LibrarySearch is here!
This fall, the library is switching from Summon to a new discovery platform from EBSCO, which we are calling “LibrarySearch.” LibrarySearch will work very much like Summon: it will still retrieve results from the library catalog (MIDCAT), and it will still find article-level results from our subscribed journals and databases (as well as beyond, if desired).
We made this switch for a number of reasons.
LibrarySearch:
- offers better discovery of non-full-text indexes such as MLA Bibliography and RILM (in fact, these databases are not indexed by Summon, due to their dissatisfaction with how Summon handles non-full-text databases)
- has features not available in Summon, such as a view into which databases search results are coming from, and the option to save search results directly into online storage providers such as Dropbox
- is more tightly integrated with the library’s catalog than Summon
- is (like Summon) a very stable and widely-used system
- is highly customizable
- is also now available to students and colleagues at the William Tell Coleman library at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies
Of course, since LibrarySearch is provided to us by a
different vendor, you will see changes in how search results are ranked and
displayed, and the interface will look somewhat different.
Please see go/librarysearch to try out the new system. As with any new system, there are bound to be some bugs, broken links, unexpected results or behavior, etc. Please submit problems, or suggestions for improvements, to Terry Simpkins in the Library (x5045).