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  4. Abundance, Attention, and Access: Of Portals and Catalogs

Abundance, Attention, and Access: Of Portals and Catalogs

File(s)
Abundance, Attention, and Access - Of Portals and Catalogs.pdf (2.68 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/2878
Collections
Articles, Preprints, and Presentations by CUL Staff
Author
Thomas, Sarah
Abstract

The world's information resources are abundant, but time is a scarce commodity. The ideal discovery tool, therefore, is one which consults omnivorously, but which returns a selection of relevant results in rapid sequence. Searchers find what they need promptly without having to wade through a vast assortment of tangentially related, inaccurate, or otherwise deficient data. It costs little to build and operate, and it yields a high degree of user satisfaction because it delivers reliable information in a timely manner with relative ease. Such a tool is still imaginary, although it could become a reality in the near future if librarians organize themselves appropriately and commit the resources to design it.

Date Issued
2000-10
Publisher
Association of Research Libraries
Keywords
portal
•
catalog
•
digital library
Previously Published as
Thomas, Sarah E., "Abundance, Attention, and Access - Of Portals and Catalogs," A Bimonthly Report on Research Library Issues and Actions from ARL, CNI, and SPARC, Issue 212 (October 2000).
Type
article

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