The $100 laptop closer to reality
John Chambers
jc at trillian.mit.edu
Thu Sep 29 17:15:46 EDT 2005
Anthony Gabrielson writes:
| On Thu, 29 Sep 2005, Gordon Marx wrote:
| > Please, PLEASE, find me somewhere that some university administrator
| > says "Undergraduate libraries are obsolete." I'll even take just one,
| > rather than the "many" you claim.
|
| Since you only asked for one:
| http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/08/23/tech/main791462.shtml
The "libraries are obsolete" idea is really a parody of what's been
happening, from people who don't understand the changes that are
underway. It's based on the idea that a library is nothing but a book
collection. It's hard to find such libraries nowadays.
And, of course, that article doesn't quite state anything quite as
extreme as "libraries are obsolete". They just acknowledge that
alternatives are developing. In recent decades, librarians themselves
have moved in the same direction. It's now difficult to find a public
library that doesn't have audio and video material for checkout. Most
also have computers with internet connections. Physical card catalogs
have mostly disappeared, and have been replaced with networked
computers, making it easy to learn which libraries have a particular
book. Many libraries are cooperating with efforts like Project
Gutenberg and wikibooks. Rare books are more and more being scanned
and the images put online. And on and on.
Eventually, we'll just have one big online archive. But we're a long
way from that right now.
The idea that the old publishing industries are fighting it is based
on a lot of truth. Many publishers have long considered libraries to
be centers of copyright violation and profit loss. Such publishers
deserve what is happening to them.
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