Monday, June 6, 2011

Are we fighting a losing battle?

To begin, I love real live paper books. They are nice to hold and to flip through, easy on the eyes, easy to share and manage. All of this is important.

However, I also think it is a bit closed minded to consider the question of print or electronic resources to be a battle. At the moment, there is a key distinction between anything print and anything digital, namely around access. Until access to digital versions of all out print texts becomes as easy, as pleasant, and as available to everyone in all circumstances, print will always differ completely from digital. However, once we get there, an ebook and a print book will be exactly the same resource, just like hard cover and paperback. They will need librarians to manage them, too, remember, and libraries to hold them, even if they look a little different.

The difference to consider, then, is between:

Static resources - print and ebooks; peer-edited, (usually) reliable, purposefully structured but not quite current and not interactive

Fluid resources - websites, databases, wikipedia; constantly updated, interactive, cross-linked, but not necessarily subject to academic rigour (although not impossible), and with a differently designed, less controlled structure.

Each of these types have different purposes and uses in research and question answering, but whether the words are printed on a screen or a piece of paper is not the issue.

Until our user interfaces become as intuitive and print books, and everyone has as easy access to digital versions as print versions, the dynamic between print and digital is an issue. Right now, print resources can come back to a student’s desk, be carried home, and be browsed intuitively. By contrast, digital resources stay where the computer is, and students rarely can access them as easily as print. Also, each print resource can be used by a different student at once, can be shared and traded easily. Meanwhile, only the number of students as have workstations can get at digital materials. Print resources can automatically be given a certain amount of authority, as being checked and reviewed is inherent in the way they are produced. All these are important considerations, but it is very possible that technology will catch up with all of these.

I’m not saying that I think digital resources are better and we should abandon print books, but I do think that before too terribly long, there won’t be any difference.

3 comments:

  1. How do you feel about printing out digital resources.

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  3. It depends on the type of digital resource. If it's a fluid resource, you can't print it because that would be like taking a snapshot of a film. It loses the advantages of fluidity. Perhaps, if accessibility is an issue then key ideas or pieces of information could be printed, but it would not be representative of the resource. Rather, it would be more like reading a quote within an essay than reading the book.

    If it's a static resource, then on paper or on screen doesn't affect the information. If you don't have screens to look at it on, then I guess you need paper. That being said, if you have a screen to look at it on then it seems utterly pointless and wasteful to me. Maybe that's unfair, as I come from the generation that is more comfortable reading on screens, but that's my feeling.

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