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This brief history of library automation is framed around the question of why to automate a library, exploring the transition from a focus on local concerns in the 1960s to today’s focus on global concerns.
information resources on an international basis. This brief history of library automation is framed around the question of why to automate a library, exploring the transition from a focus on local concerns in the 1960s to today's focus on global concerns. Why Automate a Library? What motivates a library to automate its operations, resources ...
17 Ιουν 2023 · Library automation has a rich history of more than 130 years of development, from the standardization of card catalogs to the creation of the machine-readable cataloging (MARC) communications format and bibliographic utilities.
Technology and policy issues involved in library automation and its role in the Global Information Infrastructure are summarized. Over a period of thirty years, goals for library automation have shifted from an emphasis on local concerns to an emphasis on global concerns.
Virágos, Márta, 'The Human Aspects of Library Automation', in Andrew Lass, and Richard E Quandt (eds), Library Automation in Transitional Societies: Lessons from Eastern Europe (New York, NY, 2000; online edn, Oxford Academic, 31 Oct. 2023), https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195132625.003.0035, accessed 21 Nov. 2023.
Library Automation: History. By Robert M. Hayes. Book Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences. Click here to navigate to parent product. Edition 4th Edition. First Published 2017. Imprint CRC Press. Pages 12. eBook ISBN 9781315116143.
This entry provides a review of the history of developments in library automation in the United States. It discusses four contexts within which library automation should be seen, and does so within each of six time periods: 1) pre-1945; 2) 1945–1960; 3) 1960–1975; 4) 1975–1990; 5) 1990–2008; and (6) post-2008.