Project Gutenberg Monthly Newsletter
The Project Gutenberg Monthly Newsletter--June 21, 2009
eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since 1971
42 Months to The End of the World Via Mayan Calendaring
on December 21, 2012 [some now saying October 11, 2011]
Leaving 3 years 6 months, 14 seasons or 42 months.
Not to worry, I will still make long range predictions.
Headline News
More eBooks To More People Via More Hardware and Software
The 39th year of Project Gutenberg will begin …
[View More]July 4th, 2009--
and we will once again be one of larger sponsors of The World
eBook Fair at http://www.worldebookfair.org, which will reach
the neighborhood of ~2.5 million eBooks from July 4 to August
4, starting in about two weeks.
One of the major developments this year is the advance in the
variety of hardware and software methods of reading eBooks in
more circumstances, more locations, and, of course, with more
eBooks in wider and wider circulation.
We will be sending out a special edition of this Newsletter a
few weeks from now dedicated to these.
Our 25,000th eBook In English Will Be Coming Up Shortly
If you have any ideas, suggestions, comments, etc., about how
we might commemorate this event, please let us know.
We Just Published Our:
200th eBook in Italian
400th eBook in Chinese
500th eBook in Finnish
We are coming up on our 250th in Spanish. . .suggestions???
iPhone Acquisition
As you know, we try to get one of each of the popular reading
devices to test how our eBooks work on them and demonstrate a
wide variety of reading options.
A friend is updating his iPhone today and I am buying his old
one, so we would appreciate any suggestions of which programs
we should load to demonstrate the widest variety of readers.
Some interesting notes about eBooks of various varieties:
National archives reviews purchases of paper materials in digital
age Library and Archives Canada has put a moratorium on buying paper
documents and books for its collection. Full Story:
http://links.cbc.ca/a/l.x?T=jncickgjiekjmplpgobfifjajd&M=36
...
Google Books Improves -
http://www.slaw.ca/2009/06/18/google-books-improves/
Google Books has released a number of improvements designed to make
reading and sharing their material easier. The Books blog, Inside
Google Book Search lists seven changes:
- embedding and links - From the new toolbar on a Books page you can
copy a link to the source or the html necessary to produce an iframe
in your blog or web page that will embed the source.
- improved search - There's now more context around your search
terms, and you can rank your search results by relevance as well as
page order.
- thumbnail view - More useful, perhaps, where images are involved,
you can see an overview in thumbnails of the book you're examining.
- drop-down menu - The drop-down menu displays links to the various
divisions within the book.
- plain text mode - Viewers can turn off the html mode and work
simply with plain text.
- page turn animation - This feature, invoked by clicking at the
bottom of
the screen, simulates a more natural progression through the book.
- improved book overview - There's more data about the book offered
on the overview page.
British Library Publishes Online Archive of 19th-Century Newspapers
Maev Kennedy The Guardian Thursday 18 June 2009
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/jun/18/
british-library-newspaper-archive-online>
A shorter URL for the above link:
<http://tinyurl.com/nknweq>
Over two million pages of 19th and early 20th century newspapers go
online today, part of the vast British Library collection.
The 49 British national and regional titles cover events including
the Battle of Waterloo in June 1815 "Vague reports have been made of
the numbers slain on both sides ... We should not quote them if our
silence could prevent the
spreading of disastrous intelligence", the Morning Chronicle
reported. There was also the banks crisis of 1878, the first FA Cup
final in 1872, and the triumph of the music hall star Vesta Tilley
in a talent contest.
<snip>
The site
<http://newspapers.bl.uk/blcs>
holds journals including the True Crime of its day, the Illustrated
Police News which covered the Jack the Ripper murders. The British Library
worked in partnership with the Joint Information Systems Committee
and Gale, part of Cengage Learning, to create the service. Searches
are free, but users can pay to download information.
["Can pay"??? I wonder if that translates into "must pay,"
unless one is a certain kind of member or the like?]
Our All Time Hottest Requests!!!!!!!
FLASH RAM
I am looking for the earliest flash RAM possible.
The very earliest were PCMCIA cards, such as used for the
Poqet computer, etc.
The earliest USB flash drives were DisgoDizgo, M-Systems
and these were OEMed by IBM, HP, etc. They are particular
in a recognizable fashion because their snapon connectors
resemble the connectors of jigsaw puzzles.
We received two examples of RAM actually labeled "Flash,"
for the H-P 95 pocket DOS machine from 1991, and a sample
of Fairchild bubble memory, as well, from down under.
Thank you, Mate!
POWERPOINT
We need someone who can do PowerPoint illustrations.
One in particular, building a 3-D box of 1,000 dominoes.
Additional Newsletter Services
In addition, we will provide the PG Canada Newsletter and
totals from PG of Australia, Europe, PrePrints, etc.
You should notice that we had a very good month, with 100
books done nearly every single week.
These totals do NOT include 75,000+ at
httpwww.gutenberg.cc
Where there are eBooks representing over 100 languages.
The Project Gutenberg Statistical Report
[As of about noon Central Daylight Time]
Various totals from the ~30,000 at
httpwww.gutenberg.org
and our other Project Gutenberg Sites
This week:
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Sun 2009-06-14 | 6
Mon 2009-06-15 | 13
Tue 2009-06-16 | 2
Wed 2009-06-17 | 16
Thu 2009-06-18 | 6
Fri 2009-06-19 | 12
Sat 2009-06-20 | 13
Thanks to Marcello Perathoner!
Here are the current language totals
for languages with 200 or more eBooks.
Grand total for today: 29082
24519 English en
1434 French fr
584 German de
505 Finnish fi
423 Dutch nl
402 Chinese zh
329 Portuguese pt
241 Spanish es
200 Italian it
Not to mention PrePrints, Canada, Australia, Europe....
Total increase +287 All Reported Languges
and from the previous month. . . .
Thanks to Greg Newby!
//////
And From Project Gutenberg Sites Worldwide [2 months]
29,082 up 283 PG General Automated Count
1,767 up 7 PG of Australia
637 up 6 PG of Europe
2,021 up 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42],etc.
325 up 36 PG of Canada, End of May.
======
33,832 up 320 Grand Total
Note Without counting PrePrints, we are still over 30,000
and some of the new .lit collection will not make it under
our current rules of addition from PrePrints, and would be
deleted from PrePrints without moving to other listings.
Note There are perhaps 100 eBooks not listed here
that are already in circulation from Project Gutenberg.
Note PG Canada includes English, French, and Italian.
///
Here is how we ended 2008
27,616 PG General Automated Count
1,726 Project Gutenberg of Australia
554 Project Gutenberg of Europe
225 Project Gutenberg of Canada [Estimated]
[202 up to December, no current report]
2,431 PrePrints [Counting the 307 Chinese eBooks +111]
====== ======
32,552 Grand Total [Counting those PrePrints]
Here is how we ended 2007
The combined PG projects had produced a total of 26,161 titles.
The most number of books posted...
...in one day was 65 on the 26th December
...in one week was 151 in Week 18 (week ending 9th May)
...in one month was 477 in November
We averaged
338 per month [Over 4,000 for the year]
78 per week
11.13 per day
99 titles were newly REposted to the new filing system, bringing us
almost to
the 2,000 mark.
Here is a small selection of project milestones;
TOTAL Original Project Gutenberg eBooks equals about
the number of books in the average U.S. public library
32,500 on 20082121 [Counting the 307 Chinese Preprints]
[And presuming 3 after official count]
32,000 on Calcuating
31,500 on 20081021 [not an error, 1,777 PrePrints]
30,000 on 20081021
29,500 on 20080919
29,000 ~~ Calculating
28,500 ~~ Calculating
28,000 ~~ 20080516
27,500 on 20080405
27,000 ~~ 20080229
26,500 on 20080126
26,000 on 20071224
25,000 on 20071012
24,000 on 20070710
23,000 on 20070415
PG-AU
1,700 on 20081010
1,600 on 20080208
1,500 on 20070407
PG Canada
175 on 20080930
100 on 20080325
110 on 20080417
[View Less]
Here is the news from PG Canada for May.
We published a total of 18 ebooks during the month: we have now published a cumulative total of 325 ebooks.
The New Releases section at the top of the PGC main page always gives the details of new releases for the most recent three months.
LANGUAGES:
- 15 in English
- 3 in French
GENRES
- 7 novels
- 4 history books
- 2 cookbooks
- 1 book of essays
- 1 dictionary
- 1 book of poetry
- 1 personal journal
- 1 children's book
8 of this month's ebooks …
[View More]were by Canadians or had a connection to Canada.
9 of this month's titles were fiction, and 9 were non-fiction.
April saw the posting of two further titles by the famous English novelist and essayist Arnold Bennett (1867-1931), courtesy of Distributed Proofreaders Europe.
May was notable for the posting of our first titles by the famous missionary, explorer, historian, and linguist Adrien-Gabriel Morice (1859-1938), celebrated in the annals of British Columbia, and of the Canadian historian Ernest Alexander Cruikshank (1854-1939).
Authors new to PGC this month included:
Bennet, Robert Ames (1870-1954) [American novelist]
Bosse, Sara [née Eaton] (1868-1940) [Canadian author] and Watanna, Onoto [Reeve, Winnifred Eaton: née Eaton, Winnifred] (1875-1954) [Canadian novelist]
Boucher-Belleville, Jean-Philippe [Jean-Baptiste] (1800-1874) [Journaliste canadien]
Cody, Hiram Alfred (1872-1948) [Canadian priest, novelist, and biographer]
Cruikshank, Ernest Alexander (1854-1939) [Canadian historian]
Dionne, Narcisse-Eutrope (1848-1917) [Historien, lexicographe et bibliothécaire canadien]
Hodgson, William Hope (1877-1918) [English novelist and poet]
Isle, June (active around 1864) [American children's author]
Lighthall, William Douw (1857-1954) [Canadian lawyer, politician, historian, novelist, philosopher, and poet]
Monck, Frances Elizabeth Owen (d. 1919) [Irish memoirist]
Morice, Adrien-Gabriel (1859-1938) [Missionnaire, explorateur, ethnologue et lexicographe canadien]
O'Duffy, Eimar Ultan (1893-1935) [Irish playwright, novelist, and economist]
Wallace, Edgar [Wallace, Richard Horatio Edgar] (1875-1932) [English novelist, playwright, and screenplay writer]
***************
Thanks as ever for your support!
Mark
[View Less]
Here is the (delayed) news from PG Canada for April.
We published a total of 18 ebooks during the month: we have now
published a cumulative total of 307 ebooks.
The New Releases section at the top of the PGC main page always
gives the details of new releases for the most recent three months.
LANGUAGES: - 16 in English - 2 in French
GENRES - 9 novels - 2 books of short stories - 1 anthology with
introductory essay - 1 autobiography - 1 children's book - 1
biography - 1 history book - 1 …
[View More]dictionary - 1 scientific manual
6 of this month's ebooks were by Canadians or had a connection to
Canada.
12 of this month's titles were fiction, 5 were non-fiction, and one
was an anthology of fiction with a lengthy introductory essay.
April saw the posting of two further titles by the famous English
novelist and essayist Arnold Bennett (1867-1931), courtesy of
Distributed Proofreaders Europe.
Authors new to PGC this month included:
Abbott-Smith, George (1864-1947) [Canadian theologian and
philologist]
Bridges, Thomas Charles (1868-1944) [English boys'
novelist]
Gaskell, Elizabeth Cleghorn (1810-1865) [English novelist
and biographer]
Lawler, James (1868-1945) [Canadian silviculturist]
McArthur, Peter Gilchrist (1866-1924) [Canadian journalist] Niven,
Frederick John (1878-1944) [Canadian novelist]
Thorpe, James (1876-1949) [English cartoonist]
***************
Thanks as ever for your support!
Mark
[View Less]