Voted best in category in the Users' Choice awards.
OK, thinking about the people who want preservation for when eight peaks falls. This seems to ignore that preservation only helps against time and nature, not actual people. If the karak falls and the invaders decide that paper makes nice sounds when burning preservation will not help, security would.

[ ] Preservation
You could focus from the outset on the preservation of the gathered materials from both natural disaster and the march of time. The masons will use techniques meant for facilities built atop live volcanoes to create a library that could withstand being the epicentre of the beginning of a second Time of Woes, and a great deal of care paid to air shafts and ambient humidity will create separate sections of the library tailored for the different needs of paper, parchment, and papyrus, and a means of completely securing the entire facility such that it could last another few millennia of enemy inhabitation unbreached.
 
[ ] Preservation
You could focus from the outset on the preservation of the gathered materials from both natural disaster and the march of time. The masons will use techniques meant for facilities built atop live volcanoes to create a library that could withstand being the epicentre of the beginning of a second Time of Woes, and a great deal of care paid to air shafts and ambient humidity will create separate sections of the library tailored for the different needs of paper, parchment, and papyrus, and a means of completely securing the entire facility such that it could last another few millennia of enemy inhabitation unbreached.
Ah, I should learn to read better. My fault. Thanks for pointing it out.
 
[X] Comfort

I was going to vote [ ] Order, but on second thought, i feel like the Dwarf standard of Order is going to be quite high, while their standard of comfort might not necessarily keep in mind things like elven or draconic sensibilities if we ever invite them to the library.
 
[X] Order

Let's make our library very good for research and being a library.
 
[X] Comfort
[] Order
[] Preservation

I love all three, but im choosing the one that might have most interesting effects inquest.
 
[X] Comfort
[X] Order

One because I like it, one because without it, it would be quite a bit less useful in time.
 
[X] Preservation

They're all great but preservation seems like the core impetus for this entire operation. Humans constantly be losing shit.
 
Ultimately I think that when it comes to preservation just being inside a dwarf hold is more than enough safety, yes we could make it literally as safe as dwarf tombs, but what is that in service of? Do we expect the hold to fall? Should we plan for it, invest significant resources that could go into making it a better library into preparing for that day?

I think not, as both practicality and aspiration order seems to me the superior choice, the one that it looking towards a future that is worth fighting for not more of the long slow defeat.
 
Ultimately I think that when it comes to preservation just being inside a dwarf hold is more than enough safety, yes we could make it literally as safe as dwarf tombs, but what is that in service of? Do we expect the hold to fall? Should we plan for it, invest significant resources that could go into making it a better library into preparing for that day?

I think not, as both practicality and aspiration order seems to me the superior choice, the one that it looking towards a future that is worth fighting for not more of the long slow defeat.
The goal of preservation, in my mind at least, is not to prepare for if K8P falls, but to preserve knowledge and rare books and stop our collected knowledge from fading from the world forever
 
The goal of preservation, in my mind at least, is not to prepare for if K8P falls, but to preserve knowledge and rare books and stop our collected knowledge from fading from the world forever

While there are living dwarfs around that does not need preservation in that sense, the idea is to preserve knowledge surely, not individual books, so we can just copy over books as they fade and wear out.
 
[X] Preservation

This way Future Doctor Quirin's words truly will be immortal.

Still working on the rest of him
Okay, just a thought, can't we do Order later by commissioning an enchanted dragon skull that knows the location of every book in the building at all times and making it Head Librarian (pun intended)?
Omegahugger approves of all plans that involves enchanting corpse parts to make them perform roles normally reserved for living people.
 
[X] Order

Information is useless if it cannot be found.

This is the wonder of modern search engines and indexed databases, and millions of accessible papers available at literally the click of a button. Before the internet, research was really fucking hard - the web was literally developed at CERN out of a need for ease of data and filesharing between academics, the sheer amount of data they were producing and the information that was being lost.

If you want to have a gander at the original proposal by Berners-Lee, it can be found here.

Losing Information at CERN

CERN is a wonderful organisation. It involves several thousand people, many of them very creative, all working toward common goals. Although they are nominally organised into a hierarchical management structure,this does not constrain the way people will communicate, and share information, equipment and software across groups.

The actual observed working structure of the organisation is a multiply connected "web" whose interconnections evolve with time. In this environment, a new person arriving, or someone taking on a new task, is normally given a few hints as to who would be useful people to talk to. Information about what facilities exist and how to find out about them travels in the corridor gossip and occasional newsletters, and the details about what is required to be done spread in a similar way. All things considered, the result is remarkably successful, despite occasional misunderstandings and duplicated effort.

A problem, however, is the high turnover of people. When two years is a typical length of stay, information is constantly being lost. The introduction of the new people demands a fair amount of their time and that of others before they have any idea of what goes on. The technical details of past projects are sometimes lost forever, or only recovered after a detective investigation in an emergency. Often, the information has been recorded, it just cannot be found.

If a CERN experiment were a static once-only development, all the information could be written in a big book. As it is, CERN is constantly changing as new ideas are produced, as new technology becomes available, and in order to get around unforeseen technical problems. When a change is necessary, it normally affects only a small part of the organisation. A local reason arises for changing a part of the experiment or detector. At this point, one has to dig around to find out what other parts and people will be affected. Keeping a book up to date becomes impractical, and the structure of the book needs to be constantly revised.

...

In providing a system for manipulating this sort of information, the hope would be to allow a pool of information to develop which could grow and evolve with the organisation and the projects it describes.


So yeah, order your shit. It makes life so much easier for researchers and academics.
 
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