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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!manuel.anu.edu.au!coombs!dmcm
- From: dmcm@coombs.anu.edu.au (David McMullen)
- Newsgroups: aus.aarnet
- Subject: McGuiness in the Australian
- Date: 22 Jan 93 11:50:44 GMT
- Organization: Australian National University
- Lines: 164
- Message-ID: <dmcm.727703444@coombs>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: 150.203.76.2
-
-
- From the The Australian, January 22, 1993, page15.
-
- This article may contain the occasional scanning error.
-
- ELECTRONINC JEWEL IN THE GLOBAL COMMUNICATION CROWN
-
- by Padraic P. McGuinness
-
- "NETWORKs dissolve geography." This was only one
- of the many fascinating remarks made at a conference which has
- been going on in Sydney over the past few days on
- information on-line and on-disc-or the revolution in human
- conununications.
-
- The quote is from the opening speaker Dr Clifford Lynch,
- who is director of Library Automation at the University of
- California, in the office of the president of that
- university. Dr Lynch looked a bit like an ageing product
- of the 60s at the Berkeley campus of that university but
- spoke with the articulateness of an angel.
-
- He was speaking about the enormous growth and future of
- data transmission over the telephone lines from one
- computer to another which is making huge amounts of
- information available instantaneously and increasingly
- cheaply, and also creating networks of
- communlcation between individuals all over the world who
- gossip just as easily (perhaps more so) as if they were
- nextdoor neighbours. The truth is now that it is just as
- easy and, if You have access to the educational networks
- in particular, just as cheap to talk to someone anywhere
- in the world as it is to someone on the other side of the
- same country.
-
- Voice communications are still not so easy. But I have an
- old mate atthe Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru,
- in Lima, with whom I can correspond (through the
- Compuserve/Interlink connection) just as easily as if he
- were in Katoomba.
-
- The implications of this for social and family relations
- are immense.But so are the implications for business and
- our general intercourse with the rest of the world.
-
- If I wanted to I could chat daily with journalists in the
- United States or Europe, or anywhere else served by
- Compuserve. If I were a university employee, l could,
- through Aarnet (the Australian Academic Research network)
- and Internet, correspond with any university employee in
- most countries of the world.
-
- But more than that, I could swap documents, research, and
- even publish anything I wanted over the network. I could set up
- my own publications-for that matter, I could, for
- virtually nothing, file my columns into the network so
- that anyone who missed the precious words in
- The Australian could simply tap into them on
- Aarnet/Internet. As the capacity of these and similar
- networks grows, huge quantities ofresearch and data can
- be swapped all around the world.
-
- But the subject of the conference organised by the Australian
- Library and Information Association, was the
- huge growth in more formal provision of information on-
- line, which can be accessed by the public through the
- growing numbers of libraries and librarians who are
- trained to handle the techno]ogy, as well as by businesses
- research institutions, consultants and just about anybody
- who is sufficiently curious. The remarkable thing is that
- access to the huge and growing world database is becoming
- easier snd cheaper every day - though, of course, unlike
- the reformed hippies and nerds who have created Internet,
- most of the services are operated for profit.
-
- (The conference also provided a showcase for the nearly
- as interesting area of compact disc information, like the
- marvellous Oxford English Dictionary on CD-Rom about which
- I wrote a couple of months ago.)
-
- It was a conference which should have warmed the heart of
- any feminist. For the interesting thing was (and it
- reflects the original composition of the menial occupation
- of librarian as book trolley) that about 80 per cent of
- the attendance was female. Also interesting (though
- this probably reflects the relative seniority of those who
- are specialists in online database searching) is that the
- majority were over 40. I would expect that the sex balance
- would be more even among the younger librarlans, as in all
- other occupations. Perhaps we need affirmative action
- programs for male librarians, to make sure that the
- proportion of males in senior librarian positions reflects
- their proportion in the population as whole.
-
- But the reallty is that the once humble job of librarian
- is now becoming something much more important - they are
- the experts on accessing the huge body of information,
- that is the libraries and information databases of the
- world, which is abolishing geography in the intellectual
- as well as the personal sense. However, many of them
- have to learn, as indeed many have learnt, that a request
- to provide information on a subject which results in a
- lengthy blbliography and nothing else is not going to be
- much use to anyone except an academic with plenty of time
- on his or her hands.
-
- So what the new techndogy, which is becoming more and
- more powerful every year, is producing is a new breed
- which can be called, fairly pretentiously "information
- professionals" or, better information brokers. These are,
- in effect, the people who can deal with huge chunks of
- wholesale information and break it up, package it and on-
- sell it in a useful form to customers, business or
- consumers. The analogy holds even in its origins, of course,
- since the proliferation of brands and types of
- retail goods and services requires that expert advice
- on choice.
-
- This is of course what consumer bodies like the
- Australian Consumers Association do very well when they
- forget their ideological prejudices and stick to their
- last; it is also the function of critics of all kinds.
-
- The packaging and retailing of wholesale information is
- also what the newspapers and journalists do often very
- effectively - the incoming cables basket of a newspaper
- (these days that is an electronic, not a physical,
- concept) contains huge amounts of news, comment and
- analysis which has to be selected and edited. Such is the
- wealth of information that often it still overwhelms the
- reader. But at their best, journalists are the
- information brokers par excelience.
-
- People who taik about electronic newspapers often forget
- just how much judicious selection and presentation goes
- into the production of that medium - newspapers are seliing
- this function just as much as the news itself. Comment and
- analysis are always there, but the more explicit
- it becomes the less it appears as mere bias (as with the
- ABC) and the more it adds value to the commodity of news.
-
- Radio does it less well - these days radio is mainly a form
- of therapy - and televislon of course presents compelling
- images which often cater for the semi-literate or the
- print-handicapped but at their best add a dimension which
- the newspapers cannot. But if you don't like any of this,
- It is now easy to tap the contents of many of the great
- world newspapers direct. (You cannot yet tap into The
- Australian, except for The Business Australian, for
- technical reasons which I hope, will not last long.)
-
- So far, online information in Austraila has been a
- relatively well-kept secret. It is a time-consuming
- business, and its bibliographic rather than full-
- information bias for years confined it to libraries. (It
- has to be added that Telecom has until recently not been a
- great help and the specialist software it provides is a
- positive obstacle.) The subsidised academics have thebestofthings- but it is amazng how many of them do
- not realise what a jewel they are sitting on.
-
- It real iy is a huge, new world--and it is as near as the
- nearest telephone connection. Geography is being
- dissolved.
-
-