Book review: Academic libraries as high-tech gateways: A guide to design & space decisions (2nd Edition), by Richard J. Bazillion & Connie L. Braun (original) (raw)

Historians, Books, Computers, and the Library

Library Trends - LIBT, 1992

PASTEXAMINATIONS OF THE interactions of librarianship with historical scholarship have noted problems that libraries face in serving historians. This article examines changes in the nature of historical work that have occurred over the last four decades including the advent of computers and electronic texts. The authors examine recent developments-such as electronic publishing, electronic mail, electronic journals, and hypertext databases-and suggest that some of these tools will be of limited use to historians, due to the nature of historical scholarship. While some historians may be reluctant to adopt computer technology, many of them already use computers in writing. Historians' personal computers will be a gateway for new forms of electronic information, as evidenced by the publication of various CD-ROM files of relevance to historians. Other publishing projects in the humanities also offer examples that historians can follow in the use of electronic text and images.

A Multipurpose System: The development of the University at Albany Library Systems Wiki

Faculty of Information Quarterly, 2010

A growing trend in recent years for American academic libraries is the use of Web 2.0 applications to create and enhance both internal and external websites. In 2009, the University at Albany Library Systems group decided to replace its file server and intranet portal with a combined system that was more collaborative and easier to navigate and access for staff members. To implement this system, Library Systems compared open source and commercial wiki software to create a prototype 'Library Systems Wiki' for their department. Based on current literature regarding the use of wikis by academic libraries, this prototype takes a different approach in its choice and use of software. The wiki also has in-house technical specialists as developers that allows for greater system complexity. This paper outlines the systems design and implementation as well as future plans for the wiki.

"Racing through the Information Age without Falling Off": Address for Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) breakfast session sponsored by ATLA and EBSCO, March 26, 2015, Portland, OR.

Canadian Theological Schools I've been doing this library thing for about three decades now. When I started, we were printing library cards on card stock, sending them out for photocopying, then manually typing headings on them, before filing them alphabetically in card cabinets. True, there were electronic databases around, even some rudimentary online library catalogs. But the databases had to be searched remotely by information experts, and the catalogs were few and partial. Think "retrospective conversion."

Collection development in the electronic library

Proceedings of the 21st annual ACM SIGUCCS conference on User services, 1993

Until recently, bzzilding library collections lzas meant acquiring materials and housing thenz locally. Librarians have constrzzcted a well-defined methodology for plannirzg the development of collections. TIze predonzinant model was "the bigger, the better." Libraries are no70 at a crossroads. Tlze nzznzber of pztblications and their cost are growing so rapidly that evelz the largest researck libraries calz no longer acqztire all the nzaterials their llsers need. Librarinns are hnoing to rethirlk the ways in &ich they serve their users, leadirzg to the czlrrent debate over "ownership verszzs access. 'I They are realizing that they mztst nzoz7efronz tlzc model of collecting materials in alzticipation of zzser needs to one of accessing materials zcpon presentation of need. Dztring tlze last twenty-five years libraries Izave relatively easily incorporated electronic information in thefornz of online catalogs, CD-ROMs and otlzer bibliographic databases into their collectiows, in part because they containcd.familiar information which often lzad print counterparts. Conzpzcter networks, in particztlar the Internet, now #er libraries access to otlzer illformation resozzrces. Many libraries \zazje implemented ltzternet access via tlze University of Mijmesota's Gopher software, zulzich allows selective and organized access to information on the Internet. lrlfornzation on the Internet comes in a wide variety offormats, most of it "non-traditional" as far as libraries are concerned. Librarians have to decide zuhat.information on tlze Internet qzdalifies as "libra y" infornzation. In addition, librarians zuill have to zuork witlzirz the larger contexts of the university, other libraries, and the larger research community. In tlzcir role as mediators between people and knowledge, librarians can add valzde to a libra y Goplzer in many zuays. By bringing informationfrom the Internet into local collections and by enhancing its accessibility, librarians are working towards the realization of the electronic libra y.

Doctoral Symposium on Research on Online Databases in History (RODBH 2019)

2019

This editorial provides an introduction to the field of research of the Doctoral Symposium on Research on Online Databases in History (RODBH 2019) which was collocated with the 3rd Data for History workshop. The workshop series is situated in the field of digital humanities and targets the interconnection of subjects of historical research, knowledge engineering, and information science. The common interlink of this disciplines is the use of research data, data management, and all accompanying activities as well as the organization of collaborative community processes.

Electronic Literature and Online Literary Databases: The PO.EX and ELMCIP Cases

RISS, 2014

This essay reflects on the shift of user interaction operated by online literary archives and databases. One can easily recognize a change of scenery happening in the current networked world, given the way authors and general public produce, catalog, tag, access, research, analyze, preserve and share knowledge. In the field of electronic literature, the creation of several collaborative and open access databases attests this trend. For this purpose, I review two of them: the PO.EX Digital Archive of Portuguese Experimental Literature and the ELMCIP Electronic Literature Knowledge Base. My aim is to contribute to an informed view on how these online literary databases are shaped and are shaping the field: What is their scope? How do they operate? What kind of navigation and user input exists? Why should they really matter? Finally, I use these insights to develop some considerations concerning the relations between memory and archive, and different perspectives on electronic literature preservation.