[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
RE: The App Store Effect
- To: <liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu>
- Subject: RE: The App Store Effect
- From: "John Cox" <John.E.Cox@btinternet.com>
- Date: Wed, 17 Jun 2009 15:19:14 EDT
- Reply-to: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
- Sender: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
[MOD NOTE: Thank you, John, for catching this error. The original posting arrived with formatting characters that messed with the numbers; though we thought we'd cleaned them up, obviously we didn't know to remove the pesky and ultra-important 3s.] Please note that this posting is misleading as an extraneous "3" appears in both the numbers quoted. UK universities and colleges spent GBP 79.8 million on electronic serials in 2006-07. The average direct cost per download was GBP 0.81. It is important to get the numbers right. It is absolutely right that the cost per item may fall further if all these e-journals were to be licensed collectively on a UK-wide basis. And the most significant benefit would be to those universities are not research-intensive and do not have large journal collections, rather than "public access". Moreover, I see no reason why corporate, government and other special library users should have a free ride on what the university and college sector would be financing. That would throw an additional burden on a higher education (HE) sector that is facing hard times. It should also be noted that the e-journals that UK HE are published by thousands of publishers, most of which are small, with only one or two titles. It is simply not a practicable proposition to invest in the manpower needed to negotiate national licences with publishers that publish only one or two titles. Negotiating licences with the major publishers is one thing. But the long tail of small publishers is another. John Cox Managing Director John Cox Associates Ltd Rookwood Bradden TOWCESTER Northants NN12 8ED United Kingdom E-mail: John.E.Cox@btinternet.com Web: www.johncoxassociates.co.uk -----Original Message----- From: owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu [mailto:owner-liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Armbruster, Chris Sent: 16 June 2009 23:36 To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu Subject: RE: The App Store Effect What about the following key finding made by CIBER on behalf of RIN for the UK: "UK universities and colleges spent in excess of 379.8m licensing electronic journals during 2006/07. The level of use of these resources is enormous: almost 102 million articles were downloaded that year, at an average (direct) cost of 30.81." [MOD: POUNDS?] I note that the price tag is below 1 GBP/EURO/USD per item. If these deals were turned into national licensing deals with public access it is possible that the average cost would fall further... Anybody like to comment? The full paper may be fournd at: http://www.rin.ac.uk/use-ejournals The file is: Journal_spending_use_outcomes_CIBER_ejournals_working_paper.pdf Chris Armbruster
- Prev by Date: Re: Hoax Article Accepted by OA Bentham Journal
- Next by Date: Re: Building collections in a bad economy
- Previous by thread: RE: The App Store Effect
- Next by thread: ALCTS-CMDS Forum at ALA
- Index(es):