|
||||||
From Card Catalogs to Integrated Library SystemsHow Libraries Are Evolving in the Information Age
Integrated library systems, often known simply in library circles as ILS, is used to manage how a library manages its items: including ownership, ordering, and billing.
Comprised of relational databases, integrated library systems separate software functions into discrete programs called modules, which are then integrated into a unified interface. Card CatalogsBefore the age of computers, the majority of libraries used a card catalog to index its holdings. Such catalogs registered all bibliographic items found in a library or group of libraries, particularly a network of libraries at several locations. A bibliographic item represented any item in the library (such as books, computer files, graphics, maps, etc.), that is considered library-owned material. However, thanks to the invention of automated computer systems which eventually saved the labor involved in resorting the card catalog, libraries began to rely less on manual library workers. Automated Library SystemsWith the emergence of computers in the 1970s, library card catalogs began to be automated. Such automated systems included checking out and checking in books, generating statistics and reports, acquisitions and subscriptions, indexing journal articles and linking to them, as well as tracking interlibrary loans. With computer software programs, instead of having to open up separate applications, library staff could now use a single application with multiple functional modules. As the Internet and world wide web evolved, ILS increasingly offered more functionality related to the Internet. The Internet and ILSMajor ILS systems eventually began to offer web-based portals where library users can log in to view their account, renew their books, and be authenticated to use online databases, which is how most ILS systems in most libraries are now set up. With ILS, patrons and library items that were signed out could be much more easily tracked, as each item contained a unique ID in the database that allowed the ILS to track its activity. In many ways, ILS improved library catalogs by stretches and miles.
Currently, there are a number of large ILS vendors, of which are private proprietary companies. Most libraries are familiar with these vendors.
The copyright of the article From Card Catalogs to Integrated Library Systems in Computer Software is owned by Allan Cho. Permission to republish From Card Catalogs to Integrated Library Systems in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||