Category Archives: Engineering Library

Antarctic Collection

A new Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been entered into between UC and Antarctic New Zealand regarding the management of the Antarctic Collection.

Since 1999, the Library has administered the Antarctic Collection on behalf of Antarctica New Zealand. The MoU had not been revised since its original drafting in 1999. It was out-of-date and included restrictive clauses, which hindered the effective management of collection by UC. The Library also has two separate collections on this area, one belonging to UC and the other Antarctica New Zealand.

An impending movement of the collection to the EPS Library (in 2017) as part of the Education Library preparation, provided an opportunity to review how we managed the collection and the MoU. The Library particularly wished to integrate the two collections to make them easier to use.

To help the review, various meetings took place between the Library and

* Dean of College of Science
* Gateway Antarctica
* Antarctic New Zealand

The result of these discussions were

* An exhibition in EPS Library of Antarctic material (joint venture with Gateway Antarctica – proposed to continue annually) to coincide with Antarctic Week
* A revised MoU, which allows the integration of the Antarctica NZ collection into the main collection

ENGR 101 Assignment 2017

Greeting All,  It’s that time of the year again when the ENGR 101 Students get their very first assignment.  Currently there are 898 students in the course.

Engineering Process for Aircraft Overweight Issues.

There is no one solution to this question! Their assignment requires them to write a technical report that contains, a figure, excel chart and bibliography in APA format.  They are required to cite material in APA style.

In first instant please send them to our subject guide help.

http://canterbury.libguides.com/engr/aircraft-seat-design

We have added some interesting Journal articles, Ebooks, Links to Reports, Aircraft design companies and Aircraft seat standards all already cited in APA format.

The second journal article (Kokorikou, et al)  has been posted up on learn as access problems and copyright means that this is only available to students inside the course.  The students themselves will have to log in.

Multi search is a very good database to start with, depending on their keywords.

As an engineering solution they might need to consult the SAE Aircraft Seat Standards ARP5526D and AS8049C.  These are ONLY available in the EPS library as they cannot be scanned or available electronically.

Students should not cite wikipedia, but can use it as a starting point.

If more help is needed please sent the students to the subject librarians based in EPS…

Dave.

 

Tuesday 11 October

I’ve been wanting to play with the data ICTS collects on wireless connections in the library for a while. Dave Lane kindly gathered all the logs for Tuesday the 11th of October from ICTS.  We got 7 million lines of logs, and I wrote some code to extract this:

2 (1)

 

This is pretty rough: it indicates unique wireless devices connecting to library based access points every hour.  that means if someone was sitting in level 4 of James Hight, their laptop or phone would be counted once an hour.  If they moved up to level 5 at 10:30, it would be counted once on level 4, and then once on level 5.  It includes staff and students.

Tuesday the 11th of October was the last week of term, so there was a lot of studying and assignment writing going on!

There is a lot more that could be done with this data, but I think this provides an interesting ‘proof of concept’ of data we already collect, and can question for all sorts of purposes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Level 2 Mopier

The Level 2 Mopier (North Side) CS Gold unit is not connecting to it’s server. Producing the error “LOC 22” and only showing 5 copies for students. I have rung and logged a job with Uni IT to investigate.

Someone had unplugged all the network cables. Causing for both the Mopier and CS gold unit to fail. These have been re-established, but the CS gold unit is still not responding. If we get errors in the future we will need to investigate all possible reasons for the failure, physical and network.

Cheers!

Dave

Shelves and Scaffolding

Scaffolding among the TK books

The retrievals process at Engineering continues to be full of excitement.

Generally we wait until a pause in the banging and power tools indicates that the construction workers are taking a break, then we head up in the lift (wearing a reflective jacket for safety and carrying a torch because the lift lights are out), pick our way over various obstacles, and clamber through the plastic sheets that have been wrapped around all the shelves.

Some areas are a bit trickier — here’s one where scaffolding blocks access to a large number of books.

To see more of what’s happening, have a look at our ‘Merger Construction’ photos on Flickr. Even more photos are in Q:\Deborah\2009_Construction

Deborah