Regenerates: Information is a unique resource in that it is not depleted with use. The more information is used or shared, the more it is created. This makes information regenerative which is associated with information life-cycle-the evolutionary process of information. There appears to be no consensus on the number of stages or processes involved in the cycle. For example while Marchland and Horton (1986) identified requirement definition, collection, transmission, processing, storage, dissemination and use as the states involved, another school of thought enumerated the following stages, origination, capturing, storage and presentation. For the purpose of this study Marchland and Horton’s ideas will be borrowed. We can now conceptualize information life-cycle as shown in the diagram below.