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What Libraries Can (Still) Do

28 pointsby nolsover 9 years ago

6 comments

EliRiversover 9 years ago
Libraries are fantastic at lending me physical books. Really, really good at it.<p>I&#x27;ve been an avid consumer of books on my various Sony readers (I prefer them to kindles and other brands) for most of the last decade, but as I type I have nine physical books from the library within a few feet of me. They charge me fifty pence to fetch it for me if they have to fetch it from some other county library, and two and a half pounds if they have to fetch it from anywhere in the UK and Ireland. I have six or seven books on order at the moment from the library, and they&#x27;ve got two waiting for me (one of which came from the county store, fifty pence, and one of which came from a university somewhere, two pounds and fifty pence).<p>Unbeatable value for books I want to read but don&#x27;t want to buy. Sometimes I even forgo piracy for the extra convenience of having it in physical format; novels that I read cover to cover sequentially are more convenient on the Sony, but textbooks, reference manuals and technical guides are so much more useful as paper. I completed a part-time degree last year and the library was an absolute viking at getting me maths textbooks and histories from all over.<p>Libraries can (still) lend me books at fantastic prices.
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design-of-homesover 9 years ago
I think many people (myself included) underestimate just how much knowledge is still tied up in books.<p>I thought I&#x27;d repeat this anecdote I previously posted on a discussion about libraries a while ago.<p>A few years ago I was researching the Swiss architect Le Corbusier. I wanted to find out about his famous housing complex called Unité d&#x27;habitation (Housing Unit) first built in Marseille in France. I started my research online looking for floorplans and commentary or critques. I found very little (there is a lot more available online today, but not when I was looking).<p>Consider that Le Corbusier is one of the most famous architects of the 20th century so this was a surprise. Eventually, I did find what I was looking for by going to the library and visiting an architecture exhibition. The point of all this is that we assume everything is mostly online and so it&#x27;s our first port of call for any research or knowledge gathering. But there is a huge amount of information and knowledge found in books that have never made it online. If you never go to the library, you simply won&#x27;t realise what you&#x27;re missing.
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m52goover 9 years ago
I&#x27;m not a librarian, but as I understand it, ebook pricing is ridiculously high right now. We need a revolution equivalent to the one brought by the paperback book to make the ebook market relevant for institutions like libraries (whether that&#x27;s brought about by a change in production costs, distribution, copyright, business model, or something else).<p>Also, I&#x27;d love to see some innovation in book discovery. Even if&#x2F;when a &quot;paperless library&quot; does exist, I can&#x27;t imagine having to &quot;browse&quot; through a search-box like some kind of autonomous pigeon-holed drone.<p>&gt; Libraries are screwed because we are invested in the codex, and the codex has become outmoded.<p>So, adapt! If this is how librarians think, then they really are screwed. But from my experience, most aren&#x27;t as averse to change and doomy-and-gloomy as this guy. There are some very creative and open-minded folks out there in charge of librarians doing some creative things. Time will tell what will work.
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neilsharmaover 9 years ago
I recently rediscovered my local library and fell in love. There are several libraries in my county that share a collection of books, and I can request a book available in a different library to be fetched and held for me at the library of my choice -- for free! Probably 90% of books in my goodreads reading list are accessible this way.<p>I used to buy a few kindle books (or pirate the ones I couldn&#x27;t find digital copies of), but I found out I read both more and faster with tangible books. And the three-week rental period (with the option to renew for up to six more weeks) encourages me to actually finish books in a timely manner.<p>My library also hosts cultural shows and has a small museum -- currently there are several pre-modern human skulls on display.<p>Plus, internet speeds hit 50Mbps+. Never need to go to a local coffeehouse again.<p>The only odd thing about my library is how ebook rentals (3-week digital access) can be out of stock. Don&#x27;t know what kind of licensing deal they have with publishers, but this seems pointless.<p>On a different note, what I&#x27;ve noticed is how easy platforms like this help fight piracy:<p>Netflix + HBO --&gt; fewer torrented movies&#x2F;shows.<p>Steam&#x2F;Humble Bundle&#x2F;etc --&gt; fewer illegal games.<p>Libraries --&gt; fewer pirated books.<p>Youtube&#x2F;Spotify&#x2F;Pandora --&gt; no longer need to maintain a library of illegally procured music.<p>With the right combination of price, selection, accessibility, and convenience, piracy to me has seemed less appealing over the years.
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mjevansover 9 years ago
Updated: Having read the article, my own opinions miss a feature of libraries that I had forgotten existed. Human search aids that can better translate the questions of humans in to the domain of curated information that they might also maintain.<p>I am happy to see that I was mistaken in my belief that they would be talking about just books, given their domain name.<p>-- the remainder is my thoughts prior to reading the article. --<p>For me, it begins with asking, what is a library? If you ask any normal person they&#x27;ll start talking about books. Books are just one medium for storing, preserving, and disseminating information. A library should be about more than books.<p>A library is a temple for worship of and enlightenment through information; for some of the very aspects that separate us from our ancient ancestors and even more so from the other creatures that live in the ecosystems we share.<p>Libraries can, and should, be repositories and distribution points for information, in all forms and medias. A library should be a well connected hub, not just for books, but also our networks. A library is where local content should be cached, and remote content mirrored. A library should work &#x2F;with&#x2F; local not-for-profits of all types who share the goal of spreading education, enlightenment, and progress in the useful arts of science.
tormehover 9 years ago
A library close to where my parents live have gone in a different direction, concentrating on hosting talks.