I was thinking about the future of libraries today while participating in the library board meeting. We were talking about where we go at HPL with downloadable media of all types. It is my current belief that libraries everywhere will be subscribing to more than one online content provider to get the broad scope of what is (and what will be) available for download.
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Warehouse? |
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Center of the City? |
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Tiny kiosk? |
Here's what I think will happen: Despite all the talk about ebooks driving the future of reading / publishing, there is still an important demographic that prefers paper, or can't afford the technology, has no access to high speed Internet, or any number of other contributing factors. The library will have another demographic to cater to - the ebook patron. Just like before them came the downloadable audio patron, the DVD patron, the VHS patron, the tape audiobook patron, the CD music patron, the vinyl / 8-Track / microfilm / microfiche / plain-old-book patrons before them.
Ebook readers don't kill libraries. Lack of good services for lending ebooks does. When the publishers realize that libraries DO promote their authors and DO promote a love of reading and services like
OverDrive realize loaning ematerial CAN be easy and seamless (look at
3M Cloud Library, hint, hint), libraries will integrate this new media and move on. Afterall, libraries are so much more than the materials they loan out. Libraries serve a function in their communities no other entity can fulfill - they cause the
First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States to be injected into the real world. Sound grandiose? It isn't - public libraries provide space to assemble, access
(at least for awhile) information to allow the existence of an informed electorate,
defend the freedom of speech, and ensure at least some measure of equality to all this across the increasingly disparate ends of the socio-economic spectrum.
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