Skip to Content.
Sympa Menu

inc-lib-usecase - RE: [InC-Lib-UseCase] draft outline, InC-Lib use case -- bedtime story.....

Subject: Defining Use Cases for Federating Library Services

List archive

RE: [InC-Lib-UseCase] draft outline, InC-Lib use case -- bedtime story.....


Chronological Thread 
  • From: "Dale,Andy" <>
  • To: "inc-lib-usecase" <>
  • Subject: RE: [InC-Lib-UseCase] draft outline, InC-Lib use case -- bedtime story.....
  • Date: Tue, 20 Oct 2009 16:00:37 -0400

Hi All,

I apologize for my extended absence from this group... personal stuff...
blah blah. I do apologize and believe I am now finally in a position to
re-engage. Please let me know if you think I have missed too much
context over the last couple of months to usefully jump back in;
otherwise... I will.


-----Original Message-----
From: []
Sent: Tuesday, October 20, 2009 12:05 PM
To: inc-lib-usecase
Subject: [InC-Lib-UseCase] draft outline, InC-Lib use case -- bedtime
story.....

here's a rough draft of what I've got so far....


Jane is sitting at Starbucks following her Bio 301 class; she's
reviewing the work she'll need to do before the next class meeting.

She goes to the campus LMS system, logs in with her University web
single sign-on userid and password, and starts viewing the course
information.

There are three articles she has to read -- she clicks the link for
each one, and is taken directly to articles at Elsevier, EBSCO, and
JSTOR. She doesn't have to identify herself because all three sites
operate within the same Web SSO framework that is used on the campus.
All three links are "deep links" -- they take her directly to an
article deep in the site, rather than to the site's front page (where
she'd then have to search for the desired article).

She decides that she'll also search for additional articles on the
same topic. She goes to MedLine (an abstracts DB), and starts
searching. She finds an interesting article, and clicks the OpenURL
button. She is redirected to the Link Resolver at her campus, and on
to the deep link at "Biochemistry and cell biology"; once again, she
doesn't have to identify herself.

She also decides to search the local campus library catalog for
relevant books. She finds one -- but when she logs in to the local
ILS system she discovers that one of her classmates has already
checked the book out. She clicks a button, tho, and is taken to Iliad
(the inter-library loan system). Once again, she doesn't have to
identify herself. She orders the book from another campus library.

Lastly, she goes to XXXX site. Once again, she doesn't have to
identify herself. This site is able to use the persistent but
anonymous identifier sent by her campus to uniquely identify her. The
site doesn't know her real identity, but recognizes that "its her"
whenever she returns. She's able to save searches from one session to
the next, and create a personalized look to the site. If she were
willing to share her email address, the site would send her a
monthly email newsletter (with content tailored to her searches).





Archive powered by MHonArc 2.6.16.

Top of Page