Why Libraries

LIBRARIES AND TECHNOLOGY
  • Television didn’t spell the end of movie theaters, personal sound systems didn’t spell the end of radio, and the Internet won’t spell the end of libraries
    • The library of tomorrow will be a hybrid of print (analog) and digital
  • Book production vastly outpaces digitization
    • More than 68,000 books are published in the U.S. alone each year
    • Only about 1,300 books have been digitized by Project Gutenberg
  • Other print materials will not wind up on the Internet
    • The cost of digitizing existing books/information is prohibitive
    • Storage requirements are prohibitive (48 gigabytes per New Yorker)
  • Very little is actually on the Internet
    • One-half of one percent of the 110 million Library of Congress items
    • Only about 8 percent of all journals
    • Very little that is more than 15 years old is on the Internet
  • Very little of what’s on the Internet is worthwhile
    • There is no quality control for information and isn’t likely to be any
    • There is no way to separate out-of-date from current information
  • Without libraries, the Internet is less useful
    • More people learn how to use the Internet at libraries than elsewhere
    • For those without access at work, school or home, libraries are the primary place to access the Internet
  • You can’t search everything on the Internet regardless of your search strategy
    • Search engines access limited amounts of Internet information
    • 30 percent is indexed by search engines; the rest is difficult to access
  • People simply do not read on their computers
    • 80 percent of those who actually do buy electronic books say they buy paper books and do not read books on computers
    • What happens when the power goes out?