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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Buczynski, James A.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ873178
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author Buczynski, James A.
author_facet Buczynski, James A.
Buczynski, James A.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Looking for Collection 2.0 Buczynski, James A. Library Services Internet Social Networks Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Sharing Behavior Library Administration Metadata Financial Support Resource Allocation Vendors Models Time Management Systems Approach Purchasing Libraries are integrating Web 2.0 services into work practices, positioning themselves in online social environments, and deploying enhanced search and discovery tools. Collections conversely are not progressing to the same degree. Like many public services today, library budgets are stained. User-pay options are appearing in library systems, suggesting that one day answering a reference question with "You can buy it here" will not be taboo. Though libraries have been successful in pushing traditional content suppliers to innovate with interoperability in mind, retail direct-to-consumer vendors do not have libraries on their radar. Price/demand curves are unknown, and libraries are not talking to direct-to-consumer vendors. A user-pay collection development path may destroy our brand image, develop a knowledge divide, speed up the commercialization of information, result in library funding cuts, and undermine the open-access movement. Easy-pay downloads are going to challenge our definition of collections--sooner than we can imagine.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ873178
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Looking for Collection 2.0
Buczynski, James A.
Library Services
Internet
Social Networks
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Sharing Behavior
Library Administration
Metadata
Financial Support
Resource Allocation
Vendors
Models
Time Management
Systems Approach
Purchasing
Looking for Collection 2.0 Buczynski, James A. Library Services Internet Social Networks Information Technology Computer Mediated Communication Sharing Behavior Library Administration Metadata Financial Support Resource Allocation Vendors Models Time Management Systems Approach Purchasing Libraries are integrating Web 2.0 services into work practices, positioning themselves in online social environments, and deploying enhanced search and discovery tools. Collections conversely are not progressing to the same degree. Like many public services today, library budgets are stained. User-pay options are appearing in library systems, suggesting that one day answering a reference question with "You can buy it here" will not be taboo. Though libraries have been successful in pushing traditional content suppliers to innovate with interoperability in mind, retail direct-to-consumer vendors do not have libraries on their radar. Price/demand curves are unknown, and libraries are not talking to direct-to-consumer vendors. A user-pay collection development path may destroy our brand image, develop a knowledge divide, speed up the commercialization of information, result in library funding cuts, and undermine the open-access movement. Easy-pay downloads are going to challenge our definition of collections--sooner than we can imagine.
title Looking for Collection 2.0
topic Library Services
Internet
Social Networks
Information Technology
Computer Mediated Communication
Sharing Behavior
Library Administration
Metadata
Financial Support
Resource Allocation
Vendors
Models
Time Management
Systems Approach
Purchasing
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ873178