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Collection development in the electronic library
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Source User Services Conference archive
Proceedings of the 21st annual ACM SIGUCCS conference on User services table of contents
San Diego, California, United States
Pages: 50 - 56  
Year of Publication: 1993
ISBN:0-89791-631-X
Authors
Kristin Antelman  Library Computing Systems Department University of Delaware Library, Newark, DE
David Langenberg  Reference Department, University of Delaware Library, Newark, DE
Sponsors
SIGUCCS: ACM Special Interest Group on University and College Computing Services
SIGCUE: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Uses In Education
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
Michael Buckland, Redesigning Library Services--A Manifesto (Chicago: American Library Association, 1992). W. David Penniman, "The Library of Tomorrow: A Universal Window Serving Independent Pr oblem Solvers," Library Hi Tech 10:4 (1992) calls these three library types, respectively, "the library of the past," "the library of the present," and "the library of the future."
 
2
John Swan, "Books and Screens, Readers and Reference: Bridging the Video Gap," Reference Librarian 37 (1992), p. 65.
 
3
Harold Billings, "The Bionic Library," Library Journal 166:17 (October 15, 1991), p. 38.
 
4
Art St. George, Internet-Accessible Library Catalogs & Databases. Billy Barron, UNT's Accessing On-Line Bibliographic Databases.
 
5
Gopher was developed at the University of Minnesota. Rich Wiggins, "The University of Minnesota's Internet Gopher System: A Tool for Accessing Network-Based Electronic Information," The Public-Access Computer Systems Review 4:2 (1993), pp. 4-60, describes in detail the background and development of Gopher and its relation to other navigation software.
 
6
Tom Mandel, "Surfing the Wild Internet," SRI International Business Intelligence Program, Scan No. 2109 (March 1993). Reposted by the author on the Internet.
 
7
 
8
One effort is being led by a group of Gopher administrators and librarians from CICNet, NYSERNet. Another is the Scandinavian Gopher Subject Tree project, led by Anders Gillner. A third is being run out of the University of Michigan School of Information and Library Studies.
 
9
For example, the engineering Gopher at University of California-Santa Barbara (gopher.ece.ucbm.edu); the mathematics Gopher at the University of Copenhagen (gopher.euromath.dk); and the architecture Gopher at Johns Hopkins University (libra.arch.umich.edu).
 
10
Larry Krumenaker, "Virtual Libraries, Complete With Journals, Get Real," Science 260 (May 21, 1993), pp. 1066- 1067.
 
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12
Alan Emtage, "Internet Uniform Resource Identifiers," Internet Engineering Task Force Newsletter, 1:3, N-1-3- 040.31.2.
 
13
Malcolm Getz, "The Electronic Library: Analysis and Decentralization in Collection Decisions," Reference Librarian 14:3 (1991), Table 1, p. 76. The table compares costs per gigabyte of storing information in various media.
 
14
For example, Ohio State University Gateway project, which aims to provide the OPAC with a common user interface. Swan, p. 67.
 
15
Doug Brent, "Oral Knowledge, Typographic Knowledge, Electronic Knowledge: Speculations on the History of Ownership," E-Journal 1:3 (November 1991), lines 284-285.
 
16

Collaborative Colleagues:
Kristin Antelman: colleagues
David Langenberg: colleagues