As someone who already monitors five listservs, I would like to respond to Robbin's suggestion... In many ways (and with varying degrees of abuse!), this kind of activity is what occurs upon the lists. By commercializing, you may marginalize some of the very people you are hoping to reach. Indeed, many people are only on the lists because because the lists get distributed back through the commercial services. When the New York Times was running a series of articles on the New York Historical Society debacle last year, the ARCHIVES-L had numerous excerpts posted that kept many of us informed. Additionally, there are frequent excerpts from more obscure or less available publications appearring there all the time. We REALLY need to be careful about how we all contribute the proliferation of *information clutter*. Does the world really need ANOTHER gopher? IMNNSHO...(that's *In my not-necessarily-so humble opinion* 8-)...) ******************************************************************* Dennis Moser I once declared that we * [log in to unmask] should digitize it all... * [log in to unmask] Now I may be the last humanist * (517)764-6264 to go through SILS... * School of Information and Library Studies&Museum Practice Program * University of Michigan * ******************************************************************* On Thu, 3 Feb 1994, Robbin Murphy wrote: .... > Seems to me that we need some kind of electronic "newspaper" for > museum issues that will keep everyone up-to-date by collecting > information in one place and alert readers to important articles > in journals and newsletters they might not normally read. Seems > that some spunky entrepreneur could develop something that would > be worth paying for. > Robbin Murphy > [log in to unmask] >