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What will the library of the future look like?

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Matthew Fisher, an assistant professor of English at UCLA, knew that libraries all over the world had been digitizing their holdings. But he was frustrated by the difficulty finding what he was looking for -- in particular, Medieval manuscripts. A Google search for ‘Edward the Confessor’ might turn up 20 pages of results before the book, the oldest surviving Anglo-Norman history of the king, appears; it’s at Cambridge University, and they’ve put it online.

Rather than telling Cambridge it was time they hired an SEO expert, Fisher decided to collect links to these works himself. Launched late last year, the Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts is functional, if not pretty. But it does link to almost 1,000 manuscripts, including ‘Topographia Hibernia,’ above, which seems to be having a 12th to 13th century-style ‘Law and Order’ moment (if you can read the Latin, translations are welcome in the comments). The Medieval manuscripts catalog links to manuscripts by 193 authors in 20 languages collected by 59 libraries and describes them with the information scholars look for.

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Of those hundreds of manuscripts, UCLA has 48. Which means that the online catalog has greatly expanded their collection, if virtually. Is this the library of the future? A distributed network of collections of terrestrial libraries, curated by specialists?

It sounds good, but the collection-of-links model is problematic. Creating curated lists of links was vital to the early Internet, when search was spotty; lists of links is where Yahoo got started. But I worked at one of these sites (the Ultimate Band List, ubl.com) where we soon realized that we’d ceded control to the sites we’d linked to -- and they often changed. Sure, bands are flakier than libraries, but libraries can still update their naming protocols, change a frame-based site to one without frames, or move the collection into a new database-driven site. In other words, the Internet addresses of digital collections can easily change.

One other option is a massive, centralized digitized library like the Europeana. It launched in November 2008 with 2 million digitized items on its servers from from 1,000 libraries and museums across Europe. And, when it got 10 million hits an hour, it swiftly crashed. (A test version of the Europeana is now live; be gentle). Centralizing can be good, but it needs substantial infrastructure.

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Click around the Catalogue of Digitized Medieval Manuscripts and you’ll make your way to centuries-old books, some brilliantly illuminated. Whatever the library of the future might be, it’s lovely to look at our literary past.

-- Carolyn Kellogg

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