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- NREN for All:
- Insurmountable Opportunity
-
- c. 1993 Jean Armour Polly
- Manager of Network Development and User Training
- NYSERNet, Inc.
- jpolly@nysernet.org
-
- This was originally published in the February 1, 1993 issue of
- Library Journal (volume 118, n. 2, pp 38-41.
- It may be freely reprinted for educational use, please let me know if
- you are redistributing it, I like to know if it's useful and where it's
- been. Please do not sell it, and keep this message intact.
-
-
- When Senator Al Gore was evangelizing support for his visionary
- National Research and Education Network bill, he often pointed to
- the many benefits of a high-speed, multi-lane, multi-level data
- superhighway. Some of these included:
-
- -- collaborating research teams, physically distant from each other,
- working on shared projects via high speed computer networks.
- Some of these "grand challenges" might model global
- environmental change, or new therapeutic drug research, or the
- design of a new airplane for inexpensive consumer air travel.
-
- -- a scientist or engineer might design a product, which could be
- instantly communicated to a manufacturing plant, whose robotic
- machine could turn the drawing-board product into reality. One
- example of this is the capability to digitally measure a new recruit
- for an army uniform, transmit the information to a clothing
- manufacturer, and take delivery of a custom-tailored uniform the
- next day.
-
- -- access to digital libraries of information, both textual and graphic.
- Besides hundreds of online public access catalogs, and full text
- documents, color illustrations of photographic quality, full motion
- videos and digital audio will also be available over the network.
-
- In his many articles and speeches touting the bill, Gore often used
- an example of a little girl, living in a rural area, at work on a school
- project. Was she information-poor due to her physical location, far
- from the resources of large cities? No-- the National Research and
- Education Network would give her the capability to dial into the
- Library of Congress-- to collect information on dinosaurs.
-
- Now that the NREN bill has been signed into law (12/91), and
- committees are being formed, and policies are being made, I'm still
- thinking about that little girl, and her parents, for that matter. In
- fact I've got some "Grand Questions" to pose.
-
- 1- How will we get access?
- The Internet has been called the "Interim NREN", since it's what we
- have in place now.
- I'm wondering how the family is going to get to the Internet "dial
- tone", let alone the NREN, especially since they live in a rural area.
- The information superhighway may be miles from their home, and
- it may be an expensive long-distance call to the "entrance ramp".
-
- Or, the superhighway may run right through their front yard, but
- they can't make use of it because they have no computer, no
- modem, and no phone line to make the connection. What
- good is a superhighway if all you've got is a tricycle?
-
- 2- What will they be able to gain access to, and will their privacy be
- protected?
- Beyond the infrastructure issues, I'm concerned about what kind of
- things will be available for them once they do get connected,
- how the resources will be arranged, and how they will learn to use
- these tools to advantage. Beyond that, how authoritative is the
- information in the digital collection, and how do we know for sure
- it came from a legitimate source? How confidential will their
- information searches be, and how will it be safeguarded?
-
- 3- Who will get access?
- I'm concerned that even if the infrastructure and resource problems
- are resolved, that little girl still won't be allowed access, because a
- lot of folks don't think the Internet is a safe place for
- unaccompanied minors.
-
- 4- Does the family have any electronic rights? Electronic
- responsibilities? Are dinosaurs and a grade-school project too
- trivial for NREN?
- Some people think the NREN should be reserved for scientists
- working on "Grand Challenges", not ordinary ones. Who will
- decide what constitutes "acceptable use"?
-
- 5- What is the future of the local public library?
- Worse yet, I'm worried that the reason they are phoning the Library
- of Congress in the first place is that their local public library has
- shut its doors, sold off the book stock, and dismissed the librarian.
- What can public libraries do to avoid that future?
-
- Brief Background: The Internet Today
-
- Computers all over the world are linked by high speed
- telecommunications lines. On the other side of their screens are
- people of all races and nationalities who are able to exchange ideas
- quickly through this network.
-
- This "brain to brain" interface brings both delight and despair, as
- evidenced by the following True Tales from the Internet:
-
- -- Children all over the world participate in class collaborations,
- sharing holiday customs, local food prices, proverbs, acid rain
- measurements, and surveys such as a recent one from a fifth grade
- class in Argentina who wanted to know (among other things) "Can
- you wear jeans to school?".
-
- -- During the Soviet coup in the summer of 1991, hundreds read
- eyewitness accounts of developments posted to the net by
- computer users in Moscow and other Soviet cities with network
- connectivity. A literal hush fell over this side of the network after a
- plea came across from the Soviet side. We appreciate your
- messages of encouragement and offers of help, it said, but please
- save the bandwidth for our outgoing reports!
-
- - Proliferation of discussion groups on the Internet means one can
- find a niche to discuss everything from cats to Camelot, from
- library administration to lovers of mysteries, from Monty Python to
- Medieval History.
-
- -- Predictably, Elvis has been sighted on the Internet.
-
- Besides electronic mail, full text resources may be downloaded
- from many Internet host computers. Some of these are religious
- materials, such as the Bible, and the Koran, others are the complete
- works of Shakespeare, Peter Pan, and Far From the Madding
- Crowd.
-
- Searchable resources include lyrics from popular songs, chord
- tablature for guitar, recipes, news articles, government information,
- Supreme Court Opinions, census data, current and historical
- weather information, dictionaries, thesauri, the CIA World Fact
- Book, and much more.
-
- Hundreds of library OPACS may be searched, and those with
- accounts set up at CARL may use UnCover to find articles of
- interest, which then may be faxed on demand.
-
- The richness of the Internet changes on a daily basis as more data
- resources, computer resources, and human resources join those
- already active on the net.
- But, back to that little girl╔.
-
- How will she get access?
-
- She'll need a plain old telephone line, a modem, a computer, and
- some communications software. Will her family be able to afford it?
- If not, will she be able to dial in from her school? Her Post Office?
- The local feed store? A kiosk at K-Mart?
-
- At the American Library Association's 1992 convention in San
- Francisco, Gloria Steinem said "the public library is the last refuge
- of those without modems." I'm sure she meant that the library will
- act as information provider for those unable to get their
- information using a home computer's telecommunications
- connections. But it could be taken another way. Couldn't the public
- library act as electronic information access centers, providing public
- modems and telecommunications alongside the books and videos?
-
- Why the Public Library is a good place for NREN access
-
- The public library is an institution based on long-standing beliefs in
- intellectual freedom and the individual's right to know. Let's revisit
- ALA's LIBRARY BILL OF RIGHTS, Adopted June 18, 1948;
- amended February 2, 1961, and January 23, 1980, by the ALA
- Council.
-
- The American Library Association affirms that all libraries are
- forums for information and ideas, and that the following basic
- policies should guide their services.
-
- 1. Books and other library resources should be provided for the
- interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the
- community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded
- because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to
- their creation.
-
- No problem here. The Internet's resources are as diverse as their
- creators, from nations all over the world. Every community can
- find something of interest on the Internet.
-
- 2. Libraries should provide materials and information
- presenting all points of view on current and historical issues.
- Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan
- or doctrinal disapproval.
- 3. Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of
- their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.
- 4. Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups
- concerned with resisting abridgment of free expression and free
- access to ideas.
-
- Again, global electronic communication allows discussion and
- debate in an instant electronic forum. There is no better "reality
- check" than this.
-
- 5. A person's right to use a library should not be denied or
- abridged because of origin, age, background, or views.
-
- In a public library, the little girl won't be barred from using the
- Internet because of her age. The ALA interpretation of the above
- right states:
- "Librarians and governing bodies should not resort to age
- restrictions on access to library resources in an effort to avoid actual
- or anticipated objections from parents or anyone else. The mission,
- goals, and objectives of libraries do not authorize librarians or
- governing bodies to assume, abrogate, or overrule the rights and
- responsibilities of parents or legal guardians.
- Librarians and governing bodies should maintain that parents - and
- only parents - have the right and the responsibility to restrict the
- access of their children - and only their children - to library
- resources.
- Parents or legal guardians who do not want their children to have
- access to certain library services, materials or facilities, should so
- advise their children. Librarians and governing bodies cannot
- assume the role of parents or the functions of parental authority in
- the private relationship between parent and child. Librarians and
- governing bodies have a public and professional obligation to
- provide equal access to all library resources for all library users."
- 6. Libraries which make exhibit spaces and meeting rooms
- available to the public they serve should make such facilities
- available on an equitable basis, regardless of the beliefs or
- affiliations of individuals or groups requesting their use."
-
- The Internet provides the equivalent of electronic meeting rooms
- and virtual exhibit spaces. Public libraries will offer access to all
- comers, regardless of their status.
-
- Further, as part of the Interpretation of the Library Bill of Rights,
- this statement appears:
- "The U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that `the right to receive
- ideas follows ineluctably from the sender's First Amendment right
- to send them. . . . More importantly, the right to receive ideas is a
- necessary predicate to the recipient's meaningful exercise of his
- own rights such as speech, press, and political freedom' Board of
- Education, Island Trees Union Free School District No. 26 v. Pico,
- 457 U.S. 853, 866-67 (1982) (plurality opinion)."
-
- Clearly, reception and sending of ideas is a First Amendment issue.
- Oral, written, and electronic speech must be equally protected so
- that democracy may flourish.
-
- Public libraries also provide "free" services, though in fact the costs
- are just deferred. Taxes, state aid derived from taxes, federal aid
- derived from taxes, and private funds all pay for the "free" services
- at public libraries. Public libraries may be thought of as
- Information Management Organizations (IMO's), similar to Health
- Management Organizations, where patrons/patients contribute
- before they need information/health care, so that when they do
- need it, librarians/doctors are available to render aid.
-
- Why NREN in the Public Library is a bad idea
-
- On the surface, the public library looks like an excellent place to
- drop Internet/NREN connectivity. Libraries are veritable temples
- of learning, intellectual freedom, and confidentiality.
-
- However, most public libraries lack what computer experts call
- infrastructure. If there are computers, they may be out of date. Staff
- may not have had time to learn to operate them, and the computers
- may literally be collecting dust.
-
- There may be no modems, no phone line to share, no staff with
- time to learn about the Internet and its many resources. Money to
- update equipment, hire staff, and buy training is out of the
- question. Public libraries face slashed budgets, staff layoffs,
- reduced hours, and cutbacks in services.
-
- Many of these drawbacks are noted in the recent study by Dr.
- Charles R. McClure, called Public Libraries and the
- Internet/NREN: New Challenges, New Opportunities.
-
- Public librarians were surveyed about their attitudes toward NREN
- in interviews and focus groups. According to the study, public
- librarians thought that the public had a "right" to the Internet, and
- its availability in their libraries would provide a safety net for the
- electronic-poor.
-
- On the other hand they felt that they could not commit resources to
- this initiative until they knew better what the costs were and the
- benefits might be. They longed for someone else to create a pilot
- project to demonstrate the Internet's usefulness, or lack thereof, for
- public library users.
-
- The study describes several scenarios for public libraries as the
- NREN evolves. Some may simply choose to ignore the sweeping
- technological changes in information transfer. They may continue
- to exist by purveying high-demand items and traditional services,
- but they may find it increasingly difficult to maintain funding
- levels as the rest of the world looks elsewhere for their information
- and reference needs. The public library may find itself servicing
- only the information disenfranchised, while the rest of the
- community finds, and pays for, other solutions.
-
- As the study explains:
-
- "While embracing and exploiting networked information and
- services, [successfully transitioned libraries] also maintain high
- visibility and high demand traditional services. But resources will
- be reallocated from collections and less-visible services to support
- their involvement in the network. All services will be more client-
- centered and demand-based, and the library will consciously seek
- opportunities to deliver new types of information resources and
- services electronically."
-
- "In this scenario, the public library will develop and mount services
- over the NREN, provide for public access to the NREN, and will
- compete successfully against other information providers. In its
- networked role, the library can serve as a central point of contact as
- an electronic navigator and intermediary in linking individuals to
- electronic information resources- regardless of type or physical
- location. The public library in this second scenario will define a
- future for itself in the NREN and develop a strategic plan to insure
- its successful participation as an information provider in the
- networked environment."
-
-
- What Should Happen
-
- Senator Gore has proposed what has been variously called Son of
- NREN or Gore II, which should help address many of these
- infrastructure problems.
-
- Unfortunately, the Bill was not passed and the closing of the last
- Congress. There is hope, however, that it will be reintroduced this
- Spring.
-
- Specifically, Gore's bill would have ensured that the technology
- developed by the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991 is
- applied widely in K-12 education, libraries, health care and
- industry, particularly manufacturing. It would have authorized a
- total of $1.15 billion over the next five years.
-
- According to a press release from Senator Gore's office,
-
- "The Information Infrastructure and Technology Act charges the
- White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) with
- coordinating efforts to develop applications for high-performance
- computing networking and assigns specific responsibilities to the
- National Science Foundation, the National Aeronautics and Space
- Agency, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and
- the National Institutes of Health. It would expand the role of
- OSTP in overseeing federal efforts to disseminate scientific and
- technical information."
-
- "The bill provides funding to both NSF and NASA to develop
- technology for 'digital libraries'-- huge data bases that store text,
- imagery, video, and sound and are accessible over computer
- networks like NSFNET. The bill also funds development of
- prototype 'digital libraries' around the country."
-
- The public needs NREN because 300 baud used to be fast and low-
- resolution graphics used to be pretty. Now we get impatient
- waiting for fax machines to print out a document from half a
- continent away, when a few years ago we would have been
- content to wait days or weeks for the same article to arrive by mail.
- We are satisfied with technology until it starts to impede our lives
- in some way. We wait impatiently, sure that we spend half our
- lives waiting for printers, and the other half waiting for disk drives.
- Time is a commodity.
-
- I can envision that little girl walking into the public library with the
- following request:
- "I'm doing a school report on the Challenger disaster. I need a video
- clip of the explosion, a sound bite of Richard Feynman explaining
- the O-ring problem, some neat graphics from NASA, oh, and
- maybe some virtual reality mock-ups of the shuttle interior. Can
- you put it all on this floppy disk for me, I know it's only 15 minutes
- before you close but, gee, I had band practice╔." This is why
- public libraries need NREN.
-
- We would do well to remember the words of Ranganathan, whose
- basic tenets of good librarianship need just a little updating from
- 1931:
-
- "[Information] is for use."
- "Every [bit of information], its user."
- "Every user, [his/her bit of information]."
- "Save the time of the [user]."
- "A [network] is a growing organism."
-
- And so is the public library. A promising future awaits the public
- library that can be proactive rather than reactive to technology.
- Information technology is driving the future, librarians should be at
- the wheel. It is hoped that the new Administration in Washington
- will provide the fuel to get us going.
-
- _______________________________
- SIDEBAR
- -------------------------------------------------------
- Excerpts from S.2937 as introduced July 1, 1992
- 102nd Congress
- 2nd Session
- IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES
-
- Mr. GORE (for himself, Rockefeller (D-WV), Kerry (D-MA),
- Prestler (R-SD), Riegle (D-MI), Robb (D-VA), Lieberman (D-CT),
- Kerrey (D-NE) and Burns (R-MT)) introduced the following bill;
- which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Commerce,
- Science and Transportation.
-
- A BILL
- To expand Federal efforts to develop technologies for applications
- of high-performance computing and high-speed networking, to
- provide for a coordinated Federal program to accelerate development
- and deployment of an advanced information infrastructure,
- and for other purposes.
-
- Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives
- of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
-
-
- SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
- This Act may be cited as the "Information Infrastructure and
- Technology Act of 1992".
-
- SEC. 7. APPLICATIONS FOR LIBRARIES.
- (a) DIGITAL LIBRARIES.--In accordance with the Plan
- developed under section 701 of the National Science and
- Technology Policy, Organization and Priorities Act of 1976 (42
- U.S.C. 6601 et seq.), as added by section 3 of this Act, the National
- Science Foundation, the National Aeronautics and Space
- Administration, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency,
- and other appropriate agencies shall develop technologies for
- "digital libraries" of electronic information. Development of digital
- libraries shall include the following:
- (1) Development of advanced data storage systems
- capable of storing hundreds of trillions of bits of data
- and giving thousands of users nearly instantaneous
- access to that information.
- (2) Development of high-speed, highly accurate
- systems for converting printed text, page images,
- graphics, and photographic images into electronic form.
- (3) Development of database software capable of
- quickly searching, filtering, and summarizing large
- volumes of text, imagery, data, and sound.
- (4) Encouragement of development and adoption of
- standards for electronic data.
- (5) Development of computer technology to
- categorize and organize electronic information in a
- variety of formats.
- (6) Training of database users and librarians in
- the use of and development of electronic databases.
- (7) Development of technology for simplifying the
- utilization of networked databases distributed around
- the Nation and around the world.
- (8) Development of visualization technology for
- quickly browsing large volumes of imagery.
- (b) DEVELOPMENT OF PROTOTYPES.--The National
- Science
- Foundation, working with the supercomputer centers it
- supports, shall develop prototype digital libraries of
- scientific data available over the Internet and the National
- Research and Education Network.
- (c) DEVELOPMENT OF DATABASES OF REMOTE-
- SENSING
- IMAGES.--The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- shall develop databases of software and remote-sensing images
- to be made available over computer networks like the
- Internet.
-
- (d) AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.--
- (1) There are authorized to be appropriated to the National
- Science
- Foundation for the purposes of this section, $10,000,000 for fiscal
- year 1993, $20,000,000 for fiscal year 1994, $30,000,000 for fiscal year
- 1995, $40,000,000 for fiscal year 1996, and $50,000,000 for fiscal year
- 1997.
- (2) There are authorized to be appropriated to the National
- Aeronautics and Space Administration for the purposes of this
- section, $10,000,000 for fiscal year 1993, $20,000,000 for fiscal year
- 1994, $30,000,000 for fiscal year 1995, $40,000,000 for fiscal year
- 1996, and $50,000,000 for fiscal year 1997.
-
- ________________________
- SIDEBAR
- Resources
- ___________________________
-
- McClure, Charles R., Joe Ryan, Diana Lauterbach and William E.
- Moen
- Public Libraries and the INTERNET/NREN: New Challenges, New
- Opportunities.
- 1992. Copies of this 38-page study may be ordered at $15 each from
- the Publication Office, School of Information Studies, Syracuse
- University, Syracuse, NY 13244-4100 315/443-2911.
-
- The U.S. National Commission on Libraries and Information
- Science (NCLIS) has issued a Report to the Office of Science and
- Technology Policy on Library and Information Services' Roles in
- the National Research and Education Network. The 25-page
- document, released in late November, 1992, summarizes the results
- of an open forum held in Washington during the previous summer.
- Topics addressed include funding NREN, charging for use,
- commercial access, protection of intellectual property, and security
- and privacy. The report "focuses on fulfilling the potential for
- extending the services and effectiveness of libraries and
- information services for all Americans through high-speed
- networks and electronic databases." A limited number of copies are
- available from NCLIS at 111 18th St., NW, Suite 310, Washington,
- D.C. 20036 202/254-3100.
-
- Grand Challenges 1993: High Performance Computing and
- Communications. The "Teal Book" (because of its color) "provides a
- far-sighted vision for investment in technology but also recognizes
- the importance of human resources and applications that serve
- major national needs. This ╔ investment will bring both economic
- and social dividends, including advances in education,
- productivity, basic science, and technological innovation."
- Requests for copies of this 68-page document should go to: Federal
- Coordinating Council for Science, Engineering and Technology,
- Committee on Physical, Mathematical, and Engineering Sciences
- c/o National Science Foundation, Computer and Information
- Science and Engineering Directorate, 1800 G St. NW, Washington,
- D.C. 20550
-
- Carl Kadie operates an excellent electronic resource of documents
- pertaining to academic freedom, the Library Bill of Rights, and
- similar policy statements. Those with Internet access may use File
- Transfer Protocol (FTP) to ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) Login as
- anonymous, use your network address as the password. The
- documents are in the /pub/academic directory.
-
- Further Reading
-
- Kehoe, Brendan. (1993). Zen and the Art of the Internet: a
- Beginner's Guide (2nd ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
- The first edition is available for free from many FTP sites. (see
- below) This version has about 30 pages of new material and
- corrects various minor errors in the first edition. Includes the story
- of the Coke Machine on the Internet. For much of late
- 1991 and the first half of 1992, this was the document of choice for
- learning about the Internet. ISBN 0-13-010778-6. Index. $22.00
-
- To ftp Zen: ftp.uu.net [137.39.1.9] in /inet/doc ftp.cs.toronto.edu
- [128.100.3.6] in pub/zen ftp.cs.widener.edu [147.31.254.132] in
- pub/zen as zen-1.0.tar.Z, zen-1.0.dvi, and zen-1.0.PS ftp.sura.net
- [128.167.254.179] in pub/nic as zen-1.0.PS
-
- Krol, Ed. (1992). The Whole Internet User's Guide & Catalog.
- Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly & Associates.
- Comprehensive guide to how the network works, the domain name
- system, acceptable use, security, and other issues. Chapters on
- telnet/remote login, File Transfer Protocol, and electronic mail
- explain error messages, special situations, and
- other arcana. Archie, Gopher, NetNews, WAIS, WWW, and
- troubleshooting each enjoy a chapter in this well-written book.
- Appendices contain info on how to get connected in addition to a
- glossary. ISBN 1-56592-025-2. $24.95
-
- LaQuey, Tracy, & Ryer, J. C. (1993). The Internet Companion: a
- Beginner's Guide to Global Networking. Reading, MA: Addison-
- Wesley.
- Beginning with a foreword by Vice-President Elect Al Gore, this
- book provides an often- humorous explanation of the origins of the
- Internet, acceptable use, basics of electronic mail, netiquette, online
- resources, transferring information, and finding email addresses.
- The In the Know guide provides background on Internet legends
- (Elvis sightings is one), organizations, security issues, and how to
- get connected.
- Bibliography. Index. ISBN 0-201-62224-6 $10.95
-
- Polly, Jean Armour. Surfing the Internet 2.0. An enthusiastic tour of
- selected Internet resources, electronic serials, listserv discussion
- groups, service providers, manuals and guides and more. Available
- via anonymous FTP from NYSERNET.org (192.77.173.2) in the
- directory /pub/resources/guides surfing.2.0.txt.
-
- Tennant, Roy, Ober, J., & Lipow, A. G. (1993). Crossing the Internet
- Threshold: An Instructional Handbook. Berkeley, CA: Library
- Solutions Press.
- A cookbook to run your own Internet training sessions. Real-world
- examples. Foreword by Cliff Lynch. Library Solutions Institute and
- Press
- 2137 Oregon Street Berkeley, CA 94705
- Phone:(510) 841-2636 Fax: (510) 841-2926
- ISBN: 1-882208-01-3 $45.00
-
-
-