Archive for the ‘Events and Anniversaries’ Category

Evergreen at Three: Reflections and Memories

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009
Evergreen Turns Three!

Happy 3rd Birthday, Evergreen!

Evergreen celebrated its third birthday on September 5, 2009. We are marking that anniversary with reflections from the community and, in a separate post, a special Evergreen Index.

Evergreen happened because visionary people believed that libraries deserved good software they could control — software in the public’s trust. Lamar Veatch, Georgia State Librarian, said, “Maybe I was naïve, but I felt like it was in good hands, and I had the confidence in those guys.”

One reason Georgia Public Library Service chose to develop Evergreen–and make it open source–was their frustration with the proprietary software marketplace. Lamar commented, “I felt like we didn’t have any other option. There was no other place to go but try this. Everyone was very excited about the concept of having control over the software, setting our own course, and not having to rely on whatever the commercial sector had available.”

(Also see this video of Lamar’s opening remarks from the 2009 Evergreen International Conference.)

Outside GPLS, some viewed the Evergreen project with skepticism. “I’m proud of taking a risk,” said Julie Walker, Deputy State Librarian for Georgia. “Librarians as a profession are not known for risky behavior, and I think a state library in particular may not be apt to take the road less traveled. Making that leap to try something out of the ordinary, not allowing the naysayers to slow us down, makes me proud to be a librarian from Georgia. I think every PINES library staff member in Georgia should take a moment to bask in the success that is Evergreen.”

Elizabeth McKinney, PINES Program Director, noted, “We never imagined the level of interest the library community would have in an open source project like Evergreen. The library community was watching and waiting for us to go live on Day 1. We have been contacted for information from libraries around the world. It far exceeds any of our expectations.”

David Singleton, former Deputy State Librarian for Georgia, added, “I remember thinking that we had done an amazing thing that would have a ripple effect in the library community for years to come. Many people thought we were crazy for trying to create an open source ILS. What they didn’t know, and I did, is that we had an exceptional team of people committed to the project.”

Evergreen was not just a flash in the pan, David continued. “When strong partners from British Columbia, the University of Windsor, Laurentian University, and others stepped forward, representing a broad spectrum of public, academic, and school libraries, I felt that Evergreen’s potential was limitless. That has continued as consortia and individual libraries have embraced Evergreen over the last few years.”

When asked about what he would like to see in Evergreen’s near future, David replied, “The creation of an Evergreen Foundation for the long-term support and development of the software has been a long-time goal and would be a major step forward.”

Andrea Buntz Neiman and Karen Collier of Kent County Public Library shared their birthday wishes: “As the smallest public library in Maryland, we have to be creative with our budget and our technology.  Once we learned about Evergreen we were thrilled that there was an ideal solution for us!   We have been live since June 2008 and couldn’t be happier.  Evergreen is a great system for public libraries, and open source shares many ideals and values with public libraries.  We are proud to be the first Evergreen public library in Maryland and look forward to celebrating many more Evergreen birthdays!”

You are invited to share more memories on this post!

The Evergreen Index, September, 2009

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009

This Evergreen Index (with apologies to Harper’s Index) was created in honor of Evergreen’s third birthday, September 5, 2009. Feel free to use the comments field to add your own “Evergreen Index” memories, and also see this blog post with commemorative comments from key people Present at the Creation.

Note: because Evergreen is open source—free to download, free to use—actual statistics for Evergreen are at best estimates.

All calculations as of August, 2009.

The September, 2009 Evergreen Index

Libraries known to run Evergreen as of September 5, 2006: 248

Libraries known to run Evergreen as of September 5, 2009: 454

Weddings among Evergreen instructors since September 5, 2009: 1

Country of wedding: Czechoslovakia

Children known to have been born to Evergreen developers since September 5, 2006: 4

Employees at Equinox Software in 2007: 4

Employees at Equinox Software in 2009: 20

Number of major Evergreen releases since September 5, 2006: 6

Total lines of code written for Evergreen, including OpenSRF, as estimated with  SLOCCount: 118,364

Number of languages used in Evergreen code: 6

Language found most often: Perl (56,344 lines of code, or 47.60%)

Type libraries running Evergreen in 2006: 1 (Public)

Type libraries running Evergreen in 2009: 4+ (Public, Academic, Special, School, Tribal)

Countries believed to have at least one library running Evergreen in a live production environment: 7

Holdings, inclusive of book and serial volumes, of largest known public and academic Evergreen libraries: Grand Rapids Public Library (1,130,202); University of Windsor (1,373,197)

Known Evergreen library farthest from the state of Georgia: Mahatma Education Society, Maharashtra, India

Number of vendors known to offer Evergreen services: 6

Number of editors on the Evergreen wiki: 110

Projected and actual attendance for the first-ever Evergreen Conference, held May 2009: 150, 155

Available languages when Evergreen went live: 1 (English)

Known language translations available for Evergreen in 2009: 5 (U.S. English, Canadian English, Canadian French, Armenian, and Czech), plus a partial Chinese translation

Smallest known population served of all known Evergreen public libraries: Alert Bay, British Columbia (population served: 629)

Total population served of all known Evergreen public libraries: 6,088,151