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SirsiDynix announced the BLUEcloud Library Services Platform (LSP) at the annual users group conference, COSUGI. It is a browser-based system that will integrate SirsiDynix's "administration, discovery, acquisition, and collection management applications." It can be accessed from a desktop, laptop, tablet or smart phone.
In June 2005, SirsiDynix was formed by the merger of the Dynix Corporation and the Sirsi Corporation. Phase-outs of Dynix were constant in the late 2000s, and by the second decade of the 21st century, it was obsolete and remained in very few libraries. [3] By mid-2013, only 88 libraries were on record as having Dynix installed. [17]
Synapse Group, Inc. is a multichannel marketing company. Synapse is also the largest consumer magazine distributor in the United States, [3] with access to over 700 magazine titles from major publishers, including Hearst Corporation, Condé Nast Publications, Meredith Corporation, and Time Inc. Synapse attracts subscribers for these publications by working through a number of non-traditional ...
BiblioCommons is a privately held company, based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, that develops front end interactive catalog and web services for libraries. In February 2020, BiblioCommons was acquired by Volaris Group, an operating segment of Constellation Software.
A federal court recently said the Internet Archive is not protected by fair use doctrine.
It was the company's first step into the research services market. [28] The company provides services to thousands of customers in more than 90 countries. [29] As of 2015, Ex Libris served 43 of the 50 top universities in the world. [29] Over 40 national libraries use Ex Libris solutions. [30]
NewsBank Inc. is a US-based commercial company founded in 1972 that operates a global news database resource providing online archives of media publications as reference materials to libraries. As of 2024 [update] it includes current and archived information from thousands of newspapers, videos, broadcast transcripts, journals, and other ...
The American Library Association condemned legislation that would threaten librarians and other educators with prosecution for possessing “obscene” material.