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It Will Be Hard To Find A Public Library 15 Years From Now." Idea Logical Company / Mike Shatzkin.
New York: Idea Logical Company, April 8th 2011.
"The core purpose — the founding purpose — of a library, around which other  things have grown, is to deliver access to printed words. Even the smallest  local library almost certainly had more content housed within it than any  individual had in their home and, in most cases, far more content than would be  available at any local store. It was the books in the library that initially  defined the library and attracted a core of patrons to it. When all of us have  access to more books on our screens than are in the library, what’s the point to  the library?
At least, that’s what I was thinking. ...
Gary [Price] observes that many people use the library for more than books,  specifically citing their mission in providing technology education and to  provide Internet access, and making the point that not everybody has access to  the computer and the Internet at home. In my opinion, all these objections will  be almost entirely mooted in the next 10 or 15 years.
(A parenthetical point. In the US, at least, the poor will almost certainly  always be with us. People will be left behind by change; our country routinely  permits that. I’m a liberal Democrat; that’s not an aspect of America that makes  me happy. Libraries will vanish faster than the need for them does. I predict  what I believe will happen, not what I want to happen.)"
See Also;
Michael Shatzkin in Montreal: Libraries Don't Make Sense Anymore