Parents of Invention

Regular price €62.99
1980s-90s
A01=Christopher Brown-Syed
Author_Christopher Brown-Syed
Bibliographic Systems
Category=GLF
Challenges and Solutions
Collaborative Creative Processes
Competition among
Corporate Environments
Customers
Effects on Library Automation
End-Users Ability to Influence Software and Hardware Design
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
ILS for End-Users
ILS on Workflows in Libraries
Impact of
Impact of Automation on Library Workflow
Importance of
Library Acquisitions Systems
Library Circulation Systems
Library Systems Departments in Libraries
Library Systems Vendors
Mergers and Takeovers among ILS Vendors
Online Public Access Catalogues
Perspectives of
Program Code and Languages
Programming Perspectives
Sales and Marketing Perspectives
Technical Specifications
Technical Specifications of GEAC and Rival Mini-Computers
Technical Specifications of Overnight/Offline Processing Required by ILS
Technical Specifications of OvernightOffline Processing Required by ILS
Technological Turning Points
Vendors

Product details

  • ISBN 9781591587927
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2011
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This fascinating tale of the rise and fall of mini-computer-based integrated library systems (ILS) offers both an explanation of the technical workings—still being used daily—and a historical investigation.

Parents of Invention: The Development of Library Automation Systems in the Late 20th Century traces the rise and fall of mini-computer-based ILS. In doing so, it offers an insider's view of the process of creation, the technical challenges, and the lasting contributions of librarians and programmers at a time when librarians and their automation needs forced computer companies to innovate.

Organized around a series of interviews with computer programmers, librarians, and salespeople, the book discusses developments from the late 1970s to the mid-1990s, focusing on the 1980s when both ILS and the mini-computer were dominant. It documents the time when a small group of computing vendors joined with large libraries around the world to perfect systems that automated functions such as circulation, acquisitions, cataloging, and online public access catalogs. A concluding chapter, contributed by Louise O'Neill, brings the story up to date with a discussion of current developments in library automation, including the adoption of open-source systems, open-access principles, and the Semantic Web.

The late Christopher Brown-Syed was editor of the journal Library & Archival Security; and taught at Seneca College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.