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- Info on Michigan Information Transfer Source
- Craig Stahl, 11/4/85
- FreeForm-Legal RBBS, 313/774-7258, data
-
- The following is information on the best unknown research service for
- professionals.
-
- The Michigan Information Transfer Service (MITS) is operated by the University
- of Michigan Library Science Department. Their primary goal is to provide
- research services for the university - They have gone commercial, perhaps to
- help with operating expenses or perhaps to keep those in that major occupied,
- who knows. Whatever reason, let me explain why you should find it so useful
- and give some examples:
-
- The service has access to all specialized computer databases (directly, not
- through something like compuserve). The databases cover all scholarly journals
- and most everything else printed. There are more than two dozen databases.
-
- The method of using the service is to call with a general idea of your research
- request, or to fill out a form and send it in. They will then return reams of
- computer printout within two days. You will be billed the actual cost of
- computer time plus $10-30 an hour for the research assistant's time.
-
- What makes the system better than Nexis, The Source and others?
-
- 1. The huge number of databases. They have access to bases like inorganic
- chemestry, psychological abnormailities and People Magazine (I think the later
- two are related).
-
- 2. Being University of Michigan, they must have cut a deal to get discount
- access time. You will see the actual charges on printouts they send you and
- wonder how they got away with it.
-
- 3. You talk to a real, thinking person who understands the question better than
- you think they do. They know exactly what databases to go into, what to get
- and how. After all, that's their major and they are being graded on
- performance.
-
- 4. You are keeping a hungry undergrad co-op employed instead of improving some
- corporation's portfolio.
-
- Turnaround is within two days. No order passes through without supervision
- from the director (her name evades at this moment).
-
- Now two examples of why my enthuiasm exudes:
-
- 1. Back in law school I was required to write a paper on DISC corporations
- (huh? was my first response). I gave MITS the word DISC and ended up with 120
- references. Most references were from obscure international economic journals,
- some were from legal journals and some were from magazines like Forbes (a
- couple quotes from Malcom Sr. can seem like levity in a dreary paper). Some
- headnotes were good enough to use without looking at the actual paper. Please
- never repeat that - I don't want to be recalled to law school. All this cost
- me $60 which I would gladly pay again.
-
- 2. A client was anticipating litigation against fly-by-night robotics supplier.
- The issue of disagreement was quality of the firmware. I explained vector
- analysis, linear interpolation and RS-274D (not 232) to the director of MITS.
- The info received back landed on all four points. It helped my client (and
- myself) understand what the hell was going on. The info also helped with the
- next supplier so that a second bluff wouldn't be successful. This case cost
- $120, mostly because we requested a lot of photocopied articles from the
- references.
-
- Ask for their information booklet and forms:
-
- Michigan Information Transfer Source (MITS)
- Hutchins Hall
- University of Michigan
- Ann Arbor, Michigan
-
- Sorry again but the zip code and phone number also evade me. I would suggest
- 1/313-555-1212 as a good starting point for your research.
-
- ADDENDUM: They have two levels of retrival priorities. They can retrive
- references while online or wait for a callback overnight. Not much difference
- in speed. If your need is extremely urgent and you can't wait for airmail,
- they have modems.
-
- LET US KNOW ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCES - POST THEM ON THE LAWYER'S BBS LISTED ABOVE
- AND WE'LL INCLUDE THEM IN THIS TEXT. THANKS.