
Every librarian worth his salt knows that despite the rise of web scale discovery services, Google and Google Scholar are often the go-to tools of researchers.
Every librarian worth his salt knows that despite the rise of web scale discovery services, Google and Google Scholar are often the go-to tools of researchers.
Almost 4 years ago in 2010, I posted A few heretical thoughts about library tech trends.
Is known item searching really a big issue in Web Scale discovery?
In my last post, I mused about blue ocean strategies and how libraries should consider spending time focusing more on blue ocean strategies.
Curious about academic librarianship in Singapore as a career?
Library web scale discovery systems are great. They break down the silos between books , articles and other content types. They provide the "one-search" box experience that our users claim to want. But problems exist (See my overview - 8 things we know about web scale discovery systems in 2013 and outstanding issues ). In my experience, one of the most sticky issues is the question of getting relevant results.
I like to question why. I don't believe the status quo or the way things are is always the best that is possible. I ask why. I agitate for change. I try new things. But after over almost 7 years of working on various projects and initiating various changes, "the way things are" have started to slowly shift to what I had a hand in deciding or at least help guide thinking in - in some areas at least.
As part of a new goal to start reading sources outside the library world for ideas, I have been reading Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant and I must say it is surprisingly insightful.
I blogged 8 things we know about web scale discovery systems in 2013 , an attempt to summarize the current consensus after 4 years of web scale discovery service use in libraries and hundreds of research papers and presentation.
After several posts in a row about discovery services, let's have a change of pace and let me share with you some interesting ideas in the world of librarianship that I am playing with lately.
A tongue in a cheek, thought experiment or perhaps precautionary tale of the ultimate fate of library discovery services in 2035.