LIS 601: Week7
Key Concepts from the Lynch (1997) Article
- The Internet is NOT a digital library:
- lack of human intervention
- no collection/selection criteria
- lack of subject organization (classification systems)
- reliance on automatic search/classification/description mechanisms
- Advantages of NOT being a digital library
- lack of human intervention makes the Internet more "democratic"
- information is more dynamic
- information is more diverse
- information can be more current
- search engines can handled very large amounts of data inexpensively
- search engines can pinpoint the needed information within a document collection
- Disadvantages of NOT being digital library
- humans better at giving "overviews" of information
- humans best for recommending "best" sources
- lack of formal archival functions (pages "disappear")
- Conclusions:
- Those wanting the "digital library" approach will probably have to subscribe to special services to pay for the cost of human intervention.
- Low-cost/no-cost , advertiser-supported, search services will rely on automated indexing (i.e. webcrawlers and spiders).
- Final thought: it will be "social and economic issues, rather than technological ones, [that] will exert the greatest influence in shaping the future of information retrieval on the Internet (Lynch 1997)."
Page creator: J. Stephen Downie
Page created: 22 October 1997
Page updated: 23 October 1997