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On the perils of early adoption
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: On the perils of early adoption
- From: "Mcsean, Tony \(ELS\)" <T.Mcsean@elsevier.com>
- Date: Tue, 3 Apr 2007 17:49:01 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
Christina Pinkas highlights a problem with some ScienceDirect backfile articles that we have been aware of for some time. Long enough, in fact, to have put in place plans to eliminate it. Strictly speaking there are two related issues. 1. Individual pages being scanned poorly. The Elsevier backfile conversion was a very large project - it has already been running 7 years and huge quantities of data have been digitised. The backfile collections on ScienceDirect have been very well received by customers and users and have brought many valuable research articles back into use in current day research. In addition, as we've heard on this list in recent days, many customers have taken advantage of the backfile availability to free up shelf space. Some missing and poorly-scanned pages have slipped through onto ScienceDirect. We have added or rescanned these when they have been brought to out attention, and will continue to do so wherever we can lay our hands on good source material. 2. Systematic improvements. During 7 years of scanning, we have learned a lot from the experience and have seen important improvements in storage and other technologies. Consequently, some of the decisions that seemed reasonable in 2001 are now being revisited. When we first started the project resolution levels used were 300dpi, black and white. Perfectly good for text, butt less so for images and sometimes small-format tables. To implement higher resolution, grey scale and colour would not have been feasible, given the mainstream storage and line speed then in current use. In 2004, we were able to implement new technology to produce much higher quality images and include the full use of colour and grey scale without compromising performance or storage requirements. We are currently rescanning where there have been particular problems and where colour is of crucial significance for meaning, including a complete rescan of some journals, including Brain Research, Neuroscience and Icarus. The rescanning project continues. You will start to see a marked improvement over time in all aspects of image quality and continuing elimination of of missing content below the current figure of 0.5%. This posting has been unusually detailed because we want the process, and the reasons why it has been necessary, to be transparent. We are continuing to invest in improving the usefulness and quality of the backfiles. In the meantime, thank you for your feedback and for your patience. Tony McSean Director of Library Relations Elsevier London NW1 7BY +44 7795 960516 +44 20 7424 4242
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