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Date: | Fri, 29 Apr 1994 15:58:26 EDT |
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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
The Scripps Institution of Oceanography Library welcomes
the data to be provided by NASA's Office of Mission to
Planet Earth (EOSDIS). The subject matter certainly falls
into our realm of interests.
Dr. Eisenbeis, Universities Space Research Association,
seeks to know the "reasonable number of users that might be
expected to use these data ... at and through libraries."
At the SIO Library we've never sought to quantify public use
of the data bases we already have loaded up. We just look
at the potential users based on the subject matter and put
it out there. The library advertises all these sources of
data available either at our public computer work stations
or from remote offices here at Scripps (& some off campus
locations). We don't have meters mounted on our computers so
we don't know what the volume of traffic is from remote
locations. Our goal is to provide data for people at their
own offices so they don't have to come to the library. Our
computers POINT TO RESOURCES (such as EOSDIS) using our
World Wide Web Home Page. There are likely hundreds of
potential users of EOSDIS here at Scripps but since there is
a satellite facility in operation here I'm not sure if users
would derive data thru the Internet or just walk up the hill
to those rusty trailers housing the Satellite machinery and
get to it from there. It's a very complicated scenario here
at Scripps and no easy way to determine how much this data
will be used from here.
I'd recommend that NASA just make this stuff available, let
the libraries point to it, and wait and see what happens.
If no one calls up it won't be because the libraries didn't
at least tell their clientele about it.
- Paul Leverenz
Scripps Institution of Oceanography Library
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