1)Mischo, W. (July/August 2005). Digital Libraries: challenges and influential work. D-Lib Magazine. 11(7/8). http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july05/mischo/07mischo.html
It talks about the “ Distributed information environment”
This distributed information environment is populated by silos of: full-text repositories maintained by commercial and professional society publishers; preprint servers and Open Archive Initiative (OAI) provider sites; specialized Abstracting and Indexing (A & I) services; publisher and vendor vertical portals; local, regional, and national online catalogs; Web search and metasearch engines; local e-resource registries and digital content databases; campus institutional repository systems; and learning management systems.
2)Paepcke, A. et al. (July/August 2005). Dewey meets Turing: librarians, computer scientists and the digital libraries initiative. D-Lib Magazine. 11(7/8). http://www.dlib.org/dlib/july05/paepcke/07paepcke.html
This article talks about Librarians, Computer Scientists, and the Digital Libraries Initiative and how each of them relates to each other. after combining the word digital with library, three interested parties are immediately defined: librarians, computer scientists, and publishers.
3)Lynch, Clifford A. "Institutional Repositories: Essential Infrastructure for Scholarship in the Digital Age" ARL, no. 226 (February 2003): 1-7. http://www.arl.org/newsltr/226/ir.html
The webpage does not work!
Friday, November 13, 2009
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1 comment:
I really liked the second reading. I think having different perspectives really adds to this conversation. It will be interesting to see how things change in the coming years.
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