University Of Chicago’s Robotic Library Makes Your Librarian Obsolete

Tomorrow, The University of Chicago will be changing how their students will be doing their research papers. The Joe and Rika Mansueto Library will use a massive automated retrieval system, turning the whole library experience on it’s head.

Even now, libraries can be a little intimidating. The Dewey Decimal System seems like one of those relics of a cruel past when even reading a book entailed a trial by fire. That’s how I feel anyway. The Mansueto Library does away with that pain by automating the whole process with robotic cranes. Naturally. Imagine the entire experience:

Gone is the frustration of not finding the book that the system swears is exactly where you are looking. Gone is the having to sneak through dark corners of stacks and walk all over the library to find a single tome. However, also gone are the serendipitous encounters with texts surrounding the one you were looking for, guiding your research and interests in new directions.

Which is a shame, for sure. But even then, maybe you can still make your way to that fortuitous find but in a whole new way. And without that librarian glowering at you. [University of Chicago Libraries via Geekosystem, Big Think]

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(2 Comments)
  • [–]

    Wet N Wild

    Monday, May 16, 2011 at 4:38 PM

    Not sure why the human is needed to scan in and out.
    Cameras and the barcodes (better as RFID?) ahould be able to handle that function as well, and possibly faster than the cardigan crew.

  • [–]

    Dewey Reincarnate

    Tuesday, May 17, 2011 at 10:50 AM

    That’s all well and good.
    Yet the patron still has to search for the item using a catalogue and as it stands most people don’t know how to use a catalogue properly (subject haedings wtf!?), so hang onto your cardigans and pearls Library stereotypes you may still be needed.

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