Agreed. It's much easier to face a preservation project of many terabytes of 
archival tif images that will never be used for presentation but must be 
maintained when you have an "endless supply" (wink wink) of storage out in the 
cloud rather than face everything that is associated with bringing a large 
storage appliance online. Not to mention growth planning for said appliance, 
backup planning and execution, etc...

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Esmé 
Cowles
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2013 11:14 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Libraries and IT Innovation

On Jul 17, 2013, at 2:01 PM, Matthew Sherman <[email protected]> wrote:

> As for cloud computing I am rather unsure of how that can be applied 
> to the libraries.  Possibly it can be used as part of the collaborative space?
> Possibly it can be utilized for file redundancy in digital archives to 
> help with preservation of born digital records?  I simply am not sure 
> but it is an area of IT innovation so it would be neat to hear people's ideas.

I think cloud computing is very relevant to libraries because it lowers the 
barriers to entry for hosting servers and storage, and helps let people scale 
up on-demand.  

-Esme

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