2009
DOI: 10.7771/2380-176x.2389
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Getting Our Feet Wet: One Library’s Experience with Transactional Access

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Weir and Ireland point out that the model originates with the leader in digital music downloads-iTunes-where users can pay for the songs they want to hear rather than an entire album. 3 Libraries have gone this route because it simultaneously decreases library budgets for journal articles 4 and increases the number of articles to which users have access. 5 This system has been effective because it allows libraries to simultaneously cancel high-price eJournals while loading records and allowing searches for a wider range of titles.…”
Section: Jenny Colvinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Weir and Ireland point out that the model originates with the leader in digital music downloads-iTunes-where users can pay for the songs they want to hear rather than an entire album. 3 Libraries have gone this route because it simultaneously decreases library budgets for journal articles 4 and increases the number of articles to which users have access. 5 This system has been effective because it allows libraries to simultaneously cancel high-price eJournals while loading records and allowing searches for a wider range of titles.…”
Section: Jenny Colvinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One major element of the fixed price to which we agreed was our commitment to maintain active subscriptions to Elsevier journals. To read more about that process (see Weir and Ireland, 2010).…”
Section: Transactional Access At One Institutionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The initial programme is for three years and in the longer term the authors urge a vendor such as Ebsco or Swets to provide “a pay‐per‐view/transactional access model across publisher lines”. It will certainly be interesting to see how this develops, and hopefully ILDS will be able to carry an article on the experience of this model at Murray State University in Kentucky (Weir and Ireland, 2009/2010). The third article describes a PPV service piloted with Wiley and Elsevier at the University of Wisconsin – Stevens Point.…”
Section: Document Supplymentioning
confidence: 99%