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Going digital: a look at assumptions underlying digital libraries

Published:01 April 1995Publication History
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Abstract

What are digital libraries, how should they be designed, how will they be used, and what relationship will they bear to what we now call “libraries”? Although we cannot hope to answer all these crucial questions in this short article, we do hope to encourage, and in some small measure to shape, the dialog among computer scientists, librarians, and other interested parties out of which answers may arise. Our contribution here is to make explicit, and to question, certain assumptions that underlie current digital library efforts. We will argue that current efforts are limited by a largely unexamined and unintended allegiance to an idealized view of what libraries have been, rather than what they actually are or could be. Since these limits come from current ways of thinking about the problem, rather than being inherent in the technology or in social practice, expanding our conception of digital libraries should serve to expand the scope and the utility of development efforts.

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          cover image Communications of the ACM
          Communications of the ACM  Volume 38, Issue 4
          April 1995
          102 pages
          ISSN:0001-0782
          EISSN:1557-7317
          DOI:10.1145/205323
          Issue’s Table of Contents

          Copyright © 1995 ACM

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          • Published: 1 April 1995

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