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Network access to visual information: a study of costs and uses1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 June 2016

Howard Besser*
Affiliation:
UCLA School of Education & Information Studies, 241 GSE&IS Bldg, Box 951520, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1520, USA
*
Email: howard@sims.berkeley.edu, http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/~howard/
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Abstract

This paper summarizes a subset of the findings of a study of digital image distribution which focused on the Museum Educational Site Licensing Project (MESL) - the first large-scale multi-institutional project to explore digital delivery of art images and accompanying text/metadata from disparate sources. This Mellon Foundation sponsored study evaluated the costs, infrastructure, and efforts involved in implementing the MESL project, as well as user reaction to functionality. The study also examined costs of running analog slide libraries and compared these to costs and functionality associated with digital image distribution.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Art Libraries Society 1981

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Footnotes

1.

Text of a paper delivered at the Open Session of the Section of Art Libraries at the 65th IFLA General Conference in Bangkok, 1999.

References

1. Text of a paper delivered at the Open Session of the Section of Art Libraries at the 65th IFLA General Conference in Bangkok, 1999.Google Scholar
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4. Besser, Howard and Stephenson, Christie. ‘The Museum Educational Site Licensing Project: technical issues in the distribution of museum images and textual data to universities’. In E.V.A. ’96 London (Electronic Imaging and the Visual Arts), edited by Hemsley, James. Hampshire, UK: Vasari Ltd., 1996, p.5:15:15.Google Scholar
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6. Besser, Howard. ‘Comparing five implementations of the Museum Educational Site Licensing Project: “If the museum data’s the same, why’s it look so different?’”. In Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Hypermedia and Interactivity in Museums. Pittsburgh, PA: Archives and Museum Informatics, 1997, p.317325.Google Scholar
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