Talking With Gary Price
February 4, 2004
Had a nice chat with Gary Price yesterday. Here's a librarian who's written the book on the Invisible Web, and who has a mission to educate us about the resources - beyond the open web of Google et al - that are freely available to the public. Price took me on a tour of the databases that are available to anyone with a public library card. Among them, the Arlington library, which has the same Thompson/Gale databases for free as Highbeam has for $20 a month. Others, like the SF library, have huge databases of magazines and other business resources available. All you need is a library card (and access to the web - many resources are available over the net). This it does kind of make you wonder how Keepmedia and Highbeam intend to make money in the long run. Wait a minute...they intend to make money by intermediating libraries, who are notoriously terrible at marketing themselves.
As I've pointed out in a few other posts, Price maintains Resourceshelf and writes and lectures prolifically about search and research.




Comments
John,
You don't even have to go to the local library to find the Thomson/Gale info for free. Instead of paying a monthly subscription on some sites as you state, you can go to Looksmart Articles on the Web and find the Gale articles for no fee.
See my write-up in my weblog last week where I address the mixed-up world of pricing models on the Web:
http://shore.com/commentary/weblogs/premium/ecommerce/2004_01_01_archive.html#107516326314840462
John, thanks for the post.
Janice:
I saw that you commented on John's article about me.
Two quick comments.
1) The databases I showed John and available to most people are ACCESSIBLE WITHOUT having to visit the library. They are on via the web. In some areas you don't even need a library card.
2) FindArticles provides access to about 700 pubs.
Several of the resources I showed John have access to thousands of publications. For example, between
Academic Academic Index and InfoTrac OneFile a user would have access to over 4000 publications, many with archives back to the early 1990's.
I also mentioned NetLibrary to John. This resource, available remotely is from many libraries, provides access to several thousand, in print, books.
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