IT News
From the bandwidth world, here’s a post describing internet connections at the South Pole. Not bad for a shaky satellite connection. The decline in isolation also changes something fundamental about wintering in Antarctica. The anecdote at the close of the article suggests something of the change. I find myself wondering if that is entirely a good thing, but the author, herself in residence, certainly seems to disagree with my concern. If I were there, I might disagree, too.
The second article is about robots shelving books. The library is at Chicago State University. Books after 1990 seem to be in open stacks. All the rest are in robot-serviced drawers. The books have RFID chips attached, and with them, the bots can retrieve 5 books in 2.5 minutes. They say that it took students two hours, but unless they have really dumb students—which I doubt—I suspect that the time reflected the students having to accomplish several tasks at once. If so, it’s not a very fair comparison, but the point being made, that having a dedicated technology can speed things up, is quite true.
Of course, here is yet another example of the prohibition of browsing and with that prohibition, of the curtailing of one of the most important ways that we learn about works of importance to our interest. I realize that libraries are often stuck between a rock and a hard place in this—they must find more and more space or downsize their collections. And this is certainly superior to the order-one-day-pick-up-the-next approach that off-premise storage entails. Still . . . .