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Band 79: Janet Wagner Band 78: Philip Franklin Orr Band 77: Carina Dony Band 76:
Linda Freyberg
Sabine Wolf (Hrsg.)
Band 75: Denise Rudolph Band 74: Sophia Paplowski Band 73: Carmen Krause Band 72:
Katrin Toetzke
Dirk Wissen
Band 71: Rahel Zoller Band 70: Sabrina Lorenz Band 69: Jennifer Hale Band 68:
Linda Schünhoff
Benjamin Flämig
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Wilfried Sühl-Strohmenger
Jan-Pieter Barbian
Band 66: Tina Schurig Band 65: Christine Niehoff Band 64: Eva May Band 63: Eva Bunge Band 62: Nathalie Hild Band 61: Martina Haller Band 60: Leonie Flachsmann Band 59: Susanne Göttker Band 58: Georg Ruppelt Band 57: Karin Holste-Flinspach Band 56: Rafael Ball Band 55: Bettina Schröder Band 54: Florian Hagen Band 53: Anthea Zöller Band 52: Ursula Georgy Band 51: Ursula Jaksch Band 50: Hermann Rösch (Hrsg) Band 49: Lisa Maria Geisler Band 48: Raphaela Schneider Band 47: Eike Kleiner
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1. Juli 2025
  WEITERE NEWS
Aktuelles aus
L
ibrary
Essentials

In der Ausgabe 4/2025 (Juni 2025) lesen Sie u.a.:

  • Neue Anforderungen an Führungs­kompetenz in wissenschaftlichen Bibliotheken
  • KI in der Katalogisierung: Drei Chatbots auf dem Prüfstand
  • Mehr als nur eine ID: Warum Forscher ORCID nutzen und warum nicht
  • Anxiety in der Hochschullehre: zögerlicher Einsatz von ChatGPT
  • Smart Reading in Bibliotheken: Aktive Beteiligung von Leser:innen
  • Kinder im digitalen Zeitalter:
    OECD-Bericht zeigt Handlungsbedarf für Politik und Bildungseinrichtungen
  • Bibliotheken und ihre Rolle beim Klimaschutz
  • Initiative für eine unabhängige Infrastruktur biomedizinischer Literatur –
    ZB MED entwickelt PubMed Alternative
  • Leiterin der Library Of Congress entlassen
  • Data Citations –
    Datenauswertung in Bibliotheken
  • Unternehmen investieren gezielt
    in künstliche Intelligenz
  • Springer Nature spendet KI-Werkzeug „Geppetto“ an die Verlagsbranche zur Bekämpfung betrügerischer Einreichungen
  • Die San José State University
    setzt auf Ihren ersten KI-Bibliothekar
u.v.m.
  fachbuchjournal

Emory University Libraries Migrate to Ex Libris Cloud Services

All Emory’s new and current Ex Libris solutions will be managed in the Ex Libris TotalCare

Ex Libris® Group is pleased to announce that Emory University Libraries has selected the Aleph® integrated library system, replacing its SirsiDynix Unicorn system. At the same time, the Emory Libraries are moving their Ex Libris solutions, including their Primo® discovery and delivery solution, MetaLib® metasearch solution, and SFX® OpenURL link resolver, to the TotalCare cloud environment, and are complementing their suite of Ex Libris cloud-based solutions with the addition of the Primo Central Index of scholarly content and the bX article recommender.  

“As long-term partners with Ex Libris, we chose the cloud-based option for the Aleph and Primo solutions to ensure the robust management of our diverse library collections and operations,” noted Richard Luce, vice provost and director of the Emory libraries. “The combination of Aleph and Primo on a cloud-based platform with the addition of the vast Primo Central Index and bX service will enable us to offer our users a complete discovery solution. In addition, the Ex Libris road map aiming toward a unified resource management resonates deeply with our strategic direction.”  

“We welcome the Emory libraries’ decision to select Aleph and applaud its vision in choosing to move all its library operations to the TotalCare cloud environment,” commented Mark Triest, president of Ex Libris North America. “Emory is making a bold statement about cloud-based services in today’s library space. By stepping up to prepare its operations for the Ex Libris Alma next-generation library management service, Emory is demonstrating its continuing leadership in the world of academic libraries.”

About the Emory Libraries  

With more than 13,000 students, Emory University is a top 20 research university located in Atlanta, Georgia. The nine Emory libraries house more than 3.7 million volumes, including over 56,000 electronic resources. From the Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library—which holds special collections that are strong in modern literature, African American history and culture, and the history of Georgia and the South—to the Woodruff Health Sciences Library, whose librarians are called upon by medical students and hospital professionals alike, each library contributes to making the system as a whole the intellectual commons of the campus.
http://web.library.emory.edu/.   

www.exlibrisgroup.com