Neither way is perfect and each situation needs to be
evaluated to suit
your needs, professionally or personally. Having print
provides us with
some opportunities as well as liabilities. Having it online
does as
well.
MLA is working on emergency preparedness for medical
libraries. I am
currently in the midst of trying to find a Regional
Emergency
Preparedness Coordinator for hospital library services, so
my thinking
is right now is a little skewed to emergency preparedness
and libraries.
Power Outages:
In 2003 more than 60 million customers in the United States
and Canada
were affected by a multi state and international power
outage for days.
In that instance, NOTHING was available electronically.
Yeah for books
and paper, right?! Well if you knew where the book was and
could find
it in our dark stacks (emergency lighting works to keep you
from bumping
into things not reading typeface). Technically our back up
generator
could have handled keeping the server running. However, the
a/c was
offline (usually standard operating procedure in a power
outage since
most generators can't handle dealing with the power
demands). If we
turned on our servers they would have burnt up without a/c.
There was
no internet, no online catalog, and no online access to
MEDLINE. You
couldn't photocopy anything. If you could blindly find the
book/journal
you had to go to the windows and sit and read by the
sunlight. At least
we had windows! But how many patrons let alone librarians
could easily
go back into the stacks and easily find (without adequate
reading light)
the answer to every reference question? The print is there
and
available, but there is a question of accessibility. If you
can ACCESS
it, THEN the print works when your electricity is out. If
you can't
access it when the power is out then it doesn't really
matter if it is
print or online, it is inaccessible.
Fire, flood, Storm Damage:
Libraries who have suffered fire, flood, or storm damage
have had huge
amounts of print resources become unavailable and lost
(perhaps
forever). You can't read a burnt up journal or a moldy
decaying book.
However the online database resources (not locally held)
like journal
and book collections can be used as soon as library
establishes
connectivity. In the case of a total library disaster the
library
theoretically can be temporarily set up off site with a
laptop and
internet access. Information in the printed format is
unavailable, but
that same book or journal online is available and ready for
use.
Nothing is perfect.
_____________________________________________
Michelle Kraft, MLS, AHIP
Senior Medical Librarian
Cleveland Clinic Alumni Library
9500 Euclid Ave. NA30
Cleveland, OH 44195
216-445-7338
-----Original Message-----
From: web4lib-bounces webjunction.org
[mailto:web4lib-bounces webjunction.org] On Behalf Of jimm
wetherbee
Sent: Monday, February 11, 2008 12:39 PM
To: Mark Sandford
Cc: web4lib webjunction.org
Subject: Re: [Web4lib] Paperless society
Mark Sandford wrote:
> Not just critical information is at stake. How many
people are
trusting burned CD to store their family photos? Digital is
great, but
that CD probably won't last half a decade.
Even if it does, who will have anything that will read it?
I really
don't expect that backwards-compatible storage will go back
indefinitely. Speaking of readers, however, another aspect
of
"paperless" is that our various online resources
generate paper usage.
Instead of taking notes, bibliographic citations or
full-text articles
are printed (or e-mail to be printed later). Compare this
behavior to
copying relevant quotes to note cards. Someday there will
be a reader
that is useful as the printed page, but we aren't there yet.
Until
then, everything ultimately goes to print.
--jimm
--
Jimm Wetherbee | jimm wingate.edu
Information Systems Librarian | Voice: 704-233-8092
E.K. Smith Library | Fax: 704-233-8254
Wingate University | http://library.
wingate.edu/staff/jmw/
Wingate, NC 28174 | lux et fides
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