To meet the challenging role of providing information to users, the Collection Services and Access Services Departments have met and advanced the demands presented by the information explosion.
32.
Some members of the technogentsia, including Red Burns, director of New York University's Interactive Telecommunications Program, reject any effort to label what she calls " the information explosion ."
33.
Leyden said her own mother feels fortunate she gave birth in the days before the information explosion because, she told her daughter, " it's driving you girls crazy ."
34.
In 1992 the Internet Architecture Board ( IAB ) produced a series of recommendations to resolve the scaling problems of the IPv4-based Internet : address space consumption and routing information explosion.
35.
Undaunted, he went for the full monty : the Monitor Channel, a 24-hour news and information cable television venture that would integrate church-owned media into the much-bruited " information explosion ."
36.
"In a way, these cults are understandable at a time when we face simultaneously an information explosion and a corresponding implosion in meaning, the capacity to understand everything that's coming at us,"
37.
For all the bogus excitement generated by the use of new technology by the Democratic candidates, the campaigns are operating as if the Internet and the information explosion it spawned never happened.
38.
Some experts, Chinese as well as foreign, worry about the risks of harsher rule as free trade throws angry workers into the streets and a daunting information explosion confronts the government's hapless censors.
39.
In the past decade, amid an information explosion and a shift to many priorities instead of just the Soviet bloc, the NSA budget was cut significantly, by as much as a third, according to some estimates.
40.
In the 1990s, there was again an upsurge of interest in alienation prompted by the fall of the Soviet Union, globalization, the information explosion, increasing awareness of ethnic conflicts, and post-modernism ( see Geyer, 1996 ).