addressable (>= 2.3.5)
- faraday (> 0.8, < 2.0)
- simpleidn (0.1.1)
+ faraday (>= 0.17.3, < 3)
+ simpleidn (0.2.1)
unf (~> 0.1.4)
- sprockets (4.0.2)
+ sprockets (4.1.1)
concurrent-ruby (~> 1.0)
rack (> 1, < 3)
- sprockets-rails (3.2.2)
- actionpack (>= 4.0)
- activesupport (>= 4.0)
+ sprockets-rails (3.4.2)
+ actionpack (>= 5.2)
+ activesupport (>= 5.2)
sprockets (>= 3.0.0)
terminal-table (1.8.0)
unicode-display_width (~> 1.1, >= 1.1.1)
thread_safe (0.3.6)
typhoeus (1.4.0)
ethon (>= 0.9.0)
- tzinfo (1.2.8)
+ tzinfo (1.2.10)
thread_safe (~> 0.1)
- tzinfo-data (1.2021.5)
+ tzinfo-data (1.2022.7)
tzinfo (>= 1.0.0)
unf (0.1.4)
unf_ext
- unf_ext (0.0.7.7)
- unicode-display_width (1.7.0)
+ unf_ext (0.0.8.2)
+ unf_ext (0.0.8.2-x64-mingw32)
+ unicode-display_width (1.8.0)
webrick (1.7.0)
- zeitwerk (2.4.1)
+ zeitwerk (2.6.6)
PLATFORMS
ruby
@@ -301,4 +309,4 @@ DEPENDENCIES
webrick
BUNDLED WITH
- 2.2.29
+ 2.3.21
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
index 67e53c3b..c07cb045 100644
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
-# 2022.code4lib.org
+# 2023.code4lib.org
## Intro
-This site is developed by the [Code4Lib 2022 Conference Committee Website Working Group](https://wiki.code4lib.org/Code4Lib_2022_Conference_Committees#Website_Working_Group) based on a design by the [2016 working group](https://wiki.code4lib.org/2016_Conference_Committees#Website_Working_Group). A great deal of conference and organizational info can be found on the [Code4Lib Wiki](https://wiki.code4lib.org/Main_Page) and the [Code4Lib Site](https://code4lib.org), but this site should serve as a gateway to the various sources of Code4Lib information while providing visitors with a user-friendly way to find conference-specific info.
+This site is developed by the [Code4Lib 2023 Conference Committee Website Working Group](https://wiki.code4lib.org/Code4Lib_2023_Conference_Committees#Website_Working_Group) based on a design by the [2016 working group](https://wiki.code4lib.org/2016_Conference_Committees#Website_Working_Group). A great deal of conference and organizational info can be found on the [Code4Lib Wiki](https://wiki.code4lib.org/Main_Page) and the [Code4Lib Site](https://code4lib.org), but this site should serve as a gateway to the various sources of Code4Lib information while providing visitors with a user-friendly way to find conference-specific info.
This site is designed with future users in mind, so the group chose platforms that would be accessible to a wide range of users: [Jekyll](https://jekyllrb.com) and [GitHub Pages](https://pages.github.com).
## Resources
-More details are available in the [GitHub wiki](https://github.com/code4lib/2022.code4lib.org/wiki).
+More details are available in the [GitHub wiki](https://github.com/code4lib/2023.code4lib.org/wiki).
## About Jekyll
@@ -18,11 +18,11 @@ More details are available in the [GitHub wiki](https://github.com/code4lib/2022
Steps for contributing have been documented in the [wiki on the 2016 site's GitHub page](https://github.com/code4lib/2016.code4lib.org/wiki) and will be updated as needed.
-See a list of [open issues](https://github.com/code4lib/2022.code4lib.org/issues). The following example uses "issue#3" as a subject. That's the branch name and is used in the commit message.
+See a list of [open issues](https://github.com/code4lib/2023.code4lib.org/issues). The following example uses "issue#3" as a subject. That's the branch name and is used in the commit message.
### Setup
-1. ```git clone``` the [repo](https://github.com/code4lib/2022.code4lib.org) from GitHub
+1. ```git clone``` the [repo](https://github.com/pulibrary/2023.code4lib.org) from GitHub
2. cd to repo root and ```git pull```
3. ```bundle install```
4. Continue with step 3 below
@@ -48,7 +48,7 @@ See a list of [open issues](https://github.com/code4lib/2022.code4lib.org/issues
* ```git push --set-upstream origin issue#3```
9. Switch back to the main branch
* ```git checkout main```
-10. Go to https://github.com/code4lib/2022.code4lib.org
+10. Go to https://github.com/code4lib/2023.code4lib.org
11. Make a pull request base:master and compare:issue-3
12. Wait for someone to test your changes and merge the pull request
13. Do the dance of joy 🎉
diff --git a/_config.yml b/_config.yml
index b374074d..3f6e6995 100644
--- a/_config.yml
+++ b/_config.yml
@@ -1,13 +1,8 @@
-url: http://2022.code4lib.org
+url: http://2023.code4lib.org
permalink: /:categories/:title
exclude: [vendor]
-repository: code4lib/2022.codelib.org
+repository: pulibrary/2023.codelib.org
future: true
timezone: America/New_York
sass:
sass_dir: assets/_scss
-include:
- - .well-known
-keep_files:
- - .dat
- - dat.json
diff --git a/_data/community-support-schedule.yml b/_data/community-support-schedule.yml
index a5812d2b..9e4f7df7 100644
--- a/_data/community-support-schedule.yml
+++ b/_data/community-support-schedule.yml
@@ -11,112 +11,9 @@ onsite:
# volunteers:
# - surname
# - othersurname
- - day: Monday
- period: Morning Preconferences
- volunteers:
- - slaughter
- - day: Monday
- period: Afternoon Preconferences
- volunteers:
- - phetteplace
- - yelton
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteers:
- - slaughter
- - grynoch
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteers:
- - kayiwa
- - mesco
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 1pm - 3pm ET
- volunteers:
- - phetteplace
- - nelson
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 3pm - 5:15pm ET
- volunteers:
- - fox
- - yelton
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 6pm - 9pm Reception
- all-hands: true
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteers:
- - grynoch
- - yelton
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteers:
- - nelson
- - fox
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 1pm - 3pm ET
- volunteers:
- - phetteplace
- - mesco
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 3pm - 5:15pm ET
- volunteers:
- - slaughter
- - kayiwa
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 7pm - 11pm Game Night
- volunteers:
- - nelson
- - phetteplace
- - day: Thursday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteers:
- - mesco
- - slaughter
- - day: Thursday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteers:
- - nelson
- - fox
online:
# template:
# - day:
# period:
# volunteer:
- - day: Monday
- period: 9am - 12pm ET
- volunteer: giarlo
- - day: Monday
- period: 1:30pm - 4:30pm ET
- volunteer: gosselar
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteer: sanford
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteer: giarlo
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 1pm - 3pm ET
- volunteer: gosselar
- - day: Tuesday
- period: 3pm - 5:15pm ET
- volunteer: gosselar
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteer: sanford
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteer: sanford
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 1pm - 3pm ET
- volunteer: giarlo
- - day: Wednesday
- period: 3pm - 5:15pm ET
- volunteer: gosselar
- - day: Thursday
- period: 8:30am - 11am ET
- volunteer: sanford
- - day: Thursday
- period: 11am - 1pm ET
- volunteer: giarlo
diff --git a/_data/community-support.yml b/_data/community-support.yml
index 0ac590a0..39c3d3f9 100644
--- a/_data/community-support.yml
+++ b/_data/community-support.yml
@@ -8,91 +8,3 @@
# slack_handle:
# onsite: true
# online: false
-
-slaughter:
- name: Anne Slaughter
- img: /assets/img/conduct/anne-slaughter.jpeg
- img_alt:
- slack_handle: aslaughter
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-phetteplace:
- name: Eric Phetteplace
- img: /assets/img/speakers/eric-phetteplace.png
- img_alt: "Smiling white man with a mustache, beard, and receding hairline who is wearing a striped collared shirt."
- slack_handle: phette23
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-grynoch:
- name: Tess Grynoch
- img: /assets/img/conduct/tess-grynoch.jpeg
- img_alt: "Tess Grynoch, a white woman with short brown curly hair, smiling and proudly wearing her UMass Chan Medical School, Lamar Soutter Library sweater."
- slack_handle: "Tess Grynoch"
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-yelton:
- name: Andromeda Yelton
- img: /assets/img/conduct/andromeda-yelton.jpg
- img_alt: "A smiling white woman with glasses, rosy cheeks, and curly brown hair. Her pretty white-and-grey cat is on her shoulder."
- slack_handle: thatandromeda
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-mesco:
- name: Ann Marie Mesco
- img: /assets/img/conduct/ann-marie-mesco.jpeg
- img_alt: "Woman with long blonde hair and blue eyes. Who is smiling, wearing glasses, and a black sweater."
- slack_handle: "Ann Marie"
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-sanford:
- name: Daniel Sanford
- img:
- img_alt:
- slack_handle: dans
- onsite: false
- online: true
-
-gosselar:
- name: Jackie Gosselar
- img:
- img_alt:
- slack_handle: "Jackie Gosselar"
- onsite: false
- online: true
-
-giarlo:
- name: Mike Giarlo
- img:
- img_alt:
- slack_handle: mjgiarlo
- onsite: false
- online: true
-
-fox:
- name: Bobbi Fox
- img: /assets/img/conduct/bobbi-fox.jpeg
- img_alt: "A smiling large old white woman with glasses and long brown/grey hair."
- slack_handle: bobbifox
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-nelson:
- name: Chad Nelson
- img: /assets/img/conduct/chad-nelson.jpeg
- img_alt: "Man with glasses, and beard standing in front of a brick wall."
- slack_handle: bibliotechy
- onsite: true
- online: false
-
-kayiwa:
- name: Francis Kayiwa
- img: /assets/img/conduct/francis-kayiwa.jpeg
- img_alt:
- slack_handle: "El Cromulente"
- onsite: true
- online: false
diff --git a/_data/conf.yml b/_data/conf.yml
index d1b4b025..050b4bfe 100644
--- a/_data/conf.yml
+++ b/_data/conf.yml
@@ -3,32 +3,31 @@
# "Global" Vars
###################
-year: 2022
-hashtag: 'c4l22'
-location: 'Buffalo, New York'
+year: 2023
+hashtag: 'c4l23'
+location: 'Princeton, New Jersey'
timezone: 'Eastern'
search: false
online-only-conference: false
-# https://research.lib.buffalo.edu/2022code4lib/venues
-welcome-message: In 1896, when Nicola Tesla initiated the first ever long-range transmission of electricity, the destination of Buffalo became the City of Light. Today, from biomedical research to the arts, this spirit of innovation glows brighter than ever, which makes Buffalo a perfect location for our 2022 Code4Lib Conference. Hosted by the State University of New York at Buffalo, details on our venue are coming soon!
-catchline: the City of Light
+welcome-message: Coming Soon
+catchline: Coming Soon
###########################
# Hero
###########################
# Place hero image in /assets/img/theme-images/. Includes optional webp format.
-hero-image-filename: 'buffalo.png'
-hero-image-source: ''
-hero-image-filename-webp: 'buffalo.webp'
-hero-image-alt: 'The skyline of Buffalo, New York. White lightning bolts and stars are in the background, representing the Buffalo city flag.'
+hero-image-filename: 'princeton.jpg'
+hero-image-source: 'https://unsplash.com/photos/JYqLCa-rv7o'
+hero-image-filename-webp: 'princeton.webp'
+hero-image-alt: 'Princeton University campus'
image-attributions:
- attribution:
- creator: Christopher Behrend
- image-title: Buffalo
- image-url: https://VisitBuffaloNiagara.com
- license-name:
- license-url:
+ creator: 'Tim Alex (@thelondoner)'
+ image-title: 'Nassau Hall, Princeton University'
+ image-url: 'https://unsplash.com/photos/JYqLCa-rv7o'
+ license-name: 'Unsplash License'
+ license-url: 'https://unsplash.com/license'
########################
# Program & Schedule
@@ -36,55 +35,55 @@ image-attributions:
# These booleans affect the main menu links in the ways described below, as well
# as displays in a few other places.
# if true Speakers link -> /speakers/, if false -> /speakers/past-keynotes
-have-talks: true
-have-workshops: true
+have-talks: false
+have-workshops: false
# if true Schedule link -> /schedule/, if false -> /schedule/timeline
-have-schedule: true
+have-schedule: false
# day 0 = preconf day
days:
- - weekday: Monday
- date: May 23rd
- # date in a form that JS Date() constructor understands
- date-data: 2022-05-23T23:59
- weekday: Tuesday
- date: May 24th
- date-data: 2021-05-24T23:59
+ date: March 14th
+ # date in a form that JS Date() constructor understands
+ date-data: 2023-03-14T23:59
- weekday: Wednesday
- date: May 25th
- date-data: 2021-05-25T23:59
+ date: March 15th
+ date-data: 2023-03-15T23:59
- weekday: Thursday
- date: May 26th
- date-data: 2021-05-26T23:59
+ date: March 16th
+ date-data: 2023-03-16T23:59
+ - weekday: Friday
+ date: March 17th
+ date-data: 2023-03-17T23:59
####################
# Venue Information
####################
# Short Form for location
-city-state: 'Buffalo, NY'
-city: 'Buffalo'
-state: 'NY'
+city-state: 'Princeton, NJ'
+city: 'Princeton'
+state: 'NJ'
venue:
- name: 'Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences'
- street: 'University in Buffalo 955 Main St.'
- postal-code: '14203'
+ name: 'Princeton University'
+ street: 'Frist Campus Center'
+ postal-code: '08544'
phone:
- image: 'jacobs.jpeg'
- website: 'https://medicine.buffalo.edu/about/our_campuses.html'
- floorplan:
- directions: 'https://medicine.buffalo.edu/about/our_campuses.html#title-1'
+ image: 'frist-campus-center.jpg'
+ website: 'https://www.princeton.edu/'
+ floorplan: 'https://www.princeton.edu/frist/floorplans/floorplansBc.html'
+ directions: 'https://www.princeton.edu/meet-princeton/visit-us'
a11y: ''
hotel:
show: true
multiple-hotels: true
- multiple-hotels-map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=1NVNeQvh5brzIyWVk3iDpAkk_q5dLTOtX&ll=42.8963212217323%2C-78.870584222229&z=15
+ multiple-hotels-map: https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=15yvj8MVkJpo8DtSdhPks_UauH8OqMbA
name:
reserved-room-block: false
cost:
with-tax-cost:
- cost-cutoff-date: 2140-12-31
+ cost-cutoff-date:
check-in-time:
check-out-time:
self-parking-fee:
@@ -124,7 +123,7 @@ anonymous-form: 'https://css4csv.clir.org/anonymous-incident-report-form/'
# - post: for after the conference is over
#
####################
-homepage-display: post
+homepage-display: pre
livestream:
show: false
@@ -133,32 +132,32 @@ livestream:
slides:
show: false
- url: 'https://osf.io/meetings/c4l22'
+ url: 'https://osf.io/meetings/c4l23'
contact: ''
email: ''
slide-template:
- url: '/assets/C4L2021-template.pptx'
+ url: '/assets/C4L2023-template.pptx'
closed-captioning:
url:
# Peri display descriptions and titles
-peri:
- day1-am-title: 'Pre-Conference'
- day1-am-desc: 'Workshops'
- day1-pm-title: 'Newcomer Dinner'
- day1-pm-desc: 'Dine-Around'
- day2-am-title: 'Conference, Day 1'
- day2-am-desc: 'Opening Keynote & Talks'
- day2-pm-title: 'Reception'
- day2-pm-desc: 'Pearl Street Grill & Brewery'
- day3-am-title: 'Conference, Day 2'
- day3-am-desc: 'Awesome Talks'
- day3-pm-title: 'Game Night'
- day3-pm-desc: 'Board or Card Games'
- day4-am-title: 'Conference, Day 3'
- day4-am-desc: 'Closing Keynote & Talks'
+#peri:
+# day1-am-title: 'Pre-Conference'
+# day1-am-desc: 'Workshops'
+# day1-pm-title: 'Newcomer Dinner'
+# day1-pm-desc: 'Dine-Around'
+# day2-am-title: 'Conference, Day 1'
+# day2-am-desc: 'Opening Keynote & Talks'
+# day2-pm-title: 'Reception'
+# day2-pm-desc: 'Pearl Street Grill & Brewery'
+# day3-am-title: 'Conference, Day 2'
+# day3-am-desc: 'Awesome Talks'
+# day3-pm-title: 'Game Night'
+# day3-pm-desc: 'Board or Card Games'
+# day4-am-title: 'Conference, Day 3'
+# day4-am-desc: 'Closing Keynote & Talks'
###########
# Sponsors
@@ -166,10 +165,10 @@ peri:
# If false, hides sponsors link in navigation and footer
show-sponsors: true
# Toggles whether prospectus button displays on homepage and sponsor pages
-sponsor-buttons: false
+sponsor-buttons: true
# URL to document
-prospectus-document: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11oFZcxx5F_gCdkJ5S7WIzUom-AkNxuAM/view?usp=sharing
-sponsor-btn-link: 'https://www.concentra-cms.com/c4l22sponsorreg.html'
+prospectus-document: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J6oOSqwsXQSGFs9AUHH2LW8IJDwX2AFN/view?usp=sharing
+sponsor-btn-link: 'https://www.concentra-cms.com/c4l23sponsorreg.html'
##########
# !!!NOTE!!! All 'end-date' vars should be in the following format: YYYY-MM-DD
@@ -182,18 +181,18 @@ sponsor-btn-link: 'https://www.concentra-cms.com/c4l22sponsorreg.html'
keynote-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://wiki.code4lib.org/2022_Keynote_Speakers_Nominations'
- end-date: '2021-11-28'
+ submission-form: 'https://wiki.code4lib.org/2023_Keynote_Speakers_Nominations'
+ end-date: '2022-11-29'
workshop-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfh1ri7kmxtZv5SdfKJ-Q6EoiTFYVxtaFNhbh2Wzpzxcr0BcQ/viewform'
- end-date: '2021-11-29'
+ submission-form: 'https://forms.gle/e1fgutRMHRxJJwVQ7'
+ end-date: '2022-11-30'
talk-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSc3WHM4INwlzBmpRXwJQTKls0yIr0Vafk2EVhfu5H_o0-aAgw/viewform'
- end-date: '2021-11-28'
+ submission-form: 'https://forms.gle/nBvxVhndmeLAJRkN9'
+ end-date: '2022-11-14'
panel-proposals:
show: false
@@ -202,37 +201,37 @@ panel-proposals:
poster-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://forms.gle/ELyF1dx6U3FnvZoU7'
- end-date: '2022-02-21'
+ submission-form: ''
+ end-date: ''
shirt-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://forms.gle/uZpF6MzgfzrNeSgNA'
- end-date: '2022-03-18'
+ submission-form: ''
+ end-date: ''
host-proposals:
show: false
- submission-form: 'https://wiki.code4lib.org/2019_Hosting_Proposals'
- end-date: '2021-02-23'
+ submission-form: ''
+ end-date: ''
###########
# Voting
###########
keynote-voting:
- show: false
- url: 'https://forms.gle/NgZEfs3a5ciceAbr7'
- end-date: '2021-12-20'
+ show: true
+ url: 'https://forms.gle/Ve1M6YcSDwujAVYd8'
+ end-date: '2022-12-12'
workshop-voting:
show: false
- url: 'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfEAwmP9Wnrk2aXLgfEpnk0zS3W8M4rukx_DL3tCeaMjqHwdg/viewform'
- end-date: '2021-11-19'
+ url: ''
+ end-date: ''
talk-voting:
- show: false
- url: 'https://forms.gle/vSjoYhcxDEs8GuGX8'
- end-date: '2021-12-17'
+ show: true
+ url: 'https://forms.gle/hhwJJW4NMLW3ZysK8'
+ end-date: '2022-12-05'
panel-voting:
show: false
@@ -241,136 +240,36 @@ panel-voting:
poster-voting:
show: false
- url: 'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdPB96c7KqbKJJUN99al0fH2YeMhMyveuFd5_atqvtatZXexQ/viewform'
- end-date: '2022-03-18'
+ url: ''
+ end-date: ''
shirt-voting:
show: false
- url: 'https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf0CK7T66PnyAVBcXbTS-IJdCAwgy0JwL6jPE9QNjq8yvBZCA/viewform'
- end-date: '2022-03-30'
+ url: ''
+ end-date: ''
##################
# Schedule events
##################
# usually on the wiki
-social-activities-url: '/general-info/social/'
-
-simulation:
- show: true
- date: '2022-05-25'
- time: '10:10AM to 10:50AM'
- location: 'Behling Human Simulation Center - Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences'
- description: 'The Behling Human Simulation Center is a facility where learners are exposed to high-risk, low-frequency events through the use of high-fidelity simulated patients. Simulations can range from communication scenarios with a concerned/abusive parent (portrayed by a local actor) while treating their child, to life-threatening code scenarios, to child delivery. Workshops are regularly held using task trainers to either learn, or brush-up on specific skills such as intubation and airway management. The use of these simulated patients allows learners to experience and utilize their skills without the risk to human life.
The sign up sheet will be available at Wednesday’s morning registration table. There is a 20-person maximum for this event.'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: ''
- sign-up-button-text: ''
-
-tours:
- show: true
- date: '2022-05-25'
- time: '6:30PM to 7:30PM'
- location: ''
- description: 'There are two tours available: the "Architecture Timeline: Downtown Walking Tour", and the "Best of Buffalo Walking Tour".
The "Architecture Timeline: Downtown Walking Tour" is a chronological walk through architectural time from the mid-nineteenth century to the early twenty-first century. We''ll see excellent examples of all the major architectural styles prevalent in commercial and government office construction during this period. Tour begins at: Northeast Corner of Pearl Street and Seneca Street across from Pearl Street Brewery. (Seneca Station Light Metro Rail - free above ground).
The "Best of Buffalo" is an architectural overview tour to help tell the story of Buffalo''s rapid rise to prominence, from the opening of the Erie Canal to the 1901 Pan-American Exposition. Buildings seen on this tour were designed by both nationally and locally significant architects, including Louis Sullivan, Richard Upjohn, Louise Bethune, and EB Green. Perfect for both visitors and residents alike, this tour is an excellent introduction to Buffalo''s architectural heritage. This tour begins at: Front entrance of Hotel @ the Lafayette, 391 Washington St, Buffalo, NY 14203 (Church Street Station Light Metro Rail).
Cost is $15 at registration, and sign up is available during conference registration. There will be 15 people max on each tour.'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: ''
- sign-up-button-text: ''
-
-game-night:
- show: true
- date: '2022-05-25'
- time: '7:00PM to 11:00PM'
- location: 'Wyndham Garden Buffalo Downtown, 125 High St, Buffalo, NY. Buffalo Room.'
- description: 'Play games? Come join your fellow code4libers in a few board or card games! Games night will take place at the Wyndham Garden Buffalo Downtown. Outside food and drinks are allowed.'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: 'https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1rPr6TxP5qxHnx2PMPvZK9im2b-ZmqZcTCVFOmwaQZLU/edit#gid=0'
- sign-up-button-text: 'Sign Up for Game Night'
-
-virtual-game-night:
- show: true
- date: '2022-05-25'
- time: '6:00PM to 8:00PM'
- location: 'Online'
- description: 'Play games? Come join your fellow code4libers in a few board or card games!'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: 'https://docs.google.com/document/d/1oRVxajcg9Jx3FuFsufttyad5MB_TD37p8HxrVAQWkXg/edit#heading=h.ljbkf0ewo3sw'
- sign-up-button-text: 'Sign Up for VIRTUAL Game Night'
-
-karaoke-night:
- show: false
- date: '2022-03-24'
- time: '6PM to 7:30PM'
- description: 'We also have Karaoke night for those who would like to share your passions in singing, or just hangout with friendly folks.'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: ''
- sign-up-button-text: 'Sign Up for a Song!'
-
-trivia-night:
- show: false
- date: '2022-03-25'
- time: '6PM to 7:30PM'
- description: 'If you miss the good old pub trivia days, come join us as we compete for bragging rights at Trivia Night hosted by DC-based District Trivia!'
- event-url: ''
- event-url-button-text: ''
- sign-up-url: ''
- sign-up-button-text: 'Sign Up! Registration Limited'
+#social-activities-url: '/general-info/social/'
diy-social:
show: true
-# see also: dinner.yml file of restaurant locations
-newcomer-dinner:
- show: true
- # entering the URL doubles as a "show more info" switch, too
- signup-url: 'https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kG53yWe3rVAx8ck4GaAv4bFRxKgthJgFZ3UzAFGrvbc/edit#'
- transit-info: 'https://docs.google.com/document/d/1kG53yWe3rVAx8ck4GaAv4bFRxKgthJgFZ3UzAFGrvbc/edit#'
- activities-info: 'https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/viewer?mid=19KBXCOtzJSle2hGG2BSm6WGyT8-AZOGF&ll=42.9255235816872%2C-78.8159373&z=12'
- date: '2022-05-23'
-
-libtech-women:
- show: false
- date: '2022-03-10'
- time: '5:30PM to 7:30PM'
- location: 'Bill’s Bar & Burger (in the Conference Hotel)'
- hashtag: libtechwomen
-
-reception:
- show: true
- venue: 'Pearl Street Grill & Brewery'
- url: 'https://pearlstreetgrill.com/'
- street: '76 Pearl Street, Buffalo NY'
- postal-code: '14202'
- phone: '+1(716)-856-2337'
- contact: 'https://pearlstreetgrill.com/contact-us'
- floorplan:
- image: 'pearl-street.jpg'
- image_title: 'Pearl Street Grill & Brewery'
- image_alt: 'Pearl Street Grill & Brewery'
- times: '6:30PM to 9:00PM'
- date: '2022-05-24'
- special-notes: "We'll be on the 4th floor."
-
-self-event:
- show: false
- url: 'https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bKuSy14npN2uq-rqE9RAEmc4nZRpn99KnU9SK8dfEQ8/edit?usp=sharing'
-
###############
# Volunteer
###############
volunteer-committee:
show: false
- url: 'https://wiki.code4lib.org/Code4Lib_2022_Conference_Committees'
- end-date: '2021-12-31'
+ url: ''
+ end-date: ''
volunteer-dutyoff:
show: false
- url: 'https://goo.gl/forms/2DkdbUUDSSOMi1f33'
+ url: ''
end-date: ''
# for volunteers during conference like MCs, mic-minders, etc.
@@ -392,21 +291,21 @@ angel-fund:
# whether to show the "donation thermometer" & Google Spreadsheet key for it
# NOTE: spreadsheet needs to be "published to the web"
thermometer: false
- spreadsheet-key: '1U-FaszOhcXxpQnfMaI9TbRfcpQfPxrogfl8zrFIVIOk'
- url: https://mxmerchant.com/mxcustomer/d/46efc4f8-1366-4943-a367-3d11cda79283/v3
+ spreadsheet-key: ''
+ url: ''
diversity-scholarship-applications:
show: false
url: '/general-info/scholarships#how-to-apply'
url-text: 'How to Apply'
end-day: 'Monday'
- end-date: '2022-01-31'
- end-time: '11:59 PM ET'
- notification-date: '2022-02-15'
- apply-url: 'https://forms.gle/tNmnqz53e7yMoBXA6'
- committee-wiki-url: 'https://wiki.code4lib.org/Code4Lib_2022_Conference_Committees#Scholarship_Committee'
- max-scholarship-award: '$1500'
- max-international-award: '$3000'
+ end-date: ''
+ end-time: ''
+ notification-date: ''
+ apply-url: ''
+ committee-wiki-url: ''
+ max-scholarship-award: ''
+ max-international-award: ''
# show sponsors for diversity scholarships on general-info/scholarships
diversity-scholarship-sponsors:
@@ -417,7 +316,14 @@ diversity-scholarship-sponsors:
# Other
################
+live-captioning:
+ show: false
+ service: ''
+
quiet-room:
- show: true
+ show: false
# Room number(s)
- location: '2212 A&B'
+ location: ''
+
+public-transportation:
+ show: true
diff --git a/_data/dinner.yml b/_data/dinner.yml
index bd3fa2a1..169af394 100644
--- a/_data/dinner.yml
+++ b/_data/dinner.yml
@@ -2,8 +2,8 @@
# - distance should start with a number
# - price point should start with a $ and then a number
-- restaurant-name: Allen Burger Venture
- url: http://allenburgerventure.com/
+- restaurant-name: Sample Restaurant
+ url: http://example.com/
type-of-food: American, Burgers
distance-from-hotel: .25 to .5 miles
vegetarian-options: Yes
@@ -11,253 +11,3 @@
takes-reservations: No
price-point: $9-$20
accessibility-and-notes: Loud inside. Smaller group number recommended.
-
-- restaurant-name: Cafe 59
- url: https://www.cafe59.com/
- type-of-food: American, Sandwiches, Vegan
- distance-from-hotel: .25 to .5 miles
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $5-$19
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Casa Azul
- url: https://www.casaazulbuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: Mexican Taqueria
- distance-from-hotel: .25 to .5 miles
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $10-$19
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Coco
- url: https://www.cocobuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: French, Modern European, Burgers
- distance-from-hotel: .25 to .5 miles
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $17-$28
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Big Ditch Brewing
- url: https://www.bigditchbrewing.com/tap-room-1-2/
- type-of-food: American, Brewpub
- distance-from-hotel: 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $12-$18
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Vice
- url: https://www.vicebuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: American, Wood-fired Pizza, Burgers
- distance-from-hotel: .75 to 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $17-$98
- accessibility-and-notes: Can Seat Multiple Groups of Six.
-
-- restaurant-name: JJ’s Casa Di Pizza
- url: https://casadipizza.com/
- type-of-food: Pizza
- distance-from-hotel: 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $3.50 (slice) - $40+ (sheet pizza)
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Dinosaur Bar-B-Que
- url: https://www.dinosaurbarbque.com/buffalo/
- type-of-food: American, Barbeque
- distance-from-hotel: .75 to 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $13-$34
- accessibility-and-notes: Can Seat Multiple Groups of Six.
-
-- restaurant-name: Sato
- url: https://www.satorestaurantgroup.com/sato
- type-of-food: Japanese, Sushi, Ramen
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $10-$22
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Taste of Siam
- url: http://www.taste-of-siam.com/
- type-of-food: Thai
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $17-$28
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Liberty Hound
- url: http://libertyhoundbuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: Seafood, Cocktails
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $17-$28
- accessibility-and-notes: Waterfront views. Seasonal and set to reopen mid-April; details will be updated after re-opening.
-
-- restaurant-name: Panorama on 7
- url: https://www.panoramaonseven.com/
- type-of-food: American, Cocktail Bar
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: No
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $26-44
- accessibility-and-notes: Inside Buffalo Marriott.
-
-- restaurant-name: Southern Tier Brewery
- url: https://taprooms.stbcbeer.com/southern-tier-brewery-buffalo-72235d6a76d8
- type-of-food: American, Brewpub
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: No
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $13-$20
- accessibility-and-notes: Loud inside.
-
-- restaurant-name: Riverworks/The Ward
- url: https://buffaloriverworks.com/the-ward/
- type-of-food: American
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $12-$24
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Amy’s Place
- url: https://www.amysplacebuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: Diner, Lebanese
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $5.50-$15
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Mister Sizzle’s
- url: https://mistersizzles.com/
- type-of-food: Burgers
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $8.25-$14
- accessibility-and-notes: Casual/counter ordering.
-
-- restaurant-name: Hofbräuhaus Buffalo
- url: https://www.hofbrauhausbuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: German, Beer Garden
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $13-$30
- accessibility-and-notes: Loud, Can Seat Multiple Groups of Six.
-
-- restaurant-name: Burning Buffalo
- url: https://theburningbuffalo.com/
- type-of-food: American
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $13-$24
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Lloyd Taco Factory
- url: https://whereslloyd.com/
- type-of-food: Tacos, Cocktail Bar
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $3.49 (single taco)-$10.69
- accessibility-and-notes: Casual/counter ordering.
-
-- restaurant-name: Taj Grill
- url: https://www.tajgrillwny.com/
- type-of-food: Indian
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $17-$35
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Britesmith Brewing
- url: https://britesmithbrewing.com/
- type-of-food: Brewpub, Pizza
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: No
- price-point: $12-$30
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Buffalo Little Lamb
- url: https://sites.google.com/site/buffalolittlelamb8/home
- type-of-food: Chinese, Hot pot, Barbeque
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $10-$37
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Duff’s
- url: http://www.duffswings.com/
- type-of-food: Wings, no-frills
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: No
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $9-$17
- accessibility-and-notes: Seating is limited.
-
-- restaurant-name: Jazzboline
- url: https://jazzboline.com/
- type-of-food: American, cocktails
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $16-$29
- accessibility-and-notes: Can Seat Multiple Groups of Six
-
-- restaurant-name: Siena Restaurant
- url: https://siena-restaurant.com/
- type-of-food: Northern Italian
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: Yes
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $13-$56
- accessibility-and-notes:
-
-- restaurant-name: Taisho Bistro
- url: http://www.taisho-bistro.com/
- type-of-food: Japanese, Izakaya, Sushi, Hibachi
- distance-from-hotel: More than 1 mile
- vegetarian-options: Yes
- vegan-options: No
- takes-reservations: Yes
- price-point: $11-$31
- accessibility-and-notes:
diff --git a/_data/keynote-nominees.yml b/_data/keynote-nominees.yml
index 3d156a34..376f40b8 100644
--- a/_data/keynote-nominees.yml
+++ b/_data/keynote-nominees.yml
@@ -1,29 +1,4 @@
-- name: "Lauren Chambers"
+- name: ""
slug: 1
bio: |
- Lauren is a Ph.D. student at the Berkeley iSchool, focused on data and society issues. Previously she was staff technologist at the ACLU of Massachusetts, where (among other things) she fought against government use of facial recognition technology and co-organized a workshop where drag queens taught anti-surveillance makeup techniques in a public library. Before that, she was an astrophysicist.
-
-- name: "Kathleen Fitzpatrick"
- slug: 2
- bio: |
- Kathleen Fitzpatrick is Director of Digital Humanities and Professor of English at Michigan State University. Fitzpatrick is author of Generous Thinking: A Radical Approach to Saving the University (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2019). She is project director of Humanities Commons, an open-access, open-source network serving more than 19,000 scholars and practitioners in the humanities. She is also co-founder of the digital scholarly network MediaCommons, where she has led a number of experiments in open peer review and other innovations in scholarly publishing. She serves on the editorial or advisory boards of publications and projects including the Open Library of the Humanities, Luminos, the Open Annotation Collaboration, PressForward, and thresholds. She currently serves as the chair of the board of trustees of the Council on Library and Information Resources, and as Vice-President/President-Elect of the Association for Computers and the Humanities.
-
-- name: "Crystal Lee"
- slug: 3
- bio: |
- Crystal is a Ph.D. student at MIT. To quote from her web site, "I work broadly on topics related to the social and political dimensions of computing, data visualization, and disability. I also conduct ethnographic and computational research on social media communities like COVID skeptics, Chinese cyber-nationalist fandoms, and data hoarders." She did an amazing paper on how COVID skeptics use data visualization practices to promote misinformation, hence how information literacy is altogether more complicated than it seems.
-
-- name: "Serena Oduro"
- slug: 4
- bio: |
- Serena has worked on anti-racist tech equity and policy issues at Data & Society and Greenlining. "Serena received a BA in History from Seattle University where she also minored in Philosophy, Business, Global African Studies, and Mandarin", and all of that background shows up in her talks. She's worked and studied in England, Poland, and Ghana.
-
-- name: "Diego Pino Navarro"
- slug: 5
- bio: |
- Archipelago is an open source repository system developed and supported by the Metropolitan New York Library Council (METRO). Conceived 3 years ago as a response to our communities’ need (New York State) to lower the technological barriers of using and maintaining such systems and our experience maintaining and developing other open source repositories, Archipelago has come a long way, from a simple idea to many successful implementations. An extensive, thoughtful planning process turned into a formal roadmap that guided the development of a novel paradigm, coded with care for and supported by a diverse community. This presentation is about multi-sided Openness, a tale of rethinking our historical notions of what domain driven systems are in our shared professional realms, of stepping back, of giving users the tools for building on their own practices, of removing ourselves (developers) from imposing preconceived shapes data and media should have. In an evolving and constantly shifting domain, we provide means that support local, identity-driven workflows, enabling exploration and iterative actions leading to making knowledge more open, for human and machine consumption.
-
-- name: Adrian Roselli
- slug: 6
- bio: |
- Based in Buffalo, Adrian is a celebrated advocate and educator on building accessible and usable websites. Heavily involved with W3C, he has served on multiple standards committees. His website is well known for his articles exploring accessibility issues with a deep analysis of the critical aspects but written in such a way that both novices and experts learn valuable insights. Committed to social justice in design and technology, Adrian has much he could share with the Code4Lib community.
+ Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.
diff --git a/_data/locations.yml b/_data/locations.yml
index cb5db23a..f0c9ae0d 100644
--- a/_data/locations.yml
+++ b/_data/locations.yml
@@ -1,14 +1,10 @@
-- id: hayes-hall
- name: 'Hayes Hall, UB South Campus'
- google_maps: 'https://goo.gl/maps/cBFP9HQXd1b5ARJh6'
+- id: sample
+ name: 'Sample Hall'
+ google_maps: ''
# only provide a URL, we make our own responsive iframe around it
- embed_code: https://www.google.com/maps/embed?pb=!1m18!1m12!1m3!1d46706.20418019159!2d-78.83873112390165!3d42.97537161235213!2m3!1f0!2f0!3f0!3m2!1i1024!2i768!4f13.1!3m3!1m2!1s0x89d373b012ee45ab%3A0x18223823e83f3757!2sHayes%20Hall%20-%20University%20at%20Buffalo!5e0!3m2!1sen!2sus!4v1645743773341!5m2!1sen!2sus
+ embed_code: ''
rooms:
- - id: 327
- name: Room 327
- - id: 328
- name: Room 328
- - id: 401
- name: Room 401
- - id: 402
- name: Room 402
+ - id: 1
+ name: Room 1
+ - id: 2
+ name: Room 2
diff --git a/_data/registration.yml b/_data/registration.yml
index 344461de..b3a49245 100644
--- a/_data/registration.yml
+++ b/_data/registration.yml
@@ -7,16 +7,16 @@
conference:
# "show" means display information on the home page and /general-info/attend
show: false
- url: https://code4lib.regfox.com/code4lib-2022
- start-date: 2022-03-01
- end-date: 2022-05-02
- cancellation-date: 2022-05-02
+ url: ''
+ start-date: ''
+ end-date: ''
+ cancellation-date: ''
# "open" means people can register
- open: true
- cost: "$195"
- late-cost: "$250"
- workshop-half-day-cost: "$40"
- workshop-full-day-cost: "$80"
+ open: false
+ cost: ''
+ late-cost: ''
+ workshop-half-day-cost: ''
+ workshop-full-day-cost: ''
limited-capacity: true
workshop-only:
@@ -28,18 +28,18 @@ workshop-only:
undecided-text: "Depending on availability, Pre-Conference ONLY registration may open at the beginning of May."
url:
# precon-only registration cost may differ from precons with general registration
- half-day-cost: "$50"
+ half-day-cost: ''
full-day-cost:
- start-date: 2022-05-03
+ start-date: ''
t-shirt-only:
show: true
- start-date: 2022-03-01
- cost: $29
+ start-date: ''
+ cost: ''
# should be one or the other: have to purchase by last-date or cost changes after late-date
- last-date: 2022-05-02
- # late-date: 2022-05-03
- # late-cost: $39
+ last-date: ''
+ # late-date: ''
+ # late-cost: ''
childcare:
# "show" toggles the child care entry on /general-info/attend, under 'Additional Information' heading
diff --git a/_data/schedule.yml b/_data/schedule.yml
index e2303ed6..4bd9149b 100644
--- a/_data/schedule.yml
+++ b/_data/schedule.yml
@@ -1,11 +1,3 @@
-# Registration
-- timeImg: 8.00.png
- title: Registration & Breakfast
- day1: true
- day2: true
- day3: true
- time: 08:00-09:00
-
## Reception
#- timeImg: 7.00.png
# title: Reception
@@ -13,193 +5,3 @@
# time: 19:00-21:00
# menu: day2-menus
# submenu: Reception
-
-# Announcements
-- timeImg: 9.00.png
- title: Announcements and Welcome
- day1: true
- time: 09:00-09:15
-
-- timeImg: 9.00.png
- title: Announcements
- day2: true
- day3: true
- time: 09:00-09:15
-
-- timeImg: 1.15.png
- title: Announcements
- day1: true
- day2: true
- time: 13:15-13:30
-
-# Breaks
-- timeImg: 10.00.png
- title: Morning Break
- day1: true
- day2: false
- day3: true
- time: 10:00-10:15
- #menu: day1-menus
- #submenu: Morning
-
-- timeImg: 2.45.png
- title: Afternoon Break
- day1: true
- time: 14:45-15:00
- #menu: day1-menus
- #submenu: Afternoon
-
-- timeImg: 3.15.png
- title: Afternoon Break
- day2: true
- time: 15:15-15:30
- #menu: day1-menus
- #submenu: Afternoon
-
-
-
-# NOTE: first-timers page uses the link properties of the first events with
-# titles like "Breakout Sessions" and "Lightning Talks"
-# Breakouts
-- timeImg: 2.15.png
- title: Breakout Sessions 1
- day2: true
- time: 14:15-15:15
- link:
-
-- timeImg: 11.00.png
- title: Breakout Sessions 2
- day3: true
- time: 11:00-11:45
- link:
-
-# lightning
-- timeImg: 3.20.png
- title: Lightning Talks 1
- day1: true
- time: 15:20-16:15
- link:
-
-- timeImg: 10.30.png
- title: Lightning Talks 2
- day2: true
- time: 10:30-11:00
- link:
-
-- timeImg: 10.15.png
- title: Lightning Talks 3
- day3: true
- time: 10:15-11:00
- link:
-
-# Poster Session
-- timeImg: 3.30.png
- title: Poster Session - 2nd Floor, Atrium South
- day2: true
- time: 15:30 - 16:00
- link:
-
-# wrap ups
-- timeImg: 5.00.png
- title: Daily Wrap-up
- day1: true
- time: 17:00-17:15
-
-- timeImg: 4.55.png
- title: Daily Wrap-up
- day2: true
- time: 16:55-17:10
-
-- timeImg: 12.30.png
- title: Wrap-up
- day3: true
- time: 12:30-12:45
-
-# lunches
-- timeImg: 12.05.png
- title: Lunch - 2nd Floor, Atrium South
- day1: true
- time: 12:05-13:15
- #menu: day1-menus
- #submenu: Lunch
-
-- timeImg: 12.00.png
- title: Lunch - 2nd Floor, Atrium South
- day2: true
- time: 12:00-13:15
- #menu: day2-menus
- #submenu: Lunch
-
-# keynotes
-- timeImg: 9.15.png
- title: Opening Keynote
- day1: true
- groupId: key-open
- time: 09:15-10:00
-
-- timeImg: 9.15.png
- title: Closing Keynote
- day3: true
- groupId: key-close
- time: 09:15-10:00
-
-# groups
-- timeImg: 10.15.png
- title: Group 1: 110 minutes (8 talks)
- day1: true
- groupId: 1
- time: 10:15-12:05
-
-- timeImg: 1.30.png
- title: Group 2: 75 minutes (4 talks)
- day1: true
- groupId: 2
- time: 13:30-14:45
-
-- timeImg: 4.15.png
- title: Group 3: 45 minutes (4 talks)
- day1: true
- groupId: 3
- time: 16:15-17:00
-
-- timeImg: 9.15.png
- title: Group 4: 45 minutes (3 talks)
- day2: true
- groupId: 4
- time: 09:15-10:00
-
-- timeImg: 11.00.png
- title: Group 5: 60 minutes (3 talks)
- day2: true
- groupId: 5
- time: 11:00-12:00
-
-- timeImg: 1.30.png
- title: Group 6: 45 minutes (3 talks)
- day2: true
- groupId: 6
- time: 13:30-14:15
-
-- timeImg: 4.00.png
- title: Group 7: 55 minutes (4 talks)
- day2: true
- groupId: 7
- time: 16:00-16:55
-
-- timeImg: 11.45.png
- title: Group 8: 45 minutes (3 talks)
- day3: true
- groupId: 8
- time: 11:45-12:30
-
-- timeImg: 3.00.png
- title: Rescheduled, Group 1: 20 minutes (2 talks)
- day1: true
- groupId: 100
- time: 15:00 - 15:20
-
-- timeImg: 10.15.png
- title: Rescheduled, Group 1: 15 minutes (1 talk)
- day2: true
- groupId: 101
- time: 10:15 - 10:30
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_data/scholarship-recipients.yml b/_data/scholarship-recipients.yml
index 6ff71b35..b3936976 100644
--- a/_data/scholarship-recipients.yml
+++ b/_data/scholarship-recipients.yml
@@ -1,42 +1,3 @@
-- name: Erika Barber
+- name: Sample Person
bio: ""
- twitter_handle: "ErikaGBarber"
-- name: David Broom
- bio: ""
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Tiffany Cheung
- bio: ""
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Hyung Wook Choi
- bio: ""
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Chanda Hardin
- bio: "Chanda is the Library Technician for the National Museum of African American History and Culture Museum at the Smithsonian Institution where she co-leads the Content Support Group for the Smithsonian Libraries and Archives User Experience Program. She has a graduate certificate in Instructional Technology Integration from the University of Maryland Global Campus and she looks forward to learning more about how she can contribute fruitfully to Code4Lib’s vibrant and diverse community."
- twitter_handle: "BiblioOsmosis"
-- name: Soojeong Herring
- bio: "My name is Soojeong Herring, and I am acquisitions and cataloging specialist at Colorado State University Libraries. I am so happy to be in the community, and I look forward to learning a lot of things and meeting you all at the conference!"
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Jalesia Horton
- bio: "Jalesia Horton is the Director of Access and Resource Sharing Services at Southern Methodist University. She received her MLIS in May 2017 and is expected to complete her Master's in Public Administration in 2022.Her work focuses on increasing access to academic libraries through innovative and updated services, user design, web design, and increased accessibility options for those with disabilities."
- twitter_handle: "jalesia"
-- name: Faezeh Jahanshiri
- bio: "My name is Faezeh Jahanshiri. I am a librarian, and work at the Central Library of Rochester. I’m very interested in computer programming and computer science, in-general, for instructional and educational purposes. I began studying computer programming a few years ago when I was attending the school of information at the San Jose State University in California while I was in the library & information science master’s program. I completed a few computer programming courses and continued learning on my own after I graduated in 2018. I have been presenting Python programming classes at the Central Library of Rochester since October 2021.These courses are designed for absolute beginners and provide a gateway to coding and programming to help them build a strong foundation in computer programming. The objective is to provide a stepping stone for library patrons of all ages who are interested in learning the basics of coding to break into the world of coding and encourage them to explore many career possibilities in the coding field."
- twitter_handle: "FJpari01"
-- name: Chenyue Jiao
- bio: "As a third-year doctoral student in Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign, Chenyue's research focuses on issues in scholarly communication. Her research agenda is to understand how libraries provide better services and make right decisions for users in a big data era. She is excited to be selected as a 2022 Code4Lib scholarship recipient because of the connections and collaborations with the Code4Lib community."
- twitter_handle: "chenyuej"
-- name: Dr Raj Kumar
- bio: ""
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Grace Liu
- bio: "Grace Liu is a Systems Librarian and Engineering Liaison at University of Windsor Leddy Library. She holds a Master of Computer Science and an MLIS degree. Her research interests include library technology, electronic resources management, and library services to international students."
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Meng Qu
- bio: "Meng is a Web Services Librarian from the Miami University - Oxford, Ohio. Her interest of coding front-end websites has never stopped since years ago. She has recently turned her research interests into big data, data analysis, and Machine Learning, with the goal of building better library services."
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Jhani Miller
- bio: ""
- twitter_handle: ""
-- name: Joah Tang
- bio: "Joah Tang is a Youth Services and Makerspace Library Assistant for the Tompkins County Public Library. He runs TCPL's children's robotics club, teen robotics club, and young adult makerspace programs. Joah is a self-taught coder, hobby roboticist, and lifelong library lover."
- twitter_handle: ""
+ twitter_handle: "sample"
diff --git a/_data/speakers.yml b/_data/speakers.yml
index 2a6d6369..a3716556 100644
--- a/_data/speakers.yml
+++ b/_data/speakers.yml
@@ -1,830 +1,11 @@
# NOTE: we've not traditionally used the github, twitter, slack, or pronouns at all
-- id: crystal-lee
- name: Crystal Lee
- last: Lee
- pronouns:
- institution: MIT
- position-title: Senior Fellow in Responsible Computer Science at Mozilla
- bio: 'Crystal Lee is a PhD candidate at MIT and a Senior Fellow in Responsible Computer Science at Mozilla. Her work investigates what she calls the “life-cycle of data representations,” or the process by which datasets are curated, cleaned, visualized, and circulated. In other words, she works on a wide scope of things: from the history of disability and human-computer interaction to theories about data visualization. This research has been supported by fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Social Science Research Council, and the MIT Programs for Digital Humanities. She is also a research affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, where she co-lead the Ethical Tech Working Group. Previously, she has worked as a visiting research scientist at the European Commission and graduated with high honors from Stanford University.'
- twitter:
- slack:
- github:
- image_alt: "A medium-skinned Asian woman with a pixie cut wearing a gray shirt and round eyeglasses with black frames. Trees and other greenery are behind her."
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/crystal-lee.jpg
- keynote: true
-
-- id: lauren-chambers
- name: Lauren Chambers
- last: Chambers
- pronouns:
- institution: UC Berkeley
- position-title: Ph.D. student at the UC Berkeley School of Information
- bio: |
- Lauren Chambers is a Ph.D. student at the UC Berkeley School of Information. Advised by technology law expert Prof. Deirdre Mulligan, she studies the intersection of data, technology, and sociopolitical advocacy.
- Previously Lauren was the staff technologist at the ACLU of Massachusetts, where she explored government data in order to inform citizens and lawmakers about the effects of legislation and political leadership on our civil liberties. Her projects included tracking the disparate effects of COVID-19 on vulnerable populations, analyzing policing budgets and practices, and advocating for regulation of government facial surveillance.
- Lauren received her Bachelor's degree from Yale in 2017, where she double-majored in astrophysics and African American studies. Her undergraduate African American studies thesis, "A Different Kind of Dark Energy: Placing Race and Gender in Physics" examines how physics and astronomy theory and praxis are influenced by race, gender, and identity. After graduating, Lauren spent two years in Baltimore supporting NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope mission as a software developer.
- twitter:
- slack:
- github:
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/lauren-chambers.png
- image_alt: "A woman smiling with long curly brown hair, wearing a purple cardigan and large lavender earrings."
- keynote: true
-
-- id: shalini-ramachandran
- name: Shalini Ramachandran
- last: Ramachandran
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Chapman University
- title: Associate STEM Librarian
- bio: "Dr. Shalini Ramachandran was a Science & Engineering librarian at the University of Southern California (USC) where she taught information literacy to science and engineering students, including computer science students. She is currently a Faculty Liaison at Boise State University's Office of Research Development. She has conducted research on computer science students' perceptions of algorithm bias and presented on the topic at the 2019 ALA Midwinter Meeting."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/shalini-ramachandran.jpg
- image_alt: "Image of a female librarian with black hair and brown eyes."
-
-
-- id: steve-cutchin
- name: Steve Cutchin
- last: Cutchin
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: Boise State University
- title: Associate Professor
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/steve-cutchin.jpg
- image_alt: "Photograph of a pale white computer science professor against a brick background."
-
-
-- id: sheree-fu
- name: Sheree Fu
- last: Fu
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: California State University, Los Angeles
- title: ECST Librarian
- bio: "Sheree Fu is the Engineering, Computer Science, and Technology Librarian at California State University, Los Angeles. She teaches graduate and undergraduate students information literacy skills. While her current research interests include information literacy, user research, space planning, accessibility, and algorithmic bias, she continuously explores how to encourage students to ask their own questions and take their next steps."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/sheree-fu.jpg
- image_alt: "Asian woman wearing red shirt and white sweater with long hair. Also wearing glasses."
-
-
-- id: jack-hill
- name: Jack Hill
- last: Hill
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: Duke University Libraries
- title: IT Analyst
- bio: "Jack is on the Systems team at Duke University Libraries, and is passionate about Free and Open Source software, storage, and functional programming. GNU Guix is the first Free software project where Jack has contributed meaningful code. When not thinking about computers, he cares about Catholicism, amateur radio, fountain pens, and ultimate (frisbee)."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/jack-hill.jpg
- image_alt: "Person very short beard, short dark hear, light olive skin, smiling with teeth exposed, wearing a bow tie and white shirt with a mottled blue and gray background."
-
-
-- id: amy-jiang
- name: Amy Jiang
- last: Jiang
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of La Verne
- title: Head of Emerging Technologies and Digital Initiatives
- bio: "Amy Jiang holds an MLS from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, MS in Computer Science from Southeastern University, BA of English Translation and Interpretation from Tianjin Foreign Studies University in China. She is the Head of Emerging Technologies and Digital Initiatives at the Wilson Library at the University of La Verne. (2012 to present) where she serves as ILS system administrator, founding director for the Wilson library makerspace. Amy has worked at Northwestern University as Digital Resources and Emerging Technology Librarian from 2004-2012."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/amy-jiang.png
- image_alt: "Asian woman with black hair and glasses smiling."
-
-
-- id: margaret-heller
- name: Margaret Heller
- last: Heller
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Loyola University Chicago
- title: Digital Services Librarian
- bio: "Margaret Heller is Digital Services Librarian at Loyola University Chicago, where she works on front-end web development, digital collections, and scholarly communications. She currently serves as President-Elect of Core, a division of ALA. Her scholarly interests include library technology community success, women in library technology, and improving access to digital resources. She also writes frequent book reviews for Library Journal and chairs the ELUNA Primo Working Group. In her personal life she enjoys taking her kids on tiny adventures and is slowly learning to play the guitar."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/margaret-heller.jpg
- image_alt: "Subtle smile, medium length blond hair that does not match my current hair, sleeveless blue dress"
-
-
-- id: eric-phetteplace
- name: Eric Phetteplace
- last: Phetteplace
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: California College of the Arts
- title: Systems Librarian
- bio: "Eric manages a library website, Koha catalog, digital archive, Moodle LMS, Panopto, & other systems. He holds a B.A.S. in English and Mathematics from Stanford University and a Master's of Library & Information Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. His professional interests include web design, automating complex workflows, using APIs to integrate disparate systems, and user experience."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/eric-phetteplace.png
- image_alt: "Smiling white man with a mustache, beard, and receding hairline who is wearing a striped collared shirt."
-
-
-- id: bohyun-kim
- name: Bohyun Kim
- last: Kim
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of Michigan
- title: Associate University Librarian for Library Information Technology
- bio: "Bohyun Kim is Associate University Librarian for Library Information Technology at the University of Michigan Library. She is the author of three books, Moving Forward with Digital Disruption (ALA TechSource, 2020), The Library Mobile Experience: Practices and User Expectations (ALA TechSource, 2013), and Understanding Gamification (ALA TechSource, 2015). She has published many articles and given numerous invited/peer-reviewed presentations on a variety of topics related to library technologies and their impact on libraries."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/bohyun-kim.jpg
- image_alt: "A headshot photo of Bohyun Kim with a blank wall as the background."
-
-
-- id: william-reed-quinn
- name: William Reed Quinn
- last: Reed
- pronouns:
- institution: Northeastern University
- title: Semantic Data Specialist
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: julia-caffrey-hill
- name: Julia Caffrey-Hill
- last: Caffrey-Hill
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Towson University
- title: Web Services Librarian
- bio: "Julia Caffrey-Hill is the Web Services Librarian at Cook Library of Towson University. She has a B.A. in Anthropology and Asian Studies from Bates College and received her M.S. in Library and Information Science from Simmons University. She specializes in digital inclusion, accessibility, and user experience. Julia enjoys coding (what else??), knitting, and spending time with her brand new son Sam, who arrived into the world January 2022."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/julia-caffrey-hill.png
- image_alt: "A white woman smiling. She has curly dark blonde hair and a glass necklace."
-
-
-- id: wesley-teal
- name: Wesley Teal
- last: Teal
- pronouns: he/him/his, they/them/their
- institution: Iowa State University
- title: Metadata Librarian
- bio: "Wesley Teal is a Metadata Librarian at Iowa State University."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: tomasz-kalata
- name: Tomasz Kalata
- last: Kalata
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: BookOps / New York Public Library
- title: Metadata Manager
- bio: "Tomasz Kalata is the Metadata Manager in the Cataloging Department at BookOps, the shared technical services collaboration of New York Public Library and Brooklyn Public Library. He is responsible for development of cataloging applications, especially related to automation in cataloging work. Before joining BookOps in 2013 as a cataloger, he was a Senior Cataloger at Brooklyn Public Library. "
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/tomasz-kalata.jpg
- image_alt: "Bearded white man wearing tortoiseshell glasses. He has fear in his eyes that a full bookshelf behind him is not enough to distract from his impostor syndrome."
-
-
-- id: alyssa-panetta
- name: Alyssa Panetta
- last: Panetta
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University at Albany
- title: Web Designer/Developer
- bio: "Alyssa Panetta has been designing and developing websites by hand since Y2K. She has worked freelance, for educational mathematics software companies and is currently Web Designer/Developer (unicorn) for the University Libraries, University at Albany. After a diagnosis of brain cancer in 2020 and subsequent treatment, Alyssa started a website where she writes letters to her removed tumor that is preserved in a tumor research bank: deartalula.com. "
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/alyssa-panetta.jpg
- image_alt: "Alyssa Panetta (she/her/hers) smiling with colorful background."
-
-
-- id: thomas-dodson
- name: Thomas Dodson
- last: Dodson
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: Southern Oregon University
- title: Web & Discovery Librarian
- bio: "Thomas is an assistant professor and the Web and Discovery Librarian at Southern Oregon University. A writer, editor, and front-end web developer, he has expertise in interaction design, visual design, information architecture, and writing for the web. Before joining SOU, he served as the web developer and designer for the Harvard Library."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: kate-deibel
- name: Kate Deibel
- last: Deibel
- pronouns:
- institution: Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine
- title:
- bio: "Dr. Kate Deibel is a longstanding advocate for accessibility and usability in library technologies. She has a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Washington but would much rather talk about web comics, chili peppers, her cat, technology adoption, and changing the world."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/kate-deibel.jpg
- image_alt: "Cartoon avatar of a quite pale white bespectacled brunette geek girl whose open downturned mouth is adamantly advocating an important point or three. A bookcase is behind her."
-
-
-- id: abigail-goben
- name: Abigail Goben
- last: Goben
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of Illinois Chicago
- title: Associate Professor and Data Management Librarian
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/abigail-goben.jpg
- image_alt: "White brunette woman wearing tortoiseshell glasses and gold earrings. She is outside and smiling."
-
-
-- id: sebastian-karcher
- name: Sebastian Karcher
- last: Karcher
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution:
- title: Associate Director, Qualitative Data Repository
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: randy-colon
- name: Randy Colon
- last: Colon
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: University of Illinois Chicago
- title: PhD Student Disability Studies
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt: "Pale, smiling female; medium length blond hair; wearing light grey dress; darker gray background."
-
-
-- id: laurie-g-arp
- name: Laurie G. Arp
- last: Arp
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: LYRASIS
- title: Director, DuraSpace Community Supported Programs, LYRASIS
- bio: "Laurie's professional interests focus on the intersection of collections, technology and people. As the Director of DuraSpace Community Supported Programs, Laurie supervises ArchivesSpace, CollectionSpace, DSpace, Fedora and VIVO, the community supported open-source programs housed at LYRASIS. Laurie supports governance, strategic planning and developing partnerships."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/laurie-g-arp.jpg
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: heather-greer-klein
- name: Heather Greer Klein
- last: Klein
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Samvera
- title: Samvera Community Manager
- bio: "Heather Greer Klein is the Samvera Community Manager. She has worked in many roles supporting open source and consortial library communities. Heather has an MLIS from Simmons University and a Certificate in Training & Development from NC State University."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/heather-greer-klein.jpg
- image_alt: "A smiling white woman with a round face, purple glasses and short, curly, purple-tipped hair. She is outdoors and there are leaves in the background."
-
-
-- id: chulin-meng
- name: Chulin Meng
- last: Meng
- pronouns:
- institution: Lehigh University
- title: Director of Library Technology
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: christopher-creswell
- name: Christopher Creswell
- last: Creswell
- pronouns:
- institution: Lehigh University
- title: Senior Analyst
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: michelle-suranofsky
- name: Michelle Suranofsky
- last: Suranofsky
- pronouns:
- institution: EBSCO
- title: Senior Software Engineer
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: karen-majewicz
- name: Karen Majewicz
- last: Majewicz
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of Minnesota
- title: Geospatial Project Manager & Metadata Coordinator
- bio: "Karen manages the Big Ten Academic Alliance Geoportal and serves as the GeoBlacklight Community Coordinator. Her research interests include the promotion of free & open data and archives for geospatial data. When she is not wrangling metadata, she composes & performs music to silent films."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/karen-majewicz.png
- image_alt: "caricature of person with yellow hair & glasses, wearing green turtleneck."
-
-
-- id: amy-ruskin
- name: Amy Ruskin
- last: Ruskin
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Northeastern University
- title: Data Engineer
- bio: "Amy Ruskin is the Data Engineer for the Digital Scholarship Group at Northeastern University. She has a Master's degree in Information Studies from McGill University and a background in computer science and statistics."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: madison-chartier
- name: Madison Chartier
- last: Chartier
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Oklahoma State University
- title: Metadata Librarian
- bio: "Madison Chartier is the Metadata Librarian for Digital Resources and Discovery Services at the Oklahoma State University Library. Chartier has a master’s degree in Library Science from Indiana University Bloomington. https://experts.okstate.edu/madison.chartier"
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: megan-macken
- name: Megan Macken
- last: Macken
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Oklahoma State University
- title: Assistant Director, Digital Resources and Discovery Services
- bio: "Megan Macken is the Assistant Director, Digital Resources and Discovery Services, and the liaison for art, art history, and graphic design at the Oklahoma State University Library. Macken has master’s degrees in Library Science and the History of Art from Indiana University. https://experts.okstate.edu/megan.macken"
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: kim-pham
- name: Kim Pham
- last: Pham
- pronouns: she
- institution: Max Planck Institute for the History of Science
- title: Research Technology Officer
- bio: "Kim Pham is the Research Technology Officer at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science. Working in Research IT group, she is involved in facilitating digital humanities projects and working on the digital research infrastructure with the Library."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: naomi-dushay
- name: Naomi Dushay
- last: Dushay
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Stanford University
- title: Senior Software Developer
- bio: "Naomi Dushay is a software engineer at Stanford University Libraries, working on a team with Aaron Collier, Mike Giarlo and other Code4Lib notables. She has worked in the digital library field since 1990 (cough). Professionally, she is interested in improving discovery of assets, maintainability of code and providing quality assessments of metadata as early as possible in its lifecycle."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/naomi-dushay.png
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: mike-giarlo
- name: Mike Giarlo
- last: Giarlo
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: Stanford University
- title: Senior Software Developer
- bio: "Mike Giarlo is a software engineer & technology strategist at Stanford University Libraries, working on a team designing and developing software for long-term access to the University’s research and cultural assets. His focus is on development and maintenance of the Stanford Digital Repository and collaboration with open source communities."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/mike-giarlo.jpg
- image_alt: "A white, freckle-faced male with blue eyes, chest-length curly dark brown hair, and a beard. He is wearing a grey henley shirt and standing in front of a light green wall."
-
-
-- id: rachel-evans
- name: Rachel Evans
- last: Evans
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of Georgia Law Library
- title: Metadata Services & Special Collections Librarian
- bio: "Rachel S. Evans first joined the staff at the University of Georgia as a web developer in the I.T. Services department in 2012. She currently serves as the metadata services and special collections librarian, ensuring the discoverability of library resources and maintaining library information platforms, including the online catalog. She also oversees the management of the archives and other special collections, including digitized materials in the school’s institutional repository. "
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/rachel-evans.jpg
- image_alt: "White female with short light brown hair wearing green glasses, a gold necklace, and a beige cardigan smiles. A bookcase and old card catalog are behind her."
-
-
-- id: jason-tubinis
- name: Jason Tubinis
- last: Tubinis
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: University of Georgia Law Library
- title: Information Technology Librarian
- bio: "Jason Tubinis joined the staff of the University of Georgia Alexander Campbell King Law Library in fall 2010. In his role as Information Technology librarian, Tubinis is responsible for researching and implementing new library and legal education technologies, and troubleshooting software and hardware problems for the library’s various systems. He leads the library's Systems and Instruction teams and serves on the law school's I.T. committees. Tubinis also teaches 1L Legal Research as well as Research & Technology Skills for the Georgia Lawyer. "
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: salwa-ismail
- name: Salwa Ismail
- last: Ismail
- pronouns: she/her
- institution: University of California Berkeley
- title: Associate University Librarian for Digital Initiatives and Information Technology Associate CIO
- bio: "Salwa Ismail is the AUL for Digital Initiatives-Information Technology and the Associate CIO. Her current portfolio includes library-wide leadership for digital strategies including digital scholarship, data services, and programs, computing, innovative technology spaces, interface design, and infrastructure services following a user-centric, interoperable, service-oriented philosophy. She was listed by Ecampus News among “11 leaders shaping the future of higher education."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/salwa-ismail.jpg
- image_alt: "A picture of a gray manatee, where the manatee is tilted a bit to the left. The manatee is submerged in blue water that surrounds it and its flippers are pointed down towards its belly button."
-
-
-- id: jackie-gosselar
- name: Jackie Gosselar
- last: Gosselar
- pronouns: they/she
- institution: University of California Berkeley
- title: Systems and Discovery Services Librarian
- bio: "Jackie Gosselar is a Systems and Discovery Services Librarian at the University of California Berkeley. Prior to UC Berkeley, they were an eResources Librarian at Livermore Public Library, where they served the public and framed access to information as fundamental to the collective good. They are interested in shaping projects that make space for all identities in an organization."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/jackie-gosselar.jpg
- image_alt: "Four rowers in a crew boat at sunrise on the water."
-
-
-- id: niqui-oneill
- name: Niqui O'Neill
- last: O'Neill
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: North Carolina State University Libraries
- title: Digital Technologies Development Librarian
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: ilya-kreymer
- name: Ilya Kreymer
- last: Kreymer
- pronouns: he/him
- institution:
- title:
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: ed-summers
- name: Ed Summers
- last: Summers
- pronouns: he/him
- institution: Stanford University
- title: Software Developer
- bio: "Ed is interested in techniques and practices for helping make the web more sustainable and durable over time."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/ed-summers.jpg
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: evan-peter-williamson
- name: Evan Peter Williamson
- last: Williamson
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: University of Idaho
- title: Digital Infrastructure Librarian
- bio: "Despite a background in Art History, Classical Studies, and Archives, he always manages to get involved in all things digital--especially websites, digitization, and digital preservation. At the library he works with Data & Digital Services to bring cool projects, enlightening workshops, and innovative services to life."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/evan-peter-williamson.jpg
- image_alt: "smiling man with long brown hair and glasses in plaid shirt."
-
-
-- id: olivia-wikle
- name: Olivia Wikle
- last: Wikle
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: University of Idaho
- title: Digital Initiatives Librarian
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/olivia-wikle.jpg
- image_alt: "brown-haired woman with bangs, smiling, wearing a blue shirt and standing outdoors."
-
-
-- id: devin-becker
- name: Devin Becker
- last: Becker
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: University of Idaho
- title: Head, Data and Digital Services
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/devin-becker.jpg
- image_alt: "A headshot photograph of Devin Becker, a middle-aged white male with a mustache and goatee."
-
-
-- id: elizabeth-james
- name: Elizabeth James
- last: James
- pronouns: she/they
- institution: West Virginia University
- title: Digital Archivist
- bio: "Elizabeth D. James is a Digital Archivist at the West Virginia Regional History Center at West Virginia University. Her research interests include using cultural heritage metadata as data for teaching, discovery, and research; non-traditional forms of engagement with digital archival materials and scalable approaches to digital preservation and repository management for small and medium size institutions."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/elizabeth-james.jpg
- image_alt: "Smiling person with dark brown hair and bright blue eyes wearing a black shirt with a bright floral print and the iconic and ever-ubiquitous archivist attire: a grey cardigan. The background is a generic beige concrete wall."
-
-
-- id: deb-verhoff
- name: Deb Verhoff
- last: Verhoff
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: New York University
- title: Digital Collections Manager
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: joe-pawletko
- name: Joe Pawletko
- last: Pawletko
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: New York University
- title: Senior Programmer/Analyst
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/joe-pawletko.jpg
- image_alt: "A round-ish male-presenting person, blue eyes, extremely short haircut, wearing black wayfarer-style horn-rimmed glasses, a black fleece and purple t-shirt, no appreciable facial hair."
-
-
-- id: michael-hucka
- name: Michael Hucka
- last: Hucka
- pronouns: he/him/his
- institution: California Institute of Technology
- title: Research Software Developer
- bio: "Michael Hucka, Ph.D., has a background in computer science and cognitive science. He has been a Research Software Developer at the Caltech Library since 2018. Prior to that, he was a Staff Scientist in Computing and Mathematical Sciences at Caltech, and worked for many years on standards and software for systems biology and computational neuroscience."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: inna-kouper
- name: Inna Kouper
- last: Kouper
- pronouns:
- institution: Indiana University
- title: Research Scientist
- bio: "Inna Kouper is a research scientist at the Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering at Indiana University Bloomington. She studies emerging technologies and data practices and works on projects that advance open science and data sharing."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/inna-kouper.jpg
- image_alt: "Photo of a white middle-aged female with short hair. The background is a whiteboard."
-
-
-- id: alex-wermer-colan
- name: Alex Wermer-Colan
- last: Wermer-Colan
- pronouns:
- institution: Temple University
- title: Digital Scholarship Coordinator
- bio: "Dr. Alex Wermer-Colan works as a Digital Scholarship Coordinator at Temple University Libraries’ Loretta C. Duckworth Scholars Studio. Alex leads workshops on computational methods of interpretation, while offering consultations, and developing research projects. "
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: suraj-gupta-gudla
- name: Suraj Gupta Gudla
- last: Gudla
- pronouns:
- institution: Indiana University
- title:
- bio: ""
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: julia-corrin
- name: Julia Corrin
- last: Corrin
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: Carnegie Mellon University
- title: University Archivist
- bio: "Julia Corrin is the University Archivist at Carnegie Mellon where she oversees physical and digital collections. She is also the project lead for the libraries' digital collections migration. She received her MSI from the University of Michigan and previously served as the Political Collections and Access Archivist at Arkansas State University."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: lina-crowe
- name: Lina Crowe
- last: Crowe
- pronouns: she/they
- institution: Carnegie Mellon University
- title: Metadata Specialist
- bio: "Lina Crowe is the metadata specialist at Carnegie Mellon University."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/lina-crowe.png
- image_alt: "Brown haired woman in a blue jumper sitting in a tea cup."
-
-
-- id: clara-turp
- name: Clara Turp
- last: Turp
- pronouns: she/her/hers
- institution: McGill University
- title: Discovery Systems Librarian
- bio: "Clara Turp is a discovery systems librarian at McGill University Libraries. As part of Digital Initiatives, she is involved in managing, configuring, and integrating selected library systems, including, but not limited to the Library's Discovery layers."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/clara-turp.jpg
- image_alt: "A brunette white woman is standing in front of a bookshelf. She is wearing black glasses, a red shirt layered with a beige cardigan. She is smiling at the camera."
-
-
-- id: kelly-stathis
- name: Kelly Stathis
- last: Stathis
+- id: sample
+ name: Sample
+ last: Sample
pronouns: they/them
- institution: Digital Research Alliance of Canada
- title: Discovery and Metadata Coordinator
- bio: "Kelly Stathis is the Discovery and Metadata Coordinator with the Digital Research Alliance of Canada’s research data management team. Kelly advances discovery and metadata initiatives for the Federated Research Data Repository (FRDR), provides technical support for the DataCite Canada Consortium, and works with several RDM expert and working groups, including the Discovery and Metadata Expert Group, the Data Repositories Expert Group, and the FRDR Discovery Redesign Working Group. Kelly holds a BS in Computer Science and a BMus in Music Composition from Washington University in St. Louis, and a MLIS from the University of British Columbia."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
-
-- id: ingrid-reiche
- name: Ingrid Reiche
- last: Reiche
- pronouns:
- institution: University of Calgary
- title: Digital Metadata Librarian
- bio: "Ingrid Reiche is the Digital Metadata Librarian at the University of Calgary. Her work focuses on digital collections, providing metadata consultation for research projects. She has recently been been working on the system migration for the digital asset management system. Ingrid enjoys living in Calgary and being outdoors."
- keynote: FALSE
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/ingrid-reiche.jpg
- image_alt: "An androgynous white woman with a subtle smile, asymmetrical light brown hair shaved on the left side, wearing a dark red shirt with a white pattern and grey/black vest. The background blurred."
-
-
-# ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-- id: bess-sadler
- name: Bess Sadler
- last: Sadler
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: ''
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: james-griffin-iii
- name: James Griffin III
- last: Griffin
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: ''
- image_src:
- image_alt:
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: esther-jackson
- name: Esther Jackson
- last: Jackson
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Esther Jackson is the Scholarly Communication Technologies Librarian at Columbia University. Esther also serves on the Code4Lib Conference Scholarship Committee, is an organizer of the Code4Lib NYC meetup group, and has been a member of the Wikiverse since 2016 as an editor, organizer, workshop leader, and a member of various boards and projects, most recently the Wikimedia Foundation Community Fund for North America.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/esther-jackson.jpeg
- image_alt:
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: dianne-weinthal
- name: Dianne Weinthal
- last: Weinthal
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Dianne Weinthal is a user experience designer at UCLA Library and 2020 graduate of the UCLA MLIS program. With a background in art history, she focuses her work on image as artwork, as visual resource, and as digital information. She also conducts visual design experiments for Civic Software Foundation and leads the grant-funded initiative "Artist Book as Record" at Los Angeles Contemporary Archive.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/dianne-weinthal.jpeg
- image_alt: "Late 20s freckled white woman attempting a professional "smize," depicted from the shoulders up in black and white against an empty wall of her studio."
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: alicia-cozine
- name: Alicia Cozine
- last: Cozine
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: ''
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/alicia-cozine.jpg
- image_alt: "Smiling female tech with glasses, hazel eyes, and shoulder-length blond-brown hair going gray."
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: hillel-arnold
- name: Hillel Arnold
- last: Arnold
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Hillel Arnold is the Assistant Director for Digital Strategies at the Rockefeller Archive Center, where he leads the implementation of systems and processes facilitating broad and equitable access to and responsible preservation of archival records. Hillel has worked as an archivist at the Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, the Foundation for Landscape Studies and the Woody Guthrie Archives.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/hillel-arnold.jpeg
- image_alt:
-
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: jim-hahn
- name: Jim Hahn
- last: Hahn
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Jim Hahn is the Head of Metadata Research at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries leading linked data and metadata projects and research. Working collaboratively across the UPenn Libraries, his work is developing a vision for the services, technologies, and policies to enhance discovery of collections, following international standards and best practices for linked data and metadata.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/jim-hahn.jpeg
- image_alt:
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: axa-liauw
- name: Axa Liauw
- last: Liauw
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Axa Liauw is a user experience designer at UCLA Library who works with students, faculty, and staff to make digital products usable, enjoyable, and accessible. With over a decade of professional experience in academic libraries, including Princeton University and Wayne State University, Axas expertise spans user experience design, web development, and instruction.
-
-Axa is a Certified Professional in Web Accessibility, a certification provided by the International Association of Accessibility Professionals. She believes that equal access to information for all people is a core value in librarianship. As a user experience designer in the library, she is committed to working towards an inclusive web as equity, diversity, and inclusion are central to the promotion and practice of intellectual freedom.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/axa-liauw.jpeg
- image_alt:
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: eric-morgan
- name: Eric Morgan
- last: Morgan
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Eric Morgan is a librarian who works in the Navari Family Center for Digital Scholarship (University of Notre Dame) where he provides text mining and natural language processing for students, researchers, and scholars. He has been practicing librarianship for more than thirty years, mostly in higher education. He has been writing software longer than that. In his spare time he enjoys binding his books, rowing his boat, and playing his guitar.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/eric-morgan.jpg
- image_alt: "A 2-bit, pixelated rendition of Eric drawn on a computer more than thirty years ago."
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: andreas-orphanides
- name: Andreas Orphanides
- last: Orphanides
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Andreas Orphanides is Associate Head, User Experience at the NC State University Libraries. His work focuses on developing high-quality, thoughtfully designed solutions to support teaching, learning, and information discovery. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Mathematics from Oberlin College, a Master of Science in Library Science from UNC-Chapel Hill, and a Master of Computer Science from NC State University. His professional interests include human factors, systems analysis, and design ethics. Outside of work, he has too many cats.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/andreas-orphanides.jpeg
- image_alt: "A line drawing of a curly-haired, goateed, bespectacled, poorly-shaven gentleman in a t-shirt, cuddling a perplexed-looking white and orange cat in his arms; squiggles and stars emanate from the gentleman's head. The background is a rainbow gradient."
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: francis-kayiwa
- name: Francis Kayiwa
- last: Kayiwa
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: ''
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/francis-kayiwa.jpg
- image_alt: "A black man with a forced smile, grin. Short hair with a blue and white striped shirt. Background has out of focus trees and shrubbery."
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: m-a-matienzo
- name: M.A. Matienzo
- last: Matienzo
- pronouns:
- institution: Stanford University Libraries
- position-title:
- bio: 'M.A. Matienzo is an archivist, technologist, and ambient musician. Their work for Stanford University Libraries includes serving as the project lead for Lighting the Way, an IMLS National Forum Grant focused on improving archival discovery and delivery, and managing a portfolio of digital library discovery and access services and systems. They received a MSI from the University of Michigan School of Information and a BA in Philosophy from the College of Wooster, and was the 2012 recipient of the Mark A. Greene Emerging Leader Award from the Society of American Archivists. They reside on the unceded ancestral lands of the Duwamish People past and present, who are still actively working for federal recognition.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/m-a-matienzo.jpeg
- image_alt: "Black and white image of a person towards the right of the frame wearing glasses and sideswept bangs looking downward. There are leaves on the far left of the frame."
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: timothy-ryan-mendenhall
- name: Timothy Ryan Mendenhall
- last: Mendenhall
- pronouns:
- institution:
- position-title:
- bio: 'Timothy Ryan Mendenhall has worked as Metadata Librarian at Columbia University Libraries since 2018. He is also active as a convener of the Program for Cooperative Cataloging (PCC) Sinopia Cataloging Affinity Group and as a convener of the LD4 Wikibase Working Hour.'
- image_src: /assets/img/speakers/timothy-ryan-mendenhall.jpeg
- image_alt: 'Timothy Ryan Mendenhall photographed at the Social Sciences and Engineering Library, Columbia University, New York.'
- keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: laura-henze
- name: Laura Henze
- last: Henze
- pronouns: she/they/her/hers
- institution: New York University
- position-title: Senior U/X Designer
- bio:
- image_src:
- image_alt:
+ institution: Sample Institution
+ title: Sample Title
+ bio: ""
keynote: FALSE
-
-- id: bryan-haley
- name: Bryan Haley
- last: Haley
- pronouns: he/him
- institution: University of La Verne
- position-title: Student Worker, Software Developer
- bio:
image_src:
image_alt:
- keynote: FALSE
diff --git a/_data/sponsors.yml b/_data/sponsors.yml
index 643045c5..dc5859f8 100644
--- a/_data/sponsors.yml
+++ b/_data/sponsors.yml
@@ -24,176 +24,17 @@
# - contributor
# - supporter
-- name: University of Pittsburgh-Library System
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/PittShield_Rule_ULS_3color_lightback.png
- link: https://www.library.pitt.edu/
- level: contributor
-
-- name: Western New York Library Resources Council
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/WNYLRC.png
- link: https://www.wnylrc.org/
- level: contributor
-
-- name: Balsamiq Studios LLC
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/Balsamiq.png
- link: https://balsamiq.com/wireframes/
- level: bronze
- annotation: 'Captioning Sponsor'
-
-- name: VALE
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/vale.png
- link: https://vale.njedge.net/
- level: supporter
- diversity: false
- transcription: false
-
-- name: MIT Libraries
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/mit.png
- link: https://libraries.mit.edu/
- #level: silver
- diversity: true
- transcription: false
-
-- name: ArchivesSpace
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/archivesspace.jpeg
- link: https://archivesspace.org/
- level: supporter
- diversity: false
- transcription: false
-
-- name: LYRASIS
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/lyrasis.jpeg
- link: https://www.lyrasis.org/
- level: bronze
- diversity: false
- transcription: false
- annotation: 'Captioning Sponsor'
-
-- name: METRO
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/METRO.jpeg
- link: https://metro.org/
- level: supporter
- diversity: false
- transcription: false
-
-- name: IndexData
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/indexdata.png
- link: https://www.indexdata.com/
- level: bronze
- annotation: 'Post Conference Video Production'
-
-- name: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library
+- name: School of Information Sciences, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
img: /assets/img/sponsors/illinois.png
- link: https://www.library.illinois.edu/
- level: bronze
-
-- name: School of Information, UBC
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/ubc.png
- link: https://ischool.ubc.ca/
- level: supporter
-
-- name: EBSCO FOLIO Services
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/ebsco.png
- link: https://www.ebsco.com/academic-libraries/products/ebsco-folio
- level: gold
-
-- name: Rutgers
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/rutgers.jpg
- link: https://comminfo.rutgers.edu/graduate-and-professional-programs/master-information
- level: bronze
-
-- name: University of Illinois School of Information Sciences
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/illinois_info_school.png
link: https://ischool.illinois.edu/
level: contributor
-- name: Innovative Interfaces
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/iii.png
- link: https://www.iii.com/
- level: silver
-
-- name: Samvera
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/samvera.png
- link: https://samvera.org/
- level: supporter
-
-- name: ByWater Solutions
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/bywater.png
- link: https://bywatersolutions.com
- level: supporter
-
-- name: Princeton University Library
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/princeton.png
- link: https://library.princeton.edu/
- level: contributor
- diversity: true
-
-- name: Rice University
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/rice_fondren_library.png
- link: https://library.rice.edu/
- level: contributor
-
-- name: School of Information and Library Science, UNC-Chapel Hill
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/unc_slis.jpg
- link: https://sils.unc.edu
- level: supporter
-
-- name: Blacklight
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/blacklight.svg
- link: https://projectblacklight.org
- level: platinum
-
-- name: DPLA
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/DPLA.jpeg
- link: https://dp.la
- level: contributor
-
-- name: Springshare
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/springshare.png
- link: https://springshare.com
- level: contributor
-
-- name: Johns Hopkins University
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/jhu.jpg
- link: https://www.library.jhu.edu/
- level: bronze
-
-- name: OCLC, Inc.
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/oclc.jpeg
- link: http://www.oclc.org/
- level: platinum
-
-- name: Developers for Diversity
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/devs4diversity.png
- link: https://github.com/pulibrary
- level: bronze
-
-- name: University at Buffalo Libraries
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/ubuffalo.jpeg
- link: https://library.buffalo.edu/
- # no level according to #conference-website slack
- level:
- diversity: true
-
-- name: University of Michigan
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/umich.png
- link: https://www.lib.umich.edu/
+- name: University of Pittsburgh- University Library System
+ img: /assets/img/sponsors/PittShield_Rule_ULS_3color_lightback.png
+ link: https://www.library.pitt.edu/
level: bronze
- diversity: true
-- name: Penn State University Libraries
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/psu.png
- link: https://libraries.psu.edu/
+- name: Index Data
+ img: /assets/img/sponsors/indexdata.png
+ link: http://www.indexdata.com/
level: bronze
- diversity: true
-
-- name: Data Curation Experts
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/dce.png
- link: https://curationexperts.com/
- level: contributor
- diversity: false
-
-- name: Carnegie Mellon University | University Libraries
- img: /assets/img/sponsors/cmu.png
- link: https://www.library.cmu.edu/
- level: supporter
diff --git a/_includes/analytics.html b/_includes/analytics.html
index 9d25402b..0f41b094 100644
--- a/_includes/analytics.html
+++ b/_includes/analytics.html
@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m)
})(window,document,'script','https://www.google-analytics.com/analytics.js','ga');
- ga('create', 'UA-98259786-5', 'auto')
+ ga('create', 'UA-98259786-6', 'auto')
ga('set', 'anonymizeIp', true)
ga('send', 'pageview')
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Actually-Accessible-Data-A-Call-To-Action.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Actually-Accessible-Data-A-Call-To-Action.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 44caf63d..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Actually-Accessible-Data-A-Call-To-Action.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T14:25
-speakers-text: Abigail Goben, Sebastian Karcher, Randy Colon
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 2
-spot: 4
-time: 2:25 PM
-speakers:
-- abigail-goben
-- sebastian-karcher
-- randy-colon
-length: 20
-slugTitle: actually-accessible-data-a-call-to-action
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Actually Accessible Data: A Call To Action
----
-In 2015, Walker and Keenan highlighted the importance of providing “truly accessible research data”: research data that are not merely available, but accessible to all users, including those with disabilities. In the 6 years since, the conversation about accessible research data that Walker and Keenan hoped to start has, mostly, not occurred. As we face exponentially growing data curation and preservation demands, it is critical to identify opportunities which improve data to facilitate use by all interested parties, rather than further reinforcing ableist practices. This presentation is both a call for, and a description of, first steps towards, “Curating for Accessibility.” We survey current guidelines and standards and the need for advocacy and representation of disabled scholars as data creators, subjects, and users. We then suggest minimal practices for truly accessible research data: 1) Ensuring web-accessibility for data repositories, 2) ensuring accessibility of common text formats, and 3) enhancement of visual and audiovisual materials. We highlight a few exemplary practices by repositories, standards, and data professionals. Our call to action: Accessibility -- in the sense of making data usable by all resusers – needs to become a mainstreamed component of curation practice, included in every training, manual, and primer.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Algorthim-Bias-Instruction-Reflection-and-Advocacy.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Algorthim-Bias-Instruction-Reflection-and-Advocacy.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 83f877b5..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Algorthim-Bias-Instruction-Reflection-and-Advocacy.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T10:15
-speakers-text: Shalini Ramachandran, Steve Cutchin, Sheree Fu
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 1
-spot: 1
-time: 10:15 AM
-speakers:
-- shalini-ramachandran
-- steve-cutchin
-- sheree-fu
-length: 20
-slugTitle: algorthim-bias-instruction-reflection-and-advocacy
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Algorithm Bias: Instruction, Reflection, and Advocacy
----
-In this presentation, we discuss our ongoing library instruction on algorithm bias to computer science students. We have instructed students about algorithm bias at three universities, with varying demographics, two public and one private. Algorithm bias is a persistent problem in the technology industry and negatively impacts people based on gender, race, and other categories. As systems that determine outcomes for health, employment, education, and incarceration become automated, the impact of machine-based bias can be felt by large segments in society. We are interested in teaching computer students about algorithm bias as many of them are going to become programmers of automated systems and search engines. We are a computer science professor and two engineering librarians. Our presentation will cover our observations gathered from instructing students and also discuss some of the reasons why algorithm bias can be difficult to root out. We argue that without a commitment to open technologies as well as external regulatory checks, algorithm bias will continue to persist within the tech industry. Librarians’ strong advocacy for inclusion and equity in information dissemination coupled with their expertise in information theory makes them strong allies in the quest to mitigate harm caused by algorithm bias.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Automation-as-a-pathway-toward-slow-librarianship.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Automation-as-a-pathway-toward-slow-librarianship.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 974f83f5..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Automation-as-a-pathway-toward-slow-librarianship.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T15:10
-speakers-text: Wesley Teal
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 100
-spot: 2
-time: 3:10 PM
-speakers:
-- wesley-teal
-length: 10
-slugTitle: automation-as-a-pathway-toward-slow-librarianship
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Automation as a pathway toward slow librarianship
----
-Automation is generally touted as a means to increase efficiency, but can it also be a tool for slowing down? This talk will explore how automating tedious and time-consuming tasks can create space for more meaningful work and how writing code can be a contemplative practice that can lead to a deeper understanding of the problems we're trying to solve.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Avoiding-Unconscious-Bias-A-Defined-Hiring-Process.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Avoiding-Unconscious-Bias-A-Defined-Hiring-Process.md
deleted file mode 100644
index cec74334..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Avoiding-Unconscious-Bias-A-Defined-Hiring-Process.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T11:00
-speakers-text: Naomi Dushay, Jeremy Friesen, Mike Giarlo
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 5
-spot: 1
-time: 11:00 AM
-speakers:
-- naomi-dushay
-- mike-giarlo
-length: 20
-slugTitle: avoiding-unconscious-bias-a-defined-hiring-process
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Avoiding Unconscious Bias: A Defined Hiring Process
----
-Hiring decisions are some of the most important decisions to be made in an organization. We present on a approach for hiring that utilizes your choice of hiring criteria in a streamlined, structured way to evaluate candidates — from receipt of applications to selections for short interviews (formerly known as phone screenings), to selections for long interviews (formerly known as on site interviews) and ultimately for determining which candidates will get job offers. Utilizing pre-defined criteria is a great way to avoid unconscious bias, and redaction of certain information before face-to-face interactions helps with this as well. A defined hiring process also makes it easier to map out steps and effort needed, reducing the time from job posting to job offer. We’ll speak about the hiring approach Jeremy Friesen invented and how it worked for the original context, and then we’ll present on Stanford’s iteration of the hiring process, how it worked, and what we want to tweak to further improve it.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Central-Knowledge-Graph-for-Digital-Humanities-Research-Data.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Central-Knowledge-Graph-for-Digital-Humanities-Research-Data.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 32e1b65b..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Central-Knowledge-Graph-for-Digital-Humanities-Research-Data.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T09:45
-speakers-text: Kim Pham
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 4
-spot: 3
-time: 9:45 AM
-speakers:
-- kim-pham
-length: 15
-slugTitle: building-a-central-knowledge-graph-for-digital-humanities-research-data
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: '[Cancelled] - Building a Central Knowledge Graph for Digital Humanities Research Data'
----
-The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science is developing a digital research platform to preserve and to integrate digital humanities research data and with library and archival systems used by the institute. The platform supports digitization of archival research materials into the library system (using Goobi) which is preserved and indexed (using Fedora, Solr, IIIF, and CDSTAR) and is linked to research data from projects in a central knowledge graph using linked data modelled with CIDOC-CRM (using Metaphacts Open Platform/ResearchSpace). This talk will discuss the use cases, design process, and challenges to create a platform to store data from multiple research projects. A short demo of the prototype will be included.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Portable-Environment-for-Working-with-Restricted-Library-Collections.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Portable-Environment-for-Working-with-Restricted-Library-Collections.md
deleted file mode 100644
index de9235e1..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Building-a-Portable-Environment-for-Working-with-Restricted-Library-Collections.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T16:40
-speakers-text: Inna Kouper, Alex Wermer-Colan, Ayisha Tabassum
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 7
-spot: 4
-time: 4:40 PM
-speakers:
-- inna-kouper
-- alex-wermer-colan
-- suraj-gupta-gudla
-length: 15
-slugTitle: building-a-portable-environment-for-working-with-restricted-library-collections
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Building a Portable Environment for Working with Restricted Library Collections
----
-This presentation will describe a secure virtual environment for providing access to restricted library collections and demonstrate how this environment can support digital humanities, using the example of Temple University Libraries’ Loretta C. Duckworth Scholars Studio's development and implementation efforts. Supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services, we modified the HathiTrust Research Center data capsule framework [1, 2] and developed a portable environment that can be deployed in any cloud platform. We identified and removed dependencies on a physical machine and specific software versions required by the original architecture and developed an Ansible playbook that simplifies and automates the deployment of the data capsule environment. We also explored the legal ramifications of research libraries using different hosting set-ups to share their proprietary data. In the presentation we will share the socio-technical challenges our project faced, including re-use of an existing framework developed in a different context, implementation of newer technological innovations, such as Ansible and cloud-native technologies, and building cross-institutional collaborations that contribute to projects’ long-term sustainability and success. We hope to engage the audience in the discussion of how the data capsule appliance can be deployed as an experimental service for enhancing scholarly research that uses modest technical and human resources and allows libraries to gauge interest and decide whether it merits additional resources. We also hope to find collaborators interested in contributing to this effort. References 1. Zeng, J., Ruan, G. Crowell, A., Prakash, A. & Plale, B. (2014). Cloud computing data capsules for non-consumptive use of texts. In Proceedings of the 5th ACM workshop on Scientific cloud computing (ScienceCloud '14). DOI: 10.1145/2608029.2608031 2. Borders,K., Weele, E. V.., Lau, B., & Prakash, A. (2009). Protecting confidential data on personal computers with storage capsules. In Proceedings of the 18th USENIX Security Symposium (SSYM’99).
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Confident-and-Ready-Developing-a-Code-of-Conduct-Incident-Response-Plan.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Confident-and-Ready-Developing-a-Code-of-Conduct-Incident-Response-Plan.md
deleted file mode 100644
index d0bab803..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Confident-and-Ready-Developing-a-Code-of-Conduct-Incident-Response-Plan.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T16:40
-speakers-text: Heather Greer Klein
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 3
-spot: 3
-time: 4:40 PM
-speakers:
-- heather-greer-klein
-length: 10
-slugTitle: confident-and-ready-developing-a-code-of-conduct-incident-response-plan
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Confident and Ready: Developing a Code of Conduct Incident Response Plan
----
-The Samvera Community is over 1,000 strong, and creating a safe space for discourse and mutual support has been key to the success of what is truly a “community.” Samvera has had a Code of Conduct for many years. When the Code was revised in 2019, participants recognized that the community was underprepared to address Code of Conduct violations. A Working Group was formed and, in partnership with two outside consultants, developed a comprehensive Code of Conduct Incident Response Manual. When we became the victims of a coordinated attack in 2020 from an online group whose mission is to harass trans* and non-binary people, this theoretical problem became an active threat to our community, thereby underscoring the importance of community safety preparedness. This presentation will focus on how the process helped community volunteers build confidence in their ability to respond to Code of Conduct violations, including proactive steps to prevent bad actors from accessing community channels; team vetting and onboarding; and a response checklist. It will highlight how the response manual helps keep the goal of community harm prevention and mitigation in mind as they collect information, make decisions, and report those decisions in ways that strengthen community trust.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Converting-Excel-Files-into-XML-Two-ways-explained.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Converting-Excel-Files-into-XML-Two-ways-explained.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 7823edc2..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Converting-Excel-Files-into-XML-Two-ways-explained.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T10:45
-speakers-text: Amy Jiang, David Raygoza
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 1
-spot: 3
-time: 10:45 AM
-speakers:
-- amy-jiang
-- bryan-haley
-length: 15
-slugTitle: converting-excel-files-into-xml-two-ways-explained
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Converting Excel Files into XML: Two ways explained
----
-In this session, presenters will explain two ways to convert excel files into XML files. My university is going through Esploro implementation for institutional repository where a lot of information is required to import using XML format (including title, department, education, etc). We usually gather data in excel format, so converting excel into xml becomes a routine task for this project. Presenters will share how they work with student workers and come up with two ways of converting excel files into XML format. One is a traditional programming approach using Python. The other is using excel built in function where non-programmer can create an XML file in a matter of minutes. Presenters will cover pro and cons of each approach and share the code for other institution to use as well.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Cracking-the-Communication-Code-Tools-and-Strategies-for-Savvy-Project-Management.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Cracking-the-Communication-Code-Tools-and-Strategies-for-Savvy-Project-Management.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 82d9a441..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Cracking-the-Communication-Code-Tools-and-Strategies-for-Savvy-Project-Management.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T11:30
-speakers-text: Rachel Evans, Jason Tubinis
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 5
-spot: 3
-time: 11:30 AM
-speakers:
-- rachel-evans
-- jason-tubinis
-length: 15
-slugTitle: cracking-the-communication-code-tools-and-strategies-for-savvy-project-management
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Cracking the Communication Code: Tools and Strategies for Savvy Project Management
----
-From system administrator to web developer, and from management of electronic resources to the curation of hoards of metadata, the names and nature of coding librarians takes many forms. And with those many different titles and tasks come an equally diverse array of projects we find ourselves involved in: regular database maintenance, emergency triage and repair, large-scale or institution-wide upgrades, etc. In this otherwise varied set of responsibilities, the importance of well-defined roles and clear channels for communication are universal keys to success. In this short session we will present a variety of tools we, and other librarians, have found helpful when managing day-to-day and long-term projects. We will also share best practices for defining what each channel is for the purpose of integrating responsibility assignment matrices/RACI charts into your teams.
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Ebooks-and-Accessibility.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Ebooks-and-Accessibility.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 723b1e9d..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Ebooks-and-Accessibility.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T13:50
-speakers-text: Thomas Dodson
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 2
-spot: 2
-time: 1:50 PM
-speakers:
-- thomas-dodson
-length: 15
-slugTitle: ebooks-and-accessibility
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Ebooks and Accessibility
----
-With the availability of eBooks in the EPUB 3.0 format, we can deliver more accessible texts to our patrons. In this talk, I'll crack open an EPUB 3.0 and show how lessons learned from web accessibility can be applied to eBooks: offering better semantics with HTML5, for example, and ARIA roles for more precise descriptions of content. Armed with this knowledge, librarians can push vendors and publishers to supply eBooks in the EPUB 3.0 format and even, if they choose, modify the code of existing eBooks to improve accessibility (allowed under fair use).
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Finding-Aids-Redesign-How-we-improved-thousands-of-legacy-finding-aids-and-upgraded-a-20-year-old-web-publishing-process.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Finding-Aids-Redesign-How-we-improved-thousands-of-legacy-finding-aids-and-upgraded-a-20-year-old-web-publishing-process.md
deleted file mode 100644
index fccf1188..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Finding-Aids-Redesign-How-we-improved-thousands-of-legacy-finding-aids-and-upgraded-a-20-year-old-web-publishing-process.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T16:10
-speakers-text: Deb Verhoff, Joe Pawletko
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 7
-spot: 2
-time: 4:10 PM
-speakers:
-- deb-verhoff
-- joe-pawletko
-- laura-henze
-length: 15
-slugTitle: finding-aids-redesign-how-we-improved-thousands-of-legacy-finding-aids-and-upgraded-a-20-year-old-web-publishing-process
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Finding Aids Redesign: How we improved thousands of legacy finding aids and upgraded a 20 year old web publishing process
----
-Our digital library team is designing a new finding aids publishing tool for archivists at NYU Libraries and five partner sites. The project is driven by three main objectives: to replace an outdated XSLT stylesheet publishing method; to improve usability for patrons; and to address shortcomings for displaying digital archival objects. In this talk we will present our work in progress on a new application and workflow that allows archivists to preview and publish finding aids along with our new design for published content. We will discuss our process for creating a data model to map EAD data exported from ArchivesSpace into JSON for use with Hugo, an open-source static site generator. And we will present our overall systems design for a suite of micro services used to automate and scale this process.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-From-Raw-Data-to-Leaflet-Maps.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-From-Raw-Data-to-Leaflet-Maps.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 46e78360..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-From-Raw-Data-to-Leaflet-Maps.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T10:15
-speakers-text: William Reed Quinn
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 101
-spot: 1
-time: 10:15 AM
-speakers:
-- william-reed-quinn
-length: 15
-slugTitle: from-raw-data-to-leaflet-maps
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: From Raw Data to Leaflet Maps
----
-The Digital Scholarship Group at Northeastern University Library has engaged in a number of projects that involve taking raw data from different kinds of sources, e.g. TEI or spreadsheets that might or might not contain explicit latitude and longitude values, and creating maps for the web using Leaflet and plugins for timelines and storymaps. One project among our collaborations is with the Massachusetts Historical Society. They hold a collection of the volumes of John Quincy Adams’s diary, which has over 17,000 entries. Hand encoding geo-references would require years of additional funding and labor. To address this, we have used the open-source library spaCy in coordination with tools for named entity extraction to produce data for maps. We will also discuss the affordances of Leaflet and why we have directed our development attention around it. Particular features in our consideration were 1) the well-documented API, 2) the intuitiveness of the code, 3) the range of plugins available, and 4) the simplicity of the data structures it likes, making it much more lightweight than, e.g., ArcGis.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Handprint-A-program-to-explore-and-compare-major-cloudbased-services-for-handwritten-text-recognition.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Handprint-A-program-to-explore-and-compare-major-cloudbased-services-for-handwritten-text-recognition.md
deleted file mode 100644
index d0271163..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Handprint-A-program-to-explore-and-compare-major-cloudbased-services-for-handwritten-text-recognition.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T16:25
-speakers-text: Michael Hucka
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 7
-spot: 3
-time: 4:25 PM
-speakers:
-- michael-hucka
-length: 15
-slugTitle: handprint-a-program-to-explore-and-compare-major-cloud-based-services-for-handwritten-text-recognition
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Handprint: A program to explore and compare major cloud-based services for handwritten text recognition
----
-Several companies have developed machine learning-based methods for handwritten text recognition (HTR), and offer them as on-demand services. These network-based services can be applied to images of document pages without the need for training on samples of handwriting. The results are remarkably good overall, but there are differences in quality and features between the different offerings. Comparing the results produced by the competing services is complicated by the fact that they each have unique application programming interfaces (APIs). The purpose of Handprint (HANDwritten Page RecognitIoN Test) is to make comparisons simple and easy, without the need for users to learn how to program with the different APIs. Handprint is a command-line application that can invoke HTR services from (currently) Amazon, Google, and Microsoft. It accepts images in various popular formats, sends them over the Internet to the service providers, gathers the results, and then annotates copies of the images to show the results to the user. Handprint includes some additional, more advanced features, such as the ability to filter the displayed results by confidence scores, and a facility to compare text results to expected (ground truth) text. This presentation will summarize Handprint and its implementation, and provide some demonstrations of its use.
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-How-Do-You-Solve-a-Problem-Like-375000-NonStandard-Metadata-Records.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-How-Do-You-Solve-a-Problem-Like-375000-NonStandard-Metadata-Records.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 5239171f..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-How-Do-You-Solve-a-Problem-Like-375000-NonStandard-Metadata-Records.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-26T11:45
-speakers-text: Julia Corrin, Lina Crowe
-categories: talks
-day: 3
-group: 8
-spot: 1
-time: 11:45 AM
-speakers:
-- julia-corrin
-- lina-crowe
-length: 15
-slugTitle: how-do-you-solve-a-problem-like-375-000-non-standard-metadata-records-
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: How Do You Solve a Problem Like 375,000 Non-Standard Metadata Records?
----
-It has been 26 years since DublinCore was released, and 23 years since EAD 1.0. What happens when your collection metadata is even older than that? As part of a digital library system migration, we needed to normalize over 375,000 metadata records that did not follow any coherent metadata standard, utilize controlled vocabularies, and contained minimal descriptive information. Using a combination of tools, including Google Sheets, Open Refine, and Python scripts, a core team managed to complete this work in under six months. This presentation will review our approach to remediation and enhancement, while looking at our strategies for when to get into the weeds, when to automate, and when to defer. We will also provide recommendations for how others can undertake similar work at scale through implementation of lightweight tools and practical analysis of technical debt and its impacts.
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-How-we-keep-a-small-opensource-community-afloat-reflections-on-GeoBlacklight.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-How-we-keep-a-small-opensource-community-afloat-reflections-on-GeoBlacklight.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 03c58a5c..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-How-we-keep-a-small-opensource-community-afloat-reflections-on-GeoBlacklight.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T16:50
-speakers-text: Karen Majewicz
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 3
-spot: 4
-time: 4:50 PM
-speakers:
-- karen-majewicz
-length: 10
-slugTitle: how-we-keep-a-small-open-source-community-afloat-reflections-on-geoblacklight
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: How we keep a small open-source community afloat: reflections on GeoBlacklight
----
-GeoBlacklight is an open-source software project based on Blacklight and optimized for geospatial resource discovery. Participants in the GeoBlacklight community come from various professional and intellectual backgrounds (including map librarians, GIS analysts, software developers, metadata specialists, applied researchers, and others), but we share a common interest in making geospatial data easily accessible to the research community and the broader public. The number of institutions adopting GeoBlacklight has grown considerably in recent years, and we appointed a Community Coordinator in 2020. Despite this growth, we are still a relatively small group and are always looking for new ways of maintaining momentum and attracting new participants. This talk will provide an overview of our current development practices, including our technical values, roadmap, and new metadata application profile. It will also discuss our efforts to diversify our community by promoting activities beyond code commits, particularly during our bi-annual community sprints. Finally, it will reflect on our attempts to establish basic governance that considers the divergent collaboration styles of our community members and the limitations of the "do-ocracy model."
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-It-Takes-a-Village-ITAV--Developing-Practical-Tools-for-OSS-Program-Sustainability.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-It-Takes-a-Village-ITAV--Developing-Practical-Tools-for-OSS-Program-Sustainability.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 8842e419..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-It-Takes-a-Village-ITAV--Developing-Practical-Tools-for-OSS-Program-Sustainability.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T16:30
-speakers-text: Laurie G. Arp
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 3
-spot: 2
-time: 4:30 PM
-speakers:
-- laurie-g-arp
-length: 10
-slugTitle: it-takes-a-village-itav-developing-practical-tools-for-oss-program-sustainability
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: It Takes a Village (ITAV) – Developing Practical Tools for OSS Program Sustainability
----
-What does it take to make sure open-source software (OSS) programs are sustainable? In 2017, the It Takes a Village (ITAV) project produced a Guidebook that serves as a reference source to help OSS programs serving cultural and scientific heritage organizations plan for long-term sustainability, ensuring that commitment and resources will be available at levels sufficient for the software to remain viable and effective as long as it is needed. In 2020, IMLS funded a new phase of It Takes a Village work, ITAV In Practice, to create and pilot an adaptable set of tools for practical use in planning and managing sustainability for open-source software (OSS) initiatives. This session will share the ITAV framework and facets (Technology, Governance, Resources, and Community Engagement) and explain how the toolkit can be used to develop sustainability plans regardless of where a program currently sits within its life cycle. We will also highlight how individuals and programs can participate in ongoing testing of the toolkit’s activities.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Lib4Code-Keeping-Archives-Useful-with-Software-Preservation.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Lib4Code-Keeping-Archives-Useful-with-Software-Preservation.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 23676859..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Lib4Code-Keeping-Archives-Useful-with-Software-Preservation.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T10:35
-speakers-text: Jack Hill
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 1
-spot: 2
-time: 10:35 AM
-speakers:
-- jack-hill
-length: 10
-slugTitle: lib4code-keeping-archives-useful-with-software-preservation
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Lib4Code: Keeping Archives Useful with Software Preservation
----
-Our libraries increasingly run on code, but what about adding code to our collections and providing the usual library services of preservation, access, discovery, and contextualization? This talk will explore how GNU Guix, a software project conceived and developed largely outside of libraries, can be applied to our own problems. Guix applies computer science research on functional package management in a way that gives people a fighting chance to understand and control their increasingly-complex computing. In libraries, many questions that patrons may have about software in our collections may not be answerable by reading a bit-for-bit reproduction of the code as it was acquired. People may want to run the code or understand the environment of other software on which the code depends. By using Guix's tooling, we can make our archives of software come alive in this way. Guix is not alone in helping to wrangle software, other projects like Software Heritage and Bootstrappable Builds, can help to flesh out the whole picture of giving code the proper treatment in our collections, so, finally, we will reflect on how else libraries can learn from, and contribute to, larger software communities.
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Living-the-UX-When-a-Web-Developer-develops-a-disability.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Living-the-UX-When-a-Web-Developer-develops-a-disability.md
deleted file mode 100644
index d859233b..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Living-the-UX-When-a-Web-Developer-develops-a-disability.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T13:30
-speakers-text: Alyssa Panetta
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 2
-spot: 1
-time: 1:30 PM
-speakers:
-- alyssa-panetta
-length: 20
-slugTitle: living-the-ux-when-a-web-developer-develops-a-disability
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Living the UX: When a Web Developer develops a disability
----
-I had been designing and developing websites for over twenty years when I learned that I had been developing a slow-growing brain tumor most of my life. After my surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy, I slowly got back to the computer, learning to use assistive technology. I quickly realized there is no better way to get to know a user experience than living it. As a user, I fell somewhere between using a standard browser and needing a screen-reader. The assistive technologies I explored were clunky and incompatible with each other, and most websites I used were a mess for an “in-betweener” like me. From HTML emails to modal windows, this talk will focus on pain points for web developers at all levels and will empower designers to fix them using real-life examples. Flexibility is an integral part of building accessible, inclusive, and resilient sites for all users along the spectrum of ability. With modern CSS, it is not that hard!
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-NightShift-Automating-Copy-Cataloging.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-NightShift-Automating-Copy-Cataloging.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 3eedc14e..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-NightShift-Automating-Copy-Cataloging.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T11:55
-speakers-text: Tomasz Kalata
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 1
-spot: 8
-time: 11:55 AM
-speakers:
-- tomasz-kalata
-length: 10
-slugTitle: nightshift-automating-copy-cataloging
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: NightShift: Automating Copy Cataloging
----
-When cataloging departments are faced with backlogs they often outsource the problem to a vendor. However, there is a better way to keep the process in-house and under full control of the library. The updated OCLC WorldCat MetadataAPI opens up possibilities to adopt a fully automated process to search the WorldCat database for newly ordered materials and perform the copy cataloging previously contracted to outside vendors or done manually by staff. This presentation will show our experiences in BookOps creating and using our copy cataloging bot for the New York Public and Brooklyn Public Library collections.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-One-Decision-at-a-Time-Reimagining-DecisionMaking-for-Democratized-Technology-Projects.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-One-Decision-at-a-Time-Reimagining-DecisionMaking-for-Democratized-Technology-Projects.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 4e5981ce..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-One-Decision-at-a-Time-Reimagining-DecisionMaking-for-Democratized-Technology-Projects.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T11:45
-speakers-text: Salwa Ismail, Jackie Gosselar
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 5
-spot: 4
-time: 11:45 AM
-speakers:
-- salwa-ismail
-- jackie-gosselar
-length: 15
-slugTitle: one-decision-at-a-time-reimagining-decision-making-for-democratized-technology-projects
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: One Decision at a Time: Reimagining Decision-Making for Democratized Technology Projects
----
-Embarking on a large, shared systems project, which was four years in the making and the first of its kind at our public land-grant research university system, the largest and oldest in the state, led us to reimagine and implement a new set of shared principles and philosophies around decision making. This talk will share how we reimagined our decision making to overcome traditional challenges we face based on our institutional structures, siloization, and existing hierarchies for inclusion - which are probably no different than challenges that most large and medium sized libraries face in just about any local technology project. The talk will describe how we as an organization unlearned our existing practices, repeatedly had to reaffirm our shared principles, and learn how to empower and support decision making at the lowest level possible, where the operational expertise resided. Rather than be bound by long-standing individual practices, we sought to design new practices that created success at a local and system level and instilled that new changes did not equal retroactively maligning past decisions. This talk will delve deeper in the “how” to reimagine, teach, and empower staff with diverse skillset to make decisions at the lowest level possible especially when they are not used to it, and we are hopeful that it will also serve as a launching pad for others to make these challenging yet vital changes around decision-making when embarking on technology projects.
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diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Opportunities-and-constraints-using-artificial-intelligence-in-metadata-creation-A-case-study.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Opportunities-and-constraints-using-artificial-intelligence-in-metadata-creation-A-case-study.md
deleted file mode 100644
index f9aa883a..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Opportunities-and-constraints-using-artificial-intelligence-in-metadata-creation-A-case-study.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-26T12:15
-speakers-text: Ingrid Reiche
-categories: talks
-day: 3
-group: 8
-spot: 3
-time: 12:15 PM
-speakers:
-- ingrid-reiche
-length: 15
-slugTitle: opportunities-and-constraints-using-artificial-intelligence-in-metadata-creation-a-case-study
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Opportunities and constraints using artificial intelligence in metadata creation: A case study
----
-Artificial intelligence and machine learning can assist in creating metadata for image descriptions through keyword generation and object detection. Project Sheeko is one such AI in the form of an open-source machine learning implementation package deployed on a local computer and designed to produce metadata for historical images. This presentation describes a test case using two pre-trained models provided by Project Sheeko to generate metadata for a sample of one hundred images from digital collections at the University of Calgary. This case study considers the technological requirements (hardware, software and IT support) needed to deploy an AI program, the time required to train a machine learning model versus the accuracy of a pre-trained model, the ethical implications of using AI programs in a locally hosted environment versus those available through cloud-based solutions, and the quality of machine-generated metadata.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Replacing-traditional-storage-of-structured-information-with-GitHub-and-Jekyll.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Replacing-traditional-storage-of-structured-information-with-GitHub-and-Jekyll.md
deleted file mode 100644
index da35539b..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Replacing-traditional-storage-of-structured-information-with-GitHub-and-Jekyll.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T13:30
-speakers-text: Niqui O'Neill
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 6
-spot: 1
-time: 1:30 PM
-speakers:
-- niqui-oneill
-length: 15
-slugTitle: replacing-traditional-storage-of-structured-information-with-github-and-jekyll
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Replacing traditional storage of structured information with GitHub and Jekyll
----
-This presentation will talk about how we were able to build a web application that uses stored data without a built in database. At the beginning of 2020, we were looking for a low barrier of entry way to allow users to create W3 Web Annotations. Annotations are stored in JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) format, a form of structured data. Instead of saving the JSON object into a database that would require continued maintenance, we looked to GitHub to give each user a personalized repo to save their JSON objects that would exist independent of the application. Each repo contains a Jekyll site where the JSON objects are written. The Jekyll site is hosted using GitHub pages, allowing users to have persistent URLs to all their objects, and providing the user with complete ownership of their content. Using Jekyll and GitHub has allowed for each site to have an automatically updating API which is used for the web application, and allows for structured data outside the JSON object to be easily accessible. This allows for more traditional access to data, similar to that of a database. The presentation will provide insights into how the system was structured, how everything interacts, along with the benefits and drawbacks.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Small-Team-Taking-on-Large-Library-Technology-Project-some-reflection-on-the-quest-for-open-source-library-management-platform-at-Lehigh.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Small-Team-Taking-on-Large-Library-Technology-Project-some-reflection-on-the-quest-for-open-source-library-management-platform-at-Lehigh.md
deleted file mode 100644
index c9208ec3..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Small-Team-Taking-on-Large-Library-Technology-Project-some-reflection-on-the-quest-for-open-source-library-management-platform-at-Lehigh.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T16:15
-speakers-text: Chulin Meng, Christopher Creswell, Michelle Suranofsky
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 3
-spot: 1
-time: 4:15 PM
-speakers:
-- chulin-meng
-- christopher-creswell
-- michelle-suranofsky
-length: 15
-slugTitle: small-team-taking-on-large-library-technology-project-some-reflection-on-the-quest-for-open-source-library-management-platform-at-lehigh
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Small Team Taking on Large Library Technology Project: some reflection on the quest for open source library management platform at Lehigh
----
-Lehigh University is one of the Open Library Environment (OLE) Initiative founding partners and was one of the first implementers of the OLE library management system in the summer of 2014. Lehigh has been actively involved in the FOLIO Collaboration since the project’s inception in 2016 and implemented FOLIO in summer 2020. We will share about our experiences of two successful open source ILS migrations, improving library operational efficiencies through customized application development using OLE and FOLIO APIs, continued involvement in the OLE and FOLIO community to help shape the system development, and how we managed to do it with a small technology team of three.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Spreadsheets-Templates-Generators-and-NO-Database-Static-Web-Methods-for-Agile-Library-Infrastructure.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Spreadsheets-Templates-Generators-and-NO-Database-Static-Web-Methods-for-Agile-Library-Infrastructure.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 2b5abc6c..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Spreadsheets-Templates-Generators-and-NO-Database-Static-Web-Methods-for-Agile-Library-Infrastructure.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,20 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T14:00
-speakers-text: Evan Peter Williamson, Olivia Wikle, Devin Becker
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 6
-spot: 3
-time: 2:00 PM
-speakers:
-- evan-peter-williamson
-- olivia-wikle
-- devin-becker
-length: 15
-slugTitle: spreadsheets-templates-generators-and-no-database-static-web-methods-for-agile-library-infrastructure
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Spreadsheets, Templates, Generators, and NO Database: Static Web Methods for Agile Library Infrastructure
----
-Do you *really* need all those databases and PHP? Is implementing that big complicated web platform *really* necessary for your next project? Maybe not--and you might not miss them at all. Many library and digital humanities practitioners are pursuing viable alternatives powered by modern static web development. This presentation offers a provocation to rethink the way libraries do digital infrastructure through the lens of minimal computing. We ask: what are the opportunity costs of traditional heavy library web platforms and what can we gain from a static web methodology? We will share our experience building library websites and digital scholarship projects using spreadsheets, Markdown, templates, and static generators. Time invested in managing servers, maintaining platform updates/security, and learning idiosyncratic admin systems, is time away from actually creating amazing projects--> Using a static web methodology to minimize our infrastructure has opened up a more agile and sustainable approach to our digital initiatives, while growing internal skills, collaboration, and empowerment. And if we can do it (i.e. librarians with no IT or developers), you probably can too, and a static web approach might be just the right fit for your next project.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-FAST-and-the-FRDR-A-story-of-automated-metadata-reconciliation.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-The-FAST-and-the-FRDR-A-story-of-automated-metadata-reconciliation.md
deleted file mode 100644
index e6604f91..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-FAST-and-the-FRDR-A-story-of-automated-metadata-reconciliation.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-26T12:00
-speakers-text: Clara Turp, Kelly Stathis
-categories: talks
-day: 3
-group: 8
-spot: 2
-time: 12:00 PM
-speakers:
-- clara-turp
-- kelly-stathis
-length: 15
-slugTitle: the-fast-and-the-frdr-a-story-of-automated-metadata-reconciliation
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: The FAST and the FRDR: A story of automated metadata reconciliation
----
-One challenge with metadata aggregation is implementing controlled vocabularies for subject terms. When metadata sources use uncontrolled keywords, how can a metadata aggregator implement a controlled vocabulary on top of this harvested metadata? The Federated Research Data Repository (FRDR) Discovery Service is a metadata aggregation service with a focus on Canadian research data. To solve the problem of uncontrolled keywords, a group of librarians across Canada attempted to map FRDR’s harvested subject terms to the Faceted Application of Subject Terminology (FAST), using a combination of automated and manual techniques. The benefits were obvious: improved metadata quality, better discovery, and an easier browsing experience. However, after two years of work on this problem, we decided to end the project. We will share what we accomplished, why we were unsuccessful, and what we think this project means for the future of cataloguing automation.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-Fickle-the-Federated-the-Frustrating-Library-Search-Experiences.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-The-Fickle-the-Federated-the-Frustrating-Library-Search-Experiences.md
deleted file mode 100644
index db1e3fe8..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-Fickle-the-Federated-the-Frustrating-Library-Search-Experiences.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,21 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T11:00
-speakers-text: Margaret Heller, Eric Phetteplace, Bohyun Kim
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 1
-spot: 4
-time: 11:00 AM
-speakers:
-- margaret-heller
-- eric-phetteplace
-- bohyun-kim
-length: 20
-slides: https://osf.io/594ft/
-slugTitle: the-fickle-the-federated-the-frustrating-library-search-experiences
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: The Fickle, the Federated, the Frustrating: Library Search Experiences
----
-Discovery layers promised a more seamless search experience than our old, clunky federated search or bento box experiences (though many of those are still chugging along). But what if a more seamless experience is a fool’s errand? After a decade of trying to understand and fix search experiences, we want to offer a brief history showing how we got to the current state of search in libraries. Have we advanced beyond silos, and when it comes to information seeking behavior, are silos so bad? We have had to adapt our search interfaces to become more personal and localized throughout the pandemic since this was the only way to reach our users. As some of these changes are likely to become permanent, we will explore how we can all share our successful changes with the larger library community no matter our search platform.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-subjects-of-linked-data-Facilitating-informed-decisions-and-securing-permissions-to-implement-linked-open-data-for-Oklahoma-Native-artists.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-The-subjects-of-linked-data-Facilitating-informed-decisions-and-securing-permissions-to-implement-linked-open-data-for-Oklahoma-Native-artists.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 42c3cfea..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-The-subjects-of-linked-data-Facilitating-informed-decisions-and-securing-permissions-to-implement-linked-open-data-for-Oklahoma-Native-artists.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T09:30
-speakers-text: Madison Chartier, Megan Macken
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 4
-spot: 2
-time: 9:30 AM
-speakers:
-- madison-chartier
-- megan-macken
-length: 15
-slugTitle: the-subjects-of-linked-data-facilitating-informed-decisions-and-securing-permissions-to-implement-linked-open-data-for-oklahoma-native-artists
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: The subjects of linked data: Facilitating informed decisions and securing permissions to implement linked open data for Oklahoma Native artists
----
-This presentation features Oklahoma State University (OSU) Library’s ongoing efforts toward Linked Open Data (LOD), using Wikidata to establish Oklahoma Native artists’ notability within the Wiki-community. The Oklahoma Native Artists (ONA) collection features first-person accounts from self-identified Native artists that document the complex history of Indian Territory, the passage of the 1990 Indian Arts and Crafts Act, and current state legislation regulating who may market their work as a Native American artist. We have been developing LOD for these artists, their exhibition histories, awards, and published bibliographies to build a foundation for researching the artists and visualizing their connections within the community as well as in publications and museums. But while LOD may help improve artists’ visibility and notability, LOD also raises ethical concerns of balancing more inclusive data with individuals’ rights to agency and self-representation online. How we work with artists to make decisions regarding data sharing is an integral aspect of our project work in establishing reliable connections and maintaining trust between librarians and Native American communities. We will discuss our communication procedures and share our present considerations, processes, successes, and setbacks in facilitating informed decision-making and securing permission as part of this presentation.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Unlikely-Allies-of-Textbook-Affordability-Python-Bookstore-Data-and-a-Discovery-API.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Unlikely-Allies-of-Textbook-Affordability-Python-Bookstore-Data-and-a-Discovery-API.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 6c4b6305..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Unlikely-Allies-of-Textbook-Affordability-Python-Bookstore-Data-and-a-Discovery-API.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T15:00
-speakers-text: Julia Caffrey-Hill
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 100
-spot: 1
-time: 3:00 PM
-speakers:
-- julia-caffrey-hill
-length: 10
-slugTitle: unlikely-allies-of-textbook-affordability-python-bookstore-data-and-a-discovery-api
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Unlikely Allies of Textbook Affordability: Python, Bookstore Data, and a Discovery API
----
-Textbooks cost too much, so our library decided to publish a webpage listing all available course books in our entire collection (not only course reserves). Our systems are old and could not parse an ISBN passed through a URL. Manually reviewing bookstore data with thousands of manual searches in our discovery layer was super inefficient, and bulk search operations output was less than useful too. I share and demo an open source script I wrote using Python and the EBSCO Discovery System API to automate the semesterly process, saving about 15 hours of staff time.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Using-Metadata-as-Data-for-Enhanced-Discovery-and-Access-of-Digital-Archival-Collections.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Using-Metadata-as-Data-for-Enhanced-Discovery-and-Access-of-Digital-Archival-Collections.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 467322bf..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Using-Metadata-as-Data-for-Enhanced-Discovery-and-Access-of-Digital-Archival-Collections.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T16:00
-speakers-text: Elizabeth James,
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 7
-spot: 1
-time: 4:00 PM
-speakers:
-- elizabeth-james
-length: 10
-slugTitle: using-metadata-as-data-for-enhanced-discovery-and-access-of-digital-archival-collections
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Using Metadata as Data for Enhanced Discovery and Access of Digital Archival Collections
----
-Archivists and librarians dedicate a significant amount of time and exercise a large deal of personal judgement when creating metadata. As a result, the metadata we create and the standards that we choose to use not only tells us about our collections, but also about ourselves and our inherent biases and values. This presentation will focus on ways in which librarians and archivists can understand and use descriptive metadata as data to create data visualizations that foster enhanced discovery, access, and use of digital archival materials, as well as the caveats inherent in such an approach. To illustrate these points, I will describe a case study that I conducted with metadata from the Alabama Department of Archives and History’s Jim Peppler "Southern Courier" Collection of negatives and photographs (https://digital.archives.alabama.gov/digital/collection/peppler) taken for the "Southern Courier", a newspaper with a diverse staff that sought to more objectively report on civil rights and social issues between 1965-1968. Creating data visualizations using the metadata allows metadata creators and users alike to engage with the descriptive information that variably is and is not present within library and archival collections and make unexpected connections and personal discoveries at the repository and collection level.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Web-archives-in-digital-repositories-Simple-integration-and-reducing-software-maintenance-footprint.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Web-archives-in-digital-repositories-Simple-integration-and-reducing-software-maintenance-footprint.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 1b4aef6f..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Web-archives-in-digital-repositories-Simple-integration-and-reducing-software-maintenance-footprint.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T13:45
-speakers-text: Ilya Kreymer, Ed Summers
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 6
-spot: 2
-time: 1:45 PM
-speakers:
-- ilya-kreymer
-- ed-summers
-length: 15
-slugTitle: web-archives-in-digital-repositories-simple-integration-and-reducing-software-maintenance-footprint
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Web archives in digital repositories: Simple integration and reducing software maintenance footprint
----
-Digital repositories can store many different types of content: images, PDFs, videos, even 3D models, but generally not other web sites. Typically, web archives have required custom server-side software (a ‘wayback machine’) and introduced additional complexities and maintenance requirements. But what if there was a media type for the web that allowed for archived web pages to be treated just like any other digital object, a file format that can be transferred and stored in any existing repository systems with minimal effort? We will present our work on such a format, which can allow web archives to be stored and fully integrated into existing repositories, loaded directly in the browser using a web-based viewer, and made searchable using existing repository search tools. We will highlight several use cases, such as lowering the software maintenance footprint by allowing institutions to convert old web sites into statically hosted (but not static) web archives. The presentation will briefly cover the format itself and its features, provide examples of on-going integration of web archives into digital repositories and cover some next steps in our work.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-Wikidata-vs-custom-Wikibases-Community-history-case-studies.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-Wikidata-vs-custom-Wikibases-Community-history-case-studies.md
deleted file mode 100644
index dd44bbc1..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-Wikidata-vs-custom-Wikibases-Community-history-case-studies.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-25T09:15
-speakers-text: Amy Ruskin
-categories: talks
-day: 2
-group: 4
-spot: 1
-time: 9:15 AM
-speakers:
-- amy-ruskin
-length: 15
-slugTitle: wikidata-vs-custom-wikibases-community-history-case-studies
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: Wikidata vs. custom Wikibases: Community history case studies
----
-The Boston Research Center (BRC) is a digital community history and archives lab based in the Northeastern University Library. Our current projects include initiatives to document public art in several Boston neighborhoods and take inventory of historical materials related to Boston’s Chinatown. We have identified Wikibase, the software behind Wikidata, as suiting the BRC’s needs for storing multilingual structured data, representing connections between entities, and providing a space for collaborative editing. In this presentation, we will discuss how the BRC has been using Wikidata and Wikibase as repositories for data about Boston neighborhoods. We will talk about the advantages and disadvantages of using Wikidata versus custom Wikibase instances depending on project needs. A custom Wikibase instance can allow for more control over editing access and data models, as well as the inclusion of project-specific items and properties that wouldn’t meet Wikidata’s notability guidelines. On the other hand, Wikidata can allow a project to take advantage of all of the work that has been done in Wikidata so far and invite wider participation. Finally, we’ll touch on the process of getting started with a Wikibase project.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-You-Got-Your-DEI-in-my-Accessibility-Writing-Inclusive-and-Equitable-Alt-Text-for-Diverse-Communities.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-You-Got-Your-DEI-in-my-Accessibility-Writing-Inclusive-and-Equitable-Alt-Text-for-Diverse-Communities.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 3b083d6e..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-You-Got-Your-DEI-in-my-Accessibility-Writing-Inclusive-and-Equitable-Alt-Text-for-Diverse-Communities.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: talk
-startTime: 2022-05-24T14:05
-speakers-text: Kate Deibel
-categories: talks
-day: 1
-group: 2
-spot: 3
-time: 2:05 PM
-speakers:
-- kate-deibel
-length: 20
-slugTitle: you-got-your-dei-in-my-accessibility-writing-inclusive-and-equitable-alt-text-for-diverse-communities
-location: Auditorium 2120 A&B
-title: You Got Your DEI in my Accessibility! Writing Inclusive and Equitable Alt Text for Diverse Communities
----
-When it comes to web accessibility, providing quality alt text for images is paramount especially regarding photos of people. This naturally raises questions about whether aspects of person's diversity and identity should be included in the alt description. Do we mention race? Gender? Visible disability? Do these aspects matter? This talk will review some of the recommended practices for providing accessible descriptions of people. How do we balance what is viewable in a photo while not wanting to misidentify a person? Do we want screen reader users to make the same mistakes a sighted person would? Can some of these recommended practices cause harm? What happens when the person in the image can provide their own self-description? Answering these accessibility questions taps into larger conversations taking place in libraries regarding cataloging, authorship, authority controls, and more.
\ No newline at end of file
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-crystal-lee.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-crystal-lee.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 662afabc..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-crystal-lee.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,18 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-speakers-text: Crystal Lee
-speakers:
-- crystal-lee
-day: 1
-group: key-open
-spot: 1
-length: 45
-type: key-open
-startTime: 2022-05-24T09:15
-categories: keynotes
-title: Crystal Lee Keynote
-slides:
-youtube_key:
----
-
-[Crystal Lee](http://web.mit.edu/crystall/www/) is a PhD candidate at MIT and a Senior Fellow in Responsible Computer Science at Mozilla. Her work investigates what she calls the "life-cycle of data representations," or the process by which datasets are curated, cleaned, visualized, and circulated. In other words, she works on a wide scope of things: from the history of disability and human-computer interaction to theories about data visualization. This research has been supported by fellowships from the National Science Foundation, Social Science Research Council, and the MIT Programs for Digital Humanities. She is also a research affiliate at the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, where she co-lead the Ethical Tech Working Group. Previously, she has worked as a visiting research scientist at the European Commission and graduated with high honors from Stanford University.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-01-01-lauren-chambers.md b/_posts/2022-01-01-lauren-chambers.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 20ecc1a2..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-01-01-lauren-chambers.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-speakers-text: Lauren Chambers
-speakers:
-- lauren-chambers
-day: 3
-group: key-close
-spot: 1
-length: 45
-type: key-close
-startTime: 2022-05-26T09:15
-categories: keynotes
-title: Lauren Chambers Keynote
-slides:
-youtube_key:
----
-
-[Lauren Chambers](https://laurenmarietta.github.io/) is a Ph.D. student at the UC Berkeley School of Information. Advised by technology law expert Prof. Deirdre Mulligan, she studies the intersection of data, technology, and sociopolitical advocacy.
-
-Previously Lauren was the staff technologist at the ACLU of Massachusetts, where she explored government data in order to inform citizens and lawmakers about the effects of legislation and political leadership on our civil liberties. Her projects included tracking the disparate effects of COVID-19 on vulnerable populations, analyzing policing budgets and practices, and advocating for regulation of government facial surveillance.
-
-Lauren received her Bachelor's degree from Yale in 2017, where she double-majored in astrophysics and African American studies. Her undergraduate African American studies thesis, "A Different Kind of Dark Energy: Placing Race and Gender in Physics" examines how physics and astronomy theory and praxis are influenced by race, gender, and identity. After graduating, Lauren spent two years in Baltimore supporting NASA's James Webb Space Telescope mission as a software developer.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Belt-and-Suspenders-Crafting-Full-Coverage-Monitoring-for-Library-Applications.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Belt-and-Suspenders-Crafting-Full-Coverage-Monitoring-for-Library-Applications.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 2797ec6a..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Belt-and-Suspenders-Crafting-Full-Coverage-Monitoring-for-Library-Applications.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,26 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: How to think about monitoring, How to automate and maintain your monitoring infrastructure, How to deal with alert fatigue.
-attendee-requirements: We expect attendees to be System Administrators of Linux based servers with comfort with use of the command line interface.
-max-attendees: 24
-startTime: 1:30pm
-endTime: 4:30pm
-time: pm
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 402
-speakers:
-- francis-kayiwa
-- alicia-cozine
-- james-griffin-iii
-- bess-sadler
-speaker-text: Francis Kayiwa, Alicia Cozine, James Griffin III, Bess Sadler
-title: Belt and Suspenders: Crafting Full Coverage Monitoring for Library Applications
----
-We use the term "monitoring" to describe a collection of components that make up a system comprised of fault detection, metric collection, analytics, visualization, and notification. We will talk about our composable system, with modular design, combining several tools to fulfill the functions of each component.
-
-We will look at how we use Sensu, an open source monitoring tool designed for today’s systems and Datadog (we will address budget neutral alternatives). Sensu is commonly referred to as "the monitoring framework," allowing its users to compose a monitoring system to meet their unique demands. Sensu provides a monitoring agent, transport, event processor, HTTP API, etc. Datadog is an extensive, easy-to-use platform for understanding your infrastructure.
-
-In this presentation, we will discuss each component of a modern monitoring system, comparing several approaches to each of them. We will also cover the advantages and disadvantages of specific tool architectures, talk about Sensu and Datadigs approach to monitoring.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Fail4Lib-X.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Fail4Lib-X.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 8ecd1ad4..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Fail4Lib-X.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,23 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: Participants will leave this session more comfortable with failing and more comfortable with discussing failure openly. Participants will learn strategies for making failure more productive and valuable, and for making their organizations more willing to embrace failure as a learning opportunity.
-attendee-requirements:
-max-attendees: 25
-startTime: 1:30pm
-endTime: 4:30pm
-time: pm
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 327
-speakers:
-- andreas-orphanides
-speaker-text: Andreas Orphanides
-title: Fail4Lib X
----
-Everyone experiences failure in their professional lives, but no one likes to talk about it. When we see failure approaching, we distance ourselves, avert our eyes, or -- if we're in its path -- brace for the worst. But failure has intrinsic value and is an essential step on the path to professional and organizational success. And since it’s inevitable, we ought to learn how to look back on our failures to derive value from them, and how to look ahead so that our past failures can inform our future successes.
-
-Fail4Lib is the perennial Code4Lib preconference dedicated to discussing and coming to terms with the failures that we all encounter in our professional lives. It is a safe space for us to explore failure, to talk about our own experiences with failure, and to encourage enlightened risk taking. The goal of Fail4Lib is for participants – and their organizations – to get better at failing gracefully, so that when we do fail, we do so in a way that moves us forward. And in a year with plenty of failure to reflect on, the ability to make the most of failure is a valuable asset. First-timers and Fail4Lib veterans are welcome!
-
-This year, Fail4Lib celebrates ten years of celebrating failure. I hope you'll join us.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Getting-the-most-out-of-Wikibase4Lib.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Getting-the-most-out-of-Wikibase4Lib.md
deleted file mode 100644
index cd5e965d..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Getting-the-most-out-of-Wikibase4Lib.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: Participants will learn about using Docker Desktop and thereafter how to install, configure and use a Wikibase instance using Docker.
-attendee-requirements: Attendees should have a working computer, be comfortable working on the command line, and have conceptual understanding of SPARQL, the basis for the Wikibase query service. To participate, bring a laptop (and a power cord) with Docker for Desktop installed and updated to the latest version.
-max-attendees: 15
-startTime: 9:00am
-endTime: 12:00pm
-time: am
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 402
-speakers:
-- timothy-ryan-mendenhall
-- jim-hahn
-- esther-jackson
-speaker-text: Timothy Ryan Mendenhall, Jim Hahn, Esther Jackson
-title: Getting the most out of Wikibase4Lib
----
-This three hour session will provide an introduction to getting Wikibase, the software that powers Wikidata, configured on your local machine by way of Docker Desktop. The session includes an accessible and newbie friendly introduction to using Docker on your laptop, followed by a necessary (though not overly technical) delineation of the unique technology stack that makes up the Wikibase linked data system.
-
-After we have walked through the Wikibase installation steps, we will provide an overview of features and functionality of a local Wikibase. The following configuration tasks will be covered: account management features -- including adding users; importing items and properties from Wikidata; a demonstration of configuring and using the Wikibase query service; using OpenRefine with arbitrary Wikibase installs; recent advances in federated property use by the Wikibase ecosystem. This session will make use of the latest Wikibase Docker install documentation: Wikibase/Docker - MediaWiki.
-
-The final hour of the workshop will be reserved for independent work, question and answer time, and general troubleshooting for your newly installed Wikibase instance!
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Including-and-Unleashing-Everyone-Facilitation-with-Liberating-Structures.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Including-and-Unleashing-Everyone-Facilitation-with-Liberating-Structures.md
deleted file mode 100644
index d11213c9..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Including-and-Unleashing-Everyone-Facilitation-with-Liberating-Structures.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,24 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: Participants will learn about five specific methods from Liberating Structures that can be adapted to a variety of contexts. We will also provide some additional context on how to facilitate effectively. Participants will receive a copy of all presentation materials for reuse under a Creative Commons license.
-attendee-requirements: There are no prerequisites, but we’d ask any attendees to stay for the whole workshop, and to bring paper and a writing implement.
-max-attendees: 25
-startTime: 9:00am
-endTime: 12:00pm
-time: am
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 401
-speakers:
-- m-a-matienzo
-- hillel-arnold
-speaker-text: M.A. Matienzo, Hillel Arnold
-title: Including and Unleashing Everyone: Facilitation with Liberating Structures
----
-Including everyone in a collaborative project can be a challenge in technology, as well as in many other fields. People may self-select out of conversations if they’re unsure that they can contribute. If you’re a manager or project leader, it can also feel intimidating to get people to start thinking and sharing ideas. What can we do to get people unstuck from those uncomfortable silences to be engaged, curious, and excited about the future?
-
-This workshop will focus on introducing participants to [Liberating Structures](https://www.liberatingstructures.com/), a facilitation methodology designed to include and unleash everyone. Using a series of 33 methods that can be sequenced and adapted to a variety of contexts, Liberating Structures provides a balance between freedom and structure to provide space for new ideas to grow and develop. The workshop will focus on about five specific methods from Liberating Structures, and participants will learn the methods in a hands-on setting by participating in the methods themselves.
-
-The workshop’s facilitators each have experience facilitating Liberating Structures sessions in their own institutions, and learned more by serving as facilitators on the IMLS-funded [Lighting the Way project](https://lightingtheway.stanford.edu/). Lighting the Way applied Liberating Structures to get participants to imagine futures for archival discovery and delivery, and to identify strategic opportunities and challenges. We’re excited to bring these methods to the Code4lib community through learning through doing, and to help build an informal network of other facilitators.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Introduction-to-Figma.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Introduction-to-Figma.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 55a9e571..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Introduction-to-Figma.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,32 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: Figma 101. What Figma is, why you would want to use it, and how to integrate it into the current workflow.
-attendee-requirements:
-max-attendees: 20
-startTime: 1:30pm
-endTime: 4:30pm
-time: pm
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 328
-speakers:
-- axa-liauw
-- dianne-weinthal
-speaker-text: Axa Liauw, Dianne Weinthal
-title: Introduction to Figma
----
-In this half-day workshop, we will introduce you to Figma, a collaborative interface design tool. We will cover:
-
-- What is Figma? Why would I use it?
-- How can I integrate it into my current workflow?
-- Figma 101
- - Introduction to the interface and useful keyboard shortcuts
- - Frames, layers, and auto-layout
- - Components, variants, styles, and libraries
- - Commenting, sharing, and prototyping
- - Useful plugins
- - Figma Mirror
-
-No previous experience with design is necessary. All are welcome.
diff --git a/_posts/2022-05-23-Modern-Alchemy-Turning-data-into-information.md b/_posts/2022-05-23-Modern-Alchemy-Turning-data-into-information.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 718fa3ef..00000000
--- a/_posts/2022-05-23-Modern-Alchemy-Turning-data-into-information.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
----
-layout: presentation
-type: workshop
-categories: workshops
-full: false
-learning-outcomes: Participants will learn of an additional way to turn data into information -- modern alchemy.
-attendee-requirements: Attendees need to bring their own laptop computer. The need to be amenable to working from the command line, and a working version of Python 3.x needs to be installed on their computer.
-max-attendees: 12
-startTime: 1:30pm
-endTime: 4:30pm
-time: pm
-location: hayes-hall
-room: 401
-speakers:
-- eric-morgan
-speaker-text: Eric Morgan
-title: Modern Alchemy: Turning data into information
----
-In this hands-on workshop participants will first learn how to use a system called the Distant Reader to transform sets of unstructured data (like journal articles) into structured data affectionally called "study carrels". These data sets are amenable to analysis by both people as well as computers. Second, participants will learn how to use a Python-based command-line tool (the Reader Toolbox) to apply text mining and natural language processing tasks against the structured data. These processess include things such as feature extraction, concordancing, topic modeling, full text indexing, semantic indexing, network analysis, etc. In the end, participants will learn of an additional way to turn data into information -- modern alchemy.
diff --git a/assets/_scss/_homepage.scss b/assets/_scss/_homepage.scss
index c563da83..791c03d8 100644
--- a/assets/_scss/_homepage.scss
+++ b/assets/_scss/_homepage.scss
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
}
#conferenceInfo {
- background-color: $primary;
+ background-color: $princeton-orange;
h1 {
background-color: fade-out($primary-light, .35);
diff --git a/assets/_scss/_variables.scss b/assets/_scss/_variables.scss
index efdee888..2d50c488 100644
--- a/assets/_scss/_variables.scss
+++ b/assets/_scss/_variables.scss
@@ -7,6 +7,7 @@ $transparent: transparent !important;
//== Colors
+$princeton-orange: #e77500;
$cultured-white: #F5F5F5;
$white: #fff !default;
$gray-100: #f8f9fa !default;
@@ -39,7 +40,7 @@ $gray-lighter: $gray-200 !default; // #eee
//End of gray setting
-$primary: #002673;
+$primary: #050505;
$primary-dark: darken($primary, 10%) !default;
$primary-light: lighten($primary, 10%) !default;
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-
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--- a/assets/img/theme-images/flag_of_buffalo_ny.svg
+++ /dev/null
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-
-
-
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diff --git a/general-info/accessibility.html b/general-info/accessibility.html
index c61acb42..b5deab88 100644
--- a/general-info/accessibility.html
+++ b/general-info/accessibility.html
@@ -37,11 +37,12 @@
- During the general conference, Code4Lib {{site.data.conf.year}} will feature live captioning by "20/20 Captioning". In order to improve the quality of this service, we ask everyone to speak slowly and clearly so the captioning service is able to accurately capture what you say. Any prerecorded sessions or talks will also be live captioned. + During the general conference, Code4Lib {{site.data.conf.year}} will feature live captioning by {{site.data.conf.live-captioning.service}}. In order to improve the quality of this service, we ask everyone to speak slowly and clearly so the captioning service is able to accurately capture what you say. Any prerecorded sessions or talks will also be live captioned. {% if site.data.conf.closed-captioning.show %} Attendees, both local and remote, may view the text stream at: {{site.data.conf.closed-captioning.url}}. @@ -50,6 +51,10 @@
Code4Lib encourages all of its presenters to produce and deliver accessible talks. A guide to accessible presentations will be available soon. Towards this efforts, we have collected a body of advice and best practices:
- C4L Accessible Presenting Guide + Code4Lib Accessible Presenting Guide
Generally, the line of the microphone should always point towards your mouth and nose. For a handheld mic, hold it like a candy bar or at a 45 degree angle. Position a podium mic towards you.
-Desk microphones are built into every seat in the main conference venue for Q&A with presenters.
+ @@ -128,29 +132,11 @@Public transit in Buffalo, including the options between the conference hotels and venue, provide several options for riders with disabilities. For further details see the NFTA Special Services - Accessibility website.
- -For more information about the accessibility of public transit in the Princeton area, see the accessibility sites of New Jersey Transit and Amtrak.
+ {% else %} +More information forthcoming.
+ {% endif %}For this year’s conference, the stream will utilize Zoom to feed into YouTube. Due to this, two parts of the screen will have added content in them:
- -We advise that presenters leave some open space in these areas to avoid any content being obscured. On a 16:9 presentation (13.33 inches by 7.5 inches), the size of the areas to keep clear (including some open spacing) are:
+Any specific accessibility considerations for the {{site.data.conf.year}} conference will be mentioned here.
+All presenters are encouraged to share their slides, ideally with some lead time before you present. We recommend this approach for sharing them.
Attendance will be subject to Princeton's visitor policy. The policy requires that visitors to campus be fully vaccinated, show proof of a recent negative Covid-19 test, or wearing a face covering at all times inside campus buildings.
+ {% if site.data.registration.workshop-only.show-button %}For 2022, there are two options for participating remotely.
+For {{site.data.conf.year}}, there are two options for participating remotely.
- We are thrilled to let you know of a new funding opportunity we’ve just learned about for attending Code4Lib 2022! The DPOE-N (Digital Preservation Outreach & Education Network) has funding left for this academic year. They are willing to support attendees of the Code4Lib Conference. The maximum amount is $2,500 for each application. If you are considering coming to Buffalo for to the conference next month, but funding has been an issue, please consider applying. -
-- Even if you have already registered and paid for everything yourself, you can STILL apply for the funding. Once your application is approved, you will be reimbursed for your costs. The total processing time is about 4 - 6 weeks. -
-- Only U.S. citizens and residents can apply. You will need to submit a W-9 form for income tax purposes. -
-- For more information and to submit an application for funding, please visit: https://www.dpoe.network/professional-development-support. You can directly contact DPOE-N (Natalie Baur: nbaur@pratt.edu) with any questions. -
-- The Scholarship Committee is pleased to announce the - Code4Lib {{year}} Conference Diversity Scholarship awardees. - Through the generosity of our - sponsors and the Code4lib community we were able to - award {{ site.data.scholarship-recipients|size }} - scholarships to defray costs associated with attending - the conference. We received a large number of applications - from highly qualified candidates this year, and it was a - humbling experience for the committee to select just - {{ site.data.scholarship-recipients|size }} awardees. - Congratulations to all Code4Lib scholarship recipients! + The Scholarship Committee is pleased to announce that the application for Code4Lib 2023 conference Diversity Scholarship is open now. The deadline to submit your application is Friday, January 13, 2023.
- -+ Sponsor list being updated. +
+ {% assign sponsors = site.data.sponsors | where: "diversity", true %}- Submit your application materials via the Code4Lib online form: {{ site.data.conf.diversity-scholarship-applications.apply-url }} + To apply, please fill out the google form at https://forms.gle/m3ePcbbCRiYNts2s6
- Applications for scholarship are not currently being collected. When we are accepting applications, this site will detail what is required. + To apply, please fill out the google form at https://forms.gle/m3ePcbbCRiYNts2s6
{% endif %}- Due to the nature of hosting this conference on campus, in {{ site.data.conf.year }} there will not be a centralized hotel location. - The Local Planning Committee has secured small blocks of rooms at nearby hotels at modestly discounted rates. - Hotel registration information (including online booking links and discount codes) will be sent directly via email to all registered attendees. + Due to the nature of hosting this conference on campus, in {{ site.data.conf.year }} there will not be a centralized hotel location. The hotels closest to Princeton University are:
- {%- comment -%} Buffalo hotels, slight indent for section {%- endcomment -%} + {%- comment -%} Princeton hotels, slight indent for section {%- endcomment -%}
- Wyndham Garden Buffalo Downtown
- 125 High Street
- Buffalo, New York 14203
- (716) 845-0112
- Code4lib Attendee Rate: $108/night plus applicable taxes
- Reservation Deadline: Saturday, April 23, 2022
+ Nassau Inn
+ 10 Palmer Square
+ Princeton, NJ 08542
+ (609) 921-7500
+ https://nassauinn.com/
- Embassy Suites Buffalo
- 200 Delaware Avenue
- Buffalo, NY 14202
- (716) 842-1000
- Code4lib Attendee Rate: $169/night plus applicable taxes
- Reservation Deadline: Saturday, April 23, 2022
+ Peacock Inn
+ 20 Bayard Lane
+ Princeton, NJ 08540
+ (609) 924-1707
+ https://www.peacockinn.com/
Embassy Suites reservations come with complimentary made to order breakfasts each morning, and an evening reception for all guests. Valet parking is available for overnights guests, the current rate is $25/night.
- Aloft Buffalo Downtown
- 500 Pearl St
- Buffalo, NY 14202
- (716) 849-7280
- Code4lib Attendee Rate: $179/night plus applicable taxes
- Reservation Deadline: Thursday, April 21, 2022
+ Hyatt Regency Princeton
+ 102 Carnegie Center
+ Princeton, NJ 08540
+ (609) 987-1234
+ https://www.hyatt.com/en-US/hotel/new-jersey/hyatt-regency-princeton/princ
+
+ Chauncey Conference Center
+ One Chauncey Road
+ Princeton, NJ 08541
+ (609) 921-3600
+ https://www.acc-chaunceyconferencecenter.com/accommodations
+
+ Residence Inn Princeton at Carnegie Center
+ 3563 US Highway 1
+ Princeton, NJ 08540
+ (609) 799-0550
+ https://www.marriott.com/en-us/hotels/ttnww-residence-inn-princeton-at-carnegie-center/overview
+
+ Hyatt Place Princeton
+ 3565 US Highway 1
+ Princeton, NJ 08540
+ (609) 720-0200
+ https://www.hyatt.com/en-US/hotel/new-jersey/hyatt-place-princeton/ewrzp
- For information regarding local public transit options, driving directions, and parking availability, please consult the Jacobs School Facilities Planning and Management "Commuting" help page. -
-Don't forget your conference name tag and lanyard!
Using technology:
@@ -135,7 +135,7 @@None available at $1,500
+2 available at $1,500
To facilitate universal participation and access to conference content, real-time live transcription and closed captioning of all presentations, lightning talks, and announcements at the annual Code4Lib conference will be included with the webstream, along with full transcription after the fact to accompany recordings. Sponsor benefits will include:
@@ -263,7 +263,7 @@1 available at $1,500
+2 available at $1,500
Each day of the annual Code4Lib conference will be shared on the Code4Lib YouTube Channel. After the conference has ended, the videos will be reviewed, re-captioned and edited (as needed), and a closing screen with a Thank You to the Sponsor will be added to the end of each video. Sponsor benefits include:
@@ -282,47 +282,26 @@- 5 Break Sponsors at $2,000 - 3 Breakfast Sponsors at $3,000 - 2 Lunch Sponsors at $4,000 + 4 available at $1,500
Each year, almost 20% of our attendees identify that they have dietary needs that we need to be aware of and accommodate. This includes vegan or vegetarian diets, allergies and/or sensitivities to gluten, dairy, nuts, and so much more. The Code4Lib community is committed to providing meals to all of our conference attendees so everyone is included in the dining events. There is a cost to ensuring that everyone’s needs are met. This sponsorship will be used to provide meals and ensure accurate labeling that accommodates each of our attendee’s needs. Sponsor benefits will include:
1 available at $2,000
-- This sponsorship opportunity ensures that individuals with mobility needs (wheelchair accessibility, door-to-door assistance, etc.) face fewer barriers when participating in C4L events. Transportation options may include shuttle buses and/or metro rail cards, as needed. Sponsor benefits will include: -
-None available at $1,500
+10 available at $2,000
*Note: Funds have carried over from previous conferences and we have the majority of our Diversity Scholarships already funded for this year.
These scholarships provide travel costs and conference fees for qualified applicants from groups typically underrepresented at the conference, including international attendees, transgender people, and underrepresented ethnic and racial groups. Applicants must be interested in actively contributing to the mission and goals of the Code4Lib Conference. Sponsor benefits will include: @@ -348,13 +327,12 @@
Tables in a high-traffic area provide organizations, projects, and vendors a chance to interact with the Code4lib community on-site, and visibility throughout the conference. Participants will be able to visit tables during the morning and afternoon breaks, lunches, breakout sessions, and immediately following daily sessions. General sponsors are encouraged to also get exhibitor tables.
+Tables in a high-traffic area provide organizations, projects, and vendors a chance to interact with the Code4lib community on-site, and visibility throughout the conference. Participants will be able to visit tables during the morning and afternoon breaks, lunches, breakout sessions, and immediately following daily sessions. General sponsors are encouraged to also get exhibitor tables. Exhibitor Tables include one complimentary conference registration.