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How Much Digital Information?
Since 2007, on behalf of EMC Corporation, IDC has been sizing what it calls the Digital Universe, or the amount of digital information created and replicated in a year. The newest report is now available:
- The Digital Universe Decade – Are You Ready? By John Gantz and David ReinselIDC, Sponsored by EMC Corporation (May 2010) [PDF, 16 pp excerpted from the IDC multimedia presentation, "The Digital Universe Decade – Are You Ready?" (May 2010)
- The Digital Universe Decade – Are You Ready? (The multimedia content)
- Last year, despite the global recession, the Digital Universe set a record growing by 62% to nearly 800,000 petabytes.
- The average file size is getting smaller. The number of things to be managed is growing twice as fast as the total number of gigabytes.
- The growth of the Digital Universe is like a perpetual tsunami. How will we find the information we need when we need it?
- How will we know what information we need to keep, and how will we keep it?
- It will aid preservation by making the preservation community bigger. This will not only increase redundancy, but will also help ensure that there is less chance that a single system or financial or governance failure will mean a loss of all information.
- It will help deal with the scale of the preservation problem (as identified by the IDC report). With more players and more stake holders, there will be more voices and more variety in the decision making process when we collectively decide what to save. This will mean, for example, that a group of School Libraries working together on digital preservation could ensure that an item of essential use to K-12 will be saved even if no university saves it. And vice versa.
- It will help users find and use the information they need. Today, it seems that everyone understands what librarians have always known: that there is a lot of information in the world. It used to take a library degree to get an appreciation of all the sources of information in the world. Today, everyone that uses the Web has that same appreciation. It seems like every day there is another newspaper article or blog posting about how great it is to have access to "everything." But the "everything" people see on the Web is really only a subset of everything and it only appears to be "everything" because there is so much in this very large subset of everything. And, when your only option is to search "everything" you quickly discover that that is not always the best way to find just what you want. (Even Google has segmented information into categories like movies, blogs, books, and scholarly information.) Having community-of-interest collections will enable libraries to build user-interfaces that work best for those communities and that provide access to the information those communities most want.
Explaining “Born Digital” Gov Docs to Patrons & Professors
I had to explain to a student patron and their Professor today what is meant by "born digital" and how digital government documents are wonderful resources for a paper if we do not have the print version or when the print version doesn't exist (or is horribly out of date). Have any of you had to explain this a lot? It all started when the student patron told me she could only have three web sources for her Nursing research paper after I had shown her the wonderful world of digital documents online. She had found an eleven year old version of a government print source in our catalog but I cringed...born digital documents online via NIH or the U.S. Dept. of Health had more up to date medical information on her topic! I told her to use both the print and online sources. She would be able to see if there were any noticeable differences from the 1997 print version and the 2007/2008 online information on her topic. I contacted the Professor and explained this too. All is well and she will allow for the use of online government information. She was just hoping to avoid the use of too many general (i.e. crappy) websites. I understand that but I wanted to make sure that the student would not be punished for using several good government online documents and websites for her paper. I didn't get into the nitty gritty digital authentication of government documents, but with some Professors who require legislative research, I tell them about the digitally authenticated documents that currently exist from GPO. I have a feeling we government document librarians are going to have to explain this concept of "born digital" gov docs and digital authentication more often...especially now that more and more gov docs are being born digitally. Continue reading
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