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Re: [ARSCLIST] Digitizing libraries--was: Clarifying the MAM-A gold comment



At 11:59 PM 2006-12-12, Steven C. Barr(x) wrote:
If this implies what I suspect it may...it gets me thinking about
a further possibility! Since sound files for the most part start out
in digital form...and image files (as well as possibly text files,
such as books...!) can be converted to digital files by scanning...
how long will it be before libraries are converted to institutions
with huge multi-disc servers, and clients can access the contents
either using monitors at the "library" or by downloading (onto a
digital medium...possibly DVD-R...?) the desired item, in digital
form, for later use. There would be a lot of monetary details to
be worked out (or special short-lifespan media would have to
be used...?)...but think of how much space would be saved, as
well as an end to worrying about the lifespan of the artifacts
themselves!

Will future libraries be measured in terabytes (or whatever
follows those...?!)...

It's PetaBytes and don't make the mistake Sony once did in naming a project the PetaFile...


Steven, you need to read more <smile>....this is happening. Try D-Lib and CLIR and some other digital library publications (online).

Many libraries and most universities are creating institutional repositories (IRs). Stanford, UofToronto, UofVictoria, Indiana University, Harvard, MIT and I assume most others, but these I know from personal experience, all have IRs. Univ of California Santa Barbara has a large cylinder collection online as I'm sure you're aware.

Most IRs are taking "born digital" product. The amount of retrospective digitization varies. Obviously, UCSB's cylinders are all retrospective digitization. Stanford has retrospectively digitized all the stuff in the Ampex collection. UVic is having me digitize oral histories about its founding years. Michael Casey who is active in ARSC at IU is retrospectively ingesting their collection of world music.

Stanford is also digitizing a portion of their print image collections. Corbis is doing that with Black Star's image collection somewhere in a limestone mine in NW Pennsylvania.

Some have made the argument that digital storage is less costly than physical storage, although many/most institutions doing retrospective digitization are retaining the original artifact.

It's a fascinating area. But, to gain an alternate perspective, one must read Nicholson Baker's "Double Fold"

Cheers,

Richard


Richard L. Hess email: richard@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Aurora, Ontario, Canada (905) 713 6733 1-877-TAPE-FIX
Detailed contact information: http://www.richardhess.com/tape/contact.htm
Quality tape transfers -- even from hard-to-play tapes.



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