Donald Clark strikes a cord in Are we outsourcing memory?
"I've been blogging for years only to find that my posts form a sort of archive of thoughts that I often turn to for answers to questions I’m asked or reports I write or for items in talks I give at conferences."
It is easy to think of Donald's:
"What's
remarkable about all of this outsourced memory is that it's free. The
tools, storage and retrieval are all free. It's hard to see how
astonishing this change has been, how absolutely revolutionary."
as stating the obvious; but plenty of people (and policies) fail to recognise how far "plain old web search", alongside the use of alerting mechanisms like RSS or Google Alerts, and a bit (lot?) of tacit nous is increasingly how, in the developed world at least, knowledge is mediated for users, rather than visits to portals or repositories or gateways or other places where dedicated and committed professionals have spent time systematically organising, tagging, and cataloging material. (I know I've not got this quite right yet, but what is now happening feels to be that rather than the publisher, host, or owner of material needing to "categorise information on the way in", the user can "categorise it on the way out", with shape given to information by the user's choice of search terms, by the judgment he or she then exercises, and by the algorithms that rank-order what the user finds.)
In the US, young adults are the heaviest users of libraries
Apart from teaching me that being in my mid-50s I am a "leading boomer", Information searches that solve problems - How people use the internet, libraries, and government agencies when they need help [187 kB PDF], published by the Pew Internet and American Life Project on 30/12/2007, counters the view that Internet access is driving out library use - in the US at least:
Meanwhile, the Independent reports on library closures in England.
May 2006 dialogue on Fortnightly Mailing about libraries.
With thanks to Lorcan Dempsey and George Siemens for flagging this Pew report.
Posted on 31/12/2007 in News and comment | Permalink | Comments (0)
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