“…The information revolution of the late twentieth century has spawned a large number of studies of the manual technology revolution in organizations, commencing in the corporate sector, a century earlier (Beniger, 1986;Yates, 1989;Heide, 2009;Krajewski, 2011). The communications revolution of the mid-twentieth century onwards served as a backdrop, if not a stimulus, to efforts that pulled from relative obscurity, in terms of the priorities historians had been expressing, the print revolution that began in the fifteenth century (Eisenstein, 1979), and its subsequent effect on science (Shapin, 1998), as well as on distribution networks from publisher to bookshop, to what Irwin (1957) conceptualized as the 'golden chain' of library provision, and what Darnton (1982) called the 'life cycle' of the book.…”