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Showing 76 to 83 of 83 results Save | Export
Villano, Matt – Campus Technology, 2006
In the age of electronic media, some say producing textbooks is a dying art. And it may be true that every day, devices with names such as iPod and eBook threaten to replace the age-old "technology" of the traditional book with a newer, faster, and equally (if not more) portable approach. In many cases, at colleges and universities across the…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Influence of Technology, Technological Advancement, Technology Uses in Education
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Jasper, Richard P. – Acquisitions Librarian, 2005
The advent of online journals, bundled packages, and consortial "big deals" means that librarians have to work harder than ever when budget shortfalls require cutting serials. This article recounts the experience of the Houston Academy of Medicine-Texas Medical Center Library in its journal cancellation project of 2002.
Descriptors: Electronic Journals, Medical Libraries, Library Policy, Library Administration
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Ball, David – Acquisitions Librarian, 2005
At first sight, the "big deal" seems an excellent value for academic libraries. A more thorough-going evaluation, however, exposes dangers. This paper examines the roles and strengths of the players in the information supply chain: creators, publishers, intermediaries, libraries. Traditional hard-copy procurement is analysed in terms of these…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Certification, Contracts, Purchasing
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Shipe, Timothy – Acquisitions Librarian, 2005
The review and negotiation of license agreements has become a time-consuming but necessary part of the job of providing access to the electronic information resources required by libraries' patrons. The nature of these agreements may pose a number of barriers to the development of fully integrated collections. This article presents a fictitious…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Barriers, Certification, Contracts
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Kossuth, Joanne; Ballman, Donald – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2004
The ancient Romans had it right. The underlying relationships between contracting parties were considered so important among Roman citizens that breaking a contract was considered a serious offense: The breaching party forfeited social position and property, and, if necessary, his family was expected to make good on his contractual promises. In…
Descriptors: Information Systems, Information Technology, Interpersonal Competence, Contracts
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Burrows, Toby – Australian Academic & Research Libraries, 2006
The impact that electronic information technologies have had on scholarly communications and university libraries is assessed. Early predictions that the dominance of commercial publishers would decline and journal prices would fall have not been realised. The development of institutional repositories have had limited success in making the…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Research Libraries, Information Technology, Electronic Publishing
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Chou, Min; Zhou, Oliver – Acquisitions Librarian, 2005
The increasing popularity of digital information has brought great convenience to library patrons. It has, however, posed challenges to libraries in achieving their major missions, i.e., preservation and dissemination of information. The underlying reasons for this phenomenon are dichotomous: the restrictions imposed by electronic information…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Electronic Libraries, Certification, Online Vendors
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Waller, Andrew – Journal of Access Services, 2003
The Canadian university library members of two consortial e-journal deals were surveyed t o determine how many of the corresponding print journals had been cancelled as a result of their participation in the online package purchase. The survey indicated that the number of concurrent print subscriptions held by the libraries had notably decreased.…
Descriptors: Research Libraries, Electronic Journals, Library Research, Printed Materials
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