Not to mention that it's a great place to do work if you work at home. I love my library, it's quiet, has free WiFi, all the info I need at my fingers, access to research online, it's in the middle of town so I can walk and get coffee or lunch, and it smells of rich mahogany and leather bound books.
Oh and you can reserve a room for free if you're going to have a meeting.
Seriously, it's free office share with old people and kids.
I've been a librarian for twelve years and watching the internet drag that poor fool until Forbes took his article down has to be in my top 5 favorite professional moments.
Either everyone can buy the book they want to read and then let it gather dust in their shelves, or a library can buy a few copies of the book that is enough for everyone. Hmm, wonder what is more expensive.
I_like_the_word_MUFF on April 27th, 2019 at 14:00 UTC »
Not to mention that it's a great place to do work if you work at home. I love my library, it's quiet, has free WiFi, all the info I need at my fingers, access to research online, it's in the middle of town so I can walk and get coffee or lunch, and it smells of rich mahogany and leather bound books.
Oh and you can reserve a room for free if you're going to have a meeting.
Seriously, it's free office share with old people and kids.
jthomasclubb on April 27th, 2019 at 14:02 UTC »
I've been a librarian for twelve years and watching the internet drag that poor fool until Forbes took his article down has to be in my top 5 favorite professional moments.
Arthillidan on April 27th, 2019 at 14:47 UTC »
Either everyone can buy the book they want to read and then let it gather dust in their shelves, or a library can buy a few copies of the book that is enough for everyone. Hmm, wonder what is more expensive.