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Four “e”pochs: the story of informatization

Alistair S. Duff (Alistair S. Duff is a Lecturer in the School of Communication Arts, Napier University, Edinburgh, UK.)

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 March 2003

1005

Abstract

Informatization is a term of Japanese provenance denoting major systemic change resulting from the application of information technology. At the macro (economic and sociological) level, authors such as Fritz Machlup and Daniel Bell have outlined the shape of a supposed new order. In modern librarianship and information work, too, the effects of informatization have been pervasive. The paper articulates a simple synthetic theory of post‐war informatization with special reference to information services in libraries, and specifically computerized information retrieval. It is suggested, on the basis of primary and secondary research, that the “story” of informatization can be broken down into four electronic epochs: offline, online, CDROM, and the Internet. Each epoch is described and evaluated, focusing on the practical effects on British librarians (national, academic, and public) and their patrons. It is hoped that the use of primary sources enables the account to capture something of the sense of revolution accompanying the arrival of new epochs. Advice on a future fifth “e”poch is not supplied, but it is acknowledged that the prospects for a global reference system seem more hopeful than ever before.

Keywords

Citation

Duff, A.S. (2003), "Four “e”pochs: the story of informatization", Library Review, Vol. 52 No. 2, pp. 58-64. https://doi.org/10.1108/00242530310462125

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited

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