Submitted: January 16, 2009 - 10:04am
Last updated: January 16, 2009 - 10:04am
Last updated: January 16, 2009 - 10:04am
Author:
Lee Rainie
This speech pulls together Pew Internet Project data about how people's use of the Internet and cell phones has fundamentally changed the "information ecosystem" in 10 ways. Lee discusses how this has changed the role of libraries in the digital age and he points out ways that libraries can adapt to meet the expectations and demands of patrons.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Patrons rally behind resilient public libraries
- Identity Ecosystem? Inside Uncle Sam's "trusted identity" plan
- Pew Research Center Announces New Research Initiative to Study the Changing Role of Public Libraries and Library Users in the Digital Age
- Library lends a hand in troubled times
- Set goals for minimum broadband connectivity for schools and libraries
- The Phone Wars Aren't Over
- Google spends $1 million on censorship and throttling detection
- The Google Library
- Google reminds Verizon of network neutrality differences
- The FCC's New 'Local' Focus: Too Little, Too Late?
- Napolitano Calls Cyber Security A Shared Responsibility
- In Run-Up To Kindle Lending Program, Libraries Beef Up E-Book Offerings
- From Silicon Valley to Main Street Virginia
- Just-in-time Information through Mobile Connections
- Verizon: Title II Classification Would Cause Widespread Harm
Ratings
Recommendation:
1
Informative:
0
Accuracy:
0
Login to rate this headline.

