Prism Blog

Talis Prism 3 – Latest live sites

Wolverhampton Libraries catalogueIn the past month or so, we have seen six libraries go live with Talis Prism 3. Wolverhampton Libraries went live with their Talis designed catalogue, matching the design they have adopted for their community information system. Duncan Fellows explains, “We went with the Talis Design service as we did not have the in-house skills. I gave them a very open brief as we wanted to give them the freedom to do what they are good at, design. Having the same design [as Talis Engage] and using corporate colours will hopefully mean the products are instantly recognisable as ours.”

East Lothian Library Service has gone straight-to-live with their new catalogue, automatically redirecting all traffic from the old Prism 2 URL through to the new site. The homepage now includes a number of new features, all designed with the user in mind. Quick links to other parts of the library service, a bestsellers list for the current month and latest library news can all be accessed from the catalogue homepage. Donna Duff, Acting Senior Librarian (Adult Services) explains – “Users of the new catalogue will have access to the catalogue’s enriched content which offers book jackets, synopsis notes, CD track listings and DVD information. This allows us to showcase our collections and stock holdings in a much more visual and dynamic way.

North Yorkshire library service and Trafford Libraries are both parallel running their new catalogues alongside their previous ones to get feedback from the public and staff alike.

On the academic customer side, the University of Portsmouth and Birmingham City University are both now live, parallel running alongside their Talis Prism 2 catalogue. Both Portsmouth and BCU designed their own catalogue, giving them a clean look and intuitive navigation.

Looking at the Google Analytics, we can see that so far this year there have been over 1.6 million online visitors to Talis Prism 3 catalogues. These visits have resulted in over 9.1 million individual page impressions. We also saw that across all catalogues, Talis Prism 3 was accessed from a total of 187 different countries. As the status monitor shows, all this has been possible with only four minutes of downtime so far this year.

Watch the latest Talis Prism Development webinar

If you were unable to attend one of our recent Prism 3 update webinars, then catch up on latest developments by watching the recording below or by downloading the video.

The agenda for this webinar was:

  • Roadmap
  • General update
  • Admin console
  • Talis Library Ideas
  • Next release
  • Semantic Data Model
  • Questions

[podcast format=”video”]http://talis-videos.s3.amazonaws.com/prism_webinar_070211.mp4[/podcast]

Prism 3 Release Preview – 11 February 2011

We’re pleased to announce that we’ve just released the latest version of Talis Prism 3 for everyone to preview. This is a big release with lots of great new features, the most notable are:

  • View loan history (beta)
  • “My Account” redesign
  • Choice of jacket image supplier
  • Linked data API
  • New breadcrumb trail
  • Display of “in transit” items
  • An alternative to “no image available”

We’ve also undertaken some “under the bonnet” work to support a lot of exciting developments we’ve got planned for the next year and beyond.

This release also contains some other changes and a small fix:

  • Additional fields included on the feedback page
  • Year facet is now sorted in descending order
  • Fix for a bug in the facet system where values with no corresponding results in a search were being displayed

My Account/View Loan History

The most visible change in this release is the “My Account” redesign that Matt blogged about in December. The new design splits different pieces of data into their own sections and simplifies some of the most common workflows we’ve identified analysing log files. A very common operation is renewing all loans, which is now possible in a single click with the “Renew all” button.

We’ve also looked at the data displayed to users and made a few tweaks, including humanised dates and displaying ILL statuses as text descriptions rather than code numbers.

A new section has been added to allow users to view a history of their past loans; these can be paged through and sorted by title, author or date borrowed. We’ve also added book jackets to serve as a visual “aide memoire” when browsing the list.

Developing Loan History has required a new release of “Local Data Services” (LDS) so we’re going to BETA test it with a handful of customers to ensure everything is working before performing a full rollout. Once the new version of LDS goes to general release and your system is upgraded, Prism 3 will start showing the “Loan History” tab.

Choice of jacket image supplier/Alternative to “no image available”

To increase the coverage for jacket images, we’ve been talking with several providers to augment the current offering. We’re in the final stages of these conversations at the moment and as soon as they are concluded we can enable them with the work we’ve undertaken.

In tandem with this effort, we devoted effort to an idea posted by City of London libraries on Talis Library Ideas: An alternative to the default “No Image Available”. It’s now possible to upload your own images that will be displayed if no cover image can be found. These need to be a particular size and named in a certain way so that we can detect that you’ve uploaded them:

The files should be named

no-image-small.[ext]

and

no-image-medium.[ext]

where [ext] is one of gif, png or jpg, e.g. no-image-small.jpg. We suggest keeping the size of the small image at 75×100 pixels, and the medium at 150×200 pixels.

These files can then be uploaded using the Talis Admin Console.

Linked data API

Allowing greater access to the curated data in your catalogues was a central reason for developing the Linked Data API and with this release you can now surface search results and item pages in a variety of machine-readable formats. The API will also allow richer extensions that are able to tap into more of the underlying data that drives Prism 3.

To view search results as RSS 1.0, you need to add .rss to the end of “/items”, e.g.:

http://prism.talis.com/demo/leicestershire/items.rss?query=Lost+Symbol

Any search can be surfaced in this way, so you could provide RSS feeds of new releases in particular genres; your users can then subscribe to these, allowing them to be informed when something they may be interested in borrowing becomes available.

The RSS icon now also appears in the browser address bar on every search results page; users can click this to capture their search as an RSS feed, allowing them to monitor updates to those results.

The RSS icon in Firefox

The RSS icon in Firefox

The RSS icon in Internet Explorer

The RSS icon in Internet Explorer (lower right hand side of image)

To fetch the details of a particular item in a variety of formats you just append the output type after the local control number, e.g.:

http://prism.talis.com/demo/southwark/items/638126.rdf

The supported output formats are: RDF/XML (.rdf), JSON (.json), N-Triples (.nt) and Turtle (.ttl).

Display of “in transit” items

Another Talis Library Ideas suggestion that we’ve completed for this release is flagging up when an item is in transit/between locations. This feature is also reliant on the new version of LDS, so will also be tested by a small group of libraries before going to general release.

New breadcrumb trail

At a Prism 3 user day last year, the University of Derby mentioned that it would be useful if individual facets could be removed from a search in progress, without having to go back several steps. We set about looking at different ways to present this option to users and settled on a brand new breadcrumb trail for Prism 3.

The new trail has small remove buttons after each element, clicking it will rerun the search without that particular constraint included – allowing users to “open up” their search if they haven’t found exactly what they were looking for.

This is a substantial release so we’d appreciate it if you could take some time to cast an eye over your tenancy and familiarise yourself with the changes we’ve made.

You can access the preview by placing “/demo/” after the prism.talis.com part of your URL, e.g. http://prism.talis.com/demo/leicestershire/.

If you have questions on this or any other issue, please feel free to email me phil.john@talis.com or your Account Manager (or comment here, of course).

Talis Prism 3: Development Update Webinar

To keep up to date with the latest Talis Prism 3 Developments you can register for the free webinar on Monday 21st March 2011 at 12:30 for Public Libraries and 14:00 for Academic Libraries

Public libraries click here to register.

Academic libraries click here to register.

This webinar will focus again on discussing the latest Talis Prism 3 developments referring to the Talis Prism 3 Roadmap, while providing an opportunity for you to raise any specific questions that you may have.

In the meantime keep up with the latest Talis Prism 3 news and developments on the Talis Prism 3 website and blog.

Prism 3 Status and Uptime Monitor

Two vital aspects of delivering a service in the cloud, such as Talis Prism 3, are to ensure that the service is available for a very high proportion of the time, and that it performs well. Naturally we monitor these closely, and now you can see the information directly from the monitoring service.Service availability link

You’ll find the link to the Prism Service Availability monitor on the Talis Prism microsite in the left panel under Customer Resources.

The information is updated every five minutes. At the top there is a status indicator showing the current availability of the Prism 3 service.

The rest of the report shows uptime and average response time per month, most recent first, and you can select a month to see daily averages. Our target for uptime is 99.5% or better, so it is pleasing that the monthly average since February 2009 is 99.86% and that the last three complete months are all higher than that. We continue to strive to improve this further.

The montly average response times show an improving trend through 2010, during which twenty-four libraries went live with Prism 3, bringing the total to thirty-seven. This reflects the continuing effort to improve performance.

In addition to providing this information, we are working towards improved status information about Prism 3 on the Talis Live Services page.

Talis Prism 3: Development Update Webinar

To keep up to date with the latest Talis Prism 3 Developments you can register for the free webinar on Monday 7th February 2011 at 12:30 for Public Libraries and 14:00 for Academic Libraries

Public libraries click here to register.

Academic libraries click here to register.

This webinar will focus again on discussing the latest Talis Prism 3 developments referring to the Talis Prism 3 Roadmap, while providing an opportunity for you to raise any specific questions that you may have.

In the meantime keep up with the latest Talis Prism 3 news and developments on the Talis Prism 3 website and blog.

Watch the latest Talis Prism Development webinar

If you were unable to attend one of our recent Prism 3 update webinars, then catch up on latest developments by watching the recording below or by downloading the video.

This was a wide-ranging webinar. It began with a brief tour of Prism 3, highlighting the main changes that have been released during 2010. In the rest of the webinar we looked at the developments that are in progress and planned for the New Year, including the benefits of the Linked Data API, Loan History, improvements in the design and functionality of the user account, progress with the Semantic Data Model, and more. This was a lively and positive session to round of the year, with many questions from a large audience.

[podcast format=”video”]http://talis-videos.s3.amazonaws.com/prism_webinar_131210.mp4[/podcast]

Prism 3 Release – December 2010

We’re pleased to announce that the recent hotfix release of Prism 3 has now been released to the live service. This resolves an issue in the caching system and enables reset tenant cache to function correctly. An issue that limited numbers of customers experienced with the availability display has also been addressed.

If you have questions on this, or any other issue, please feel free to email phil.john@talis.com, contact your account manager, or leave a comment on the blog.

Taking a New Look at the Account Pages

One of the things we’ve been keen to do for a while is re-assess presentation of the “My Account” pages in Prism 3. This has been dependent on another piece of work, improvements to the Local Data Services (LDS) that pass information back to Prism 3 from your local LMS. This does mean that some of these modifications are dependent on installation of the newer LDS at your site.

Reasons for the Changes

One of the most requested additions to Prism 3 was the Loan History, we’re going to add this, but we’re also taking the opportunity to look at how we deliver account information overall.

Similarly to how we approached the availability redesign earlier in the year, what we wanted to focus on was:

  • How can we make the complex data as people-centric as possible?
  • How can we make the common tasks easier?
  • How can we make the information easy to comprehend?

So in this post, we’ll take a look at some of the concepts we’re working with. Please do provide feedback and remember these are mockups rather than final designs so subject to change. Also, it’s worth remembering that these are defaults that can be over-ridden by custom css or interface labels. We’ll also be looking at further changes earlier next year as part of the “improvements to my account efficiency” roadmap item.

Breaking the Data into Manageable Chunks

Our first task with the account pages of Prism was to break the data into more manageable, compartmentalised chunks. Currently everything about an account appears on one page, and this will get pretty big, pretty fast, so we wanted to move each section of my account to its own sub-page.

This means each task has its own context to work in resulting in pages for:

  • Current Loans
  • Charges
  • Reservations
  • Bookings
  • Loan History
  • Inter Library Loans

There’s been some discussion on how this is to be split up, with the issue of whether Bookings and Reservations are different enough in the minds of library users. Currently we’re erring on the side of keeping them separate, but we’d be interested in your thoughts on this.

The Account Summary

At the top of the accounts pages we’ve realigned the summary details, in much the same way as we did with availability, to be simple statements making for a more “human” page. We’ve also made it persist through the various account pages, acting as a “notifications area” to summarise items that need action (reservation pickups, charges and so on). We’ll also use this area for confirmation of actions.

Accoutn Summary - showing loans, reservations, pickup and charges

A subtle change here is that the charges indicator contains the total including currently accruing fines, where previously these were only shown as part of the loans (something that confused users).

Beneath the summary, the navigation between the various sections of the account pages will be by mini-tabs. This is a nice simple metaphor for this type of content, allowing easy movement between the various sub-sections along with highlighting current location.

Current Loans

Here we’ve put the information that the majority of users need most of the time and made it the default page when you log in. We’ve taken a look at the Google analytics and the common paths involve going in and renewing, so we want to make this as easy as possible. So we’ve added a “renew all” button, to speed the most common use case, that of “I can’t get to the library, so need to renew all my current loans”.

Current Loans - showing extra item detail, highlighting of overdue and renew all button.

We’re improving this by adding in the jacket image and a link to the item in question. We’ve also removed some of the detail that really isn’t needed by most users: item ID and control number. This was a hard choice, but scenarios in which these would be useful are fairly limited in this context.

A useful piece of feedback we got from libraries was that showing the renew count out of a total would be really useful, so we’re hoping to add this too.

We’re also adding in several cues as to the state of individual items. We’re looking at several options for the exact nature of this display. The one shown above is a simple enhancement to the existing tables. Where an item is overdue it turns a shade of red and bolded.

The second option is adds an additional collation of items so that common dates act as headings (much like an email client might). So you can see “overdue”, “due back this week”, “due back this month” and “due later” to help as a cue for what needs attention now.

Current Loans - with extra headings breaking up overdue, due next week and so on.

Loan History

The Loan History pages have the potential to contain a huge amount of data, especially if a library user has had an account for several decades and borrowed books every few weeks in that time. Thus the Loan History page needs to be broken down into manageable chunks.

Loan history - showing navigation and sorting options

The history can be re-ordered by the title, main author and loan dates; each version of the navigation provides its own paging mechanism.

Reservations, Bookings and Inter-library Loans

Although the concepts may be different, the mechanics of checking these three elements online are very similar, so the interfaces here differ only in the labels.

Reservations - showing pickup point, and highlights to ready for pickup status.

Again, the basic changes are to add in the book covers, links to the books and highlighting of common actions. A simple statement of entitlement is an element we hope to add to allow people to manage their account more efficiently and again we’ve added a cancel all button.

Charges

The charges page has only a few minor improvements. We’ve included the summary and with the improved LDS service we can fix the missing accrual date problem. As mentioned earlier, the totals now represent the current total owed, including currently accruing items.

Charges - showing history of charges and date accrued.

Next Steps

The key aim of this work is to add in the loan history work, break the account pages into manageable chunks and integrate it more completely into the rest of the product. Although it mainly addresses the “Loan History” roadmap item it also paves the way for future work including the “improvements to my account efficiency” item.

Please do let us know if there are issues we haven’t considered either here or via email.

Prism 3 Hotfix Release Preview – December 2010

We’ve released a preview version of a hotfix for two issues some customers are experiencing. The issues addressed are:

  • Reset Tenant Cache failing under certain conditions
  • Availability not displaying summary message under certain conditions

We are planning to release these to live early next week.

As with all previous releases, these changes can be tested by using the demo version of your site. For customers using the “prism.talis.com” domain, this is accessed by putting “demo/” just before your tenancy name, e.g.:

http://prism.talis.com/demo/leicestershire/

For customers with own hostname enabled, the “demo/” is placed at the end of your URL, e.g.:

http://catalogue.sunderland.ac.uk/demo/

If you have questions on this, or any other issue, please feel free to email phil.john@talis.com, contact your account manager, or leave a comment on the blog.