Carnegie Mellon's Digital Library Exceeds 1.5 Million Books 119
cashman73 writes "Most Slashdot readers are probably familiar with Google's book scanning project, a collaboration with several major universities to digitize works of literature, art, and science. But Google may have been beat to the punch this time -- about a decade ago, Carnegie Mellon University embarked on a project to scan books into digital format, to be made available online. Today, according to new reports, they now have a collection of 1.5 million books, the equivalent of a typical university library, available online."
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Heil Physical Media!
Re:Yay! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Traditional libraries are long dead in a pretty significant percentage of the US.
I was joking, geez. I love how people like you jump on any opportunity they can to say something actually insightful just for the sake of being insightful even tho their comment is hardly related to the comment they're replying to. And I'm the one troll..
Re:Yay! (Score:4, Insightful)
If you really want access, then you have to pay up and/or take the extra time to find somewhere you can get them for free.
First, in my field (astrophysics) most articles are now e-printed or at least opened up after a few years. ApJ (Astrophysical Journal) has unrestricted access to all articles older than 3 years and all articles older than 1996 are available at a free NASA/Harvard site (ADS). So basically, unless you want the absolute latest articles (which for most things you don't need) you can get them for free (and even then usually through arxiv). And if you need the latest article then, as you said, pay the fee and buy it.
Second, if you need some kind of technical book, talk to the librarians. Most of them will try to help and you can usually get it for free (or a small fee) through an inter-library loan. It might take a few weeks, but you can definitely do it without even leaving the library.
Third, take a look at the universities near you. Most allow open access to the stacks and computers. You can spend a whole day reading a book or using the university computers to access journals without paying anything. Some even allow borrowing privileges for free or for a fee. Take a look at Columbia in New York City [columbia.edu] or UCLA [ucla.edu].
So yes, public libraries don't have journals. They're far from dead though, because they don't serve that need. If you really want those sort of things, then you need to go out there and get access yourself.
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I continue to own large number of books as print copies (Churchill's 6 vol second world war, William Shirer's Rise and Fall of 3rd reich, Clausewitz On War, Arthashastra, etc ).
I do own many books on mobipocket copies, but nothing beats a paper.
Lets see how Kindle catches up.
Link here (Score:5, Informative)
http://tera-3.ul.cs.cmu.edu/
Re:Link here (Score:4, Informative)
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The only Mac plugin option they offer is for Safari, and it doesn't seem to work or have any ability of installing itself on Firefox.
While I guess having it work in Safari is better than nothing at all, it's still a bit obnoxious. (Does anyone actually *use* Safari? It's fast and doesn't guzzle RAM like a sailor on shore leave like Firefox tends to do, but without any ad
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http://dli.iiit.ac.in/ [iiit.ac.in]
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Internet Archive link (Score:1)
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Nice to have alternatives (Score:5, Informative)
As an author, I was always a bit worried having Google as the sole gatekeeper for this kind of service... not that I necessarily distrust Google's intentions, but if they changed their worldview one day, it'd be a pity to have so much work invested in only one place, and have to re-build it all somewhere else. It's nice that there are proper choices, and not all from a commercial stance either.
I don't know how smooth the integration process is (I submitted one of my books, but it appears it's a very un-automated system involving email etc, so it will probably take a while to see results). But still, I'm glad they're giving authors a way to help grow the library. Here's hoping it becomes even better than its promise!
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http://www.ulib.org/cgi-bin/udlcgi/ULIBMetainfo.cgi?&barcode=820923 [ulib.org]
Looks like the full play to me
Re:Nice to have alternatives (Score:4, Informative)
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Check out their progress report here [ulib.org].
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I agree that custom plug-ins suck. But before they fix that, they should probably fix that typo:
To see the book pages of ULIB, please dowload free TIFF plugin or DjVu plugin
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You don't need a special plugin. You just need to specify a program which displays tiff files to your browser.
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I've only had about a 50% success rate in actually viewing books once I have their listing; the system just doesn't wo
Yay2! (Score:1)
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> want to deny everyone access to it.
They have to follow the law so I forgive them on books under copyright. But they don't appear to even want to make it easy to access complete copies of books that are out of copyright. You can write them and ask for a full copy of a book. Bah. And no easy way to mirror the site (even just the out of copyright material) either.
Our library already hosts a Project Guttenberg mirror.
Direct link to Universal Library (Score:2, Redundant)
http://www.ulib.org/ [ulib.org]
Re:Digitize our history with slave labor? (Score:4, Insightful)
In case you haven't noticed, the economies of India and China are booming...in large part because of the offshoring/outsourcing from more developed countries. The wages and employment opportunities only get better in India and China due to projects like this.
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search engine (Score:5, Funny)
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You said, please give me
The old man and the sea
Please provide, it said, a valid query
With a word greater than length three,
and with that, I could supply thee
with a result that you would like to see.
ReCaptcha (Score:1)
They use a Captcha to validate the scanned words (Score:3, Informative)
reCAPTCHA improves the process of digitizing books by sending words that cannot be read by computers to the Web in the form of CAPTCHAs for humans to decipher. More specifically, each word that cannot be read correctly by OCR is placed on an image and used as a CAPTCHA.
(© 15% limited access) (Score:2)
wow. Universal access pffft
There isnt a great collection there really (Score:1)
Re:There isnt a great collection there really (Score:4, Insightful)
Copyright law in the US started out pretty reasonable - 20 years from the date of registration. Walt Disney spent alot of money and lobbied the government for another 20 year period. Before this could expire, they lobbied to have copyright terms extended to the life of the author plus 20 years. As a result of the Sonny Bonno act, it was expanded to the life of the author plus 75 years. (NOTE: this is a very brief approximation of US copyright law history - it was actually somewhat more complex than this and with several more twists and turns). See here for a detailed explanation. [copyright.gov]
The functional result of this lobbying is that no US copyrighted work created since 1923 has lapsed into the public domain (unless the owner screwed up by not renewing the copyright at the appropriate juncture).
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It is ridiculous that drug companies can spend billions of dollars on research for a drug patent that only lasts 20 years, while any pot-smoker with a guitar can write some song and the US government will grant him a monopoly that potentially extends well over 100 years.
Note: I am not 100% in support of drug patents in the current state, but the discrepancy between patents and copyrights is very dramatic.
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I'll reserve judgement on quality until I can read 970,000+ chinese books
need a visualisation (Score:4, Funny)
Guess they couldn't afford proof readers. (Score:5, Informative)
"TIT was the best of tunes, it was the worst of times,..."
"li was tie winter of despair, we had everything before us,..."
I guess they just OCR'd books en-masse without proof reading. Oh well, think of it as an exercise for your brain.
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Google's isn't any better. There, you have access to the actual scans, but many of them are of poor quality.
http://books.google.com/books?id=whSwpQn8p9QC&printsec=frontcover#PPR3,M1 [google.com]
Scroll down through the first dozen pages or so of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar; all of the words are cut off at the bound edge. I wonder why anyone would devote the time to scanning an entire book (including the blank pages) if they aren't going to do it right.
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The QuickTime plugin introduces delays which make flipping through pages pretty tedious. The HTML view is faster, but then you're going to run into OCR errors as others noted.
Here's an idea: create a custom wiki-style site containing all the book text and provide a link to each scanned page. One would normally read the standard web (HTML) version, but if any errors are foun
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OB Simpsons Quote (Score:2)
Maybe CMU just needs to hire smarter monkeys...
Lirbraries Are Not Dying (Score:2, Interesting)
Any reckless venture capitalists in here tonight? (Score:1)
Sure, Google is currently losing the scanning wars, but they'll catch up. Someone else may join the race, and eventually there will be a single collection containing 1 BILLION books. Sure, I like to read. I also suspect other people like to read too, but who has the fucking time to read 1 BILLION books? As an average, educated male, I hate being in a discussion with someone who name-drops a book I never heard of before, as a proof that my point is invalid because I am not we
Re:Any reckless venture capitalists in here tonigh (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Any reckless venture capitalists in here tonigh (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone comes up and says, "oh, this book clearly proves my point" then you can easily come back with, "Interesting. What does it say?" And you're off again, arguing the truth against real facts. Don't let them escape by saying, "oh, it's complicated." Respond, "it's ok, I have time. Please explain."
The point is, make your goal to find out the truth, and you will always win. Don't defend ideas anymore once you know them to be false. Switch over as soon as you know you are wrong, and you will always be right. Not to mention switching drives your opponent batty.
Well... (Score:1)
It seems that, culturally, we are way behind compared to what we were a hundred years ago. Want to learn geometry? Read Euclid. He wrote his books thousands of years ago.
Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)
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What about chaos theory? Theory of computation? Axiomatic set theory? Topology? Large chunks of modern probability theory?
Mathematics is developing more new material faster than it ever has.
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It seems that you aren't exposed to any modern culture.
Euclid's Elements are fine, and fun to read. But I wouldn't read Euclid for differential geometry. Or symplectic geometry. Or dozens of other kinds of geometry born
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That's exactly my point: why did the guy need to write "his" calculus in the first place. I can't see any reason other than personal profit. Unless he is some genius teacher who invented a novel way of presenting the material that would make learning effortless or something. The truth is exactly what I said: most of the calculus books available today contain nothing original.
Music? Even more.
Yes, of course - if you count all the mp3 files out there.
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regional variations... Euler was Swiss.
Ok, I understand: Germans had hard time understanding him. (He wrote in Latin, by the way, not in his "regional variant" of German; in any case, this problem, when it does exist, is solved by the method known as translation.)
any reasons
Stupidity?
What you are essentially saying is that each and every calculus textbook is a worthy read, if you want to learn calculus, even if yo
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Translation of mathematical texts amounts to rewriting it. Why not make it better for a particular purpose at the same time?
What you are essentially saying is that each and every calculus textbook is a worthy read, if you want to learn calculus, even if you have read all other book on
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Newer texts are also likely to use modern terminology, whereas original papers may have obsolete or obscure terms. Consider trying read a text where de
This is a Godsend (Score:2)
Printed books have their place, and does the digital library. The quality of our information is based on easily it can be accessed. A report written based on 3 sources the old way, might benefit from having 100 sources
p2p, usenet Library owns google and everyone else (Score:1)
If you are a student and don't have a lot of money to buy your books (mostly in third countries ). You can find all your college textbooks in there. I think is a way better library than google and others, obviously because the copyright material. But anyways in that countries you would have photocopied the book. Or maybe because when you want to legally buy a book you find out that it cant be shipped to your country.
Not for Linux / BSD (Score:1)
Not Found
The requested URL
Apache/2.0.55 (Ubuntu) mod_perl/2.0.2 Perl/v5.8.7 Server at tera-3.ul.cs.cmu.edu Port 80
Heck, I think I might have that many... (Score:3, Informative)
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sorry couldn't resist (Score:1)
Is that all? (Score:2)
Tiff best choice (Score:2)
Wow! (Score:2)
IE plug ins required to see books (Score:2)
not (Score:2)
some problems (Score:1)
Indeed, the FAQ says that if you want to download an entire book for offline reading, you must send an email request. Your use
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Have you considered visting Senator Larry Craig?