`
`BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD
`
`Apple Inc.
`
`Petitioner
`
`Papst Licensing GmbH & Co.
`
`Patent Owner
`
`Case No. Unassigned
`Patent 8,504,746
`
`DECLARATION OF SCOTT BENNETT, Ph.D.
`
`9 August 2016
`
`1
`
`Apple 1024
`
`U.S. Pat. 8,504,746
`
`Apple 1024
`U.S. Pat. 8,504,746
`
`1
`
`
`
`I, Scott Bennet, Ph.D., resident of Urbana, Illinois, hereby declare as
`
`follows:
`
`Introduction and Qualifications
`
`1.
`
`I have been retained by Sterne, Kessler, Goldstein & Fox to provide
`
`my opinions concerning the public availability of certain documents at issue in
`
`inter partes review proceedings for U.S. Patent No. 8,504,746.
`
`2.
`
`My curriculum vitae is appended to this document as Appendix A.
`
`From 1956 to 1960, I attended Oberlin College, where I received an A.B. in
`
`English.
`
`I then attended Indiana University, where I received an M.A. in 1966 and
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`a Ph.D. in 1967, both in English. In 1976, I received a M.S. in Library Science
`
`from the University of Illinois.
`
`I also served at the University of Illinois at
`
`Urbana-Champaign in two capacities. First, from 1967 to 1974, I was an Assistant
`
`Professor of English; then from 1974 to 1981, I was an Instructor, Assistant
`
`Professor, and Associate Professor of Library Science.
`
`3.
`
`From 1981 to 1989, I served as the Assistant University Librarian for
`
`Collection Management, Northwestern University. From 1989 to 1994, I served as
`
`the Director of The Milton S. Eisenhower Library at The Johns Hopkins
`
`University. From 1994 to 2001, I served as the University Librarian at Yale
`
`University. In 2001, I retired from Yale University.
`
`2
`
`
`
`4.
`
`Since then, I have served in multiple capacities for various
`
`organizations, including as a consultant on library space planning from 2004 to the
`
`present, as a Senior Advisor for the library program of the Council of Independent
`
`Colleges from 2001 to 2009, as a member of the Wartburg College Library
`
`Advisory Board from 2004 to the present, and as a Visiting Professor at the
`
`Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at
`
`Urbana-Champaign, in the Fall of 2003. I was a founding partner of Prior Art
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`Documentation Services, LLC, in 2015.
`
`5.
`
`Over the course of my work as a librarian, professor, researcher, and
`
`author of numerous publications, I have had extensive experience with cataloging
`
`and online library management systems built around Machine-Readable
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`Cataloging (MARC) standards. As a consultant, I have substantial experience in
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`authenticating documents and establishing the date when they were available to
`
`persons exercising reasonable diligence.
`
`6.
`
`In the course of more than fifty years of academic life, I have myself
`
`been an active researcher.
`
`I have collaborated with many individual researchers
`
`and, as a librarian, worked in the services of thousands of researchers at four
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`prominent research universities. Members of my family are university researchers.
`
`Over the years, I have read some of the voluminous professional literature on the
`
`information seeking behaviors of academic researchers. And as an educator, I
`
`3
`
`
`
`have a broad knowledge of the ways in which students in a variety of disciplines
`
`learn to master the bibliographic resources used in their disciplines. In all of these
`
`ways, I have a general knowledge of the how researchers work.
`
`7.
`
`My work in this matter is being billed at my standard consulting rate
`
`of $88 per hour. My compensation is not in any way contingent upon the outcome
`
`of this or any other inter partes review. I have no financial or personal interest in
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`the outcome of this proceeding or any related litigation.
`
`Scope of this Declaration
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`8.
`
`I am not a lawyer and I am not rendering an opinion on the legal
`
`question of whether any particular document is, or is not, a “printed publication”
`
`under the law.
`
`9.
`
`I am, however, rendering my expert opinion on when and how each of
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`the documents addressed herein was disseminated or otherwise made available to
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`the extent that persons interested and ordinarily skilled in the subject matter or art,
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`exercising reasonable diligence, could have located the documents before 4 March
`
`1997.
`
`10.
`
`I reserve the right to supplement my opinion in the future to respond
`
`to any arguments that the Patent Owner raises and to take into account new
`
`information as it becomes available.
`
`4
`
`
`
`Materials Considered in Forming My Opinion
`
`11.
`
`In forming the opinions expressed in this declaration, I have reviewed
`
`the documents and attachments referenced below.
`
`Document 1. Schmidt, Friedhelm. The SCSI Bus and IDE Interface:
`Protocols, Applications and Programming, translated by J. Michael
`Schultz. Wokingham, England: Addison-Wesley Publishers, 1995.
`
`12.
`
`The following Attachments are true and accurate representations of
`
`library material and online documents and records, as they are identified below.
`
`Unless otherwise indicated, all Attachments are records made in the regular course
`
`of business and available to the public. All attachments were created on 29 July —
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`9 August 2016. Each item is a type of material that experts in my field would
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`reasonably rely upon to in forming their opinions.
`
`Attachment la: Statewide Illinois Library Catalog record for Schmidt
`
`Attachment lb: University of Michigan Library catalog record for Schmidt
`
`Attachment lc: Copy of Schmidt from a copy provided by counsel
`
`Attachment ld: Swiss National Library catalog record for Schmidt
`
`Background Information
`
`13.
`
`Persons ofordinary skill in the art. I am told by counsel that the
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`subject matter of this proceeding relates to data interfacing between a host
`
`computer and a peripheral device.
`
`5
`
`
`
`14.
`
`I am told by counsel that a person having ordinary skill in the art at
`
`the relevant time would have had at least a four-year degree in electrical
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`engineering, computer science, computer engineering, or a related field of study, or
`
`equivalent experience, and at least two years’ experience in studying or developing
`
`computer interfaces or peripherals and storage related software.
`
`15.
`
`It is my opinion that such a person would have been engaged in
`
`research starting at least in undergraduate school, learning though study and
`
`practice in the field and possibly through formal instruction the bibliographic
`
`resources relevant to his or her research. In the 1980s and 1990s such a person
`
`would have had access to a vast array of long-established print resources in
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`electrical engineering, computer science, and computer engineering as well as to a
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`rich and fast changing set of online resources providing indexing infonnation,
`
`abstracts, and full text services for electrical engineering.
`
`16.
`
`Library catalog records. Libraries world-wide use the MARC format
`
`for catalog records; this machine readable format was developed at the Library of
`
`Congress in the 1960s.
`
`17. MARC formatted records use numerous tags and code. For example,
`
`they provide a variety of subject access points based on the content of the
`
`document being cataloged. All may be found in the MARC Fields 6XX.
`
`Particularly important are the MARC Field 600, which identifies personal names,
`
`6
`
`
`
`and the MARC Field 650, which identifies topical terms. An ordinarily skilled
`
`researcher might discover material relevant to his or her topic by a search using the
`
`access points provided in the MARC Fields 6XX.
`
`18.
`
`The MARC Field 040, subfield a, identifies the library or other entity
`
`that created the original catalog record for a given document and transcribed it into
`
`machine readable form. The MARC Field 008 identifies the date when this first
`
`catalog record was entered on the file. This date persists in all subsequent uses of
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`the first catalog record, although newly created records for the same document will
`
`show a new date.
`
`19. Other MARC Fields useful in establishing the authenticity of a book
`
`are MARC Field 020 International Standard Book Number, MARC Field 100
`
`Main Entry, MARC Field 245 Title Statement, MARC Field 260 Publication
`
`information, MARC Field 600 Physical Description, and MARC Field 500 General
`
`Notes.
`
`20. WorldCat is the world’s largest public online catalog, maintained by
`
`the Online Computer Library Center, Inc., or OCLC, and built with the records
`
`created by the thousands of libraries that are members of OCLC, WorldCat
`
`provides a user-friendly interface for the public to use MARC records; it requires
`
`no knowledge of MARC tags and codes. WorldCat records appear in many
`
`different catalogs, including the Statewide Illinois Library Catalog. The date a
`
`7
`
`
`
`given catalog record was created (corresponding to the MARC Field 008) appears
`
`in some detailed WorldCat records as the Date of Entry.
`
`21.
`
`The public availability of MARC formatted catalog records and
`
`detailed WorldCat records showing the Date of Entry varies.
`
`22. When a book has been cataloged, it will normally be made available
`
`to readers soon thereafter—norrnally within a few days or (at most) within a few
`
`weeks of cataloging.
`
`Consideration of individual documents
`
`Document 1. Schmidt, Friedhelm. The SCSI Bus and IDE Interface:
`Protocols, Applications and Programming, translated by J. Michael Schultz.
`Wokingham, England: Addison-Wesley Publishers, 1995. Herein referred to as
`Schmidt.
`
`23. Document 1 is a book written by Friedhelm Schmidt and published by
`
`Addison-Wesley in 1995. This book is herein referred to as Schmidt.
`
`24.
`
`Based on the evidence presented below—a book held in numerous
`
`libraries and library cataloging—it is my opinion that Schmidt was publicly
`
`available from the publisher by the book’s publication in 1995; and that Schmidt
`
`was bibliographically discoverable by an ordinarily skilled researcher by mid-June
`
`1995 and available in at least one library by late November 1995.
`
`25. Attachment la is a true and accurate copy of the Statewide Illinois
`
`Library Catalog showing that Schmidt is held by 127 libraries world-wide. An
`
`ordinarily skilled researcher would have no difficulty locating copies of this book.
`
`8
`
`
`
`26.
`
`The University of Michigan Library is one library holding Schmidt.
`
`Attachment lb is a true and accurate copy of that library’s catalog record, in
`
`MARC format, for Schmidt. The MARC Field 650 entries indicate the subject
`
`terms under which ordinarily skilled researchers would have found Schmidt.
`
`27. Attachment 1c is a true and accurate copy of the cover, title page, title
`
`page Verso, preface, table of contents, and Part 1 of Schmidt from a copy of the
`
`book provided by counsel. This copy conforms exactly to the cataloging
`
`information provided in several key MARC Fields, as an authentic copy of the
`
`book would. Specifically, the following MARC Field information as recorded in
`
`Attachment lb is evident in Attachment 1c:
`
`0 MARC Field 020 International Standard Book Number: the copy of Schmidt
`
`used for this declaration has the ISBN 0-201-42284-0.
`
`0 MARC Field 100 Main Entry—Personal Name:
`
`in the copy of Schmidt
`
`used for this declaration, the author’s name is Friedhelm Schmidt.
`
`0 MARC Field 245 Title Statement: in the copy of Schmidt used for this
`
`declaration, the book’s title is The SCSI Bus and IDE Interface. The
`
`remainder of the title is Protocols, Applications and Programming.
`
`0 MARC Field 260 Publication, Distribution, Etc:
`
`in the copy of Schmidt
`
`used for this declaration, the places of publication include Wokingham,
`
`England and Reading, Massachusetts; Addison-Wesley is the name of the
`
`9
`
`
`
`publisher; 1995 is the date of publication; and there is a computer disk in a
`
`pocket in the inside back cover. This disc bears the title of Schmidt and the
`
`author’s name and a December 1994 date.
`
`0 MARC Field 600 Physical Description:
`
`the copy of Schmidt used for this
`
`declaration has six preliminary pages (the table of contents) and 301 pages
`
`of text (including the index); it has illustrations; and it is 24 cm. high.
`
`0 MARC Field 500 General Note: the copy of Schmidt used for this
`
`declaration contains an index.
`
`28.
`
`The Swiss National Library is another library that holds Schmidt.
`
`Attachment ld is a true and accurate copy of that library’s catalog record, in
`
`MARC format, for Schmidt. The MARC Field 008 Field shows this record was
`
`created on 7 November 1995 and that Schmidt was publicly available in a least one
`
`library soon after this date.
`
`10
`
`10
`
`
`
`Attestation
`
`29.
`
`I hereby declare that all
`
`statements made herein of my own
`
`knowledge are true and that all statements made on information and belief are
`
`believed to be true; and further that these statement were made with the knowledge
`
`that willful false statements and the like so made are punishable by fine or
`
`imprisonment, or both, under Section 1001 of Title 18 of the United States Code
`
`and that such willful false statement may jeopardize the validity of the application
`
`or any patent issued thereon.
`
` 9 August 2016
`
`Scott Bennett, Ph.D.
`Managing Partner
`Prior Art Documentation Services LLC
`
`Date
`
`ll
`
`11
`
`
`
`EXHIBIT A: RESUME
`
`SCOTT BENNETT
`
`Yale University Librarian Emeritus
`
`711 South Race
`
`Urbana, Illinois 61801-4132
`
`2scottb@prairienet.org
`217-367-9896
`
`EMPLOYMENT
`
`Retired, 2001. Retirement activities include:
`
`0 Managing Partner in Prior Art Documentation Services, LLC, 2015-. This firm provides
`
`documentation services to patent attorneys; more information is available at
`htt
`: www. riorartdocumentation.com
`
`0 Consultant on library space design, 2004- . This consulting practice is rooted in a research,
`
`publication, and public speaking program conducted since I retired from Yale University in 2001.
`I have served more than 50 colleges and universities in the United States and abroad with
`
`projects ranging in likely cost from under $50,000 to over $100 million. More information is
`available at http:[[www.|ibraryspacep|anning.com[
`
`0
`
`Senior Advisor for the library program of the Council of Independent Colleges, 2001-2009
`
`0 Member ofthe Wartburg College Library Advisory Board, 2004-
`
`0 Visiting Professor, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at
`Urbana-Champaign, Fall 2003
`
`University Librarian, Yale University, 1994-2001
`
`Director, The Milton S. Eisenhower Library, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, 1989-
`1994
`
`Assistant University Librarian for Collection Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois,
`1981-1989
`
`Instructor, Assistant and Associate Professor of Library Administration, University of Illinois at Urbana-
`
`Champaign, 1974-1981
`
`Assistant Professor of English, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1967-1974
`
`Woodrow Wilson Teaching Intern, St. Paul's College, Lawrenceville, Virginia, 1964-1965
`
`EDUCATION
`
`University of Illinois, M.S., 1976 (Library Science)
`
`Indiana University, M.A., 1966; Ph.D., 1967 (English)
`
`Oberlin College, A.B. magna cum laude, 1960 (English)
`
`12
`
`12
`
`
`
`HONORS AND AWARDS
`
`Morningside College (Sioux City, IA) Doctor of Humane Letters, 2010
`
`American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship, 1978-1979; Honorary Visiting Research Fellow,
`
`Victorian Studies Centre, University of Leicester, 1979; University of Illinois Summer Faculty Fellowship,
`1969
`
`Indiana University Dissertation Year Fellowship and an Oberlin College Haskell Fellowship, 1966-1967;
`Woodrow Wilson National Fellow, 1960-1961
`
`PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
`
`American Association for the Advancement of Science: Project on Intellectual Property and Electronic
`
`Publishing in Science, 1999-2001
`
`American Association of University Professors: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chapter
`
`Secretary and President, 1975-1978; Illinois Conference Vice President and President, 1978-1984;
`
`national Council, 1982-1985, Committee F, 1982-1986, Assembly of State Conferences Executive
`Committee, 1983-1986, and Committee H, 1997-2001 ; Northwestern University Chapter
`
`Secretary/Treasurer, 1985-1986
`
`Association of American Universities: Member of the Research Libraries Task Force on Intellectual
`
`Property Rights in an Electronic Environment, 1993-1994, 1995-1996
`
`Association of Research Libraries: Member of the Preservation Committee, 1990-1993; member of the
`
`Information Policy Committee, 1993-1995; member of the Working Group on Copyright, 1994-2001;
`member of the Research Library Leadership and Management Committee, 1999-2001; member of the
`Board of Directors, 1998-2000
`
`Carnegie Mellon University: Member of the University Libraries Advisory Board, 1994
`
`Center for Research Libraries: Program Committee, 1998-2000
`
`Johns Hopkins University Press: Ex-officio member of the Editorial Board, 1990-1994; Co-director of
`Project Muse, 1994
`
`Library Administration and Management Association, Public Relations Section, Friends of the Library
`Committee, 1977-1978
`
`Oberlin College: Member ofthe Library Visiting Committee, 1990, and of the Steering Committee for
`
`the library's capital campaign, 1992-1993; President of the Library Friends, 1992-1993, 2004-2005;
`
`member, Friends of the Library Council, 2003-
`
`Research Society for Victorian Periodicals: Executive Board, 1971-1983; Co-chairperson of the Executive
`
`Committee on Serials Bibliography, 1976-1982; President, 1977-1982
`
`13
`
`13
`
`
`
`A Selected Edition of W.D. Howells (one of several editions sponsored by the MLA Center for Editions of
`
`American Authors): Associate Textual Editor, 1965-1970; Center for Editions of American Authors panel
`
`of textual experts, 1968-1970
`
`Victorian Studies: Editorial Assistant and Managing Editor, 1962-1964
`
`Wartburg College: member, National Advisory Board for the Vogel Library, 2004-
`
`Some other activities: Member of the Illinois State Library Statewide Library and Archival Preservation
`
`Advisory Panel; member of the Illinois State Archives Advisory Boa rd; member of a committee advising
`
`the Illinois Board of Higher Education on the cooperative management of research collections; chair of
`a major collaborative research project conducted by the Research Libraries Group with support from
`
`Conoco, |nc.; active advisor on behalf of the Illinois Conference AAUP to faculty and administrators on
`academic freedom and tenure matters in northern Illinois.
`
`Delegate to Maryland Governor's Conference on Libraries and Information Service; principal in
`
`initiating state-wide preservation planning in Maryland; principal in an effort to widen the use of mass
`
`deacidification for the preservation of library materials through cooperative action by the Association of
`
`Research Libraries and the Committee an Institutional Cooperation; co-instigator of a campus-wide
`information service for Johns Hopkins University; initiated efforts with the Enoch Pratt Free Library to
`
`provide information services to Baltimore's Empowerment Zones; speaker or panelist on academic
`
`publishing, copyright, scholarly communication, national and regional preservation planning, mass
`deacidification.
`
`Consultant for the University of British Columbia (1995), Princeton University (1996), Modern
`
`Language Association, (1995, 1996), Library of Congress (1997), Center for Jewish History (1998, 2000-
`
`), National Research Council (1998); Board of Directors for the Digital Library Federation, 1996-2001;
`
`accreditation visiting team at Brandeis University (1997); mentor for Northern Exposure to Leadership
`
`(1997); instructor and mentor for ARL’s Leadership and Career Development Program (1999-2000)
`
`At the Northwestern University Library, led in the creation of a preservation department and in the
`
`renovation of the renovation, for preservation purposes, ofthe Deering Library book stacks.
`
`At the Milton S. Eisenhower Library, led the refocusing and vitalization of client-centered services;
`strategic planning and organizational restructuring for the library; building renovation planning.
`
`Successfully completed a $5 million endowment campaign for the humanities collections and launched a
`$27 million capital campaign for the library.
`
`At the Yale University Library, participated widely in campus—space planning, university budget
`
`planning, information technology development, and the promotion of effective teaching and learning;
`
`for the library has exercised leadership in space planning and renovation, retrospective conversion of
`
`the card catalog, preservation, organizational development, recruitment of minority librarians,
`intellectual property and copyright issues, scholarly communication, document delivery services among
`
`libraries, and instruction in the use of information resources. Oversaw approximately $70 million of
`library space renovation and construction. Was co—principa| investigator for a grant to plan a digital
`archive for Elsevier Science.
`
`14
`
`14
`
`
`
`Numerous to invitations speak at regional, national, and other professional meetings and at alumni
`
`meetings. Lectured and presented a series of seminars on library management at the Yunnan
`
`University Library, 2002. Participated in the 2005 International Roundtable for Library and Information
`
`Science sponsored by the Kanazawa Institute of Technology Library Center and the Council on Library
`and Information Resources.
`
`PUBLICATIONS
`
`”Putting Learning into Library Planning,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 15, 2 (April 2015), 215-231.
`
`”How librarians (and others!) love silos: Three stories from the field ” available at the Learning Spaces
`
`Collaborary Web site, http:[[www.pka||sc.org[
`
`"Learning Behaviors and Learning Spaces,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 11, 3 (July 2011), 765-789.
`
`"Libraries and Learning: A History of Paradigm Change,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 9, 2 (April
`
`2009), 181-197. Judged as the best article published in the 2009 volume of portal.
`
`"The Information or the Learning Commons: Which Will We Have?” Journal ofAcademic Librarianship,
`
`34 (May 2008), 183-185. One of the ten most-cited articles published in JAL, 2007-2011.
`
`"Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007), 165-179.
`
`"Campus Cultures Fostering Information Literacy,” portal: Libraries and the Academy, 7 (2007), 147-167.
`Included in Library Instruction Round Table Top Twenty library instruction articles published in 2007
`
`"Designing for Uncertainty: Three Approaches," Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33 (2007), 165-179.
`
`"First Questions for Designing Higher Education Learning Spaces,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 33
`
`(2007), 14-26.
`
`"The Choice for Learning,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 32 (2006), 3-13.
`
`With Richard A. O'Connor, "The Power of Place in Learning,” Planningfor Higher Education, 33 (June-
`
`August 2005), 28-30
`
`"Righting the Balance,” in Library as Place: Rethinking Roles, Rethinking Space (Washington, DC: Council
`
`on Library and Information Resources, 2005), pp. 10-24
`
`Libraries Designed for Learning (Washington, DC: Council on Library and Information Resources, 2003)
`
`"The Golden Age of Libraries,” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Academic Librarianship
`
`in the New Millennium: Roles, Trends, and Global Collaboration, ed. Haipeng Li (Kunming: Yunnan
`
`University Press, 2002), pp. 13-21. This is a slightly different version of the following item.
`
`"The Golden Age of Libraries,” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 24 (2001), 256-258
`
`15
`
`15
`
`
`
`"Second Chances. An address. .
`
`. at the annual dinner of the Friends of the Oberlin College Library
`
`November 13 1999,” Friends of the Oberlin College Library, February 2000
`
`"Authors‘ Rights,” The Journal of Electronic Publishing (December 1999),
`
`http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/05-02/bennett.html
`
`"|nformation-Based Productivity,” in Technology and Scholarly Communication, ed. Richard Ekman and
`
`Richard E. Quandt (Berkeley, 1999), pp. 73-94
`
`"Just-In-Time Scholarly Monographs: or, Is There a Cavalry Bugle Call for Beleaguered Authors and
`
`Publishers?” The Journal of Electronic Publishing (September 1998),
`
`http://www.press.umich.edu/jep/04-01/bennett.htm|
`
`"Re-engineering Scholarly Communication: Thoughts Addressed to Authors,” Scholarly Publishing, 27
`
`(1996), 185-196
`
`"The Copyright Challenge: Strengthening the Public Interest in the Digital Age,” Library Journal, 15
`November 1994, pp. 34-37
`
`"The Management of Intellectual Property,” Computers in Libraries, 14 (May 1994), 18-20
`
`"Repositioning University Presses in Scholarly Communication,” Journal of Scholarly Publishing, 25
`
`(1994), 243-248. Reprinted in The Essential JSP. Critical Insights into the World of Scholarly Publishing.
`
`Volume 1: University Presses (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2011), pp. 147-153
`
`"Preservation and the Economic Investment Model,” in Preservation Research and Development. Round
`
`Table Proceedings, September 28-29, 1992, ed. Carrie Beyer (Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress,
`
`1993), pp. 17-18
`
`"Copyright and Innovation in Electronic Publishing: A Commentary,” Journal of Academic Librarianship,
`
`19 (1993), 87-91,- reprinted in condensed form in Library Issues: Briefings for Faculty and Administrators,
`14 (September 1993)
`
`with Nina Matheson, "Scholarly Articles: Valuable Commodities for Universities,” Chronicle ofHigher
`
`Education, 27 May 1992, pp. B1-B3
`
`"Strategies for Increasing [Preservation] Productivity,” Minutes of the [119th] Meeting [of the
`
`Association of Research Libraries] (Washington, D.C., 1992), pp. 39-40
`
`"Management Issues: The Director's Perspective,” and "Cooperative Approaches to Mass
`
`Deacidification: Mid-Atlantic Region,” in A Roundtable on Mass Deacidification, ed. Peter G. Sparks
`
`(Washington, D.C.: Association of Research Libraries, 1992), pp. 15-18, 54-55
`
`"The Boat that Must Stay Afloat: Academic Libraries in Hard Times,” Scholarly Publishing, 23 (1992), 131-
`137
`
`"Buying Time: An Alternative for the Preservation of Library Material,” ACLS Newsletter, Second Series 3
`
`(Summer, 1991), 10-11
`
`16
`
`16
`
`
`
`"The Golden Stain of Time: Preserving Victorian Periodicals” in Investigating Victorian Journalism, ed.
`
`Laurel Brake, Alex Jones, and Lionel Madden (London: Macmillan, 1990), pp. 166-183
`
`"Commentary on the Stephens and Haley Papers” in Coordinating Cooperative Collection Development:
`A National Perspective, an issue of Resource Sharing and Information Networks, 2 (1985), 199-201
`
`"The Editorial Character and Readership of The Penny Magazine: An Analysis,” Victorian Periodicals
`
`Review, 17 (1984), 127-141
`
`"Current Initiatives and Issues in Collection Management, ” Journal of Academic Librarianship, 10 (1984),
`
`257-261; reprinted in Library Lit: The Best of 85
`
`"Revolutions in Thought: Serial Publication and the Mass Market for Reading” in The Victorian Periodical
`
`Press: Samplings and Soundings, ed. Joanne Shattock and Michael Wolff (Leicester: Leicester University
`
`Press, 1982), pp. 225-257
`
`"Victorian Newspaper Advertising: Counting What Counts,” Publishing History, 8 (1980), 5-18
`
`"Library Friends: A Theoretical History” in Organizing the Library's Support: Donors, Volunteers, Friends,
`
`ed. D.W. Krummel, Allerton Park Institute Number 25 (Urbana: University of Illinois Graduate School of
`
`Library Science, 1980), pp. 23-32
`
`"The Learned Professor: being a brief account of a scholar [Harris Francis Fletcher] who asked for the
`
`Moon, and got it,” Non Solus, 7 (1980), 5-12
`
`"Prolegomenon to Serials Bibliography: A Report to the [Research] Society [for Victorian Periodica|s],”
`
`Victorian Periodicals Review, 12 (1979), 3-15
`
`"The Bibliographic Control of Victorian Periodicals” in Victorian Periodicals: A Guide to Research, ed. J.
`
`Don Vann and Rosemary T. VanArsde| (New York: Modern Language Association, 1978), pp. 21-51
`
`"John Murray's Family Library and the Cheapening of Books in Early Nineteenth Century Britain,” Studies
`
`in Bibliography, 29 (1976), 139-166. Reprinted in Stephen Colclough and Alexis Weedon, eds., The
`
`History of the Book in the West: 1800-1914, Vol. 4 (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate, 2010), pp. 307-334.
`
`with Robert Carringer, "Dreiser to Sandburg: Three Unpublished Letters,” Library Chronicle, 40 (1976),
`252-256
`
`"David Douglas and the British Publication of W. D. Howells’ Works,” Studies in Bibliography, 25 (1972),
`107-124
`
`as primary editor, W. D. Howells, Indian Summer (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1971)
`
`"The Profession of Authorship: Some Problems for Descriptive Bibliography” in Research Methods in
`Librarianship: Historical and Bibliographic Methods in Library Research, ed. Rolland E. Stevens (Urbana:
`University of Illinois Graduate School of Library Science, 1971), pp. 74-85
`
`17
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`17
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`
`
`edited with Ronald Gottesman, Art and Error: Modern Textual Editing (Bloomington: Indiana University
`
`Press, 1970)--also published in London by Methuen, 1970
`
`"Catholic Emancipation, the Quarterly Review, and Britain's Constitutional Revolution,” Victorian
`
`Studies, 12 (1969), 283-304
`
`as textual editor, W. D. Howells, The Altrurian Romances (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1968);
`introduction and annotation by Clara and Rudolf Kirk
`
`as associate textual editor, W. D. Howells, Their Wedding Journey (Bloomington: Indiana University
`
`Press, 1968); introduction by John Reeves
`
`”A Concealed Printing in W. D. Howells,” Papers of the Bibliographic Society of America, 61 (1967), 56-60
`
`editor, Non Solus, A Publication of the University of Illinois Library Friends, 1974-1981
`
`editor, Robert B. Downs Publication Fund, University of Illinois Library, 1975-1981
`
`reviews, short articles, etc. in Victorian Studies, Journal of English and German Philology, Victorian
`
`Periodicals Newsletter, Collection Management, Nineteenth-Century Literature, College & Research
`
`Libraries, Scholarly Publishing Today, ARL Newsletter, Serials Review, Library Issues, S[ocietyfor]
`
`S[cholarly] P[ublishing] Newsletter, and Victorian Britain: An Encyclopedia
`
`18
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`‘ttachment la: Statewide Illinois Librar
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`record for Schmidt
`
`H Statewide Illinois Library Catalog
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`lNorIdCat results for: (ti: SCSI and ti: Bus) and (ti: IDE and ti: Interface). Record 2 of 41.
`
`The SCSI bus and IDE interface :
`protocols, applications, and programming I’
`Friedhelm Schmidt
`
`1995
`English Q Book ix, 301 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm + 1 computer disc (3 H2 in.)
`Wokingham, England ; Reading, Mass. :AIddison—Wes|ey_ ; ISBN: 0201422840 9780201422849
`
`Disk includes source code for the program examples listed in the book and a SCSI monitor tool for the testing and troubleshooting SCSI devices.
`
`GEI THIS ITEM
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`Availability: Check the catalogs in your library.
`- Libraries worldwide that own item: 12?
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`Tifle: The 2 - and 2‘:
`protocols, applications, and programming!
`Unifoml Tifle:- und -—Schnittste||e. English
`AuflIor(s): Schmidt Friedhelm 1955-
`Puhlication: Wokingham, England ; Reading] Mass. : Addison—Wes|eyi
`Year: 1995
`
`Description: ix, 301 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm + 1 computer disc [3 1:‘2 in.)
`Language: English
`Standard No: ISBN: 0201422840; 9780201422849 LCCN: M23813
`Abstract: Disk includes source code for the program examples listed in the book and a 2 monitor tool for the testing and troubleshooting 2 devices.
`SUBJECT(S)
`Descriptor: - (Computer .1
`. {Standard 1
`Interfaces
`Echange de données informatisées.
`. {Standard 1
`- (Computer -1
`Interfaces.
`Protocollen linformatica)
`Programmeren [computersl
`Toepassingen.
`Identifier: Interfaces (Computers)
`Note(s): Includes index.
`Class Descriptors: LC: TK?895.B8?; Dewey: 004.6!2
`Responsibility: Friedhelm Schmidt; translated by J. Michael Schultz.
`Vendor Info: Brodart Baker and Taylor YBP Library Services (BROD BTCP YANK) $34.95
`Document Type: Book
`Entry: 19941021
`Update: 20160611
`Accession No: OCLC: 31518664
`Database: Worldcat
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