eLearning Brothers and Infuse Medical announce
the first library subscription of its kind of Medical Stock Images.
Not exact matches
That loss forced the closing of 15
libraries; reduced hours of service at almost every remaining location; cost more than 225 full - and part - time Library employees their jobs; took bookmobiles off the road for the
first time since 1947 and decreased book,
subscription and media purchases to a trickle.
My
first thought was: a
subscription book service — try the
library!
First, a primer on what Digital Comics Unlimited is: It's a
subscription service that lets you read as many issues as you want, but current issues of Marvel comics aren't in the
library.
We encourage academic librarians interested in a
library - wide
subscription to
first take out an individual
subscription so as to ascertain if BookBrowse is right for your needs.
Sowards here points to two possible challenges
libraries face with
subscription services:
First, there may be overlap and duplication because
libraries already have purchased some books found in those eCollections through other channels and in other formats, and second, titles are sometimes pulled from eCollections — often without prior notice to the subscribing institution — because contractual agreements between publishers and
subscription - package aggregators may be subject to change.
The
first issue is costs 4,99 $ Eur ($ 4.99) inside the app's
library, with annual
subscriptions priced at 17,99 $ ($ 19.99) for four issues.
I've picked stocks with mixed success before (US stocks outperformed S&P index, Canadian stocks under performed TSX index) and I heavily used ValueLine Investment Survey's screening tool (you local public
library might have a
subscription) as the
first step in my research.
So far, 11 of 16 law
libraries have taken a
subscription to the
first three volumes of Halsbury's Laws of Canada and most think they will take the entire set.
In this digital information age, I don't think our «public» law
libraries (law school and law society
libraries) are the
first place a citizen would think to go to access legal information; and I wonder if our
libraries» maintenance of expensive print
subscription services — like published law reporters and law digest services — is justified when these print resources are no longer used by our own «expert» users (students, faculty and practising lawyers), are incomprehensible and effectively inaccessible to the non-expert public, unaffordable, and increasingly unmanageable.