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View Full Version : Digital Library surpasses initial goal of 1 million books


Big!
1st-December-2007, 06:46 AM
PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Nearly a decade ago, computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University embarked on a project with an astonishingly lofty goal: Digitize the published works of humankind and make them freely available online.

The architects of the project said this week they have surpassed their latest target, having scanned more than 1.5 million books -- many of them in Chinese -- and are continuing to scan thousands more daily.

"Anyone who can get on the Internet now has access to a collection of books the size of a large university library," said Raj Reddy, a computer science and robotics professor at the university who spearheaded the project.

The latest phase in the development of the so-called Universal Library, called the Million Book Project, began in 2002 after Reddy's team successfully scanned 1,000 books.

Much of the recent work has been carried out by workers at scanning centers in India and China, helped by $3.5 million in seed funding from the National Science Foundation and in-kind contributions from computer hardware and software makers.

The United States, China and India each have contributed $10 million in cash and contributions to the project, undertaken with partners at China's Zhejiang University, India's Indian Institute of Science and Egypt's Library at Alexandria.

At least half the books are out of copyright or scanned with the permission of copyright holders. Excerpts of copyright-protected works are available, though organizers expect complete texts to become available eventually.

The project is not the first of its kind. Online search engine operator Google Inc. and software giant Microsoft Corp. have begun similar endeavors, though Carnegie Mellon representatives say theirs is the largest university-based digital library of free books and that its purpose is noncommercial.

It's a step toward the creation of an online library that would make traditionally published books available to all, said Reddy. "The economic barriers to the distribution of knowledge are falling," he said in a statement.

Michael Shamos, a Carnegie Mellon computer science professor and copyright lawyer working on the project, said the library's mission included making vast amounts of information freely available and preserving rare and decaying texts, among other things.

Books have been borrowed for scanning from various institutions and individuals worldwide, though institutions in Europe declined to participate, he said.

The library so far has books published in 20 languages, including 970,000 in Chinese, 360,000 in English, 50,000 in the southern Indian language of Telugu and 40,000 in Arabic.

c4m
1st-December-2007, 08:20 AM
Woah, that's pretty cool. I thought "woah" was a word, but the board put red dots under it. Ah, it's "whoa". How have I gone through a good 7 years of writing "whoa" the wrong way?

mrnicksta
3rd-December-2007, 12:31 AM
that's incredible, i'm definitely going to keep an eye on the development of that - it'll surely be as revolutionary as google itself and, more recently, wikipedia.

can't believe europe has declined to participate - i swear we're ran by a bunch of morons, who'll spend money on anything other than schemes that will prove beneficial

i wonder why the ratio of chinese to english books scanned is so high, considering it's funded by an english speaking university

imported_James
3rd-December-2007, 10:17 AM
more people in china = scan more books?

or maybe because one chinese symbol can equal a bunch of english words, so the books may take less time to scan?

anna karina
3rd-December-2007, 01:55 PM
PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Nearly a decade ago, computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University embarked on a project...Digitize the published works of humankind and make them freely available online
ok so where are they

mrnicksta
4th-December-2007, 01:29 PM
i have just created an ePetition for use in the UK to ask the prime minister and the government to offer funding to any university who wish to participate in this project.

i will fill in details as soon as the petition has been moderated, and hopefully we'll get a few people signing up, and hopefully someone higher up will realise the global importance of this project!

keep your eyes peeled, i'll let everyone know when the petition goes live on the government's website!

Big!
7th-December-2007, 06:18 PM
ok so where are they

http://www.ulib.org/

mrnicksta
8th-December-2007, 01:18 PM
grrr..... the government's section responsibly for moderating publicly submitted petitions is taking fucking forever to get back to me about it, maybe they're just ignoring it - hopefully not, considering how pointless some of the petitions on the governments website are

mrnicksta
19th-December-2007, 11:12 AM
wahey!

after first rejecting my petition because i put a link to the universal library website in the explanation text (apparently it was advertising???). but now i've altered it and it's up and running!

so, any british residents (or ex-patriats) that wish to sign up, here is the address for my petition:

http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/universallibrary/

cheers to anyone who signs up

Big!
20th-December-2007, 12:14 AM
Kudos.

shifted
6th-January-2008, 10:03 PM
that is pretty good. would suck to sit there all day scanning pages though lol

Big!
29th-March-2008, 04:32 PM
What's the progress on this mrnicksta?

mrnicksta
30th-March-2008, 01:07 PM
i haven't really had time to rally up support or anything (although i have been thinking of writing to a newspaper of some sort). but it's slow, put it that way.

can see for yourself at: http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/universallibrary/

edit: 14 signatures apparently