From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 5 09:08:54 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2006 09:08:54 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1A Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1a5.306 pt1b5.306 Weekly_April_05.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 05, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** * We Are Now Over 95% Of The Way To 20,000 eBooks!!! Including PG Australia, PG Europe, and PrePrints Our usual editor has been on the road and will be adding in the Newsletters as did not appear over the past month. Please forgive errors during reconstructs of the statistical periods that have been missed. Right now I have reconciled two ways of arriving at our grand total to 19,046, + or - 3. This includes an error correction changing the total for February 15 from 208 to 198, decreased the grand total by 10 eBooks. More checking is in order, but for the moment a fairly accurate total is in place. Editor's comments appear in [brackets]. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com * TABLE OF CONTENTS [Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.] *eBook Milestones *Introduction *Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements *Continuing Requests and Announcements *Progress Report *Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report *Permanent Requests For Assistance: *Donation Information *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks *Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet? *Flashback *Weekly eBook update: This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter Corrections in separate section 3 New This Week From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.] 0 New This Week From PGEu [European Copyrights, Life + 50 and 70] 0 New This Week From PG PrePrints 50 New This Week To Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright 53 New This Week [Including PG Australia, PG Europe and PrePrints] [I'm sure there are a few bugs in the new accounting] *Headline News from Edupage, etc. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists *** *eBook Milestones* ~19,046 eBooks As Of Today!!! 18,622 at www.gutenberg.org[+50] 555 Australian eBooks [+3] [included in above line] 286 Gutenberg Europe [+0] 141 PG PrePrint Site [+0] ~19,049 Grand Total of all four sites >>> We Are ~95% of the Way to 20,000!!! <<< ***548 eBooks Averaged Per Year Since July 4, 1971*** 15,981 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001 That's ~254 eBooks per Month for ~63.00 Months We Have Produced 901 eBooks in 2006 954 to go to 20,000!!! 36 New eBooks From Distributed Proofreaders 8,265 total from Distributed Proofreaders Since October, 2000 [Details in PT1B] [Currently over 36,000 DP volunteers] We Averaged ~339 eBooks Per Month In 2004 We Averaged ~248 eBooks Per Month In 2005 [Including PG Australia] We Are Averaging ~300 eBooks Per Month In 2006 [Including PGAu, PGEu and PrePrints] [This change is due to the opening of Project Gutenberg sites other than the original one at www.gutenberg.org] [Now including totals from Australia, Europe and PrePrints] [Apologies, it will take a while to integrate everything not all statistics may be totally equalized yet] [PGEu Statistics Are Counted Monthly Not Weekly] [Daily PGEu stats at http://dp.rastko.net/default.php] [Daily DP stats at http://www.pgdp.net] BTW, we just started a new "PrePrints" site at PG, so if you come across eBooks that aren't ready for primetime, but that should be saved for upgrading, we have a place to put them. http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new site All Four Sites Combined Are Averaging 69 eBooks Per Week In 2006 53 This Week It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks It took ~32 months, from 2003 to 2006 for our last 10,000 eBooks It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100 It took ~2.50 years from Oct. 2003 to Mar. 2006 from 10,000 to 19,000 * ***Introduction [The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly go to the portions you find most interesting: 1. Founder's Comments, News, Notes & Queries, and 2. Weekly eBook Update Listing. Note bene that PT1 is now being sent as PT1A and PT1B. [Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor. Email us: hart at pobox.com and gbnewby at pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.] This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter FREE INTERNET REFERENCE SITE LivingInternet.com provides a 700-odd page reference about the Internet "to provide living context and perspective to this most technological of human inventions", and has received input from many people that helped build the Internet. It currently receives about 3 thousand visitors a day, many from educational institutions. Now in its 7th year of operation. http://www.livinginternet.com/ TEXT TO SPEECH Dolphin Producer is a new software package which will convert a text document into a fully synchronized text and audio DTB at the push of a single button. The DTB can then be played back using Dolphin's EaseReader software player - which is included in Dolphin Producer. The DTB can also be played back on any other DAISY DTB software or hardware player, as well as any MP3 player - The choice is yours. http://www.dolphinuk.co.uk or http://www.dolphinusa.com *News From Other Sources Sony eReader Delayed Sony has announced a delay from Spring to mid-Summer for the rollout of its new eBook reading device. In addition, it has been announced that Sony and Borders are to be the exclusive sellers of this $300-$400 product. * Print On Demand [POD] Case Reversed In Favor of Big Business Amazon and Ingram, two of the giants in the bookselling world, won a reversal of their conviction of patent infringement case that evolved after they refused to licence POD technology from patent holder Harvey Ross, the founder of On Demand. In an interesting sidelight, the overturned royalty payment of 13% of sales is more than most authors' royalties. See: On Demand Machine Corp v Ingram Industries Inc Case numbers: 05-1074, 05-1075 and 05-1100 U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. *Headline News from Edupage [PG Editor's Comments In Brackets] IT SPENDING EXPECTED TO RISE Results of a survey by Accenture indicate a likely increase in IT spending over the next three years. The annual survey, which questions IT managers at 300 large U.S. businesses, found that 60 percent expect to increase spending, while just 13 percent anticipate that IT spending will drop. Thirty-two percent of respondents said IT spending at their companies was insufficient. The average forecast is for IT spending to rise by 5.5 percent. Factors that are expected to spur new or increased spending include new business initiatives, upgrading legacy systems, and adopting new technologies. Other factors mentioned were integration efforts following a merger or acquisition, regulatory compliance, and security. ZDNet, 31 March 2006 http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-6056393.html JUSTICE DEPARTMENT CASTS A WIDE NET FOR INFORMATION Subpoenas obtained through the Freedom of Information Act indicate that the U.S. Justice Department is seeking Internet usage data from at least 35 companies in its efforts to defend the 1996 Child Online Protection Act (COPA) against court challenges. One of the subpoenas sparked a legal showdown between the government and Google, which challenged the request for millions of records of Internet searches. In that case, the government significantly scaled back its request, which the judge ruled was allowable. Other companies that received similar subpoenas are Comcast, EarthLink, AT&T, Cox Communications, Verizon Communications, Symantec, and other makers of computer security products. The Supreme Court has ruled twice that COPA is likely unconstitutional, and the government will go to trial in October to defend it. David McGuire, spokesman for the Center for Democracy and Technology, expressed concerns echoed by other critics that the government is seeking large amounts of information to defend a questionable law. Associated Press, 30 March 2006 http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060331/ap_on_hi_te/internet_blocking ANOTHER PATENT THREATENS CAMPUS TECHNOLOGY Another company has contacted a number of colleges and universities about a technology patent they might be infringing, this time for systems that transfer money across the Internet to campus cards. in 1998, JSA Technologies applied for a patent, which was granted in 2005, that covers such transfers. Many institutions use campus cards for student expenses such as books, food in snack bars, or campus fees. Jon Gear, vice president of JSA, said the company has no intention of forcing institutions to discontinue their funds-transfer systems. The company, he said, is simply enforcing a patent that protects its intellectual property. Gear said JSA contacted a number of schools, though he declined to say how many or to name them, and will negotiate licensing fees, which he said would be "negligible." Lowell Adkins, executive director of the National Association of Campus Card Users, said his organization is working to clarify the issue. "It's still really unclear what the scope of the patent is," he said. "We need to understand how they're going to exercise their rights." Chronicle of Higher Education, 28 March 2006 (sub. req'd) http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/03/2006032802n.htm INITIATIVE AIMS TO HELP FIND TRUSTWORTHY INFORMATION ONLINE A new Web site being developed by researchers at Syracuse University and the University of Washington (UW) will provide users with tools and tips for separating good online information from the vast amounts of unreliable material. R. David Lankes, associate professor of information studies at Syracuse, and Michael Eisenberg, professor in the Information School at UW, are codirectors of the Credibility Commons, which is funded by a $250,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. Lankes said that many users assess the credibility of online information based on what a site looks like or whether it tells users what they want to hear. The Credibility Commons will gather computer programs--written by others and by the organizers of the new site--that can help users find credible information on the Web. The site will also solicit feedback from users for how best to locate reliable, accurate information. The tools developed by the Credibility Commons will be available as open source applications, which users may download and modify provided they share those changes with the site. Chronicle of Higher Education, 29 March 2006 (sub. req'd) http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/03/2006032901t.htm BT CHARGING FOR HIGH BANDWIDTH USAGE U.K. Internet service provider BT has sent letters to 3,200 subscribers letting them know that their usage exceeds the 40GB per month download limit to which they agreed in the terms of their service. The letters inform customers that they must either pay a surcharge for the extra usage or their service will be disconnected. The ISP does not have an automatic shutoff for users who exceed the limit, and officials from BT said they are willing to tolerate occasional violations. The users contacted, however, are regularly downloading far more than the limit, with some routinely downloading 200GB every month. Such a volume of downloads corresponds to approximately 50,000 songs. A spokesperson from BT said it would be fair to call these users "broadband hogs" and noted, "You would have to be downloading pretty much all day, every day, to manage that level of downloading." BT sent similar letters to 1,800 individuals in October, and while some users did agree to pay for their usage, most were cut off from BT. ZDNet, 27 March 2006 http://news.zdnet.com/2100-1035_22-6054223.html PROFESSOR FORBIDS LAPTOPS, STUDENTS GRUMBLE June Entman, a law professor at the University of Memphis, has banned laptops from her classes for first-year law students, telling them they must take notes with pen and paper. "The computers interfere with making eye contact," said Entman. "You've got this picket fence between you and the students." She said she wants her students to spend less time taking down everything she says and spend time "thinking and analyzing" instead. Students responded by circulating a petition to have the decision overturned and by submitting a complaint to the American Bar Association, which has since dismissed the complaint. Student Jennifer Bellott said she worried that Entman's decision would spawn a "snowball effect," prompting other professors to do the same. Cory Winsett, another student at the university, said, "If we continue without laptops, I'm out of here. I'm gone; I won't be able to keep up." James Smoot, dean of the law school, said that Entman's decision will stand but that the school will review technology policies. USA Today, 21 March 2006 http://www.usatoday.com/tech/news/2006-03-21-professor-laptop-ban_x.htm To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV at LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName or To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings, or access the Edupage archive, visit http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639 *HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA [As requested adding sources, etc., when possible. Remember, the subject is not the article's subject, the subject is the manipulation of the world news.] *DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK Congress is passing "Ironclad Ceilings On Spending" with great public fanfare and media coverage as the National Debt approaches $10 Trillion dollars: but at the same time they have passed two amendments to virtually unpass these "Ironclad Ceiling" bills. One of these bills exempts Congress from the limit, which is about half of national spending, such as a continuing payment for the Iraq war, etc., with the second bill exempting entitlement programs which is the other half. *PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK >From a reply to the announcement of specific brands of terabyte boxes at Fry's this past week for $649. Other places have the same products from the same brand[s] at $699. Of course, if you are willing to simply buy 4 @ 250G drives for $99 each, and put them in a less sophisticated box than previously mentioned, these new terebytes can be added for ~$450 rather than the $649-$699 mentioned. Add another $50 each time you want to add a serious feature. However you want to count it, though, if you have been considering buying a terabyte, the time is obviously coming when there will quite many wider and wider ranges of selections, and you will likely see terabytes sold at Best Buy, Circuit City, etc., for under $500 by next year's holidays. If you want a top of the line terabyte box you can get one at about $1500 that includes rows of SCSI and GigE connectors, dual power supplies, etc. *ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK This week's statistics come to you courtesy of the big flap in the United States Congress in response to President Bush making a felony issue out of being an illegal alien. As previously mentioned in reference to the U.S. population reaching 300 million shortly, the actual population is very undercounted, as witnessed by the 5% push by Congresspeople to get more representation based on such undercounts. In addition, Congress is now citing numbers over 11 million for undocumented workers in the U.S., including who knows a total of how many children they have had while in the U.S., which makes those children legal citizens, under previously enforces U.S. citizenship laws. This is also bringing attention to labor unions. Today unions represent under 1/12 of United States workers, but rates approaching 1/2 exist in certain jobs, such as an assortment of local government workers. Where do you think AFSME gets all that money to advertize with? AFSME = Association of Federal, State and Municipal Employees The highest union rates across jobs are among men with less than 9th grade educations. It's not always the United States, the same cycle happens with Canadian workers, as below. In 1998 the average full time union worker received $19/hr, as compared to $15.64 for full time non-union workers. This is just over a 20% advantange for union workers. However, the different among part time workers is greater-- $16.55/hr for unions, $9.71 for non-union workers. 70%+ In addition, unionized workers usually get more hours/week, receiving weekly paychecks of $325.64 versus $161.92, which is just over DOUBLE the paychecks of non-union workers. * Odd Statistic Today at two minutes and three seconds after 1:00 . . .the time and date will be 01:02:03 04/05/06. * By the way, for those interested, the official U.S. population estimates just passed 298 million, though many say estimations of this nature leave out as much as 5% of the population. Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries. [This one is getting a little out of date, as the US population is obviously no longer 6% of the world. In fact, rounding to the nearest percent, the US will soon fall from 5% to 4%.] "If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following. There would be: 57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America 8 Africans 52 would be female 48 would be male 70 would be non-white 30 would be white 70 would be non-Christian 30 would be Christian 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States 80 would live in substandard housing 70 would be unable to read 50 would suffer from malnutrition 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education 1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater] 1 would be 79 years old or more. Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years, but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure to expire within that 63 year period. I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date, as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer then there would be only 60 million people in the world who owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States households have computers, out of over 100 million households. Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in the United States. I just called our local reference librarian and got the number of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at: 111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports. If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million, and that's counting just one computer per household, and not counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc. I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate given above, and would like some help researching these and other such figures, if anyone is interested. BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old. This means that basically 90% of the world's population would never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations offered it to them free of charge. Then I realized that the US population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer than the non-whites. Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they can receive more per year, but because they will live more years to receive Social Security. The average poor non-white may never receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From news at pglaf.org Thu Apr 6 08:20:03 2006 From: news at pglaf.org (Project Gutenberg Newsletter) Date: Thu, 6 Apr 2006 08:20:03 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] Pt2 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter Message-ID: GWeekly_April_05_part2.txt The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter 05 Apr 2006 eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since 1971 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter: - Obtaining Project Gutenberg eBooks - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks - 48 New U.S. eBooks this week - 3 New eBooks at Project Gutenberg of Australia - Mailing list information - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :: HOW TO GET EBOOKS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG ::. The easiest way to obtain our eBooks is at our search page at http://gutenberg.org/find which allows searching by title, author or eBook number; there is also an Advanced Search page which allows for additional search criteria (note that our newer postings may not yet be indexed for all additional criteria). And please note: you can now obtain a listing by language at the above link. Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world, and you can select one nearer to your location from the link on the search results page. To see a listing of mirror sites, and locate the one nearest to you, visit: http://gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL If you prefer to download eBooks via other methods than from the search page, and need additional information, please refer to the file GUTINDEX.ALL, available for viewing or downloading at: http://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL That file contains descriptions and explanations about the filenaming process, directory structure, file formats, and more. And to directly access the file directories: http://gutenberg.org/dirs/ Please note that the Project Gutenberg Production Team continues the process of manually re-posting those eBooks originally posted prior to Nov 2003 to the new filenaming and directory system (based on the eBook number). This process includes some file maintenance (repairing, correcting and re-formatting to current PG standards where practicable). These re-postings are noted in the "corrections" listings below. More information can be found in the file GUTINDEX.ALL mentioned above. * * * Please see Part 1 of this week's newsletter for more information about Project Gutenberg. And if you haven't done so lately, please visit the website at http://www.gutenberg.org to see what's new. * * * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Note: this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as Courier New or similar. To report an error in the listings below, please write to news_at_pglaf.org and include the word CORRECTION in the subject line. ========================================================================= [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ] ========================================================================= TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed, 05 Apr 2006: 18630 (incl. 555 Aus.). RESERVED/PENDING count: 44 =-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= :: During the past week the following ebooks were manually updated and reposted with the indicated filenames and transferred into the corresponding new directories: Tacitus on Germany, by Tacitus 2995 [Translator: Thomas Gordon] [Updated edition of: etext01/tctgr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/9/2995 ] [Files: 2995.txt; 2995-h.htm] Sir Francis Drake's Famous Voyage Round the World, by Francis Pretty 2991 [Updated edition of: etext01/fdvrw10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/9/2991 ] [Files: 2991.txt; 2991-h.htm] Garrison's Finish, by W. B. M. Ferguson 2989 [Subtitle: A Romance of the Race-Course] [Updated edition of: etext01/gfnsh10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/9/8/2989 ] [Files: 2989.txt; 2989-8.txt; 2989-h.htm] The Wizard, by H. Rider Haggard 2893 [Updated edition of: etext01/twzrd10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/9/2893 ] [Files: 2893.txt; 2893-h.htm] The Yellow God, by H. Rider Haggard 2857 [Subtitle: An Idol of Africa] [Updated edition of: etext01/ylwgd10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/5/2857 ] [Files: 2857.txt; 2857-8.txt; 2857-h.htm] Moon of Israel, by H. Rider Haggard 2856 [Updated edition of: etext01/mnsrl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/5/2856 ] [Files: 2856.txt; 2856-8.txt; 2856-h.htm] Elissa, by H. Rider Haggard 2855 [Updated edition of: etext01/1rbnh10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/5/2855 ] [Files: 2855.txt; 2855-8.txt; 2855-h.htm] Sir Francis Drake Revived, by Philip Nichols 2854 [Updated edition of: etext01/fdrvv10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/5/2854 ] [Files: 2854.txt; 2854-h.htm] The Ivory Child, by H. Rider Haggard 2841 [Updated edition of: etext01/ivory10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/4/2841 ] [Files: 2841.txt; 2841-8.txt; 2841-h.htm] Jewel, by Clara Louise Burnham 2778 [Subtitle: A Chapter In Her Life] [Updated edition of: etext01/jewel10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/7/2778 ] [Files: 2778.txt; 2778-8.txt; 2778-h.htm] The Mahatma and the Hare, by H. Rider Haggard 2764 [Updated edition of: etext01/tmath10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/6/2764 ] [Files: 2764.txt; 2764-8.txt; 2764-h.htm] The World's Desire, by H. Rider Haggard and Andrew Lang 2763 [Updated edition of: etext01/wldsr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/6/2763 ] [Files: 2763.txt; 2763-8.txt; 2763-h.htm] Long Odds, by H. Rider Haggard 2730 [Updated edition of: etext01/lodds10a.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/3/2730 ] [Files: 2730.txt; 2730-h.htm] Hunter Quatermain's Story, by H. Rider Haggard 2728 [Updated edition of: etext01/qstry10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2728 ] [Files: 2728.txt; 2728-8.txt; 2728-h.htm] Morning Star, by H. Rider Haggard 2722 [Updated edition of: etext01/mstar10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2722 ] [Files: 2722.txt; 2722-8.txt; 2722-h.htm] Eric Brighteyes, by H. Rider Haggard 2721 [Updated edition of: etext01/ericb10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/2/2721 ] [Files: 2721.txt; 2721-8.txt; 2721-h.htm] Maiwa's Revenge, by H. Rider Haggard 2713 [Subtitle: The War of the Little Hand] [Updated edition of: etext01/maiwa10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/7/1/2713 ] [Files: 2713.txt; 2713-8.txt; 2713-h.htm] Queen Sheba's Ring, by H. Rider Haggard 2602 [Updated edition of: etext01/sheba10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/0/2602 ] [Files: 2602.txt; 2602-8.txt; 2602-h.htm] Stories by English Authors: Scotland, by Various 2588 Contents: The Courting of T'nowhead's Bell, by J. M. Barrie "The Heather Lintie", by S. R. Crockett A Doctor of the Old School, by Ian Maclaren Wandering Willie's Tale, by Sir Walter Scott The Glenmutchkin Railway, by Professor Aytoun Thrawn Janet, by R. L. Stevenson [Updated edition of: etext01/sbeas10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/5/8/2588 ] [Files: 2588.txt; 2588-h.htm] Life Is A Dream, by Pedro Calderon de la Barca 2587 [Translator: Edward Fitzgerald] [Updated edition of: etext01/lfdrm10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/5/8/2587 ] [Files: 2587.txt; 2587-h.htm] Polyuecte, by Pierre Corneille 2543 [Translator: Thomas Constable] [Updated edition of: etext01/plyct10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/5/4/2543 ] [Files: 2543.txt; 2543-h.htm] Orpheus in Mayfair and Other Stories and Sketches, by Maurice Baring 2492 [Updated edition of: etext01/orphe10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/9/2492 ] [Files: 2492.txt; 2492-h.htm] History Of Florence And Of The Affairs Of Italy, by Niccolo Machiavelli 2464 [Subtitle: From The Earliest Times To The Death Of Lorenzo The Magnificent] [Intro.: Hugo Albert Rennert] [Updated edition of: etext01/hflit10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/2464 ] [Files: 2464.txt; 2464-8.txt; 2464-h.htm] The Prophet of Berkeley Square, by Robert Hichens 2463 [Updated edition of: etext01/tpobs10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/2463 ] [Files: 2463.txt; 2463-8.txt; 2463-h.htm] Dona Perecta, by B. Perez Galdos 2462 [Intro.: W. D. Howells] [Translator: Mary J. Serrano] [Updated edition of: etext01/donap10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/2462 ] [Files: 2462.txt; 2462-8.txt; 2462-h.htm] Stories By English Authors: Italy, by Various 2457 Contents: A Faithful Retainer, by James Payn Bianca, by W. E. Norris Goneril, by A. Mary F. Robinson The Brigand's Bride, by Laurence Oliphant Mrs. General Talboys, by Anthony Trollope [Updated edition of: etext01/sbeai10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/5/2457 ] [Files: 2457.txt; 2457-h.htm] Caught In The Net, by Emile Gaboriau 2451 [Updated edition of: etext01/cnnet10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/5/2451 ] [Files: 2451.txt; 2451-8.txt; 2451-h.htm] :: Please note the following additional changes, corrections, improvements: -=-=-=-=[ 48 NEW U.S. EBOOKS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- How to Teach Phonics, by Lida M. Williams 18119 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18119 ] [Files: 18119.txt; 18119-h.htm] Little Journeys, Volume 4, by Elbert Hubbard 18118 [Full title: Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great, Volume 4 (of 14)] [Subtitle: Little Journeys to the Homes of Eminent Painters] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18118 ] [Files: 18118.txt; 18118-8.txt; 18118-h.htm] Georges Guynemer, by Henry Bordeaux 18117 [Subtitle: Knight of the Air] [Translator: Louise Morgan Sill] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18117 ] [Files: 18117.txt; 18117-8.txt; 18117-h.htm] The Freebooters of the Wilderness, by Agnes C. Laut 18116 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18116 ] [Files: 18116.txt; 18116-8.txt; ] Veljekset, by Arvid Jornefelt 18115 [Subtitle: Romaani] [Language: Finnish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18115 ] [Files: 18115-8.txt] Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 159, November 10, 1920, Various 18114 [Editor: Owen Seaman] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18114 ] [Files: 18114.txt; 18114-8.txt; 18114-h.htm] History of the Expedition to Russia, by Count Philip de Segur 18113 [Subtitle: Undertaken by the Emperor Napoleon in the Year 1812] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18113 ] [Files: 18113.txt; 18113-8.txt; 18113-h.htm] Moll Flanders, by Daniel Defoe 18112 [Translator: Marcel Schwob] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18112 ] [Files: 18112-8.txt; 18112-h.htm] Scenes de mer, Tome I, by Edouard Corbiere 18111 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18111 ] [Files: 18111-8.txt; 18111-h.htm] The Bridal March; One Day, by Bjornstjerne Bjornson 18110 [Translator: Edmund Gosse] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/1/18110 ] [Files: 18110.txt; 18110-8.txt; 18110-h.htm] Graveyard of Dreams, by Henry Beam Piper 18109 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18109 ] [Files: 18109.txt; 18109-h.htm] Jean-nu-pieds, Vol. 2, by Albert Delpit 18108 [Subtitle: chronique de 1832] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18108 ] [Files: 18108-8.txt; 18108-0.txt] American Lutheranism Vindicated, by Samuel Simon Schmucker 18107 [Title: American Lutheranism Vindicated; or, Examination of the Lutheran Symbols, on Certain Disputed Topics] [Subtitle: Including a Reply to the Plea of Rev. W. J. Mann] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18107 ] [Files: 18107.txt; 18107-8.txt] Lettres de Marie Bashkirtseff, by Marie Bashkirtseff 18106 [Subtitle: Preface de Francois Coppee] [Commentator: Francois Coppee] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18106 ] [Files: 18106-8.txt; 18106-0.txt; 18106-h.htm] Genesis, by H. Beam Piper 18105 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18105 ] [Files: 18105.txt; 18105-h.htm] Among Famous Books, by John Kelman 18104 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18104 ] [Files: 18104.txt; 18104-8.txt; 18104-h.htm] "Contemptible", by "Casualty" 18103 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18103 ] [Files: 18103.txt; 18103-8.txt; 18103-h.htm] The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898, Vol. 24, Ed. by Blair & Robertson 18102 [Subtitle: Volume XXIV, 1630-1634] [Ed.: Emma Helen Blair and James Alexander Robertson] [Intro. and Notes: Edward Gaylord Bourne] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18102 ] [Files: 18102.txt; 18102-8.txt; 18102-h.htm] The Life of Friedrich Schiller, by Goethe and Carlyle 18101 [Subtitle: Introduction to German Translation] [Author: Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Thomas Carlyle] [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18101 ] [Files: 18101.txt; 18101-8.txt; 18101-0.txt; 18101-h.htm] Roads from Rome, by Anne C. E. Allinson 18100 [Author AKA: Anne Crosby Emery Allinson (1871-1932)] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/0/18100 ] [Files: 18100.txt; 18100-h.htm; ] Donatello, by David Lindsay, Earl of Crawford 18099 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18099 ] [Files: 18099.txt; 18099-8.txt; 18099-h.htm; ] Schetsen uit de Indische Vorstenlanden, by Louis Rousselet 18098 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar volken, 1873] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18098 ] [Files: 18098-8.txt; 18098-h.htm] Public School Domestic Science, by Mrs. J. Hoodless 18097 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18097 ] [Files: 18097.txt; 18097-8.txt; 18097-h.htm] The Social History of Smoking, by G. L. Apperson 18096 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18096 ] [Files: 18096.txt; 18096-8.txt; 18096-0.txt; 18096-h.htm] Successful Methods of Public Speaking, by Grenville Kleiser 18095 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18095 ] [Files: 18095.txt; 18095-8.txt; 18095-h.htm] History of the Girondists, Volume I, by Alphonse de Lamartine 18094 [Subtitle: Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution] [Translator: H. T. Ryde] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18094 ] [Files: 18094.txt; 18094-8.txt; 18094-h.htm] >From the Valley of the Missing, by Grace Miller White 18093 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18093 ] [Files: 18093.txt; 18093-8.txt; 18093-h.htm] Germaine, by Edmond About 18092 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18092 ] [Files: 18092-8.txt] Samantha at the World's Fair, by Marietta Holley 18091 [Illustrator: Baron C. De Grimm] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18091 ] [Files: 18091.txt; 18091-8.txt; 18091-h.htm] Jean qui grogne et Jean qui rit, by Comtesse de Segur 18090 [Illustrator: H. Castelli] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/9/18090 ] [Files: 18090-8.txt; 18090-h.htm] Infernaliana, by Ch. Nodier 18089 [Subtitle: Anecdotes, petits romans, nouvelles et contes sur les revenans, les spectres, les demons et les vampires] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18089 ] [Files: 18089-8.txt] Libro bizzarro, by Antonio Ghislanzoni 18088 [Language: Italian] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18088 ] [Files: 18088-8.txt] Historic Doubts Relative To Napoleon Buonaparte, by Richard Whately 18087 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18087 ] [Files: 18087.txt; 18087-8.txt; 18087-0.txt; 18087-h.htm] A Dozen Ways Of Love, by Lily Dougall 18086 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18086 ] [Files: 18086.txt; 18086-8.txt; 18086-h.htm; ] J.-K. Huysmans et le satanisme, by Joanny Bricaud 18085 [Subtitle: d'apres des documents inedits] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18085 ] [Files: 18085-8.txt; 18085-h.htm] Rapport au Ministre des Finances, by Ed. Vandal 18084 [Title: Rapport au Ministre des Finances sur l'Administration des Postes] [Subtitle: Extrait de L'Annuaire des Postes de 1865] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18084 ] [Files: 18084-8.txt; 18084-h.htm] Smarra ou les demons de la nuit, by Charles Nodier 18083 [Subtitle: Songes romantiques] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18083 ] [Files: 18083-8.txt; 18083-h.htm] Marilia de Dirceo, by Tomas Antonio Gonzaga 18082 [Language: Portuguese] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18082 ] [Files: 18082-8.txt] Nouveaux souvenirs entomologiques - Livre II, by Jean-Henri Fabre 18081 [Subtitle: Etude sur l'instinct et les moeurs des insectes] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18081 ] [Files: 18081-8.txt; 18081-h.htm] Normandy Picturesque, by Henry Blackburn 18080 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/8/18080 ] [Files: 18080.txt; 18080-8.txt; 18080-h.htm; ] Autumn, by Robert Nathan 18079 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18079 ] [Files: 18079.txt; ] Soldier Silhouettes on our Front, by William L. Stidger 18078 [Illus.: Jessie Gillespie] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18078 ] [Files: 18078.txt; 18078-8.txt; 18078-h.htm; ] We and the World, Part I, by Juliana Horatia Ewing 18077 [Subtitle: A Book for Boys] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18077 ] [Files: 18077.txt; 18077-8.txt; 18077-h.htm] The Boy Trapper, by Harry Castlemon 18076 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18076 ] [Files: 18076.txt; 18076-h.htm] Mademoiselle La Quintinie, by George Sand 18075 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18075 ] [Files: 18075-8.txt; 18075-h.htm] Le cycle patibulaire, by Georges Eekhoud 18074 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18074 ] [Files: 18074-8.txt; 18074-h.htm] Marchand de Poison, by Georges Ohnet 18073 [Subtitle: Les Batailles de la Vie] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18073 ] [Files: 18073-8.txt; 18073-h.htm] Dierenleven in de wildernis, by William J. Long 18072 [Subtitle: Schetsen uit het leven der dieren hun natuurlijke aanleg en wat zij leeren moeten] [Illustrator: Charles Copeland] [Translator: Cilia Stoffel] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/7/18072 ] [Files: 18072-8.txt; 18072-h.htm] -=-=-=-=[ 3 NEW EBOOKS AT PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Apr 2006 So Well Remembered, by James Hilton [060037xx.xxx] 0555A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600371.txt or .zip] [and http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600371h.html ] Apr 2006 Early Voyages to Terra Australis by R H Major [060036xx.xxx] 0554A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600361.txt or .zip] [and http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600361h.html ] Apr 2006 On the Spot, by Edgar Wallace [060035xx.xxx] 0553A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600351.txt or .zip] eBooks are posted in uncompressed and/or compressed formats. To access these ebooks, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty.html For more information about Project Gutenberg of Australia, including accessing those etexts from outside of Australia, please visit: http://gutenberg.net.au/ --Project Gutenberg of Australia-- --A treasure trove of Literature-- *treasure-trove n. treasure found hidden with no evidence of ownership For more information about copyright restrictions in other countries, please visit: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html ============================================================================= From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 5 09:11:41 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 5 Apr 2006 09:11:41 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1B Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1b5.306 Weekly_April_05.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 05, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** PT1B Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com ***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements General Catalog of Old Books and Authors http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/ngcoba.htm which now indexes 24,000 books available free online, including all PG(US) & PG(Aus)'s books, along with some basic date information about them and their authors where you can find more. For information please contact Philip Harper * We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks. http://www.archive.org Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date, but you should get all the files when you pass through to the original sites. Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any of the eBooks you would like to work on. Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive! * Please visit and test our newest site: "PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE" http://pge.rastko.net [Project Gutenberg Europe] http://dp.rastko.net [Distributed Proofreaders Europe] * There is an experimental online reader available. Start from any bibliographic record page, e.g. http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300 Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off. Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file where the encoding is known. * MACHINE TRANSLATION We are seeking as much information as possible on the various approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact information would be greatly appreciated. *** Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc. http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject and The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running. Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test. You can access it by visiting http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969 *** Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at: http://www.gutenberg.org/about * We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files for the visually impaired and other audio book users. Let us know if you'd like to join this group. More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio *** Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!! We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners. If you have a DVD burner and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs for you to copy. You can either snail them directly to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping. We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish. Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format, as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format. *** Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web pages and publicity materials. If you have original graphics depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them! To see some of what we have now, please see: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images *** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers. We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice (both US and international) and other areas. Please email Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby , if you can help. This is much more important than many of us realize! ***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders In the first 03.00 months of this year, we produced 901 new eBooks. It took us from July 1971 to May 1997 to produce our first 901 eBooks! That's 13 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 Years!!! 53 New eBooks This Week 38 New eBooks Last Week 265 New eBooks This Month [Mar] 300 Average Per Month in 2006 266 Average Per Month in 2005 Counting 216 PGEu 248 Average Per Month in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 336 Average Per Month in 2004 355 Average Per Month in 2003 203 Average Per Month in 2002 103 Average Per Month in 2001 901 New eBooks in 2006 3186 New eBooks in 2005 Counting 216 PGeu > 2970 New eBooks in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 4049 New eBooks in 2004 4164 New eBooks in 2003 2441 New eBooks in 2002 1240 New eBooks in 2001 ==== 15,981 New eBooks Since Start Of 2001 That's Only 63.00 Months! ~254 books per month! 19,046 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks 15,946 eBooks This Week Last Year ==== 3,100 New eBooks In Last 12 Months [Incl. PGAu PGEu & PrePrints] 555 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted at the U.S. site: www.gutenberg.org ] 286 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Europe 141 Entry From Project Gutenberg PrePrints You may also want to look at Project Runeberg [Scandinavian] http://runeberg.org * Project Gutenberg began operation on July 4, 1971 Project Runeberg began operation on December 13, 1992 Distributed Proofreaders began October 22, 2000 [Became an official PG-US site in 2002] Project Gutenberg of Australia began in August, 2001 The Project Gutenberg Consortia Center started in 1997] [Became an official PG-US site in 2003] Project Gutenberg of Europe started January 12, 2004 [Posted first books February 26, when we met in Brussels to address people at the European Union Parliament. Project Gutenberg PrePrints Started January 25, 2006 http://preprints.pglaf.org/ old http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new * PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE: Since starting production in October 2000, Distributed Proofreaders has contributed 8,265 Books to Project Gutenberg. 36 added this week. For more complete DP statistics, visit: http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php * Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, and see below to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalog. eBooks are posted throughout the week. You can even get daily lists. Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs: http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto or http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml *** *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report I haven't had time to incorporate the new additions, as the Consortia Center recently doubled in size, for a current total of ~75,000 eBooks at http://gutenberg.cc Please note the addition of the Internet Archive marked with <<< below. PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as: Alex-Wire Tap Collection, 2,036 HTML eBook Files Black Mask Collection, 12,000 HTML eBook Files The Coradella Bookshelf Collection, 141 eBook Files DjVu Collection, 272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files eBooks at Adelaide Collection, 27,709 eBook Files Himalayan Academy, 3,400 HTML eBook Files Internet Archive ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress] <<< Literal Systems Collection, 68 MP3 eBook Files Logos Group Collection, ~34,000 TXT eBook Files Poet's Corner Poetry Collection, 6,700 Poetry Files Project Gutenberg Collection, 15,035 eBook Files PGCC Chinese eBook Collection ~300 eBook files <<< Note Name Change Renaisscance Editions Collection, 561 HTML eBook Files Swami Center Collection, 78 HTML eBook Files Tony Kline Collection, 223 HTML eBook Files Widger Library, 2,600 HTML eBook Files CIA's Electronic Reading Room, 2,019 Reference Files =======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files===== Average Size of the Collections 8,067.18 Total Files These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of their donors: some are one file per book; some have a file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the overcounting or duplication of numbers. If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~45,714 Unique eBooks If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~34,286 Unique eBooks [The new total of ~75,000 eBooks has eliminated many of the necessities for calculating unique eBooks this way] *** Please also note that over 25,000 eBooks are listed via The Online Books Page, of which over 5,700 are from PG. http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/ In addition: The Internet Public Library had a similar listing which is now in limbo. If anyone knows what is happening with the IPL, please let us know. Inquiries, made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up any current information. You can try a new IPL service at: http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/ It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page. Still looking for more Internet Public Library info. *** Today Is Day #091 of 2006 This Completes Week #13 and Month #03.00 [364 days this year] 274 Days/39 Weeks To Go [We get 52 Wednesdays this year] 954 Books To Go To #20,000 [Our production year begins/ends 1st Wednesday of the month/year] 69 Weekly Average in 2006 61 Weekly Average in 2005 [Counting 216 PGEu] 57 Weekly Average in 2005 [Not Counting PGEu] 78 Weekly Average in 2004 79 Weekly Average in 2003 47 Weekly Average in 2002 24 Weekly Average in 2001 45 Only ~45 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers List [Used to be well over 100] [This listing usually from the previous week] *** Permanent Requests For Assistance: DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES Please visit the site: http://www.pgdp.net for more information about how you can help a lot by simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more. If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed, and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it, please email dphelp at pgdp.net and we will get things started. Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the Project Gutenberg collection. To see what is already online, visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file) listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading. Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive? Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp at pgdp.net with your geographic location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner. [Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which will not be returned.] We have high-speed scanners currently located in the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier. Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at: http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK' lines to dphelp at pgdp.net Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself? Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution! Just send us email telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help find a project you would like to work on. Please contact us at: dphelp at pgdp.net if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders. ***Donation Information We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests! We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages, as well as in more formats, including music, artwork, movies, etc. *** QUICK WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO PROJECT GUTENBERG A. Send a check or money order to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation 809 North 1500 West Salt Lake City, UT 84116 USA B. Donate by credit card online: NetworkForGood: http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541 or PayPal to "donate at gutenberg.org": http://www.paypal.com /xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of volunteers over more than 34 years. Your donations make it possible to support these volunteers, and pay our few employees to continue the creation of free electronic texts. We accept credit cards, checks and transfers from any country, in any currency. Donations are made to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (PGLAF). PGLAF is approved as a charitable 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal Revenue Service, and has the Federal Employee Information Number (EIN) 64-6221541. For more information, including several other ways to donate, go to http://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html or email donate at gutenberg.org *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world. To find the sites nearest you, go to: http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks http://www.gutenberg.org/find allows searching by title, author, language and subject. Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want. Try: http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs or ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first five characters of the file's name. Note that updated eBooks usually go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.) *** Statistical Review In the 13 weeks of this year, we have produced ~901 new eBooks. It took us from 07/71 to 05/96 to produce our FIRST 901 eBooks!!! That's 13 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 YEARS!!! FLASHBACK! Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #901 Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext] ### A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright [Note: books without month and year entries are now in new catalog format] Jun 1997 Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allen Poe [#1][usherxxx.xxx] 932 Jun 1997 The Bab Ballads, by W. S. Gilbert [Gilbert #3] [2babbxxx.xxx] 931 Jun 1997 The Cook's Decameron, by Mrs. W. G. Water [ckdecxxx.xxx] 930 Jun 1997 The Cyberpunk Fakebook, by St. Jude & R.U. Sirius [fakebxxx.xxx] 929C May 1997 Alice In Wonderland, HTML Version of 30th Edition [alicexxh.xxx] 928 May 1997 The Lamplighter, by Charles Dickens [Dickens #29] [lmpltxxx.xxx] 927 May 1997 10,000 Dreams Interpreted, Gustavus Hindman Miller[drmntxxx.xxx] 926 May 1997 United States Presidents' Inaugural Speeches [uspisxxx.xxx] 925 May 1997 To Be Read At Dusk, by Charles Dickens[Dickens#28][rddskxxx.xxx] 924 May 1997 Life of Francis Marion #3, by William Dobein James[jjmarxxx.xxx] 923 May 1997 Sunday Under Three Heads by Charles Dickens[CD#27][suthsxxx.xxx] 922 May 1997 De Profundis, by Oscar Wilde [Oscar Wilde #13] [dprofxxx.xxx] 921 May 1997 Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza/Elwes Part 2 [#2] [2spnexxx.xxx] 920 May 1997 Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza/Elwes Part 1 [#1] [1spnexxx.xxx] 919 May 1997 Sketches of Young Gentlemen, by Dickens [CD #26] [skygmxxx.xxx] 918 May 1997 Barnaby Rudge, 80's Riots, by Charles Dickens[#25][rudgexxx.xxx] 917 May 1997 Sketches of Young Couples, by Charles Dickens[#24][yngcpxxx.xxx] 916 May 1997 Library Work with Children, by Alice I. Hazeltine [lwwchxxx.xxx] 915 May 1997 The Uncommercial Traveller by Charles Dickens[#23][unctrxxx.xxx] 914 May 1997 A Hero of Our Time, by M. Y. Lermontov [aheroxxx.xxx] 913 May 1997 Mudfog and Other Sketches, by Charles Dickens[#22][mdfogxxx.xxx] 912 May 1997 Tales of the Fish Patrol, by Jack London[London#8][totfpxxx.xxx] 911 White Fang, by Jack London 910 The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boone, by John Filson 909 A Treatise on Parents and Children, by George Bernard Shaw 908 May 1997 Flying Machine, by W.J. Jackman & Thos. H. Russell[flymcxxx.xxx] 907 May 1997 Abraham Lincoln, by James Russell Lowell[Lowell#2][1lncnxxx.xxx] 906 May 1997 Within the Law, by Marvin Dana from Bayard Veiller[wnlawxxx.xxx] 905 May 1997 Her Father's Daughter, by Gene Stratton-Porter[#7][hfdtrxxx.xxx] 904 May 1997 The White Company, by Arthur Conan Doyle[Doyle#12][whtcoxxx.xxx] 903 May 1997 The Happy Prince & Other Tales by Oscar Wilde[#12][hpaotxxx.xxx] 902 May 1997 The Jew of Malta, by Christopher Marlowe [CM #3] [jmltaxxx.xxx] 901 May 1997 Decline/Fall Of The Roman Empire, by Gibbon, Folio[dfre310f.xxx] 900 (NOTE: in proprietary Folio .nfo format; Vol. 3 only.) (See also: #890-895 for HTML format, #731-736 for plain text.) * Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet? If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of 6,507,879,958 that would be 19,046 x 65,078,800 = ~1.24 Trillion !!! With 19,046 eBooks online as of April 05, 2006 it now takes an average of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.81 from each book. [1% world population x #eBooks] 65,078,800 x 19,046 x $.81 = ~$1 Trillion [Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.] 6,507,879,958 65,078,800 * A Trillion Dollars Given Away At Just $.53 Value Per Book To 100 Million With 19,046 eBooks online as of April 05, 2006 it now takes an average of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.53 from each book. This "cost" is down from about $.63 when we had 15,946 eBooks a year ago. Our Target Audience Is 1.5% Of The World Population = ~100,000,000 people. At 19,046 eBooks in 34 Years and 09.00 Months We Averaged 548 Per Year 45.7 Per Month 1.50 Per Day At 901 eBooks Done In The 090 Days Of 2006 We Averaged 10.0 Per Day 69 Per Week 300 Per Month If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S. you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear, are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope. However, for those keeping track of how quickly the U.S. reaches a 300 million population level, and who noticed the passing of 298M, just two weeks ago. . .the U.S. is already 1/6 the way to 299M, so it will probably be 10 more weeks to 299M and 22 more to 300M. Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment, who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details]. * The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks' production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon, starts with the first Wednesday of January. January 4th was the first Wednesday of 2006, and thus ended PG's production year of 2005 and began the production year of 2006 at noon. This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week. * Odd Statistic Today at two minutes and three seconds after 1:00 . . .the time and date will be 01:02:03 04/05/06. * By the way, for those interested, the official U.S. population estimates just passed 298 million, though many say estimations of this nature leave out as much as 5% of the population. Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries. [This one is getting a little out of date, as the US population is obviously no longer 6% of the world. In fact, rounding to the nearest percent, the US will soon fall from 5% to 4%.] "If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following. There would be: 57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America 8 Africans 52 would be female 48 would be male 70 would be non-white 30 would be white 70 would be non-Christian 30 would be Christian 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States 80 would live in substandard housing 70 would be unable to read 50 would suffer from malnutrition 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education 1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater] 1 would be 79 years old or more. Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years, but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure to expire within that 63 year period. I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date, as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer then there would be only 60 million people in the world who owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States households have computers, out of over 100 million households. Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in the United States. I just called our local reference librarian and got the number of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at: 111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports. If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million, and that's counting just one computer per household, and not counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc. I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate given above, and would like some help researching these and other such figures, if anyone is interested. BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old. This means that basically 90% of the world's population would never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations offered it to them free of charge. Then I realized that the US population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer than the non-whites. Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they can receive more per year, but because they will live more years to receive Social Security. The average poor non-white may never receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 12 09:40:00 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 09:40:00 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1A Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1a1.406 Weekly_April_12.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 12, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. * Editor's comments appear in [brackets]. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com * TABLE OF CONTENTS [Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.] *eBook Milestones *Introduction *Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements *Continuing Requests and Announcements *Progress Report *Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report *Permanent Requests For Assistance: *Donation Information *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks *Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet? *Flashback *Weekly eBook update: This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter Corrections in separate section 1 New This Week From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.] 2 New This Week From PGEu [European Copyrights, Life + 50 and 70] 0 New This Week From PG PrePrints 37 New This Week To Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright 40 New This Week [Including PG Australia, PG Europe and PrePrints] [I'm sure there are a few bugs in the new accounting] *Headline News from Edupage, etc. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists *** *eBook Milestones* 1.5 eBooks Per Day Averaged Since July 4, 1971 19,097 eBooks As Of Today!!! 18,668 at www.gutenberg.org[+xx] 556 Australian eBooks [+1] [Included in above line] 288 Gutenberg Europe [+2] 141 PG PrePrint Site [+0] 19,097 Grand Total of all four sites 40 New eBooks This Week ~95.5% of the Way to 20,000 ***531 eBooks Averaged Per Year Since July 4, 1971*** 15,996 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001 That's ~257 eBooks per Month for ~62.25 Months We Have Produced 955 eBooks in 2006 903 to go to 20,000!!! 21 New eBooks From Distributed Proofreaders 8,286 total from Distributed Proofreaders Since October, 2000 [Details in PT1B] [Currently over 36,000 DP volunteers] We Averaged ~339 eBooks Per Month In 2004 We Averaged ~248 eBooks Per Month In 2005 [Including PG Australia] We Are Averaging ~294 eBooks Per Month This Year [Including PGAu, PGEu and PrePrints] All Four Sites Combined Are Averaging 68 eBooks Per Week In 2006 40 This Week It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks It took ~32 months, from 2003 to 2006 for our last 10,000 eBooks It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100 It took ~2.5 years from Oct. 2003 to Mar. 2006 from 10,000 to 19,000 [The above changes due to the opening of Project Gutenberg sites other than the original one at www.gutenberg.org] [Now including totals from Australia, Europe and PrePrints] [Apologies, it will take a while to integrate everything not all statistics may be totally equalized yet] [PGEu Statistics Are Counted Monthly Not Weekly] [Daily PGEu stats at http://dp.rastko.net/default.php] [Daily DP stats at http://www.pgdp.net] BTW, we just started a new "PrePrints" site at PG, so if you come across eBooks that aren't ready for primetime, but that should be saved for upgrading, we have a place to put them. http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new site * ***Introduction [The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly go to the portions you find most interesting: 1. Founder's Comments, News, Notes & Queries, and 2. Weekly eBook Update Listing. Note bene that PT1 is now being sent as PT1A and PT1B. [Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor. Email us: hart at pobox.com and gbnewby at pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.] This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter FREE INTERNET REFERENCE SITE LivingInternet.com provides a 700-odd page reference about the Internet "to provide living context and perspective to this most technological of human inventions", and has received input from many people that helped build the Internet. It currently receives about 3 thousand visitors a day, many from educational institutions. Now in its 7th year of operation. http://www.livinginternet.com/ TEXT TO SPEECH Dolphin Producer is a new software package which will convert a text document into a fully synchronized text and audio DTB at the push of a single button. The DTB can then be played back using Dolphin's EaseReader software player - which is included in Dolphin Producer. The DTB can also be played back on any other DAISY DTB software or hardware player, as well as any MP3 player - The choice is yours. http://www.dolphinuk.co.uk or http://www.dolphinusa.com * *Headline News from Edupage [PG Editor's Comments In Brackets] CABLE COMPANIES ROUND OUT OFFERINGS [Around here SBC/AT&T is offering deal for unlimited long distance, DSL and satellite TV for about $90. Has anyone tried such offers?] A set of new deals signals even tighter competition among communication services providers, as cable companies work to expand their offerings to align more directly with those of phone companies. The goal for cable companies is to be able to offer TV, telephone, computer, and wireless services, all from the same provider. Most notably, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox Communications, and Bright House Networks have announced a deal with Sprint Nextel that will allow cable customers access for wireless devices. Although some of the details remain to be decided, under the arrangement, consumers will be able to access TV programming over cellular networks and possibly to use handsets that use cellular networks outdoors and Wi-Fi networks indoors. Analyst Aryeh Bourkoff noted that cable companies already have an advantage over phone companies, such as Verizon and AT&T, in that phone companies have an uphill path to being able to enter the TV market. "The phone companies have the advantage of wireless today," Bourkoff said, "but they have to build video, and that's going to be very expensive." New York Times, 9 April 2006 (registration req'd) http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/10/technology/10cable.html EFF CALLS FOR PATENT TO BE INVALIDATED The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) has called on the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to invalidate a patent that broadly covers technologies that allow tests to be posted and taken online. In 2003, the USPTO granted the patent to Test.com, which has since contacted a number of colleges and universities, as well as businesses, that conduct online testing, saying those services violate the patent. Many of those approached by Test.com believe that the idea of putting tests on the Web is too obvious to warrant a patent. Now, the EFF says it has evidence that, even if the idea justifies a patent, Test.com was not the first to develop the technology to make it happen. According to the EFF, the IntraLearn Software Corporation began selling products with online testing capabilities in 1997, two years before Test.com applied for its patent. Jason Schultz, staff lawyer for the EFF, said that the USPTO would address the validity of the patent, which could take as long as a year or more. If the office determines that a patent is appropriate, said Schultz, it will "a tiny insignificant patent" rather than the very broad patent granted to Test.com. Chronicle of Higher Education, 6 April 2006 (sub. req'd) http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/04/2006040601t.htm GOOGLE, EARTHLINK TO TAKE SAN FRANCISCO WIRELESS San Francisco has chosen Google and EarthLink to build a wireless network that will cover the city. The companies submitted a joint bid, which was selected over five other bids by the San Francisco TechConnect committee. Under the terms of the bid, Google will provide free service at 300 Kbps, while EarthLink will manage a paid service that will cost at most $20 per month and will operate at 1 Mbps. A report recently released by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Electronic Privacy Information Center argued that the Google-EarthLink proposal was the worst of the bids in terms of protecting user privacy. Others had questioned whether the Google-EarthLink network would sufficiently penetrate buildings to reasonably provide full coverage. Chris Vein, executive director of the Department of Telecommunications and Information Services for San Francisco, said that he had not read the report on privacy and that the city would negotiate with the companies to provide as much access as possible. The deal must be approved by the city of San Francisco and reviewed by the Board of Supervisors. CNET, 6 April 2006 http://news.com.com/2100-7351_3-6058432.html MIT RESEARCHERS BUILD MICRO BATTERIES A team of researchers led by a group at MIT have put viruses--the biological kind--to work in the manufacture of nanowires, which the researchers said can be used to make extremely small batteries. The project involved modifying the genes of the virus such that its outer surface would bind to certain metal ions. Researchers then bred the virus in a cobalt chloride solution, which resulted in the production of cobalt nanowires just 6 nanometers wide by 880 nanometers long. The wires, which also included small amounts of gold so they could adequately transmit electricity, were then used as positive electrodes for batteries. The researchers hope that with this technology they can create batteries as small as a grain of rice. ZDNet, 6 April 2006 http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-6058703.html To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV at LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName or To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings, or access the Edupage archive, visit http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639 *HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA [As requested adding sources, etc., when possible. Remember, the subject is not the article's subject, the subject is the manipulation of the world news.] * MISUSE OF EMINENT DOMAIN TAKEN UP BY MINNESOTA'S CONGRESS Remember those news reports from Ohio, Connecticut, etc., in which homes and businesses were being eminent domained just so richer people and/or businesses could move in? The ostensible reasons for this was to the advantages tax collectors would have by having a richer tax base. i.e., if you force out the middle class and replace them with a whole new upper class population, you have a better town. Of course, there IS a certain kind of logic to this and a rash of copycat locations have been trying to do the same sorts of things around the country; classifying perfectly good homes and businesses below community standards so an eminent domain takeover can be accomplished, with results being that the properties are then sold to similar people and businesses with more money. The expected results are that the rich will then renovate the neighborhoods with a much higher taxable assessment level and the tax man will get more money to give to the local governments. Today Minnesota's State House is working on a legislation package to prevent such uses of eminent domain as the new eminent domain takeovers should be ruled as benefits to a government, but not to the public. It's class warfare all right, with the first shots fired. It will be interesting to see how this pans out. * Department of Homeland Security Caught With Online Sex NBC's Dateline reported on April 9 that two Department of Homeland Security people were trapped in their online sex sting operation when they tried to get together with fake young girls at the sting locations. * "The ones who know, don't care any more, and the ones who care, don't know." Nicholas Cage, "The Lord of War" *DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK Congress is passing "Ironclad Ceilings On Spending" with great public fanfare and media coverage as the National Debt approaches $10 Trillion dollars: but at the same time they have passed two amendments to virtually unpass these "Ironclad Ceiling" bills. One of these bills exempts Congress from the limit, which is about half of national spending, such as a continuing payment for the Iraq war, etc., with the second bill exempting entitlement programs which is the other half. *STRANGE QUOTES OF THE WEEK This is actually about quotes you did not hear. . . . re: Katie Couric becoming the next Dan Rather, Walter Cronkike or Edward R. Murrow at $13 million per year guaranteed over the next 5 years or so: As many of you probably know, Ms. Couric does the "Thanksgiving Day Macy's Parade every year with Al Roker and Matt Lauer: but last year might have been her last one for several reasons. Apparently there was a big cover up of the fact that people had been injured by the crash of the M&M's balloon into a lamppost, which then crashed to the ground injuring some wheelchair bound women who could not escape in time and her sister who stayed to take care of her. This was not just the mild kind of cover up when bad news isn't mentioned at all, but a more active kind of cover up in which a clip from last year's parade was substituted for live coverage, so the audience could see the [now fake] M&Ms in good health. It is presumed that the M&Ms will be patched up and ready to go for the next parade, but no comment has been heard about others such as the injured parties or Ms. Couric's attendance. *PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK >From a reply to the announcement of specific brands of terabyte boxes at Fry's this past week for $649. Other places have the same products from the same brand[s] at $699. Of course, if you are willing to simply buy 4 @ 250G drives for $99 each, and put them in a less sophisticated box than previously mentioned, these new terebytes can be added for ~$450 rather than the $649-$699 mentioned. Add another $50 each time you want to add a serious feature. However you want to count it, though, if you have been considering buying a terabyte, the time is obviously coming when there will quite many wider and wider ranges of selections, and you will likely see terabytes sold at Best Buy, Circuit City, etc., for under $500 by next year's holidays. If you want a top of the line terabyte box you can get one at about $1500 that includes rows of SCSI and GigE connectors, dual power supplies, etc. *ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK This week's statistics come to you courtesy of the big flap in the United States Congress in response to President Bush making a felony issue out of being an illegal alien. As previously mentioned in reference to the U.S. population reaching 300 million shortly, the actual population is very undercounted, as witnessed by the 5% push by Congresspeople to get more representation based on such undercounts. In addition, Congress is now citing numbers over 11 million for undocumented workers in the U.S., including who knows a total of how many children they have had while in the U.S., which makes those children legal citizens, under previously enforces U.S. citizenship laws. This is also bringing attention to labor unions. Today unions represent under 1/12 of United States workers, but rates approaching 1/2 exist in certain jobs, such as an assortment of local government workers. Where do you think AFSME gets all that money to advertize with? AFSME = Association of Federal, State and Municipal Employees The highest union rates across jobs are among men with less than 9th grade educations. It's not always the United States, the same cycle happens with Canadian workers, as below. In 1998 the average full time union worker received $19/hr, as compared to $15.64 for full time non-union workers. This is just over a 20% advantange for union workers. However, the different among part time workers is greater-- $16.55/hr for unions, $9.71 for non-union workers. 70%+ In addition, unionized workers usually get more hours/week, receiving weekly paychecks of $325.64 versus $161.92, which is just over DOUBLE the paychecks of non-union workers. * By the way, for those interested, the official U.S. population estimates just passed 298 million, though many say estimations of this nature leave out as much as 5% of the population. Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries. [This one is getting a little out of date, as the US population is obviously no longer 6% of the world. In fact, rounding to the nearest percent, the US will soon fall from 5% to 4%.] "If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following. There would be: 57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America 8 Africans 52 would be female 48 would be male 70 would be non-white 30 would be white 70 would be non-Christian 30 would be Christian 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States 80 would live in substandard housing 70 would be unable to read 50 would suffer from malnutrition 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education 1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater] 1 would be 79 years old or more. Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years, but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure to expire within that 63 year period. I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date, as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer then there would be only 60 million people in the world who owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States households have computers, out of over 100 million households. Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in the United States. I just called our local reference librarian and got the number of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at: 111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports. If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million, and that's counting just one computer per household, and not counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc. I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate given above, and would like some help researching these and other such figures, if anyone is interested. BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old. This means that basically 90% of the world's population would never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations offered it to them free of charge. Then I realized that the US population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer than the non-whites. Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they can receive more per year, but because they will live more years to receive Social Security. The average poor non-white may never receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 12 09:41:13 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 09:41:13 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1B Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1b1.406 Weekly_April_12.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 12, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com ***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements General Catalog of Old Books and Authors http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/ngcoba.htm which now indexes 24,000 books available free online, including all PG(US) & PG(Aus)'s books, along with some basic date information about them and their authors where you can find more. For information please contact Philip Harper * We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks. http://www.archive.org Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date, but you should get all the files when you pass through to the original sites. Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any of the eBooks you would like to work on. Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive! * Please visit and test our newest site: "PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE" http://pge.rastko.net [Project Gutenberg Europe] http://dp.rastko.net [Distributed Proofreaders Europe] * There is an experimental online reader available. Start from any bibliographic record page, e.g. http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300 Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off. Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file where the encoding is known. * MACHINE TRANSLATION We are seeking as much information as possible on the various approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact information would be greatly appreciated. *** Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc. http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject and The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running. Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test. You can access it by visiting http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969 *** Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at: http://www.gutenberg.org/about * We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files for the visually impaired and other audio book users. Let us know if you'd like to join this group. More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio *** Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!! We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners. If you have a DVD burner and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs for you to copy. You can either snail them directly to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping. We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish. Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format, as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format. *** Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web pages and publicity materials. If you have original graphics depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them! To see some of what we have now, please see: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images *** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers. We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice (both US and international) and other areas. Please email Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby , if you can help. This is much more important than many of us realize! ***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders In the first 04.25 months of this year, we produced 955 new eBooks. It took us from July 1971 to July 1997 to produce our first 955 eBooks! That's 14 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 Years!!! 40 New eBooks This Week 39 New eBooks Last Week 40 New eBooks This Month [Apr] 294 Average Per Month in 2006 266 Average Per Month in 2005 Counting 216 PGEu 248 Average Per Month in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 336 Average Per Month in 2004 355 Average Per Month in 2003 203 Average Per Month in 2002 103 Average Per Month in 2001 955 New eBooks in 2006 3186 New eBooks in 2005 Counting 216 PGeu > 2970 New eBooks in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 4049 New eBooks in 2004 4164 New eBooks in 2003 2441 New eBooks in 2002 1240 New eBooks in 2001 ==== 16,035 New eBooks Since Start Of 2001 That's Only 62.25 Months! ~258 books per month! 19,097 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks 15,996 eBooks This Week Last Year ==== 3,101 New eBooks In Last 12 Months [Incl. PGAu PGEu & PrePrints] 556 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted at the U.S. site: www.gutenberg.org ] 288 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Europe 141 Entry From Project Gutenberg PrePrints You may also want to look at Project Runeberg [Scandinavian] http://runeberg.org * Project Gutenberg began operation on July 4, 1971 Project Runeberg began operation on December 13, 1992 Distributed Proofreaders began October 22, 2000 [Became an official PG-US site in 2002] Project Gutenberg of Australia began in August, 2001 The Project Gutenberg Consortia Center started in 1997] [Became an official PG-US site in 2003] Project Gutenberg of Europe started January 12, 2004 [Posted first books February 26, when we met in Brussels to address people at the European Union Parliament. Project Gutenberg PrePrints Started January 25, 2006 http://preprints.pglaf.org/ old http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new * PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE: Since starting production in October 2000, Distributed Proofreaders has contributed 8,286 Books to Project Gutenberg. 21 added this week. For more complete DP statistics, visit: http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php * Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, and see below to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalog. eBooks are posted throughout the week. You can even get daily lists. Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs: http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto or http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml *** *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report The PGCC collection at http://www.gutenberg.cc has doubled in size from the listings below, but we don't have exactly matching collection sizes yet for a new breakdown. PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as: Alex-Wire Tap Collection, 2,036 HTML eBook Files Black Mask Collection, 12,000 HTML eBook Files The Coradella Bookshelf Collection, 141 eBook Files DjVu Collection, 272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files eBooks at Adelaide Collection, 27,709 eBook Files Himalayan Academy, 3,400 HTML eBook Files Internet Archive ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress] <<< Literal Systems Collection, 68 MP3 eBook Files Logos Group Collection, ~34,000 TXT eBook Files Poet's Corner Poetry Collection, 6,700 Poetry Files Project Gutenberg Collection, 15,035 eBook Files PGCC Chinese eBook Collection ~300 eBook files <<< Note Name Change Renaisscance Editions Collection, 561 HTML eBook Files Swami Center Collection, 78 HTML eBook Files Tony Kline Collection, 223 HTML eBook Files Widger Library, 2,600 HTML eBook Files CIA's Electronic Reading Room, 2,019 Reference Files =======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files===== Average Size of the Collections 8,067.18 Total Files These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of their donors: some are one file per book; some have a file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the overcounting or duplication of numbers. If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~45,714 Unique eBooks If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~34,286 Unique eBooks The new overall collection size, which has reduced the need to account for duplications and eBooks with files for each chapter, etc. ~75,000 Unique eBooks *** Please also note that over 25,000 eBooks are listed via The Online Books Page, of which over 5,700 are from PG. http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/ In addition: The Internet Public Library had a similar listing which is now in limbo. If anyone knows what is happening with the IPL, please let us know. Inquiries, made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up any current information. You can try a new IPL service at: http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/ It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page. Still looking for more Internet Public Library info. *** Today Is Day #097 of 2006 This Completes Week #14 and Month #02.25 [364 days this year] 266 Days/38 Weeks To Go [We get 52 Wednesdays this year] 903 Books To Go To #20,000 [Our production year begins/ends 1st Wednesday of the month/year] 68 Weekly Average in 2006 61 Weekly Average in 2005 [Counting 216 PGEu] 57 Weekly Average in 2005 [Not Counting PGEu] 78 Weekly Average in 2004 79 Weekly Average in 2003 47 Weekly Average in 2002 24 Weekly Average in 2001 44 Only ~45 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers List [Used to be well over 100] [This listing usually from the previous week] *** Permanent Requests For Assistance: DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES Please visit the site: http://www.pgdp.net for more information about how you can help a lot by simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more. If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed, and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it, please email dphelp at pgdp.net and we will get things started. Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the Project Gutenberg collection. To see what is already online, visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file) listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading. Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive? Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp at pgdp.net with your geographic location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner. [Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which will not be returned.] We have high-speed scanners currently located in the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier. Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at: http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK' lines to dphelp at pgdp.net Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself? Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution! Just send us email telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help find a project you would like to work on. Please contact us at: dphelp at pgdp.net if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders. ***Donation Information We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests! We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages, as well as in more formats, including music, artwork, movies, etc. *** QUICK WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO PROJECT GUTENBERG A. Send a check or money order to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation 809 North 1500 West Salt Lake City, UT 84116 USA B. Donate by credit card online: NetworkForGood: http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541 or PayPal to "donate at gutenberg.org": http://www.paypal.com /xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of volunteers over more than 34 years. Your donations make it possible to support these volunteers, and pay our few employees to continue the creation of free electronic texts. We accept credit cards, checks and transfers from any country, in any currency. Donations are made to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (PGLAF). PGLAF is approved as a charitable 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal Revenue Service, and has the Federal Employee Information Number (EIN) 64-6221541. For more information, including several other ways to donate, go to http://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html or email donate at gutenberg.org *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world. To find the sites nearest you, go to: http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks http://www.gutenberg.org/find allows searching by title, author, language and subject. Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want. Try: http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs or ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first five characters of the file's name. Note that updated eBooks usually go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.) *** Statistical Review In the 14 weeks of this year, we have produced ~955 new eBooks. It took us from 07/71 to 07/97 to produce our FIRST 955 eBooks!!! That's 14 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 YEARS!!! FLASHBACK! Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #955 Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext] ### A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright [Note: books without month and year entries are now in new catalog format] Jul 1997 American Notes, by Rudyard Kipling [Kipling #5] [amrntxxx.xxx] 977 Jul 1997 Tanglewood Tales, by Nathaniel Hawthorne [NH #6] [tnglwxxx.xxx] 976 Jul 1997 Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza/Elwes Part 5 [#5] [5spnexxx.xxx] 975 The Secret Agent, by Joseph Conrad 974 Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates, by Howard Pyle 973 Jul 1997 The Devil's Dictionary, by Ambrose Bierce[Bierce3][dvldcxxx.xxx] 972 Jul 1997 Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza/Elwes Part 4 [#4] [4spnexxx.xxx] 971 Jul 1997 Uncle Josh's Punkin Centre Stories, by Cal Stewart[ncjshxxx.xxx] 970 Jul 1997 The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, by Anne Bronte [B#4] [wldflxxx.xxx] 969 .(Note: the filename wldflxxx.xxx is also used for eBook, #3003 in etext02) Jul 1997 Martin Chuzzlewit, by Charles Dickens[Dickens #32][chuzzxxx.xxx] 968 Jul 1997 Nicholas Nickleby, by Charles Dickens[Dickens #31][ncklbxxx.xxx] 967 Jul 1997 Maid Marian, by Thomas Love Peacock [maidmxxx.xxx] 966 Jul 1997 The Black Tulip, by Alexandre Dumas[Pere][Dumas#1][tbtlpxxx.xxx] 965 The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood, by Howard Pyle 964 Jul 1997 Little Dorrit, by Charles Dickens [Dickens #30] [ldortxxx.xxx] 963 Jul 1997 The Poems of Henry Kendall, by Henry Kendall [phkndxxx.xxx] 962 Jul 1997 Glinda of Oz, by L. Frank Baum [LFB#17][Oz#14][14wozxxx.xxx] 961 Jun 1997 The Tin Woodman of Oz, by Baum [LFB#16][Oz#12][12wozxxx.xxx] 960 Jun 1997 The Lost Princess of Oz, by Baum [LFB#15][Oz#11][11wozxxx.xxx] 959 Jun 1997 Rinkitink In Oz, by L. Frank Baum [LFB#14][Oz#10][10wozxxx.xxx] 958 Jun 1997 The Scarecrow of Oz, by L. Frank Baum[FB#13][Oz#9][09wozxxx.xxx] 957 Jun 1997 Tik-Tok of Oz, by L. Frank Baum [Baum #12][Oz #8][08wozxxx.xxx] 956 Jun 1997 The Patchwork Girl of Oz, by L. Frank Baum[Baum12][07wozxxx.xxx] 955 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his War Tank, by Victor Appleton [21tomxxx.xxx] 954 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his Big Tunnel, by Victor Appleton [19tomxxx.xxx] 953 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his Air Glider, by Victor Appleton [12tomxxx.xxx] 952 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his Sky Racer, by Victor Appleton [09tomxxx.xxx] 951 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his Electric Runabout, by V. Appleton [05tomxxx.xxx] 950 Jun 1997 Tom Swift & his Submarine Boat, by Victor Appleton[04tomxxx.xxx] 949 Jun 1997 Ethics, by Benedict de Spinoza/Elwes Part 3 [#3] [3spnexxx.xxx] 948 * Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet? If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of 6,509,300,252 that would be 19,097 x 65,093,003 = ~1.24 Trillion !!! 6,509,300,252 65,093,003 With 19,097 eBooks online as of April 12, 2006 it now takes an average of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.80 from each book. [1% world population x #eBooks] 65,093,003 x 19,097 x $.80 = ~$1 Trillion [Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.] * A Trillion Dollars Given Away At Just $.53 Value Per Book To 100 Million With 18,673 eBooks online as of March 01, 2006 it now takes an average of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.52 from each book. This "cost" is down from about $.63 when we had 15,996 eBooks a year ago. Our Target Audience Is 1.5% Of The World Population = ~100,000,000 people. At 19,097 eBooks in 34 Years and 09.25 Months We Averaged 549 Per Year 45.8 Per Month 1.50 Per Day At 955 eBooks Done In The 097 Days Of 2006 We Averaged 9.8 Per Day 69 Per Week 294 Per Month If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S. you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear, are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope. However, for those keeping track of how quickly the U.S. reaches a 300 million population level, and who noticed the passing of 298M, just two weeks ago. . .the U.S. is already 1/6 the way to 299M, so it will probably be 10 more weeks to 299M and 22 more to 300M. Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment, who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details]. * The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks' production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon, starts with the first Wednesday of January. January 4th was the first Wednesday of 2006, and thus ended PG's production year of 2005 and began the production year of 2006 at noon. This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From news at pglaf.org Wed Apr 12 20:43:02 2006 From: news at pglaf.org (Project Gutenberg Newsletter) Date: Wed, 12 Apr 2006 20:43:02 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] Pt2 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter Message-ID: GWeekly_April_12_part2.txt The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter 12 Apr 2006 eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since 1971 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter: - Obtaining Project Gutenberg eBooks - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks - 37 New U.S. eBooks this week - 1 New eBooks at Project Gutenberg of Australia - Mailing list information - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :: HOW TO GET EBOOKS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG ::. The easiest way to obtain our eBooks is at our search page at http://gutenberg.org/find which allows searching by title, author or eBook number; there is also an Advanced Search page which allows for additional search criteria (note that our newer postings may not yet be indexed for all additional criteria). And please note: you can now obtain a listing by language at the above link. Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world, and you can select one nearer to your location from the link on the search results page. To see a listing of mirror sites, and locate the one nearest to you, visit: http://gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL If you prefer to download eBooks via other methods than from the search page, and need additional information, please refer to the file GUTINDEX.ALL, available for viewing or downloading at: http://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL That file contains descriptions and explanations about the filenaming process, directory structure, file formats, and more. And to directly access the file directories: http://gutenberg.org/dirs/ Please note that the Project Gutenberg Production Team continues the process of manually re-posting those eBooks originally posted prior to Nov 2003 to the new filenaming and directory system (based on the eBook number). This process includes some file maintenance (repairing, correcting and re-formatting to current PG standards where practicable). These re-postings are noted in the "corrections" listings below. More information can be found in the file GUTINDEX.ALL mentioned above. * * * Please see Part 1 of this week's newsletter for more information about Project Gutenberg. And if you haven't done so lately, please visit the website at http://www.gutenberg.org to see what's new. * * * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Note: this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as Courier New or similar. To report an error in the listings below, please write to news_at_pglaf.org and include the word CORRECTION in the subject line. ========================================================================= [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ] ========================================================================= TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed, 12 Apr 2006: 18668 (incl. 556 Aus.). RESERVED/PENDING count: 43 =-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= :: During the past week the following ebooks were manually updated and reposted with the indicated filenames and transferred into the corresponding new directories: Under Two Flags, by Ouida [Louise de la Ramee 3465 [Updated edition of: etext02/u2flg10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/6/3465 ] [Files: 3465.txt; 3465-8.txt; 3465-h.htm] The Spell of Egypt, by Robert Hichens 3407 [Updated edition of: etext02/sgypt10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/4/0/3407 ] [Files: 3407.txt; 3407-8.txt; 3407-h.htm] Sir Humphrey Gilbert's Voyage to Newfoundland, by Edward Hayes 3338 [Updated edition of: etext02/hgvtn10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/3/3338 ] [Files: 3338.txt; 3338-h.htm] Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches, by Theodore Roosevelt 3337 [Updated edition of: etext02/grsly10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/3/3337 ] [Files: 3337.txt; 3337-h.htm] Within an Inch of His Life, by Emile Gaboriau 3336 [Updated edition of: etext02/wnohl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/3/3336 ] [Files: 3336.txt; 3336-8.txt; 3336-h.htm] Theodore Roosevelt, by Theodore Roosevelt 3335 [Subtitle: An Autobiography by Theodore Roosevelt] [Updated edition of: etext02/trabi10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/3/3335 ] [Files: 3335.txt; 3335-8.txt; 3335-h.htm] Drake's Great Armada, by Walter Biggs 3334 [Updated edition of: etext02/drkga10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/3/3334 ] [Files: 3334.txt; 3334-h.htm] East Lynne, by Mrs. Henry Wood 3322 [Updated edition of: etext02/stlyn10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/3/2/3322 ] [Files: 3322.txt; 3322-h.htm] The Hermit of Far End, by Margaret Pedler 3159 [Updated edition of: etext02/thofe10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3159 ] [Files: 3159.txt; 3159-8.txt; 3159-h.htm] She, by H. Rider Haggard 3155 [Updated edition of: etext02/shrhe10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3155 ] [Files: 3155.txt; 3155-8.txt; 3155-0.txt; 3155-h.htm] The Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen, by Rudolph Erich Raspe 3154 [Updated edition of: etext02/baron10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3154 ] [Files: 3154.txt; 3154-8.txt; 3154-h.htm] The Virgin of the Sun, by H. R. Haggard 3153 [Updated edition of: etext02/tvots10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/3153 ] [Files: 3153.txt; 3153-8.txt; 3153-h.htm] The Wanderer's Necklace, by H. Rider Haggard 3097 [Updated edition of: etext02/ncklc10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/9/3097 ] [Files: 3097.txt; 3097-8.txt; 3097-h.htm] Beatrice, by H. Rider Haggard 3096 [Updated edition of: etext02/betrc10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/9/3096 ] [Files: 3096.txt; 3096-8.txt; 3096-h.htm] Red Eve, by H. Rider Haggard 3094 [Updated edition of: etext02/rdeve10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/9/3094 ] [Files: 3094.txt; 3094-8.txt; 3094-h.htm] :: Please note the following additional changes, corrections, improvements: -=-=-=-=[ 37 NEW U.S. EBOOKS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- The Story of the Three Little Pigs, by Unknown 18155 [Ill.: L. Leslie Brooke] [This children's book has LOVELY illustrations.] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18155 ] [Files: 18155.txt; 18155-h.htm; ] Calumet "K", by Samuel Merwin and Henry Kitchell Webster 18154 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18154 ] [Files: 18154.txt; ] Oscar, by Walter Aimwell 18153 [Subtitle: The Boy Who Had His Own Way] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18153 ] [Files: 18153.txt; 18153-8.txt; 18153-h.htm; ] Le robinson suisse, by Johann David Wyss 18152 [Subtitle: ou Histoire d'une famille suisse naufrage] [Translator: Isabelle de Montolieu] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18152 ] [Files: 18152-8.txt; 18152-h.htm] Time Crime, by H. Beam Piper 18151 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18151 ] [Files: 18151.txt; 18151-8.txt; 18151-h.htm] The Hidden Places, by Bertrand W. Sinclair 18150 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18150 ] [Files: 18150.txt; 18150-8.txt; 18150-h.htm] Conjuror's House, by Stewart Edward White 18149 [Subtitle: A Romance of the Free Forest] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18149 ] [Files: 18149.txt; 18149-8.txt; 18149-h.htm] Casanovas Heimfahrt, by Arthur Schnitzler 18148 [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18148 ] [Files: 18148-8.txt; 18148-0.txt; 18148-h.htm] Inaugureele Rede, by Hieronymus David Gaubius 18147 [Subtitle: Waarin wordt Aangetoond dat de Scheikunde met recht een plaats verdient onder de Akademische Wetenschappen] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18147 ] [Files: 18147-8.txt; 18147-0.txt; 18147-h.htm] The Children's Portion, ed. by Robert W. Shoppell 18146 [Subtitle: Entertaining, Instructive, and Elevating Stories] Contents: The Golden Age The Merchant of Venice The Afflicted Prince "His Ludship" Pious Constance The Doctor's Revenge The Woodcutter's Child Show Your Colors Her Danger Signal A Knight's Dilemma "His Royal Highness" Patient Griselda Let It Alone The Man Who Lost His Memory The Story of a Wedge Prince Edwin and His Page Cissy's Amendment The Winter's Tale A Gracious Deed "Tom" Steven Lawrence, American [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18146 ] [Files: 18146.txt; 18146-8.txt; ] Lady Rosamond's Secret, by Rebecca Agatha Armour 18145 [Subtitle: A Romance of Fredericton] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18145 ] [Files: 18145.txt; 18145-8.txt; 18145-h.htm; ] Timon Ateenalainen, by William Shakespeare 18144 [Translator: Paavo Cajander] [Language: Finnish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18144 ] [Files: 18144-8.txt] Romeo et Juliette, by William Shakespeare 18143 [Subtitle: Tragedie] [Translator: Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18143 ] [Files: 18143-8.txt; 18143-h.htm] Ellenore, Volume II, by Sophie Gay 18142 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18142 ] [Files: 18142-8.txt] CAINGAT CAYO!, by Fr. Jose Rodriguez 18141 [Subtitle: Sa manga masasamang libro,t, casulatan] [Language: Tagalog] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18141 ] [Files: 18141-8.txt; 18141-h.htm] Alabaster Box, by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman and Florence Morse Kingsley 18140 [Illustrator: Stockton Mulford] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/4/18140 ] [Files: 18140.txt; 18140-8.txt; 18140-h.htm] Rip Foster in Ride the Gray Planet, by Harold Leland Goodwin 18139 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18139 ] [Files: 18139.txt; 18139-8.txt; 18139-h.htm; ] The Loves of Great Composers, by Gustav Kobbe 18138 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18138 ] [Files: 18138.txt; 18138-8.txt; 18138-h.htm; ] Little Fuzzy, by Henry Beam Piper 18137 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18137 ] [Files: 18137.txt; 18137-h.htm; ] The Mysteries of Free Masonry, by William Morgan 18136 [Subtitle: Containing All the Degrees of the Order Conferred in a Master's Lodge] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18136 ] [Files: 18136.txt; 18136-8.txt; 18136-h.htm; ] Dreamthorp, by Alexander Smith 18135 [Subtitle: A Book of Essays Written in the Country] Contents: Dreamthorp On the Writing of Essays Of Death and the Fear of Dying William Dunbar A Lark's Flight Christmas Men of Letters On the Importance of a Man to Himself A Shelf in My Bookcase Geoffrey Chaucer Books and Gardens On Vagabonds [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18135 ] [Files: 18135.txt; 18135-8.txt; ] Sixteen Months in Four German Prisons,by Frederick Arthur Ambrose Talbot 18134 [Editor: Henry Charles Mahoney] [Subtitle: Wesel, Sennelager, Klingelputz, Ruhleben] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18134 ] [Files: 18134.txt; 18134-8.txt; 18134-h.htm; ] La cathedrale de Strasbourg, by Rodolphe Reuss 18133 [Title: La cathedrale de Strasbourg pendant la Revolution (1789-1802)] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18133 ] [Files: 18133-8.txt; 18133-0.txt] A Canadian Heroine, Vol. 3, by Mrs. Harry Coghill 18132 [Subtitle: A Novel] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18132 ] [Files: 18132.txt; 18132-8.txt; 18132-h.htm] The Rescue of the Princess Winsome, by Fellows-Johnston and Bacon 18131 [Subtitle: A Fairy Play for Old and Young] [Author: Annie Fellows-Johnston and Albion Fellows Bacon] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18131 ] [Files: 18131.txt; 18131-8.txt; 18131-h.htm] Oorlogsvisoenen, by Cyriel Buysse 18130 [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/3/18130 ] [Files: 18130-8.txt; 18130-h.htm] South with Scott, by Edward R. G. R. Evans 18129 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18129 ] [Files: 18129.txt; 18129-8.txt; ] Tocht naar de dalen van den kinaboom (Peru), by Paul Marcoy 18128 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar Volken, 1873] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18128 ] [Files: 18128-8.txt; 18128-h.htm] The Beginner's American History, by D. H. Montgomery 18127 [Author AKA: David Henry Montgomery] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18127 ] [Files: 18127.txt; 18127-h.htm; ] Tales of the Chesapeake, by George Alfred Townsend 18126 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18126 ] [Files: 18126.txt; 18126-8.txt; 18126-h.htm; ] The Audacious War, by Clarence W. Barron 18125 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18125 ] [Files: 18125.txt; 18125-8.txt; ] Sir Walter Scott, by Richard H. Hutton 18124 [Subtitle: English Men of Letters Series] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18124 ] [Files: 18124.txt; 18124-8.txt; 18124-h.htm] Nouvelles mille et une nuits, by Robert-Louis Stevenson 18123 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18123 ] [Files: 18123-8.txt; 18123-h.htm] A Canadian Heroine, Volume 2, by Mrs. Harry Coghill 18122 [Subtitle: A Novel] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18122 ] [Files: 18122.txt; 18122-8.txt; 18122-h.htm] L'illustre Olympie, ou Le St Alexis, by Nicolas Mary 18121 [Subtitle: Tragedie] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18121 ] [Files: 18121-8.txt] In de Oer-wouden van Afrika, by Jules Verne 18120 [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/2/18120 ] [Files: 18120-8.txt; 18120-h.htm] Phineas Finn, by Anthony Trollope 18000 [Subtitle: The Irish Member] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/0/0/18000 ] [Files: 18000.txt; 18000-8.txt; 18000-h.htm; ] -=-=-=-=[ 1 NEW EBOOKS AT PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Apr 2006 The Private Life of Helen of Troy, by John Erskine[060038xx.xxx] 0556A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600381.txt or .zip] [and http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600381h.html ] eBooks are posted in uncompressed and/or compressed formats. To access these ebooks, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty.html For more information about Project Gutenberg of Australia, including accessing those etexts from outside of Australia, please visit: http://gutenberg.net.au/ --Project Gutenberg of Australia-- --A treasure trove of Literature-- *treasure-trove n. treasure found hidden with no evidence of ownership For more information about copyright restrictions in other countries, please visit: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html ============================================================================= From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 19 08:58:20 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 08:58:20 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1a Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1a2.406 Weekly_April_19.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 19, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. * Editor's comments appear in [brackets]. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com * TABLE OF CONTENTS [Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.] *eBook Milestones *Introduction *Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements *Continuing Requests and Announcements *Progress Report *Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report *Permanent Requests For Assistance: *Donation Information *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks *Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet? *Flashback *Weekly eBook update: This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter Corrections in separate section 8 New This Week From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.] 2 New This Week From PGEu [European Copyrights, Life + 50 and 70] 0 New This Week From PG PrePrints 45 New This Week To Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright 55 New This Week [Including PG Australia, PG Europe and PrePrints] [I'm sure there are a few bugs in the new accounting] *Headline News from Edupage, etc. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists *** *eBook Milestones* Over 1,000 New eBooks This Year!!! 19,152 eBooks As Of Today!!! 848 to go to 20,000!!! 18,721 at www.gutenberg.org[+xx] 564 Australian eBooks [+8] [Included in above line] 290 Gutenberg Europe [+2] 141 PG PrePrint Site [+0] 19,152 Grand Total of all four sites 55 New eBooks This Week ~96% of the Way to 20,000 ***550 eBooks Averaged Per Year Since July 4, 1971*** 19,090 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001 That's ~258 eBooks per Month for ~62.50 Months We Have Produced 1,010 eBooks in 2006 848 to go to 20,000!!! 40 New eBooks From Distributed Proofreaders 8,316 total from Distributed Proofreaders Since October, 2000 [Details in PT1B] [Currently over 36,000 DP volunteers] We Averaged ~339 eBooks Per Month In 2004 We Averaged ~248 eBooks Per Month In 2005 [Including PG Australia] We Are Averaging ~294 eBooks Per Month This Year [Including PGAu, PGEu and PrePrints] All Four Sites Combined Are Averaging 68 eBooks Per Week In 2006 55 This Week It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks It took ~32 months, from 2003 to 2006 for our last 10,000 eBooks It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100 It took ~2.5 years from Oct. 2003 to Mar. 2006 from 10,000 to 19,000 [The above changes due to the opening of Project Gutenberg sites other than the original one at www.gutenberg.org] [Now including totals from Australia, Europe and PrePrints] [Apologies, it will take a while to integrate everything not all statistics may be totally equalized yet] [PGEu Statistics Are Counted Monthly Not Weekly] [Daily PGEu stats at http://dp.rastko.net/default.php] [Daily DP stats at http://www.pgdp.net] BTW, we just started a new "PrePrints" site at PG, so if you come across eBooks that aren't ready for primetime, but that should be saved for upgrading, we have a place to put them. http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new site * ~75,000 eBooks at the PG Consortia Center http://www.gutenberg.cc * ***Introduction [The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly go to the portions you find most interesting: 1. Founder's Comments, News, Notes & Queries, and 2. Weekly eBook Update Listing. Note bene that PT1 is now being sent as PT1A and PT1B. [Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor. Email us: hart at pobox.com and gbnewby at pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.] This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter FREE INTERNET REFERENCE SITE LivingInternet.com provides a 700-odd page reference about the Internet "to provide living context and perspective to this most technological of human inventions", and has received input from many people that helped build the Internet. It currently receives about 3 thousand visitors a day, many from educational institutions. Now in its 7th year of operation. http://www.livinginternet.com/ TEXT TO SPEECH Dolphin Producer is a new software package which will convert a text document into a fully synchronized text and audio DTB at the push of a single button. The DTB can then be played back using Dolphin's EaseReader software player - which is included in Dolphin Producer. The DTB can also be played back on any other DAISY DTB software or hardware player, as well as any MP3 player - The choice is yours. http://www.dolphinuk.co.uk or http://www.dolphinusa.com *Headline News from Edupage [PG Editor's Comments In Brackets] To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV at LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName or To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings, or access the Edupage archive, visit http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639 *HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA Another One Bites The Dust Illinois Governor Ryan Guilty On All 22 Counts Taking payoffs, the truckers' drivers license scandal, accepting illegal gifts, vacations, bribes, etc. from others in return for giving state contracts, leases, etc. Ryan claims he was unaware of such corruption even though it appears he and his family received cash and gifts from $100,000 to $200,000, and the Ryan was responsible for an estimated $300,000+ to prominent lobbyist Donald Udstuen. Ryan was about the 66th person indicted from the various investigations of these matters, the vast majority of them, including his campaign committee were convicted long ago. "The charged conduct by former Gov. Ryan reflects a disturbing violation of trust," said U.S. Attorney Patrick J. Fitzgerald public statement upon the indictments. "Ryan is charged with betraying the citizens of Illinois for over a decade on state business, both large and small." * We won't even go into the non-reporting of VP Cheney's reception when he threw out the first pitch at the opening the baseball season. *DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK Revolt of the Generals How Many Stars, How Many Generals? Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld defended himself this week against a group of command generals by saying that these are only half a dozen of thousands and thousands of generals. The truth is that there are NOT thousands of such generals-- command generals in charge of major operations in Iraq. There have only been a dozen such generals in the three years of the Irag War, and over half of them are on this list. Even counting all generals in command of 1,000 troops or more all over this world, there is only room for barely 1,000 such generals in a miltary with 1,000,000 combat troops. These are what are known as "command officers," and not those who "fly a desk." In addition, all of these generals have in excess of one star, namely two, three, or four stars, if your count includes the Congressional testimony of Gen. Shinseki-- the first of the generals to speak out in a public forum that the Iraq War was undermanned and underplanned and the highest ranking officer in the entire United States Army. These are command generals, all with more than one star, more experience, more stars than the average general out there. The rest are all desk officers, without the experience to see what is really happening at the troop level, consequently the actions and reactions you see here between real commanders on the battlefield and those who only know how to fly a desk. 1 Star = Brigadier General Zero on this list, common in the military 2 Stars = Major General Three on this list, not nearly as common 3 Stars = Lieutenant General Two on this list, not very common at all 4 Stars = General Two on this list, the least common of all Here is the list, by rank: Gen. Eric Shinseki, Chief of Staff, Army, highest possible rank. Gen. Anthony Zinni, also diplomatic corps "roving ambassador" Marines Central Command Chief of Staff, Middle East, "Winning the Peace" author. The top general in charge of the Iraq War. Lt. Gen. John Riggs, Distinguished Flying Cross, Viet Nam, Military Assistant to Deputy Chairman of the NATO Military Committee, Assistant Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans, Commanding General, 7th Infantry Division, most recently Commanding General of the First U.S. Army, lost a star when he retired in protest, reasons not on record, made through questionable charges AFTER he criticized the war. Lt. Gen. Gregory Newbold, Director for Operations, Joint Chiefs of Staff "The consequence of the military's quiescence was that a fundamentally flawed plan was executed for an invented war." Maj. Gen. John Batiste, Commander, 1st Infantry Division ["Big Red 1"] Maj. Gen. Paul Eaton, "Father of the Iraqi Army" Commanding General, Office of Security Transition, West Point graduate Maj. Gen. Charles Swannack, Commander, 82nd Airborne Division There are NOT thousands of generals with multiple stars and field command experience at such high levels in the entire US Army, much less directly in command of Iraq, perhaps a dozen, at the most. "On June 22, 1999, Four Star General Eric Shinseki was appointed by President Clinton To be the 34th Chief of Staff, United States Army." He was the one who first told Congress of the mismanagement, and he was forced to resign by Rumsfeld, who did not attend the retirement, not that there was much of a retirement to attend. *STRANGE QUOTES OF THE WEEK *PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK *ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK * By the way, for those interested, the official U.S. population estimates just passed 298 million, though many say estimations of this nature leave out as much as 5% of the population. Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries. [This one is getting a little out of date, as the US population is obviously no longer 6% of the world. In fact, rounding to the nearest percent, the US will soon fall from 5% to 4%.] "If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following. There would be: 57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America 8 Africans 52 would be female 48 would be male 70 would be non-white 30 would be white 70 would be non-Christian 30 would be Christian 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States 80 would live in substandard housing 70 would be unable to read 50 would suffer from malnutrition 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education 1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater] 1 would be 79 years old or more. Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years, but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure to expire within that 63 year period. I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date, as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer then there would be only 60 million people in the world who owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States households have computers, out of over 100 million households. Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in the United States. I just called our local reference librarian and got the number of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at: 111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports. If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million, and that's counting just one computer per household, and not counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc. I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate given above, and would like some help researching these and other such figures, if anyone is interested. BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old. This means that basically 90% of the world's population would never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations offered it to them free of charge. Then I realized that the US population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer than the non-whites. Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they can receive more per year, but because they will live more years to receive Social Security. The average poor non-white may never receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org Strange News in Globalization http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/11/technology/11fast.html?hp&ex=1144814400&en =ad12af5ee011af1e&ei=5094&partner=homepage The Long-Distance Journey of a Fast-Food Order By MATT RICHTEL SANTA MARIA, Calif. - Like many American teenagers, Julissa Vargas, 17, has a minimum-wage job in the fast-food industry - but hers has an unusual geographic reach. ... What made the $12.08 transaction remarkable was that the customer was not just outside Ms. Vargas's workplace here on California's central coast. She was at a McDonald's in Honolulu. And within a two-minute span Ms. Vargas had also taken orders from drive-through windows in Gulfport, Miss., and Gillette, Wyo. A man who wants a Big N' Tasty in Wyoming and a woman who wants an Egg McMuffin in Honolulu may be placing their orders with the same teenager in California. Several customers, told of the fact, seemed taken aback. And yet where is the surprise? There you sit, perhaps miles from home, idling in a car that was manufactured almost anywhere, burning gasoline refined from a substance pumped out of the ground who knows where and shipped, in all likelihood, across the ocean to be trucked to the station where you last filled up. Meanwhile you're talking to your best friend on your cellphone - and who knows how that works or where those signals go? - or listening to satellite radio beamed down from space. Yet what's really on your mind is the food they're getting together for you inside that McDonald's, made from cattle that once lived anywhere and potatoes that grew someplace else, all of it relayed from some way station in the McDonald's supply chain. Yes, a long-distance call center for a drive-through window is something to marvel at. The real wonder is that the call center isn't in Bangalore. The Magazine Reader Wild Generalization X In Details, a Hilarious Screed on Turning 40 and Not Loving It By Peter Carlson Washington Post Staff Writer Tuesday, April 11, 2006; Page C02 The folks known as Generation X are on the verge of turning 40, and apparently they're getting cranky about it. The thirty-something generation is irked, irritated and downright peeved, writes Gen Xer Jeff Gordinier in "Has Generation X Already Peaked?," a bitterly hilarious screed in the April issue of Details, a magazine for young men. They're irked at their elders, the obnoxiously self-mythologizing Baby Boomers. They're irritated at the younger generation whom they consider airheads -- Generation Y or the "millennials," who came of age around 2000. And they're peeved that the media have failed to get sufficiently excited that Generation X is turning 40. "While the boomers and the millennials have been out gulping up all of that mass-media oxygen, somebody seems to have forgotten to put together the Newsweek cover story about Generation X on the brink of turning 40," Gordinier grumbles. "Could it be that the age group that popularized the phrase jumped the shark has done just that? . . . Is Generation X already obsolete?" Gordinier doesn't actually answer those questions, which are absurd and unanswerable anyway, but he does have a good time ranting and venting in delightfully comic fashion. Here's what he says about the recent glut of media hype about Baby Boomers turning 60: "You see this stuff everywhere, and you just know what's coming. David Crosby's face transplant. The James Taylor-Carly Simon remake of On Golden Pond . Woodstock IV: Return to the Garden, cosponsored by Nike, Botox and Ben & Jerry's. The Brown Acid line of tie-dyed Depends. It's only a matter of time. Those insufferable boomers are tucking into another gluttonous, cheek-smeared smorgasbord of self-importance. Don't even try to escape." And here's what he says about the twenty-somethings of Gen Y: "The boomers bred and their solipsistic progeny have arrived . . . They just love stuff. They love celebrities. They love technology. They love brand names. . . . They're happy to do whatever advertising tells them to do. So what if they can't manage to read anything longer than an instant message?" Gordinier tries to defend Gen X, but without much enthusiasm. "Generation X is still defined more by lasts than firsts. We're the last generation to produce and hold on to albums on vinyl, the last generation to read newspapers . . . the last generation to express any sort of resistance to corporate servitude, the last generation to produce old-fashioned movie stars (Julia Roberts, Brad Pitt) as opposed to manufactured aristocretins and reality-TV clowns." Aristocretins! I love that. Finally, the perfect word for Paris Hilton. Like all good rants, this one builds up a nice head of steam. It's big fun. But of course it's all baloney. The media's insatiable need to pigeonhole disparate humans into a "generation" with a single unifying personality is almost as idiotic as stereotyping people by the hue of their epidermis. I refuse to get involved in this silliness. I'm a Baby Boomer but I love my little brothers and sisters of Gen X and Gen Y. And in the spirit of that love, I offer this sage advice to my young friends: Work hard, kids. My generation has run up a huge deficit and you guys are gonna have to pay it off. And remember to pay your Social Security taxes. I'm looking forward to a long, happy retirement, and I'll need plenty of Brown Acid Depends. *** Cargo, Unloaded _________________________________________________________________ For a week, people have been dropping by the palatial offices of The Magazine Reader to congratulate us for killing Cargo magazine. We'd love to take credit, but the death of Cargo is really a triumph for all the men of America -- except for the 373,727 wimps and weenies who actually subscribed to Cargo. For those of you blissfully unaware of Cargo, it was a shopping magazine for men, a mag filled with caption-sized "articles" about stuff you can buy -- stuff ranging from shoes to cars to men's makeup and, believe it or not, men's bikini waxes. Cargo was created in March 2004 by the Conde Nast magazine empire and was killed a couple of weeks ago, put out of its misery like a lame horse. Last week, the New York Times interviewed Ariel Foxman, Cargo's erstwhile editor, who whined that the media had said nasty things about his magazine. One of those nasty things -- "the most hurtful," the Times reported -- was printed in The Magazine Reader when Cargo debuted. Hurtful? What, pray tell, could he be talking about? Maybe it was our observation that Cargo "might be the worst idea for a magazine in human history." Or maybe it was our call for men to boycott Cargo in order to "strike a blow against foppery, frippery, metrosexuality, the commercialization of everything and the wimpification of America." Gee, we didn't want to hurt the feelings of Cargo editors, who are obviously very sensitive souls. But we're thrilled that American men showed their innate good sense by avoiding Cargo. Frankly, we're amazed that the magazine managed to find 373,727 guys dunderheaded enough to subscribe. Heeding our own call to boycott Cargo, we hadn't seen an issue since that wretched debut. But when we heard about the magazine's death, we bought the May issue, just to see if it was still pathetic. It was. It contains a tiny story about various kinds of goop you can rub on your skin so you'll look tan. And a piece touting a men's fragrance that's designed to smell like marijuana and "male sweat." And a blurb about chairs that look like they're held together with duct tape, except that the duct tape is really leather and the chairs, which cost $4,800 each, are part of a designer furniture line called "Ersatz Heirlooms." Come on, guys. If you want to look tan, go outside and lie in the sun. And if you want to sit on duct-taped chairs, smelling like weed and sweat, do you really need a men's shopping mag? Goodbye, Cargo. We can't say we'll miss you, but we'll remember you fondly next time we're duct-taping the furniture. ** Subject: FOR IP: Oklahoma bill to open your computer to companies... (Note - this is an Oklahoma House bill, not a US Congress. Doesn't make it any more right...) http://www.okgazette.com/news/templates/cover.asp?articleid=423&zoneid=7 Get ready for Microsoft, cable and phone companies, and quite a few other people to know a lot more about what you do on your computer, thanks to House Bill 2083. Wednesday, April 05, 2006 Ben Fenwick It's supposed to protect you from predators spying on your computer habits, but a bill Microsoft Corp. helped write for Oklahoma will open your personal information to warrantless searches, according to a computer privacy expert and a state representative. Called the "Computer Spyware Protection Act", House Bill 2083 would create fines of up to a million dollars for anyone using viruses or surreptitious computer techniques to break on to someone's computer without that person's knowledge and acceptance, according to the bill's state Senate author, Clark Jolley. "The bill has a clear prohibition on anything going in without your permission. You have to grant permission", said Jolley, R-Edmond. "You can look at your license agreement. It will say whether they have the ability to take that information or not". But therein lies the catch. If you click that "accept" button on the routine user's agreement, the proposed law would allow any company from whom you bought upgradable software the freedom to come onto your computer for "detection or prevention of the unauthorized use of or fraudulent or other illegal activities in connection with a network, service, or computer software, including scanning for and removing computer software prescribed under this act". That means that Microsoft (or another company with such software) can erase spyware or viruses. But if you have, say, a pirated copy of Excel - Microsoft (or companies with similar software) can erase it, or anything else they want to erase, and not be held liable for it. Additionally, that phrase "fraudulent or other illegal activities" means they can: - Let the local district attorney know that you wrote a hot check last month. - Let the attorney general know that you play online poker. - Let the tax commission know you bought cartons of cigarettes and didn't pay the state tax on them. - Read anything on your hard drive, such as your name, home address, personal identification code, passwords, Social Security number ... etc., etc., etc. "I think in broad terms that is still a form of spying", said Marc Rotenberg, attorney and executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington, D.C. "Some people say, 'Well, it's justified'. I'm not so clear that should be the case. Particularly if the reason you are passing legislation is to cover that activity". The bill is scheduled to go back before the House." From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 19 08:59:54 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 08:59:54 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1b Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1b2.406 Weekly_April_19.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 19, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com ***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements General Catalog of Old Books and Authors http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/ngcoba.htm which now indexes 24,000 books available free online, including all PG(US) & PG(Aus)'s books, along with some basic date information about them and their authors where you can find more. For information please contact Philip Harper * We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks. http://www.archive.org Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date, but you should get all the files when you pass through to the original sites. Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any of the eBooks you would like to work on. Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive! * Please visit and test our newest site: "PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE" http://pge.rastko.net [Project Gutenberg Europe] http://dp.rastko.net [Distributed Proofreaders Europe] * There is an experimental online reader available. Start from any bibliographic record page, e.g. http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300 Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off. Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file where the encoding is known. * MACHINE TRANSLATION We are seeking as much information as possible on the various approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact information would be greatly appreciated. *** Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc. http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject and The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running. Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test. You can access it by visiting http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969 *** Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at: http://www.gutenberg.org/about * We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files for the visually impaired and other audio book users. Let us know if you'd like to join this group. More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio *** Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!! We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners. If you have a DVD burner and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs for you to copy. You can either snail them directly to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping. We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish. Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format, as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format. *** Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web pages and publicity materials. If you have original graphics depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them! To see some of what we have now, please see: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images *** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers. We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice (both US and international) and other areas. Please email Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby , if you can help. This is much more important than many of us realize! ***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders In the first 04.50 months of this year, we produced 1,010 new eBooks. It took us from Jul 1971 to Aug 1997 to produce our first 1,010 eBooks! That's 15 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 Years!!! 55 New eBooks This Week 54 New eBooks Last Week [corrected for lapse] 94 New eBooks This Month [Apr] 289 Average Per Month in 2006 266 Average Per Month in 2005 Counting 216 PGEu 248 Average Per Month in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 336 Average Per Month in 2004 355 Average Per Month in 2003 203 Average Per Month in 2002 103 Average Per Month in 2001 1010 New eBooks in 2006 3186 New eBooks in 2005 Counting 216 PGeu > 2970 New eBooks in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 4049 New eBooks in 2004 4164 New eBooks in 2003 2441 New eBooks in 2002 1240 New eBooks in 2001 ==== 16,090 New eBooks Since Start Of 2001 That's Only 62.50 Months! ~258 books per month! 19,152 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks 16,050 eBooks This Week Last Year ==== 3,102 New eBooks In Last 12 Months [Incl. PGAu PGEu & PrePrints] 564 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted at the U.S. site: www.gutenberg.org ] 290 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Europe 141 Entry From Project Gutenberg PrePrints ~75,000 Project Gutenberg Consortia Center http://www.gutenberg.cc You may also want to look at Project Runeberg [Scandinavian] http://runeberg.org * Project Gutenberg began operation on July 4, 1971 Project Runeberg began operation on December 13, 1992 Distributed Proofreaders began October 22, 2000 [Became an official PG-US site in 2002] Project Gutenberg of Australia began in August, 2001 The Project Gutenberg Consortia Center started in 1997] [Became an official PG-US site in 2003] Project Gutenberg of Europe started January 12, 2004 [Posted first books February 26, when we met in Brussels to address people at the European Union Parliament. Project Gutenberg PrePrints Started January 25, 2006 http://preprints.pglaf.org/ old http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new * PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE: Since starting production in October 2000, Distributed Proofreaders has contributed 8,286 Books to Project Gutenberg. 21 added this week. For more complete DP statistics, visit: http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php * Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, and see below to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalog. eBooks are posted throughout the week. You can even get daily lists. Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs: http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto or http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml *** *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report The PGCC collection at http://www.gutenberg.cc has doubled in size from the listings below, but we don't have exactly matching collection sizes yet for a new breakdown. PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as: Alex-Wire Tap Collection, 2,036 HTML eBook Files Black Mask Collection, 12,000 HTML eBook Files The Coradella Bookshelf Collection, 141 eBook Files DjVu Collection, 272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files eBooks at Adelaide Collection, 27,709 eBook Files Himalayan Academy, 3,400 HTML eBook Files Internet Archive ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress] <<< Literal Systems Collection, 68 MP3 eBook Files Logos Group Collection, ~34,000 TXT eBook Files Poet's Corner Poetry Collection, 6,700 Poetry Files Project Gutenberg Collection, 15,035 eBook Files PGCC Chinese eBook Collection ~300 eBook files <<< Note Name Change Renaisscance Editions Collection, 561 HTML eBook Files Swami Center Collection, 78 HTML eBook Files Tony Kline Collection, 223 HTML eBook Files Widger Library, 2,600 HTML eBook Files CIA's Electronic Reading Room, 2,019 Reference Files =======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files===== Average Size of the Collections 8,067.18 Total Files These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of their donors: some are one file per book; some have a file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the overcounting or duplication of numbers. If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~45,714 Unique eBooks If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~34,286 Unique eBooks The new overall collection size, which has reduced the need to account for duplications and eBooks with files for each chapter, etc. ~75,000 Unique eBooks *** Please also note that over 25,000 eBooks are listed via The Online Books Page, of which over 5,700 are from PG. http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/ In addition: The Internet Public Library had a similar listing which is now in limbo. If anyone knows what is happening with the IPL, please let us know. Inquiries, made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up any current information. You can try a new IPL service at: http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/ It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page. Still looking for more Internet Public Library info. *** Today Is Day #105 of 2006 This Completes Week #15 and Month #03.50 [364 days this year] 259 Days/38 Weeks To Go [We get 52 Wednesdays this year] 848 Books To Go To #20,000 [Our production year begins/ends 1st Wednesday of the month/year] 67 Weekly Average in 2006 61 Weekly Average in 2005 [Counting 216 PGEu] 57 Weekly Average in 2005 [Not Counting PGEu] 78 Weekly Average in 2004 79 Weekly Average in 2003 47 Weekly Average in 2002 24 Weekly Average in 2001 44 Only ~45 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers List [Used to be well over 100] [This listing usually from the previous week] *** Permanent Requests For Assistance: DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES Please visit the site: http://www.pgdp.net for more information about how you can help a lot by simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more. If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed, and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it, please email dphelp at pgdp.net and we will get things started. Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the Project Gutenberg collection. To see what is already online, visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file) listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading. Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive? Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp at pgdp.net with your geographic location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner. [Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which will not be returned.] We have high-speed scanners currently located in the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier. Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at: http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK' lines to dphelp at pgdp.net Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself? Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution! Just send us email telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help find a project you would like to work on. Please contact us at: dphelp at pgdp.net if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders. ***Donation Information We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests! We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages, as well as in more formats, including music, artwork, movies, etc. *** QUICK WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO PROJECT GUTENBERG A. Send a check or money order to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation 809 North 1500 West Salt Lake City, UT 84116 USA B. Donate by credit card online: NetworkForGood: http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541 or PayPal to "donate at gutenberg.org": http://www.paypal.com /xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of volunteers over more than 34 years. Your donations make it possible to support these volunteers, and pay our few employees to continue the creation of free electronic texts. We accept credit cards, checks and transfers from any country, in any currency. Donations are made to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (PGLAF). PGLAF is approved as a charitable 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal Revenue Service, and has the Federal Employee Information Number (EIN) 64-6221541. For more information, including several other ways to donate, go to http://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html or email donate at gutenberg.org *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world. To find the sites nearest you, go to: http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks http://www.gutenberg.org/find allows searching by title, author, language and subject. Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want. Try: http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs or ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first five characters of the file's name. Note that updated eBooks usually go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.) *** Statistical Review In the 15 weeks of this year, we have produced 1010 new eBooks. It took us from 07/71 to 07/97 to produce our FIRST 1010 eBooks!!! That's 15 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 YEARS!!! FLASHBACK! Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #1010 Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext] ### A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright [Note: books without month and year entries are now in new catalog format] Various editions of Dante's Divine Comedy, in English and Italian * Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet? If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of 6,510,734,007 that would be 19,152 x 65,107,340 = ~1.25 Trillion !!! With 19,152 eBooks online as of April 19, 2006 it now takes an average of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.80 from each book. [1% world population x #eBooks] 65,107,340 x 19,152 x $.80 = ~$1 Trillion [Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.] * A Trillion Dollars Given Away At Just $.52 Value Per Book To 100 Million With 19,152 eBooks online as of April 19, 2006 it now takes an average of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.52 from each book. This "cost" is down from about $.62 when we had 16,050 eBooks a year ago. Our Target Audience Is 1.5% Of The World Population = ~100,000,000 people. At 19,152 eBooks in 34 Years and 09.50 Months We Averaged 550 Per Year 45.9 Per Month 1.51 Per Day At 1010 eBooks Done In The 104 Days Of 2006 We Averaged 9.7 Per Day 68 Per Week 289 Per Month If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S. you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear, are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope. However, for those keeping track of how quickly the U.S. reaches a 300 million population level, and who noticed the passing of 298M, just two weeks ago. . .the U.S. is already 1/6 the way to 299M, so it will probably be 10 more weeks to 299M and 22 more to 300M. Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment, who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details]. * The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks' production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon, starts with the first Wednesday of January. January 4th was the first Wednesday of 2006, and thus ended PG's production year of 2005 and began the production year of 2006 at noon. This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From news at pglaf.org Wed Apr 19 14:32:28 2006 From: news at pglaf.org (Project Gutenberg Newsletter) Date: Wed, 19 Apr 2006 14:32:28 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] Pt2 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter Message-ID: GWeekly_April_19_part2.txt The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter 19 Apr 2006 eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since 1971 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter: - Obtaining Project Gutenberg eBooks - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks - 51 New U.S. eBooks this week - 8 New eBooks at Project Gutenberg of Australia - Mailing list information - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :: HOW TO GET EBOOKS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG ::. The easiest way to obtain our eBooks is at our search page at http://gutenberg.org/find which allows searching by title, author or eBook number; there is also an Advanced Search page which allows for additional search criteria (note that our newer postings may not yet be indexed for all additional criteria). And please note: you can now obtain a listing by language at the above link. Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world, and you can select one nearer to your location from the link on the search results page. To see a listing of mirror sites, and locate the one nearest to you, visit: http://gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL If you prefer to download eBooks via other methods than from the search page, and need additional information, please refer to the file GUTINDEX.ALL, available for viewing or downloading at: http://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL That file contains descriptions and explanations about the filenaming process, directory structure, file formats, and more. And to directly access the file directories: http://gutenberg.org/dirs/ Please note that the Project Gutenberg Production Team continues the process of manually re-posting those eBooks originally posted prior to Nov 2003 to the new filenaming and directory system (based on the eBook number). This process includes some file maintenance (repairing, correcting and re-formatting to current PG standards where practicable). These re-postings are noted in the "corrections" listings below. More information can be found in the file GUTINDEX.ALL mentioned above. * * * Please see Part 1 of this week's newsletter for more information about Project Gutenberg. And if you haven't done so lately, please visit the website at http://www.gutenberg.org to see what's new. * * * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Note: this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as Courier New or similar. To report an error in the listings below, please write to news_at_pglaf.org and include the word CORRECTION in the subject line. ========================================================================= [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ] ========================================================================= TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed, 19 Apr 2006: 18727 (incl. 564 Aus.). RESERVED/PENDING count: 43 =-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= :: During the past week the following ebooks were manually updated and reposted with the indicated filenames and transferred into the corresponding new directories: Strong as Death, by Guy de Maupassant 4777 [Updated edition of: etext03/sdeat10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/7/7/4777 ] [Files: 4777.txt; 4777-8.txt; 4777-h.htm] When Egypt Went Broke, by Holman Day 4733 [Updated edition of: etext03/wngpt10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/7/3/4733 ] [Files: 4733.txt; 4733-h.htm] Mr. Achilles, by Jennette Lee 4714 [Updated edition of: etext03/mrchl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/7/1/4714 ] [Files: 4714.txt; 4714-h.htm] The Landloper, by Holman Day 4712 [Subtitle: The Romance Of A Man On Foot] [Updated edition of: etext03/lndlp10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/7/1/4712 ] [Files: 4712.txt; 4712-h.htm] Mademoiselle of Monte Carlo, by William Le Queux 4694 [Updated edition of: etext03/mdmmc10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/6/9/4694 ] [Files: 4694.txt; 4694-h.htm] Uncle William, by Jennette Lee 4634 [Subtitle: The Man Who Was Shif'less] [Updated edition of: etext03/ncwll10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/6/3/4634 ] [Files: 4634.txt; 4634-h.htm] The Clique of Gold, by Emile Gaboriau 4604 [Updated edition of: etext03/clqgl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/6/0/4604 ] [Files: 4604.txt; 4604-h.htm] In the Wilderness, by Robert Hichens 4603 [Updated edition of: etext03/ntwld10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/6/0/4603 ] [Files: 4603.txt; 4603-8.txt; 4603-h.htm] Swallow, by H. Rider Haggard 4074 [Updated edition of: etext03/swllw10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/7/4074 ] [Files: 4074.txt; 4074-8.txt; 4074-h.htm] Monsieur Lecoq, by Emile Gaboriau 4071 [Updated edition of: etext03/mslcq10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/7/4071 ] [Files: 4071.txt; 4071-h.htm] The Honor of the Name, by Emile Gaboriau 4002 [Updated edition of: etext03/thtnm10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/0/0/4002 ] [Files: 4002.txt; 4002-h.htm] Simon the Jester, by William J. Locke 3828 [Updated edition of: etext03/sjstr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/2/3828 ] [Files: 3828.txt; 3828-h.htm] The Lamp of Fate, by Margaret Pedler 3824 [Updated edition of: etext03/lmpft10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/2/3824 ] [Files: 3824.txt; 3824-h.htm] The Witch of Prague, by F. Marion Crawford 3816 [Updated edition of: etext03/twopr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/1/3816 ] [Files: 3816.txt; 3816-h.htm] The Lady Of Blossholme, by H. Rider Haggard 3813 [Updated edition of: etext03/blshl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/1/3813 ] [Files: 3813.txt; 3813-8.txt; 3813-h.htm] The Vultures, by Henry Seton Merriman 3805 [Updated edition of: etext03/vltrs10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/3805 ] [Files: 3805.txt; 3805-8.txt; 3805-h.htm] Pierre and Jean, by Guy de Maupassant 3804 [Translator: Clara Bell] [Updated edition of: etext03/pandj10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/3804 ] [Files: 3804.txt; 3804-h.htm] File No. 113, by Emile Gaboriau 3803 [Updated edition of: etext03/no11310.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/3803 ] [Files: 3803.txt; 3803-h.htm] The Widow Lerouge, by Emile Gaboriau 3802 [Subtitle: The Lerouge Case] [Updated edition of: etext03/lerge10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/8/0/3802 ] [Files: 3802.txt; 3802-h.htm] Egypt (La Mort De Philae), by Pierre Loti 3685 [Translator: W. P. Baines] [Updated edition of: etext03/newhd10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/8/3685 ] [Files: 3685.txt; 3685-8.txt; 3685-h.htm] Getting Gold, by J. C. F. Johnson 3679 [Updated edition of: etext03/ggold10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/7/3679 ] [Files: 3679.txt; 3679-h.htm] The Firefly Of France, by Marion Polk Angellotti 3676 [Updated edition of: etext03/fiofr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/7/3676 ] [Files: 3676.txt; 3676-h.htm] The Girl From Keller's, by Harold Bindloss 3663 [Subtitle: Sadie's Conquest] [Updated edition of: etext03/tgfks10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/6/3663 ] [Files: 3663.txt; 3663-8.txt; 3663-h.htm] The Garden Of Allah, by Robert Hichens 3637 [Updated edition of: etext03/allah10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/3/3637 ] [Files: 3637.txt; 3637-h.htm] :: Please note the following additional changes, corrections, improvements: -=-=-=-=[ 51 NEW U.S. EBOOKS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Navaho Houses, Report 17, Parts 1 and 2, by Cosmos Mindeleff 18206 [Subtitle: Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1898. Pgs. 469-518] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18206 ] [Files: 18206.txt; 18206-8.txt; 18206-0.txt; 18206-h.htm] Simon, by George Sand 18205 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18205 ] [Files: 18205-8.txt; 18205-0.txt] Stamp Collecting as a Pastime, by Edward J. Nankivell 18204 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18204 ] [Files: 18204.txt; 18204-8.txt; 18204-h.htm] Die prosa van die twede Afrikaanse beweging, Pieter Cornelis Schoonees 18203 [Language: Afrikaans] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18203 ] [Files: 18203-8.txt; 18203-h.htm] The Growth of Thought, by William Withington 18202 [Subtitle: As Affecting the Progress of Society] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18202 ] [Files: 18202.txt] David Copperfield II, by Charles Dickens 18201 [Subtitle: David Copperfield nuoremman elmkerta ja kokemukset] [Translator: Waldemar Churberg] [Language: Finnish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18201 ] [Files: 18201-8.txt] Le Collier de la Reine, Tome II, by Alexandre Dumas 18200 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18200 ] [Files: 18200-8.txt; 18200-h.htm] Le Collier de la Reine, Tome I, by Alexandre Dumas 18199 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18199 ] [Files: 18199-8.txt; 18199-h.htm] Els camins del parads perdut, by Lloren Riber 18198 [Language: Catalan] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18198 ] [Files: 18198-8.txt] Notes d'une mere, by Louise d'Alq 18197 [Subtitle: Cours d'education maternelle] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18197 ] [Files: 18197-8.txt; 18197-0.txt] Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams, by William H. Seward 18196 [Subtitle: Sixth President of the Unied States] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18196 ] [Files: 18196.txt; 18196-doc.doc; 18196.pdf-pdf] The Girl's Own Paper, Vol. VIII: No. 353, October 2, 1886, by Various 18195 [Editor: Charles Peters] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18195 ] [Files: 18195.txt; 18195-8.txt; 18195-h.htm] The Life of Buddha and Its Lessons, by H.S. Olcott 18194 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18194 ] [Files: 18194.txt; 18194-8.txt; 18194-0.txt; 18194-h.htm] Ways of Wood Folk, by William J. Long 18193 [Illustrator: Charles Copeland] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18193 ] [Files: 18193.txt; 18193-8.txt; 18193-h.htm] Works, Vol. X, by Edmund Burke 18192 [Title: The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 10 of 12] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18192 ] [Files: 18192.txt; 18192-8.txt; 18192-h.htm] Essays on "Supernatural Religion", by Joseph B. Lightfoot 18191 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18191 ] [Files: 18191.txt; 18191-8.txt] Raggedy Ann Stories, by Johnny Gruelle 18190 [Illustrator: Johnny Gruelle] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/9/18190 ] [Files: 18190.txt; 18190-h.htm] Growing Nuts in the North, by Carl Weschcke 18189 [Subtitle: A Personal Story of the Author's Experience of 33 Years with Nut Culture in Minnesota and Wisconsin] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18189 ] [Files: 18189.txt; 18189-8.txt; 18189-h.htm] Homer and Classical Philology, by Friedrich Nietzsche 18188 [Editor: Oscar Levy] [Translator: J. M. Kennedy] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18188 ] [Files: 18188.txt; 18188-8.txt; 18188-h.htm] Hebrew Life and Times, by Harold B. Hunting 18187 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18187 ] [Files: 18187.txt; 18187-8.txt; 18187-h.htm] David Copperfield I, by Charles Dickens 18186 [Subtitle: David Copperfield nuoremman elmkertomus ja kokemukset] [Translator: Waldemar Churberg] [Language: Finnish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18186 ] [Files: 18186-8.txt] The Danger Mark, by Robert W. Chambers 18185 [Illustrator: A. B. Wenzell] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18185 ] [Files: 18185.txt; 18185-8.txt; 18185-h.htm] Animal Carvings from Mounds of the Mississippi Valley, Henry W. Henshaw 18184 [Subtitle: Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880-81, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1883, pages 117-166] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18184 ] [Files: 18184.txt; 18184-8.txt; 18184-h.htm] Trees, Fruits and Flowers of Minnesota, 1916, ed. by A. W. Latham 18183 [Subtitle: Embracing the Transactions of the Minnesota State Horticultural Society, Volume 44, from December 1, 1915, to December 1, 1916, Including the Twelve Numbers of "The Minnesota Horticulturist" for 1916] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18183 ] [Files: 18183.txt; 18183-8.txt; 18183-h.htm; ] Heralds of Empire, by Agnes C. Laut 18182 [Subtitle: Being the Story of One Ramsay Stanhope, Lieutenant to Pierre Radisson in the Northern Fur Trade] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18182 ] [Files: 18182.txt; 18182-8.txt; 18182-h.htm; ] The Path of Duty, and Other Stories, by H. S. Caswell 18181 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18181 ] [Files: 18181.txt; 18181-8.txt; 18181-h.htm] Tom Slade on Mystery Trail, by Percy Keese Fitzhugh 18180 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/8/18180 ] [Files: 18180.txt; 18180-8.txt; 18180-h.htm] Othello, by William Shakespeare 18179 [Translator: Franois Pierre Guillaume Guizot] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18179 ] [Files: 18179-8.txt; 18179-h.htm] Rakontoj, by Jakub Arbes 18178 [Translator: Josef Grna] [Language: Esperanto] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18178 ] [Files: 18178-8.txt; 18178-0.txt; 18178-h.htm] In the Field (1914-1915), by Marcel Dupont 18177 [Subtitle: The Impressions of an Officer of Light Cavalry] [Tr.: H. W. Hill] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18177 ] [Files: 18177.txt; 18177-8.txt; 18177-h.htm; ] Yorkshire Tales. Third Series, by John Hartley 18176 [Subtitle: Amusing sketches of Yorkshire Life in the Yorkshire Dialect] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18176 ] [Files: 18176.txt] Yorksher Puddin', by John Hartley 18175 [Subtitle: A Collection of the Most Popular Dialect Stories from the] [Pen of John Hartley] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18175 ] [Files: 18175.txt; 18175-8.txt] Some Winter Days in Iowa, by Frederick John Lazell 18174 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18174 ] [Files: 18174.txt; 18174-8.txt; 18174-h.htm] Tales of the Ridings, by F. W. Moorman 18173 [Commentator: C. Vaughan] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18173 ] [Files: 18173.txt] This World Is Taboo, by Murray Leinster 18172 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18172 ] [Files: 18172.txt; 18172-8.txt; 18172-h.htm] The Crucifixion of Philip Strong, by Charles M. Sheldon 18171 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18171 ] [Files: 18171.txt] The Excellence of the Rosary, by M. J. Frings 18170 [Subtitle: Conferences for Devotions in Honor of the Blessed Virgin] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/7/18170 ] [Files: 18170.txt; 18170-h.htm] Mesure pour mesure, by William Shakespeare 18169 [Translator: Franois Pierre Guillaume Guizot] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18169 ] [Files: 18169-8.txt; 18169-h.htm] The Heavenly Father, by Ernest Naville 18168 [Subtitle: Lectures on Modern Atheism] [Translator: Henry Downton] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18168 ] [Files: 18168.txt; 18168-8.txt; 18168-h.htm] Chronica d'el rei D. Diniz (Vol. II), by Rui de Pina 18167 [Language: Portuguese] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18167 ] [Files: 18167-8.txt] Amistad funesta, by Jose Marti 18166 [Subtitle: Novela] [Language: Spanish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18166 ] [Files: 18166-8.txt; 18166-h.htm] Russian Rambles, by Isabel F. Hapgood 18165 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18165 ] [Files: 18165.txt; 18165-h.htm] Potash & Perlmutter, by Montague Glass 18164 [Subtitle: Their Copartnership Ventures and Adventures] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18164 ] [Files: 18164.txt; 18164-8.txt; 18164-h.htm] Patriotic Plays and Pageants for Young People, Constance D'Arcy Mackay 18163 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18163 ] [Files: 18163.txt; 18163-h.htm] Comme il vous plaira, by William Shakespeare 18162 [Translator: Franois Pierre Guillaume Guizot] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18162 ] [Files: 18162-8.txt; 18162-h.htm] Works, Vol. VIII, by Edmund Burke 18161 [Full title: The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. VIII.] [(of 12)] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18161 ] [Files: 18161.txt; 18161-8.txt; 18161-h.htm] In the World War, by Count Ottokar Czernin 18160 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/6/18160 ] [Files: 18160.txt; 18160-8.txt; 18160-h.htm] Memoires Tome 6, by Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot 18159 [Title: Memoires pour servir a l'Histoire de mon temps (Tome 6)] [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18159 ] [Files: 18159-8.txt] The Butterfly House, by Mary E. Wilkins Freeman 18158 [Illustrator: Paul Julian Meylan] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18158 ] [Files: 18158.txt; 18158-8.txt; 18158-h.htm] Fundacion de la ciudad de Buenos-Aires, by Juan de Garay 18157 [Language: Spanish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18157 ] [Files: 18157-8.txt; 18157-h.htm] We and the World, Part II, by Juliana Horatia Ewing 18156 [Subtitle: A Book for Boys] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/1/5/18156 ] [Files: 18156.txt; 18156-8.txt; 18156-h.htm] -=-=-=-=[ 8 NEW EBOOKS AT PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Apr 2006 The Love Affair of George Vincent Parker,A C Doyle[060046xx.xxx] 0564A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600451.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 The Holocaust of Manor Place, by A C Doyle [060045xx.xxx] 0563A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600451.txt or .zip] [Author: Arthur Conan Doyle] Apr 2006 The Debatable Case of Mrs. Emsley, by A C Doyle [060044xx.xxx] 0562A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600441.txt or .zip] [Author: Arthur Conan Doyle] Apr 2006 At the Pistol's Point, by E W Hornung [060043xx.xxx] 0561A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600431.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 Seven, Seven, Seven--City, by Julius Chambers [060042xx.xxx] 0560A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600421.txt or .zip] [Title: Seven, Seven, Seven--City: A Tale of the Telephone] Apr 2006 The Dutchess of Wiltshire's Diamonds, by G Boothby[060041xx.xxx] 0559A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600411.txt or .zip] [Author: Guy Boothby] Apr 2006 Round the Fire Stories, by Arthur Conan Doyle [060040xx.xxx] 0558A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600401.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 The Bachelors' Guide, by L W Lower [060039xx.xxx] 0557A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600391.txt or .zip] [Title: The Bachelors' Guide to the Care of the Young and Other Stories] eBooks are posted in uncompressed and/or compressed formats. To access these ebooks, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty.html For more information about Project Gutenberg of Australia, including accessing those etexts from outside of Australia, please visit: http://gutenberg.net.au/ --Project Gutenberg of Australia-- --A treasure trove of Literature-- *treasure-trove n. treasure found hidden with no evidence of ownership For more information about copyright restrictions in other countries, please visit: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html ============================================================================= From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 26 09:39:19 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 09:39:19 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1a Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1a3.406 Weekly_April_26.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 26, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. * Editor's comments appear in [brackets]. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com * TABLE OF CONTENTS [Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.] *eBook Milestones *Introduction *Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements *Continuing Requests and Announcements *Progress Report *Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report *Permanent Requests For Assistance: *Donation Information *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks *Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet? *Flashback *Weekly eBook update: This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter Corrections in separate section 6 New This Week From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.] 3 New This Week From PGEu [European Copyrights, Life + 50 and 70] 9 New This Week From PG PrePrints 55 New This Week To Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright 73 New This Week [Including PG Australia, PG Europe and PrePrints] [I'm sure there are a still few bugs in the new accounting] *Headline News from Edupage, etc. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists *** *eBook Milestones* 19,231 eBooks As Of Today!!! 769 to go to 20,000!!! 18,788 at www.gutenberg.org[+61] 570 Australian eBooks [+6] [Included in above line] 293 Gutenberg Europe [+3] 150 PG PrePrint Site [+9] 19,231 Grand Total of all four sites [Corrected +6] 73 New eBooks This Week ~96% of the Way to 20,000 ***550+ eBooks Averaged Per Year Since July 4, 1971*** 16,163 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001 That's ~258 eBooks per Month for ~62.75 Months We Have Produced 1,083 eBooks in 2006 769 to go to 20,000!!! 42 New eBooks From Distributed Proofreaders 8,348 total from Distributed Proofreaders Since October, 2000 [Details in PT1B] [Currently over 36,000 DP volunteers] We Averaged ~339 eBooks Per Month In 2004 We Averaged ~248 eBooks Per Month In 2005 [Including PG Australia] We Are Averaging ~294 eBooks Per Month This Year [Including PGAu, PGEu and PrePrints] All Four Sites Combined Are Averaging 68 eBooks Per Week In 2006 73 This Week It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks It took ~32 months, from 2003 to 2006 for our last 10,000 eBooks It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100 It took ~2.5 years from Oct. 2003 to Mar. 2006 from 10,000 to 19,000 [The above changes due to the opening of Project Gutenberg sites other than the original one at www.gutenberg.org] [Now including totals from Australia, Europe and PrePrints] [Apologies, it will take a while to integrate everything not all statistics may be totally equalized yet] [PGEu Statistics Are Counted Monthly Not Weekly] [Daily PGEu stats at http://dp.rastko.net/default.php] [Daily DP stats at http://www.pgdp.net] BTW, we just started a new "PrePrints" site at PG, so if you come across eBooks that aren't ready for primetime, but that should be saved for upgrading, we have a place to put them. http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new site * ~75,000 eBooks at the PG Consortia Center http://www.gutenberg.cc * ***Introduction [The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly go to the portions you find most interesting: 1. Founder's Comments, News, Notes & Queries, and 2. Weekly eBook Update Listing. Note bene that PT1 is now being sent as PT1A and PT1B. [Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor. Email us: hart at pobox.com and gbnewby at pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.] This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter FREE INTERNET REFERENCE SITE LivingInternet.com provides a 700-odd page reference about the Internet "to provide living context and perspective to this most technological of human inventions", and has received input from many people that helped build the Internet. It currently receives about 3 thousand visitors a day, many from educational institutions. Now in its 7th year of operation. http://www.livinginternet.com/ TEXT TO SPEECH Dolphin Producer is a new software package which will convert a text document into a fully synchronized text and audio DTB at the push of a single button. The DTB can then be played back using Dolphin's EaseReader software player - which is included in Dolphin Producer. The DTB can also be played back on any other DAISY DTB software or hardware player, as well as any MP3 player - The choice is yours. http://www.dolphinuk.co.uk or http://www.dolphinusa.com *Headline News from Edupage [PG Editor's Comments In Brackets] COPYRIGHT LAW UPDATE FAVORS COPYRIGHT HOLDERS Despite pressure from a number of quarters to introduce restrictions on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Congress appears to be headed the other direction. Drafts of the Intellectual Property Protection Act of 2006 are circulating among lawmakers, and a spokesperson for the House Judiciary Committee said the bill will likely be introduced soon. The bill adds a number of new layers to copyright law, including increasing fines for certain copyright crimes; criminalizing attempted copyright violations, even if they fail; and allowing copyright owners to impound "records documenting the manufacture, sale, or receipt of items involved in" violations. Jason Schultz, staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, said of this last provision that the recording industry has long wanted the ability to obtain server logs that would indicate "every single person who's ever downloaded" certain files. Keith Kupferschmid, vice president for intellectual property and enforcement at the Software and Information Industry Association, welcomed the bill, saying that it gives government officials needed authority to prosecute intellectual property criminals. CNET, 23 April 2006 http://news.com.com/2100-1028_3-6064016.html COMPANY TO PAY $4.5 MILLION IN E-RATE FRAUD CASE Houston-based NextiraOne has agreed to pay $4.5 million to settle charges that it defrauded the government and the Oglala Nation Educational Coalition through the federal E-rate program. The work for which NextiraOne was under investigation took place at the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. According to a complaint by the Department of Justice, NextiraOne billed the government for products and services it did not deliver; submitted fraudulent invoices; and charged inflated prices for other products. The E-rate program, designed to extend Internet access to schools and libraries that could not otherwise afford it, has come under fire for what some have described as rampant fraud. Under the settlement, NextiraOne will pay a criminal fine of $1.9 million and will return $2.6 million to the government. ITWorld, 21 April 2006 http://www.itworld.com/Man/2681/060421erate/ TECHNOLOGY DIRECTOR CHARGED WITH E-RATE FRAUD Federal charges have been brought against a technology director in South Carolina for defrauding the E-rate program, a federal program to fund technology improvements in disadvantaged schools. Cynthia K. Ayer was indicted on 12 counts of mail and wire fraud for funneling contracts worth $3.5 million to her company, Go Between Communications. According to the Department of Justice (DOJ), Ayer's actions netted her more than $450,000 of E-rate funds. Ayer faces fines of $250,000 and a lengthy prison term if convicted. The E-rate program has been riddled with accounts of fraud and abuse, and Ayer's case is just the latest in a string of prosecutions against 11 individuals and 10 companies. Thus far, settlements with some defendants have totaled $40 million in fines and restitution, and two individuals have been sentenced to prison terms. Internet News, 20 April 2006 http://www.internetnews.com/bus-news/article.php/3600671 NATIONAL ARCHIVES GOES TRANSPARENT The National Archives and Records Administration has made public the details of a secret agreement made in 2001 with the CIA and said it will adjust its procedures to function in a much more transparent manner. The secret deal gave the CIA the authority to insist that certain materials in the archives be removed, with no record of the documents' having been in the archives or why they were removed. Allen Weinstein, who currently heads the archives but did not when the deal was made, said he just learned of it and has acted quickly to invalidate it. "Classified agreements are the antithesis of our reason for being," he said. A spokesperson from the archives noted that it routinely archives classified materials and keeps them secret. Adding another layer of secrecy is unnecessary and inappropriate, she said. Steven Aftergood, director of a project at the Federation of American Scientists that tracks government secrecy, applauded the announcement, particularly Weinstein's role in it. "He did not attempt to deny the existence of the problem," said Aftergood, "and he did not attempt to evade responsibility for it." Chronicle of Higher Education, 19 April 2006 (sub. req'd) http://chronicle.com/daily/2006/04/2006041901t.htm SETTLEMENT REACHED IN ANTISPYWARE CASE In a settlement announced by prosecutors in Washington State, Zhijian Chen of Oregon will pay about $84,000 in fines, restitution, and attorneys' fees following a scheme in which Chen sold consumers fraudulent antispyware services. Chen was charged with sending e-mail that led recipients to believe their computers were infected with spyware and that a product called Spyware Cleaner, made by Secure Computer, could clean their machines. Chen then collected a commission when users bought the product. State Attorney General Rob McKenna said, "We will not tolerate those who try to profit by preying on consumers' fears of spyware and other malware." New York-based Secure Computer as well as a number of officials from the company are also named in the lawsuit against Chen. Associated Press, 19 April 2006 http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060419/ap_on_hi_te/spam_lawsuit To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV at LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName or To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings, or access the Edupage archive, visit http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639 *HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA Senate Inquiry: New Hampshire "Denial of Service" Attack on Democrats' Phones This past week saw some interesting revelations in the case of similar "political dirty tricks" in recent elections as were mentioned in the famous "All the Presidents Men" stories by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein of the Washington Post that brought down President Nixon. Revealed were dozens of phone calls to The White House on the day before the mid-term 2002 elections, by the man who was convicted, and the fact that National Republican Party funds were used to pay over $2.5 million in legal bills, and perhaps even super-lobbyist Jack Abramoff was involved. James Tobin, head of the New England branch of the Republican National Committee, later a director of President Bush's second presidential campaign, was convicted re: jamming the phones of of five locations of various Democratic efforts to get voters out on election day. In addition, was a similar attack on a local firefighter's effort to give transportation to polls. www.libertypost.org/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=138550 * Follow Up On "General's Revolt" Apparently the Generals lined up by the the administrtion to counter the "Revolt of the Generals" have been given a list of talking points or script suggestions for their appearances in the media. Why it is OK for the generals to support one side of the issue but not the other seems to be the elephant in the middle of the room being ignored. * The War of Classified Materials, April 25, 2006 U.S. Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart is being quoted as saying, "When everything is classified, nothing is classified," in a recent flap over the various levels of secrecy and governmenk leaks. In a rather stunning double whammy from opposite directions, recent coverage by Dana Priest, National Security Correspondent writing for The Washington Post, won a Pulitzer Prize for her columns revealing the wide ranging government wiretaps without court approval, while her alleged source, Mary McCarthy, was being fired from the CIA. Sources from the Post, including McCarthy, have said that McCarthy didn't even have access to the information she allegedly leaked. Apparently the Bush administration has tightened up the classified information business to the point where less and less information is unclassified, thus relying more and more on leaks, unscheduled on-the-spot declassification, etc., to provide information to the public and the mass media. As a result of this tightening of the informational purse strings, more and more Washington sources are simply saying, "I can't talk to you any more," and the reporters are learning not to keep notes via any of the standard means that can be found to uncover sources. Thus computers are OUT these days as a tool for working on articles since the government routinely siezes all computers and files in an ongoing investigation of these matters. Apparently the number of classified documents doubled during Bush's re-election campaign in 2004 and has continued to rise, according to Lucy Dalglish, speaking on The News Hour. * Recently Revealed: Was Chicago Bulls Player Fired and Blacklisted for Giving President Bush a Letter Concerning Iraq During a White House Visit by the Team After Their First Repeat as NBA Champions? Craig Hodges, a member of the first two Chicago Bulls Championship NBA basketball teams, claims he was not only fired by the Bulls for speaking out on political issues as an African-American, but also blacklisted by the entire NBA as a result when he could not even get a tryout with any one of the NBA franshices afterwards. The court case Craig Hodges vs. the National Basketball Association alleges "the owners and operators of the 29 NBA member franchises have participated as co-conspirators" in "blackballing" him from the entire National Basketball Association "because of his outspoken political nature as an African-American man." Hodges was a 10 year NBA veteran, the last four years with the Bulls, and he played in the majority of the Bulls' games during their second consecutive NBA Championship. classdat.appstate.edu/AAS/Soc/rosenberge/MyFiles/NYTIMES/NYTSPRTB.IZ * Trying to look up "American Dreamz" ? only local media found: The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon, USA Free preview planned of `American Dreamz' The American dream is alive and well. What could be more free than a free movie? The University of Oregon Cultural Forum and the Bijou Art Cinemas, 492 E. 13th Ave., will present a free showing of the Paul Weitz film "American Dreamz" Tuesday at 8 p.m. Vouchers are available at the Cultural Forum office in the Erb Memorial Union, 1222 E. 13th Ave. If any are unclaimed, they will be available at the door. Weitz ("In Good Company," "About a Boy") wrote and directed the film for Universal Studios. It will open nationally on April 21. advertisement The movie stars Hugh Grant, Dennis Quaid, Mandy Moore, Marcia Gay Harden, Chris Klein, Jennifer Coolidge and Willem Dafoe. In the film, "American Dreamz" is a popular singing competition. "Imagine a country where the president never reads the newspaper, where the government goes to war for all the wrong reasons and where more people vote for a pop idol than their next president." *DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK Around 6AM Sunday morning two widely separated estimates for the cost of health care per person in the US on the radio. NPR said $800 per month, $9,600 per year. WILL-AM 94.5 said $11 per month or $132 per year. WLRW-FM *STRANGE QUOTES OF THE WEEK Congressman Chistopher Smith, R-New Jersey, re: Google.cn: "China's search engine, is guaranteed to take you to the virtual land of deceit, disinformation and the big lie." *PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK Replicators that can build copies of themselves will appear this year! *ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK In 1960 people in the U.S. spent about 5% of their money on health care. In 2005 people in the U.S. spent about 16% of their money on health care. In the same period that health spending tripled per person, spending on education failed to even double. The U.S. has a universal education plan, but not universal health care, so why is spending on universal education lagging behind? The U.S. is regularly outclassed by one or two dozen other countries in standardized educational testing. The Common Sense Budget Act of 2006 cites the following: (E) research conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics shows that middle school students in the United States rank 18th in science test scores and 19th in math test scores internationally, behind students in such countries as the Republic of Korea, the Slovak Republic, Singapore, the Russian Federation, and Malaysia. . . . [Longer lists available on request] Medical: The U.S. spends about $1.8 Trillion per year. Schools: The U.S. spends about $0.5 Trillion per year. Sources: The weekend news programs on NPR, CBS, ABC, NBC. BTW, if the $1.8 Trillion medical figure is accurate, along with the $9 Trillion GDP, then medical is 20%, not the 16% cited. 3.6% on Education. On the international math tests the U.S. ranked 24th and 28th for recent tests among middle schools, 12th for grade schools. In science the U.S. was 17th. Down from 3rd for 4th graders. [More data available on request] * Oldest Ice Core Dated At 1 Million Years, As of April 18, 2006 Japanese scientists are examining a 1 million year old chunk of ice removed from a spot 3 kilometers under the Antarctic ice cap surface. The previously oldest ice cores from about 650,000 years ago revealed that we now have much higher levels of carbon dioxide and methane in the atmosphere than any time previously measured in this manner. www.cnn.com/2006/TECH/science/04/18/old.ice.reut/index.html * Exxon's CEO Lee Raymond Receives $1 Billion In Total Compensation After a little over a decade at the wheel of the largest oil company, it appears that Lee Raymond's total compensation for that period will be approximately one billion dollars, with hearly half of that coming in various forms of separation pay and bonuses. In papers filed with with the Securities and Exchange Commission this past month, it was revealed that Mr. Raymond will receive nearly $.5 billion in total retirement compensations along with his previous pay bonuses over the years, this in addition to his yearly salaries from the last 12 years or so. Nearly $.4 billion of this was revealed in the recently filed SEC documents. Raymond's final annual paycheck totaled over $50 million, or $140,000 per day, or nearly $6,000 per hour, waking or sleeping. . .four times the pay of Chevron's CEO, Exxon's nearest competitor. During Raymond's reign, Exxon stoct is reported to have gone up 500%, but don't forget that most people forget that to go up 100% doubles, so they usually miss by 100% in such reports. There is a shareholder revolt of sorts going on to pass resolutions condemning such exorbitant pay practices, which Exxon encourages the shareholdes to vote against. abcnews.go.com/GMA/story?id=1841989 * Kate Moss returned to her career as a supermodel this week with a reported $2.5 million shoot for Nikon. * By the way, for those interested, the official U.S. population estimates just passed 298 million, though many say estimations of this nature leave out as much as 5% of the population, with the obvious exclusion of the 11-12 million immigrant workers now being mentioned so much in the news. Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries. [This one is getting a little out of date, as the US population is obviously no longer 6% of the world. In fact, rounding to the nearest percent, the US will soon fall from 5% to 4%.] "If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, it would look something like the following. There would be: 57 Asians 21 Europeans 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both North and South America 8 Africans 52 would be female 48 would be male 70 would be non-white 30 would be white 70 would be non-Christian 30 would be Christian 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 would be from the United States 80 would live in substandard housing 70 would be unable to read 50 would suffer from malnutrition 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education 1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater] 1 would be 79 years old or more. Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years, but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure to expire within that 63 year period. I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date, as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer then there would be only 60 million people in the world who owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States households have computers, out of over 100 million households. Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in the United States. I just called our local reference librarian and got the number of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at: 111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports. If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million, and that's counting just one computer per household, and not counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc. I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate given above, and would like some help researching these and other such figures, if anyone is interested. BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old. This means that basically 90% of the world's population would never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations offered it to them free of charge. Then I realized that the US population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer than the non-whites. Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they can receive more per year, but because they will live more years to receive Social Security. The average poor non-white may never receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in. * *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From hart at pglaf.org Wed Apr 26 09:40:43 2006 From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart) Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 09:40:43 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] PT1b Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter Message-ID: pt1b3.406 Weekly_April_26.txt **The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, April 26, 2006 PT1** *******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******** Please note some previous miscounts still not corrected, but the grand totals should be fairly accurate, just have to go back and fix the interim counts. Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart at pobox.com or gbnewby at pglaf.org Anyone who would care to get advance editions: please email hart at pobox.com ***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements General Catalog of Old Books and Authors http://www.kingkong.demon.co.uk/ngcoba/ngcoba.htm which now indexes 24,000 books available free online, including all PG(US) & PG(Aus)'s books, along with some basic date information about them and their authors where you can find more. Plus many books not available on line, a good place to search for books by specific authors who you are interested in. For information please contact Philip Harper * We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks. http://www.archive.org Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date, but you should get all the files when you pass through to the original sites. Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any of the eBooks you would like to work on. Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive! * Please visit and test our newest site: "PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE" http://pge.rastko.net [Project Gutenberg Europe] http://dp.rastko.net [Distributed Proofreaders Europe] * There is an experimental online reader available. Start from any bibliographic record page, e.g. http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300 Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off. Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file where the encoding is known. * MACHINE TRANSLATION We are seeking as much information as possible on the various approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact information would be greatly appreciated. *** Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc. http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject and The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running. Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test. You can access it by visiting http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969 *** Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at: http://www.gutenberg.org/about * We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files for the visually impaired and other audio book users. Let us know if you'd like to join this group. More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio *** Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!! We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners. If you have a DVD burner and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs for you to copy. You can either snail them directly to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping. We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish. Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format, as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format. *** Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web pages and publicity materials. If you have original graphics depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them! To see some of what we have now, please see: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images *** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers. We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice (both US and international) and other areas. Please email Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby , if you can help. This is much more important than many of us realize! ***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders In the first 04.75 months of this year, we produced 1,083 new eBooks. It took us from Jul 1971 to Oct 1997 to produce our first 1,083 eBooks! That's 16 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 Years!!! 73 New eBooks This Week 55 New eBooks Last Week [corrected for lapse] 182 New eBooks This Month [Apr] 289 Average Per Month in 2006 266 Average Per Month in 2005 Counting 216 PGEu 248 Average Per Month in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 336 Average Per Month in 2004 355 Average Per Month in 2003 203 Average Per Month in 2002 103 Average Per Month in 2001 1083 New eBooks in 2006 3186 New eBooks in 2005 Counting 216 PGeu > 2970 New eBooks in 2005 Not Counting PGEu 4049 New eBooks in 2004 4164 New eBooks in 2003 2441 New eBooks in 2002 1240 New eBooks in 2001 ==== 16,163 New eBooks Since Start Of 2001 That's Only 62.75 Months! ~258 books per month! 19,231 Total Project Gutenberg eBooks 16,106 eBooks This Week Last Year ==== 3,125 New eBooks In Last 12 Months [Incl. PGAu, PGEu & PrePrints] 570 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted at the U.S. site: www.gutenberg.org ] 293 eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Europe 150 Entry From Project Gutenberg PrePrints ~75,000 Project Gutenberg Consortia Center http://www.gutenberg.cc You may also want to look at Project Runeberg [Scandinavian] http://runeberg.org * Project Gutenberg began operation on July 4, 1971 Project Runeberg began operation on December 13, 1992 Distributed Proofreaders began October 22, 2000 [Became an official PG-US site in 2002] Project Gutenberg of Australia began in August, 2001 The Project Gutenberg Consortia Center started in 1997] [Became an official PG-US site in 2003] Project Gutenberg of Europe started January 12, 2004 [Posted first books February 26, when we met in Brussels to address people at the European Union Parliament. Project Gutenberg PrePrints Started January 25, 2006 http://preprints.pglaf.org/ old http://preprints.readingroo.ms/ new * PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE: Since starting production in October 2000, Distributed Proofreaders has contributed 8,348 Books to Project Gutenberg. 42 added this week. For more complete DP statistics, visit: http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php * Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, and see below to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalog. eBooks are posted throughout the week. You can even get daily lists. Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs: http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto or http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml *** *Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report The PGCC collection at http://www.gutenberg.cc has doubled in size from the listings below, but we don't have exactly matching collection sizes yet for a new breakdown. PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as: Alex-Wire Tap Collection, 2,036 HTML eBook Files Black Mask Collection, 12,000 HTML eBook Files The Coradella Bookshelf Collection, 141 eBook Files DjVu Collection, 272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files eBooks at Adelaide Collection, 27,709 eBook Files Himalayan Academy, 3,400 HTML eBook Files Internet Archive ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress] <<< Literal Systems Collection, 68 MP3 eBook Files Logos Group Collection, ~34,000 TXT eBook Files Poet's Corner Poetry Collection, 6,700 Poetry Files Project Gutenberg Collection, 15,035 eBook Files PGCC Chinese eBook Collection ~300 eBook files <<< Note Name Change Renaisscance Editions Collection, 561 HTML eBook Files Swami Center Collection, 78 HTML eBook Files Tony Kline Collection, 223 HTML eBook Files Widger Library, 2,600 HTML eBook Files CIA's Electronic Reading Room, 2,019 Reference Files =======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files===== Average Size of the Collections 8,067.18 Total Files These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of their donors: some are one file per book; some have a file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the overcounting or duplication of numbers. If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~45,714 Unique eBooks If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts, that leaves a unique book total of ~34,286 Unique eBooks The new overall collection size, which has reduced the need to account for duplications and eBooks with files for each chapter, etc. ~75,000 Unique eBooks *** Please also note that over 25,000 eBooks are listed via The Online Books Page, of which over 5,700 are from PG. http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/ In addition: The Internet Public Library had a similar listing which is now in limbo. If anyone knows what is happening with the IPL, please let us know. Inquiries, made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up any current information. You can try a new IPL service at: http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/ It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page. Still looking for more Internet Public Library info. *** Today Is Day #112 of 2006 This Completes Week #16 and Month #03.75 [364 days this year] 252 Days/38 Weeks To Go [We get 52 Wednesdays this year] 769 Books To Go To #20,000 [Our production year begins/ends 1st Wednesday of the month/year] 68 Weekly Average in 2006 61 Weekly Average in 2005 [Counting 216 PGEu] 57 Weekly Average in 2005 [Not Counting PGEu] 78 Weekly Average in 2004 79 Weekly Average in 2003 47 Weekly Average in 2002 24 Weekly Average in 2001 44 Only ~45 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers List [Used to be well over 100] [This listing usually from the previous week] *** Permanent Requests For Assistance: DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES Please visit the site: http://www.pgdp.net for more information about how you can help a lot by simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more. If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed, and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it, please email dphelp at pgdp.net and we will get things started. Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the Project Gutenberg collection. To see what is already online, visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file) listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading. Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive? Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp at pgdp.net with your geographic location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner. [Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which will not be returned.] We have high-speed scanners currently located in the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier. Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at: http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK' lines to dphelp at pgdp.net Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself? Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution! Just send us email telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help find a project you would like to work on. Please contact us at: dphelp at pgdp.net if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders. ***Donation Information We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests! We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages, as well as in more formats, including music, artwork, movies, etc. *** QUICK WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO PROJECT GUTENBERG A. Send a check or money order to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation 809 North 1500 West Salt Lake City, UT 84116 USA B. Donate by credit card online: NetworkForGood: http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541 or PayPal to "donate at gutenberg.org": http://www.paypal.com /xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of volunteers over more than 34 years. Your donations make it possible to support these volunteers, and pay our few employees to continue the creation of free electronic texts. We accept credit cards, checks and transfers from any country, in any currency. Donations are made to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (PGLAF). PGLAF is approved as a charitable 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal Revenue Service, and has the Federal Employee Information Number (EIN) 64-6221541. For more information, including several other ways to donate, go to http://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html or email donate at gutenberg.org *Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections *Mirror Site Information Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world. To find the sites nearest you, go to: http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks http://www.gutenberg.org/find allows searching by title, author, language and subject. Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want. Try: http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs or ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first five characters of the file's name. Note that updated eBooks usually go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.) *** Statistical Review In the 15 weeks of this year, we have produced 1010 new eBooks. It took us from 07/71 to 07/97 to produce our FIRST 1010 eBooks!!! That's 15 WEEKS as Compared to ~26 YEARS!!! FLASHBACK! Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #1083 Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext] ### A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright [Note: books without month and year entries are now in new catalog format] Oct 1997 The Arrow of Gold, by Joseph Conrad [argldxxx.xxx] 1083 Oct 1997 Voyage of The Paper Canoe, by Nathaniel H. Bishop [pprcnxxx.xxx] 1082 Oct 1997 Dead Souls, by Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol [Gogol#1][dsolsxxx.xxx] 1081 Oct 1997 A Modest Proposal, by Jonathan Swift [Swift #3] [mdprpxxx.xxx] 1080 Oct 1997 Life of Tristram Shandy, by Laurence Sterne [shndyxxx.xxx] 1079 Oct 1997 The Scouts of the Valley, by Joseph A. Altsheler [sctvlxxx.xxx] 1078 Oct 1997 The Mirror of Kong Ho, by Ernest Bramah [Bramah#2][konghxxx.xxx] 1077 Oct 1997 The Wallet of Kai Lung, by Ernest Bramah[Bramah#1][wklngxxx.xxx] 1076 Oct 1997 The Strength of the Strong, by Jack London [#12][sstrgxxx.xxx] 1075 Also Contains: Samuel, by Jack London [Jack London #18] The Sea-Farmer, by Jack London [Jack London #17] The Dream of Debs, by Jack London [London #16] The Enemy of All the World, by Jack London [#15] The Unparalleled Invasion, by Jack London [#14] South of the Slot, by Jack London [London #13] Oct 1997 The Sea Wolf, by Jack London [Jack London #11] [cwolfxxx.xxx] 1074 Oct 1997 The Death of Olivier Becaille, by Emile Zola [#4] [1zolaxxx.xxx] 1073 * Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet? If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of 6,512,167,762 that would be 19,231 x 65,121,677 = ~1.25 Trillion !!! With 19,231 eBooks online as of April 26, 2006 it now takes an average of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.80 from each book. [1% world population x #eBooks] 65,121,677 x 19,231 x $.80 = ~$1 Trillion [Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.] * A Trillion Dollars Given Away At Just $.52 Value Per Book To 100 Million With 19,231 eBooks online as of April 26, 2006 it now takes an average of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.52 from each book. This "cost" is down from about $.62 when we had 16,106 eBooks a year ago. Our Target Audience Is 1.5% Of The World Population = ~100,000,000 people. At 19,231 eBooks in 34 Years and 09.75 Months We Averaged 552 Per Year 46.0 Per Month 1.51 Per Day At 1083 eBooks Done In The 112 Days Of 2006 We Averaged 9.7 Per Day 68 Per Week 289 Per Month If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S. you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear, are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope. However, for those keeping track of how quickly the U.S. reaches a 300 million population level, and who noticed the passing of 298M, just two weeks ago. . .the U.S. is already 1/6 the way to 299M, so it will probably be 10 more weeks to 299M and 22 more to 300M. Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment, who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details]. * The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks' production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon, starts with the first Wednesday of January. January 4th was the first Wednesday of 2006, and thus ended PG's production year of 2005 and began the production year of 2006 at noon. This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week. *Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists, including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters: and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists: The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the first Wednesday of the month. To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server: http://lists.pglaf.org If you are having trouble with your subscription, please email the list's human administrators at: help at pglaf.org From news at pglaf.org Wed Apr 26 17:32:47 2006 From: news at pglaf.org (Project Gutenberg Newsletter) Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:32:47 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [gweekly] Pt2 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter Message-ID: GWeekly_April_26_part2.txt The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter 26 Apr 2006 eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since 1971 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter: - Obtaining Project Gutenberg eBooks - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks - 55 New U.S. eBooks this week - 6 New eBooks at Project Gutenberg of Australia - Mailing list information - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - :: HOW TO GET EBOOKS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG ::. The easiest way to obtain our eBooks is at our search page at http://gutenberg.org/find which allows searching by title, author or eBook number; there is also an Advanced Search page which allows for additional search criteria (note that our newer postings may not yet be indexed for all additional criteria). And please note: you can now obtain a listing by language at the above link. Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world, and you can select one nearer to your location from the link on the search results page. To see a listing of mirror sites, and locate the one nearest to you, visit: http://gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL If you prefer to download eBooks via other methods than from the search page, and need additional information, please refer to the file GUTINDEX.ALL, available for viewing or downloading at: http://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL That file contains descriptions and explanations about the filenaming process, directory structure, file formats, and more. And to directly access the file directories: http://gutenberg.org/dirs/ Please note that the Project Gutenberg Production Team continues the process of manually re-posting those eBooks originally posted prior to Nov 2003 to the new filenaming and directory system (based on the eBook number). This process includes some file maintenance (repairing, correcting and re-formatting to current PG standards where practicable). These re-postings are noted in the "corrections" listings below. More information can be found in the file GUTINDEX.ALL mentioned above. * * * Please see Part 1 of this week's newsletter for more information about Project Gutenberg. And if you haven't done so lately, please visit the website at http://www.gutenberg.org to see what's new. * * * ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Note: this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as Courier New or similar. To report an error in the listings below, please write to news_at_pglaf.org and include the word CORRECTION in the subject line. ========================================================================= [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ] ========================================================================= TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed, 26 Apr 2006: 18788 (incl. 570 Aus.). RESERVED/PENDING count: 43 =-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= :: During the past week the following ebooks were manually updated and reposted with the indicated filenames and transferred into the corresponding new directories: The People Of The Mist, by H. Rider Haggard 6769 [Updated edition of: etext04/plmst10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/7/6/6769 ] [Files: 6769.txt; 6769-h.htm] The Story of a Child, by Pierre Loti 6664 [Translator: Caroline F. Smith] [Updated edition of: etext04/fchld10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/6/6/6664 ] [Files: 6664.txt; 6664-h.htm] Therese Raquin, by Emile Zola 6626 [Translator: Edward Vizetelly] [Updated edition of: etext04/thrqn10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/6/2/6626 ] [Files: 6626.txt; 6626-h.htm] December Love, by Robert Hichens 6616 [Updated edition of: etext04/dcmbr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/6/1/6616 ] [Files: 6616.txt; 6616-h.htm] Letters to His Children, by Theodore Roosevelt 6467 [Editor: Joseph Bucklin Bishop] [Updated edition of: etext04/ltchl10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/4/6/6467 ] [Files: 6467.txt; 6467-h.htm] Smith and the Pharaohs, and Other Tales, by H. Rider Haggard 6073 Contents: Smith And The Pharaohs Magepa The Buck The Blue Curtains Little Flower Only A Dream Barbara Who Came Back [Updated edition of: etext04/smthn10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/7/6073 ] [Files: 6073.txt; 6073-h.htm] Stella Fregelius, by H. Rider Haggard 6051 [Updated edition of: etext04/stlfg10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/6/0/5/6051 ] [Files: 6051.txt; 6051-h.htm] Jess, by H. Rider Haggard 5898 [Updated edition of: etext04/jessh10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/8/9/5898 ] [Files: 5898.txt; 5898-h.htm] The Great Impersonation, by E. Phillips Oppenheim 5815 [Updated edition of: etext04/grmpr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/8/1/5815 ] [Files: 5815.txt; 5815-h.htm] Doctor Therne, by H. Rider Haggard 5764 [Updated edition of: etext04/drthr10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/7/6/5764 ] [Files: 5764.txt; 5764-h.htm] Lysbeth, by H. Rider Haggard 5754 [Subtitle: A Tale Of The Dutch] [Updated edition of: etext04/lsbth10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/7/5/5754 ] [Files: 5754.txt; 5754-h.htm] She and Allan, by H. Rider Haggard 5745 [Updated edition of: etext04/shlln10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/7/4/5745 ] [Files: 5745.txt; 5745-8.txt; 5745-h.htm] The Fat and the Thin, by Emile Zola 5744 [Translator: Ernest Alfred Vizetelly] [Updated edition of: etext04/ftthn10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/7/4/5744 ] [Files: 5744.txt; 5744-8.txt; 5744-h.htm] Ayesha, by H. Rider Haggard 5228 [Subtitle: The Further History of She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed] [Updated edition of: etext04/aysha10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/2/2/5228 ] [Files: 5228.txt; 5228-h.htm] Pearl-Maiden, by H. Rider Haggard 5175 [Updated edition of: etext04/prlma10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/7/5175 ] [Files: 5175.txt; 5175-8.txt; 5175-h.htm] The Fortune of the Rougons, by Emile Zola 5135 [Editor: Ernest Alfred Vizetelly] [Updated edition of: etext04/froug10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/3/5135 ] [Files: 5135.txt; 5135-8.txt; 5135-h.htm] A Zola Dictionary, by J. G. Patterson 5103 [Updated edition of: etext04/zladc10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/5/1/0/5103 ] [Files: 5103.txt; 5103-h.htm] Bar-20 Days, by Clarence E. Mulford 4922 [Updated edition of: etext04/br20d10.txt] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/4/9/2/4922 ] [Files: 4922.txt; 4922-h.htm] :: Please note the following additional changes, corrections, improvements: -=-=-=-=[ 55 NEW U.S. EBOOKS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=- Printcrime, by Cory Doctorow 19000C [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/9/0/0/19000 ] [Files: 19000.txt; ] More Tales of the Ridings, by Frederic Moorman 18260 [Contents] [Melsh Dick] [Two Letters] [A Miracle] [Tales of a grandmother] [I. The Tree of Knowledge] [II. Janet's Cove] [The Potato and the Pig] [Coals of Fire] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/6/18260 ] [Files: 18260.txt] Gentle Julia, by Booth Tarkington 18259 [Illustrator: C. Allan Gilbert and Worth Brehm] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18259 ] [Files: 18259.txt; 18259-8.txt; 18259-h.htm] Deutsche Charaktere und Begebenheiten, by Jakob Wassermann 18258 [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18258 ] [Files: 18258-8.txt; 18258-0.txt; 18258-h.htm] The Universe -- or Nothing, by Meyer Moldeven 18257C [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18257 ] [Files: 18257.txt; ] Woodside, by Caroline Hadley 18256 [Subtitle: or, Look, Listen, and Learn.] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18256 ] [Files: 18256.txt; 18256-h.htm] Versuch einer Kritik aller Offenbarung, by Johann Gottlieb Fichte 18255 [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18255 ] [Files: 18255-8.txt; 18255-0.txt; 18255-h.htm] Claverhouse, by Mowbray Morris 18254 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18254 ] [Files: 18254.txt; 18254-8.txt; 18254-h.htm; ] Discovery of Witches, by Thomas Potts 18253 [Editor: James Crossley] [Subtitle: The Wonderfull Discoverie of Witches in the Countie of] [Lancaster] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18253 ] [Files: 18253.txt; 18253-8.txt; 18253-h.htm; ] Hertfordshire, by Herbert W Tompkins 18252 [Illustrator: Edmund H. New] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18252 ] [Files: 18252.txt; 18252-8.txt; 18252-h.htm] Latin for Beginners, by Benjamin Leonard D'Ooge 18251 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18251 ] [Files: 18251.txt; 18251-8.txt; 18251-mac.txt; 18251-0.txt; 18251-h.htm] The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift, D.D., Vol. VII, by Jonathan Swift 18250 [Subtitle: Historical and Political Tracts--Irish] [Editor: Temple Scott] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/5/18250 ] [Files: 18250.txt; 18250-8.txt; 18250-h.htm] Some Summer Days in Iowa, by Frederick John Lazell 18249 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18249 ] [Files: 18249.txt; 18249-h.htm] Lucy Raymond, by Agnes Maule Machar 18248 [Subtitle: Or, The Children's Watchword] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18248 ] [Files: 18248.txt; 18248-8.txt; 18248-h.htm] The Last Man, by Mary Shelley 18247 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18247 ] [Files: 18247.txt] Kuninkaan-alut, by Henrik Ibsen 18246 [Subtitle: Historiallinen nytelm viidess nytksess] [Language: Finnish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18246 ] [Files: 18246-8.txt] Contes merveilleux, Tome II, by Hans Christian Andersen 18245 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18245 ] [Files: 18245-8.txt; 18245-h.htm] Contes merveilleux, Tome I, by Hans Christian Andersen 18244 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18244 ] [Files: 18244-8.txt; 18244-h.htm] Bezoek aan den berg Athos, by Anonymous 18243 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar Volken, 1873] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18243 ] [Files: 18243-8.txt; 18243-h.htm] Behind the Arras, by Bliss Carman 18242 [Subtitle: A Book of the Unseen] [Illustrator: T. B. Meteyard] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18242 ] [Files: 18242.txt; 18242-8.txt; 18242-h.htm] Tea-Cup Reading, by 'A Highland Seer' 18241 [Title: Tea-Cup Reading, and the Art of Fortune-Telling by Tea Leaves] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18241 ] [Files: 18241.txt; 18241-8.txt; 18241-0.txt; 18241-h.htm] Roumania Past and Present, by James Samuelson 18240 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/4/18240 ] [Files: 18240.txt; 18240-8.txt; 18240-0.txt; 18240-h.htm] The Road to Mandalay, by B. M. Croker 18239 [Author AKA: Bithia Mary Croker (1849-1920)] [Subtitle: A Tale of Burma] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18239 ] [Files: 18239.txt; 18239-8.txt; ] Songs from Vagabondia, by Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey 18238 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18238 ] [Files: 18238.txt; 18238-8.txt; 18238-h.htm] A Bird Calendar for Northern India, by Douglas Dewar 18237 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18237 ] [Files: 18237.txt; 18237-h.htm] In de Amsterdamsche Jodenbuurt, by Jan Feith 18236 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar Volken, 1907] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18236 ] [Files: 18236-8.txt; 18236-h.htm] Het Geuldal, by L. H. J. Lamberts Hurrelbrinck 18235 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar Volken, 1907] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18235 ] [Files: 18235-8.txt; 18235-h.htm] A Girl's Student Days and After, by Jeannette Marks 18234 [Commentator: Mary Emma Woolley] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18234 ] [Files: 18234.txt; 18234-8.txt; 18234-h.htm] Animal Ghosts, by Elliott O'Donnell 18233 [Subtitle: Or, Animal Hauntings and the Hereafter] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18233 ] [Files: 18233.txt; 18233-8.txt; 18233-h.htm] Gedenkrede auf Wolfgang Amade Mozart, by Richard Beer-Hofmann 18232 [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18232 ] [Files: 18232-8.txt; 18232-0.txt; 18232-h.htm] Die Last, by Georg Engel 18231 [Language: German] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18231 ] [Files: 18231-8.txt; 18231-0.txt; 18231-h.htm] How to Write a Play, by Various 18230 [Subtitle: Letters from Augier, Banville, Dennery, Dumas, Gondinet, Labiche, Legouve, Pailleron, Sardou, Zola] [Editor: James Brander Matthews] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/3/18230 ] [Files: 18230.txt; 18230-8.txt] Transactions of the ASCE, Paper 1150, by Charles W. Raymond 18229 [Full title: Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers,] [Vol. LXVIII, Sept. 1910] [Subtitle: The New York Tunnel Extension of the Pennsylvania Railroad.] [Paper No. 1150] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18229 ] [Files: 18229.txt; 18229-h.htm] El Mandarin, by Eca Queiroz 18228 [Language: Spanish] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18228 ] [Files: 18228-8.txt; 18228-h.htm] Some Spring Days in Iowa, by Frederick John Lazell 18227 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18227 ] [Files: 18227.txt; 18227-8.txt; 18227-h.htm] My Young Days, by Anonymous 18226 [Illustrator: Paul Konewka] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18226 ] [Files: 18226.txt; 18226-8.txt; 18226-h.htm] The Shield of Silence, by Harriet T. Comstock 18225 [Illustrator: George Loughridge] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18225 ] [Files: 18225.txt; 18225-8.txt; 18225-h.htm] Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town, by Cory Doctorow 18224C [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18224 ] [Files: 18224-8.txt; 18224-h.htm; ] The Essence of Buddhism, by Various 18223 [Compiler: E. M. Bowden] [Preface: Edwin Arnold] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18223 ] [Files: 18223.txt; 18223-h.htm] The Religion of Numa, by Jesse Benedict Carter 18222 [Subtitle: And Other Essays on the Religion of Ancient Rome] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18222 ] [Files: 18222.txt; 18222-8.txt; 18222-h.htm] De aardbeving van San Francisco, by Hugo de Vries 18221 [Subtitle: De Aarde en haar Volken, 1907] [Language: Dutch] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18221 ] [Files: 18221-8.txt; 18221-h.htm] A Cidade e as Serras, by Eca de Queiros 18220 [Language: Portuguese] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/2/18220 ] [Files: 18220-8.txt] The Trumpeter Swan, by Temple Bailey 18219 [Ill.: Alice Barber Stephens] [This is the same book as #17967, but they are different editions by] [different publishers, and there are differences in the text.] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18219 ] [Files: 18219.txt; 18219-8.txt; 18219-h.htm; ] Works, Vol XI, by Edmund Burke 18218 [Title: The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. 11 of 12) [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18218 ] [Files: 18218.txt; 18218-8.txt; 18218-h.htm] Chambers's Elementary Science Readers, Book I, by Various 18217 [Other: William Chambers] [Robert Chambers] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18217 ] [Files: 18217.txt; 18217-8.txt; 18217-h.htm] Pathfinders of the West, by A. C. Laut 18216 [Subtitle: Being the Thrilling Story of the Adventures of the Men Who Discovered the Great Northwest: Radisson, La Verendrye, Lewis and Clark] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18216 ] [Files: 18216.txt; 18216-8.txt; 18216-h.htm] Le marquis de Loc-Ronan, by Ernest Capendu 18215 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18215 ] [Files: 18215-8.txt; 18215-h.htm] Our Friend the Dog, by Maurice Maeterlinck 18214 [Illustrator: Cecil Alden] [Translator: Alexander Teixeira de Mattos] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18214 ] [Files: 18214.txt; 18214-8.txt; 18214-h.htm] The Story of the Great War, Volume III (of 12), by Miller 18213 [Editor: Francis J. Reynolds, Allen L. Churchill, and Francis Trevelyan] [Miller] [Subtitle: The War Begins, Invasion of Belgium, Battle of the Marne] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18213 ] [Files: 18213.txt; 18213-8.txt; 18213-h.htm; ] Arts and Crafts in the Middle Ages, by Julia De Wolf Addison 18212 [Subtitle: A Description of Mediaeval Workmanship in Several of the] [Departments of Applied Art, Together with Some Account of Special Artisans] [in the Early Renaissance] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18212 ] [Files: 18212.txt; 18212-8.txt; 18212-h.htm; ] Servitude et grandeur militaires, by Alfred de Vigny 18211 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18211 ] [Files: 18211-8.txt] The Heptalogia, by Algernon Charles Swinburne 18210 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/1/18210 ] [Files: 18210.txt; 18210-8.txt; 18210-h.htm] English Seamen in the Sixteenth Century, by James Anthony Froude 18209 [Subtitle: Lectures Delivered at Oxford Easter Terms 1893-4] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18209 ] [Files: 18209.txt; 18209-8.txt; 18209-h.htm] L'enfer et le paradis de l'autre monde, by mile Chevalier 18208 [Language: French] [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18208 ] [Files: 18208-8.txt] Coffee and Repartee, by John Kendrick Bangs 18207 [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/2/0/18207 ] [Files: 18207.txt; 18207-8.txt; 18207-h.htm] -=-=-=-=[ 6 NEW EBOOKS AT PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Apr 2006 A Warning in Red, by Victor L. Whitechurch [060052xx.xxx] 0570A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600521.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 The Secret of Emu Plain,by Meade and Eustace [060051xx.xxx] 0569A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600511.txt or .zip] [Author: L T Meade and Robert Eustace] Apr 2006 Followed, by L T Meade and Robert Eustace [060050xx.xxx] 0568A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600501.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 The Tragedy of a Third Smoker, by Cutcliffe Hyne [060049xx.xxx] 0567A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600491.txt or .zip] Apr 2006 The Romance of the Secret Service Fund, F M White [060048xx.xxx] 0566A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600481.txt or .zip] [Author: Frederick Merrick White] Apr 2006 The Silkworms of Florence, by Clifford Ashdown [060047xx.xxx] 0565A [http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks06/0600471.txt or .zip] eBooks are posted in uncompressed and/or compressed formats. To access these ebooks, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty.html For more information about Project Gutenberg of Australia, including accessing those etexts from outside of Australia, please visit: http://gutenberg.net.au/ --Project Gutenberg of Australia-- --A treasure trove of Literature-- *treasure-trove n. treasure found hidden with no evidence of ownership For more information about copyright restrictions in other countries, please visit: http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html =============================================================================