The Evergreen community is varied and thriving. Please accept our invitation and join us. Questions? Take a look at the FAQ, send us an email at feedback@open-ils.org, or drop by and say "hi" on the mailing lists or on IRC at #OpenILS-Evergreen on the Freenode IRC network. For the Facebookers among us, we have a group here.
A public demo of Evergreen's online catalog is located at demo.gapines.org. A developer's version of the online catalog, with all of the latest, greatest features we're working on, is located at dev.gapines.org (note the development site may be unstable or experimental).
Evergreen is currently in use (and was first put into production) by Georgia Library PINES, a consortium of 270 public libraries. British Columbia has a growing Evergreen-powered consortium named SITKA, with Prince Rupert Library, Fort Nelson Public Library, Powell River, and Terrace Public Library already in production, and with 14 additional libraries coming this year. The Robertson Library at the University of Prince Edward Island is the first academic library to use Evergreen in production. Kent County Public Library is also running Evergreen in production and has become the first public library in Maryland to use an open source automation system.
Laurentian University is also committed to Evergreen and is collaborating with GPLS, British Columbia, McMaster University, and the University of Windsor on an Acquisitions/Serials module. The Michigan Library Consortium and Grand Rapids Public Library are working together to develop a shared library system using Evergreen. And now the Indiana State Library and the Hussey Mayfield Memorial Public Library (Zionsville) have announced the Indiana Open Source ILS Initiative, which will use Evergreen. The King County Library System has recently put out an RFP for Evergreen development, implementation, and support.
If you're an Evergreen library, a soon-to-be Evergreen library, or otherwise involved with Evergreen and would like to be listed here, please let us know!