On 12 February 2014 06:30, Paul Poulain <paul.poulain@biblibre.com> wrote:
Hi koha-devel,
There are sometimes debates about how and who is using Koha, how it is setup, which decision is of general interest. I had 2 ideas that could be developed during the hackfest. 2 of BibLibre developers are very motivated by the idea, anyone else can join us ;-)
**** 1st idea : collecting -anonymous- data on staff interface usage We sometimes are wondering whether librarians are running an old version of IE, or if they have a large screen, or if the page X is often run or not. There's a tool that could let us know: piwik (BibLibre already has an offer on Piwik for the OPAC) The idea here would be to add piwik for staff interface, and collect all datas on a single piwik instance. We made something (quick) for one of our current supported library, just to see what kind result we could get. We're quite happy with the performances, datas are interesting (which browser is used, which screen size, which pages. [ For example, the library runs an average of 40 times "reports/catalogue-stats.pl" every day (yes, that's crazy ;-) ). This page is worth being optimized !!! ]
The only caveat we've seen for now is that it can be tricky to have many websites pointing to the same piwik database. We also are not completely peaceful with having 10 000 librarians calling the server. We could face a heavy load...
But that's worth investigating imo.
(for those who don't know what is piwik, it's like google analytics, but respect your privacy ;-) Ah, and it's a software developed by a frenchy, living in new zealand, that has office hosted by catalystNZ afaik) If the community likes the idea, we will ask him for any advice on the 2 caveats we fear. [ PS: please avoid starting a troll about piwik collecting anonymous data or not because of the IP. Anyway, the feature will be trigger-able by the library. ]
Hi Paul I have cced the piwik devs who are indeed working in the Catalyst NZ offices (up on level 9, hi Matthieu and Thomas) who might have some ideas around this. Chris