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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cibbarelli, Pamela R.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ878695
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author Cibbarelli, Pamela R.
author_facet Cibbarelli, Pamela R.
Cibbarelli, Pamela R.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Helping You Buy ILS Cibbarelli, Pamela R. Library Automation Online Vendors Library Development Library Networks Computer Software Evaluation Technology Uses in Education Technology Planning Information Technology Computer Interfaces Navigation (Information Systems) Mail Surveys Performance Factors This article is the fourth in a series of articles published annually by "Computers in Libraries" surveying integrated library systems and services (ILSs). The purpose of the annual survey is to enable comparison of the ILSs that are available. ILS vendors are in constant pursuit of an ever-changing, consistently vague definition of what the "ideal" library automation system should encompass. In this article, the author presents and discusses five issues and five open-ended questions that were intended to help readers buy the system that is best for them. The necessity of integrating new developments in computer and telecommunication technologies while concurrently responding to the expanded concepts of what librarians want is extremely challenging. A questionnaire was developed based on the surveys conducted by Information Today, Inc. in 2006, 2007, and 2008. The survey was intended to: (1) Provide an up-to-date comparison of functionality currently available in ILS products; (2) Provide a comparison of support services and licensing structures available from ILS service providers; (3) Learn the practical advice given by ILS service providers; (4) Determine the current areas of strong trends and development priorities for ILS services; and (5) Provide vendors' current contact information for readers interested in more information. The answer to question five is presented in an online-only directory of vendors that provides the vendors' answers to what they regard as their products' greatest strength, along with full contact information, product release dates, the number of sites it has, and the library markets it serves. (Contains 5 tables.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ878695
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2010
record_format eric
spellingShingle Helping You Buy ILS
Cibbarelli, Pamela R.
Library Automation
Online Vendors
Library Development
Library Networks
Computer Software Evaluation
Technology Uses in Education
Technology Planning
Information Technology
Computer Interfaces
Navigation (Information Systems)
Mail Surveys
Performance Factors
Helping You Buy ILS Cibbarelli, Pamela R. Library Automation Online Vendors Library Development Library Networks Computer Software Evaluation Technology Uses in Education Technology Planning Information Technology Computer Interfaces Navigation (Information Systems) Mail Surveys Performance Factors This article is the fourth in a series of articles published annually by "Computers in Libraries" surveying integrated library systems and services (ILSs). The purpose of the annual survey is to enable comparison of the ILSs that are available. ILS vendors are in constant pursuit of an ever-changing, consistently vague definition of what the "ideal" library automation system should encompass. In this article, the author presents and discusses five issues and five open-ended questions that were intended to help readers buy the system that is best for them. The necessity of integrating new developments in computer and telecommunication technologies while concurrently responding to the expanded concepts of what librarians want is extremely challenging. A questionnaire was developed based on the surveys conducted by Information Today, Inc. in 2006, 2007, and 2008. The survey was intended to: (1) Provide an up-to-date comparison of functionality currently available in ILS products; (2) Provide a comparison of support services and licensing structures available from ILS service providers; (3) Learn the practical advice given by ILS service providers; (4) Determine the current areas of strong trends and development priorities for ILS services; and (5) Provide vendors' current contact information for readers interested in more information. The answer to question five is presented in an online-only directory of vendors that provides the vendors' answers to what they regard as their products' greatest strength, along with full contact information, product release dates, the number of sites it has, and the library markets it serves. (Contains 5 tables.)
title Helping You Buy ILS
topic Library Automation
Online Vendors
Library Development
Library Networks
Computer Software Evaluation
Technology Uses in Education
Technology Planning
Information Technology
Computer Interfaces
Navigation (Information Systems)
Mail Surveys
Performance Factors
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ878695