If I could interject one concern, while people/organizations may like particular interfaces or platforms, in terms of collection database applications, the most important aspect of the entire endeavor is the data that is created. To have the overall effort actually be of benefit in the longrun, the data should be of an open-standards, non-proprietary nature; every currently utilized application should be able to export that data in a format that can be moved up the technology food-chain. In addition, and I am thankful that the museum crowd is actually starting to adopt this, standarized thesauri and controlled vocabularies are available from places like the Library of Congress (LCTGM & LCDTGM) and the Getty's (Art and Architecture Thesaurus), so that we can all start using the same terms to describe collections. Mac, Clone or UNIX, as long as everyone is using similar terminology to describe the objects in our collections, the greater likelyhood that we will be able to benefit from computerization. Robert MacKimmie Curatorial Director of Photography California Historical Society, San Francisco [log in to unmask]