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Published byClarissa Nash Modified over 9 years ago
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Ebooks? John Akeroyd Milano March 7 th 2005
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Ebook Readers
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Ebook Collections Subject Collections – Safari, Books 24x7 Publisher Collections – Taylor and Francis, John Wiley Aggregators – NetLibrary82,000 vol – EBL – Questia50,000 books 400,000 articles – Ebrary
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Pricing Models Subscription models Library lending models Consortial deals Marketing to end users ie students Archival rights
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What do users want? 24/7 availability Easily refernced and bookmarked Downloadable Collections/titles can be easily searched Integrated into work patterns/catalogues/essays etc
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Benefits for Libraries Easier title management Lower space needs Lower handling costs eg processing Speed of acquisition Improved management information
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What Libraries Need Discovery ( Marc cataloging records, linking) Title page and bibliographic information Title substitution in collections Coordinated decision-making between print & electronic editions for new monographs Provide usage statistics Loanable Downloadable to the hardware device of choice Segmentable
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What libraries don’t need. High Levels of duplication Effort in selection
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Promotion and Uptake Individual titles in reading lists versus Corpus of titles New Generation of ebooks
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Criteria for Success Library chooses content (within available universe) Content is aggregated: – Single interface for critical mass of content – Full text searches across multiple resources Provider adds value: – Embedded dictionaries, authoring tools, linking – Multiple simultaneous users – remote access – Interactivity – discipline specific – Multi-media (digital audio, video, mapping, MLEs) Content is “consulted” not read
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