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Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Subject: Re: Is it time to stop printing journals?
- From: "Tracy L. Thompson" <tracy.thompson@yale.edu>
- Date: Sun, 1 Apr 2007 13:14:00 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
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We've reached the point where librarians tend to worry a lot more about the print than the people who use our libraries do."I think this is the most provocative sentiment in Scott's statement. It's part of our charge as librarians, as information professionals, to 'worry' about the print. In general, patrons are primarily concerned with access while librarians also have a commitment to the development and retention of archives. I wouldn't advocate a wholesale abandonment of print in favor of e at this time. I think print will continue to be necessary until we as a profession can develop the confidence in e-archives that we now have in print as an archival format. Will we ever develop that confidence? What will it take?
Cheers,
Tracy
At 07:49 PM 3/29/2007, you wrote:
Scott Plutchak from UAB writes in his blog response "We certainly don't need to keep the print to satisfy our user base. Two years ago we stopped getting any print for our ScienceDirect titles. I did not get a single question, comment, or expression of concern from faculty or students. We've reached the point where librarians tend to worry a lot more about the print than the people who use our libraries do." I am curious to hear whether this is a commonly held sentiment. In other words, do the librarians on this list have the sense that their patrons are operating in a post-print world (not in the OA/PMC/Battle Royale sense of the term, but meaning have we outgrown print)? If so, this would be a remarkable shift, and a remarkably quick one. Certainly when I helped launch The Berkeley Electronic Press in 2000, print was sacrosanct. The idea of a viable electronic-only journal publisher was met with feedback running the wide gamut from skepticism to scorn. If this equation has indeed flipped in a matter of a half-dozen or so years, this ranks as one of the most important periods in scholarly communication history. Best, Greg Greg Tananbaum gtananbaum@gmail.com (510) 295-7504 On 3/28/07, T Scott Plutchak <tscott@uab.edu> wrote:I've posted a reply to Mark's questions here: http://tscott.typepad.com/tsp/2007/03/no_more_print.html T. Scott Plutchak Director, Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences University of Alabama at Birmingham tscott@uab.edu
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