This book, first published in 1995, describes how automation is
changing the face of acquisitions as librarians know it and making
the future uncertain yet exciting. It documents how libraries have
increasingly moved to powerful, second-generation interfaceable or
integrated systems that can control all aspects of library
operations. The libraries presented as examples show that
increasing user expectations, the siren call of cyberspace and
network connectivity, and administrative faith in the savings to be
obtained from electronic technical services continue to drive the
migration to higher-level library management systems.
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