Advances In Search Engine Technology And Their Impacts On Libraries

 

Abstract:

 

The “information search” has developed into a key business sector of a worldwide, competitive, and commercial market. Libraries consider themselves as central information providers for their customers, at universities or research organizations. Commercial internet search engines, information portals, international publishers, and online content integrators are just a few of the strong firms that have entered this industry. The globalization of scholarly material, the existence, and the further expansion of the academic internet provide difficulties for libraries that must be acknowledged if they are to avoid losing ground in a crucial part of their conventional services. Information portals, globalization, information search, libraries

 

INTRODUCTION:

 

Some individuals view physical libraries as charming artifacts of a bygone era, especially in light of today’s instant, anywhere, anytime access to Google, Bing, and Wolfram Alpha, where information searches may be completed in a matter of microseconds using a device connected to the internet. The way that digital library portals are currently used gives us the idea that the internet is seldom ever used to find academic resources. What we find are primarily digitally converted print products that have historically been the focus of library acquisition policies: online library catalogues, electronic journals, and (sometimes) e-books. Additionally, databases have a lengthy history of being well-known. Publishers, book houses, or subscription services typically offer content through well-established service routes. In addition to digitized collections, faculty and research group websites, conference web servers, preprint/e-print servers, and increasingly institutional repositories and archives, a wide variety of learning objects and courses have proliferated as a result of the digitization of publishing and the development of the World Wide Web.

Leave a Comment