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Thu, 18 Jun 1992 20:46:23 CDT |
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<no.id>; from "Kathryn Wright" at Jun 18, 92 8:09 pm |
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> The question has arisen among academic librarians attending continuing
> education/summer courses and conferences at other sites as to how they may
> keep in touch with home base electronically if they 1) lack an account with
> a commercial service and their home base offers no 800 number and also if
> they 2) lack a portable machine with a modem.
>
> Are there any evolving conventions at various institutions for dealing with
> this situation? Is the situation different at every spot in the universe?
> What does your institution do when wandering scholars - and librarians -
> show up, begging?
>
> My sense is that this is an area currently full of potholes and badly in
> need of some general understandings.
>
There are many differences depending on the technology at home and away. The
best possible situation that I have found, is that at the away facility there
is a public terminal room which will allow me to telnet back to my home
system. I would recommend that users obtain accounts on commercial systems,
e.g. mcimail, compuserv. Most times accessing these services requires only a
local call and finding a friend with a computer and modem is fairly easy these
days. The commercial services are not very expensive for a few months' use.
-phil
> Kathryn Wright
> Indiana State University
> LIBKAT@INDST or [log in to unmask]
>
--
J. Philip Miller, Professor, Division of Biostatistics, Box 8067
Washington University Medical School, St. Louis MO 63110
[log in to unmask] - Internet (314) 362-3617 [362-2694(FAX)]
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