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March 2010
- 1 participants
- 3 discussions
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010, Vicki wrote:
> This is my second request. Please remove me from your mailing list.
This is my second response:
I can't delete you, only you can delete you, or else hackers could
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Copyright ? 1971-2004 Project Gutenberg -- All Rights Reserved.
Most recently updated: 2004-08-07 16:33:32.
>
> Thank you in advance.
>
> ---Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass.. It's about learning to
> dance in the rain.
>
>
> On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 10:05 AM, Michael S. Hart <hart(a)pglaf.org> wrote:
>
> The Project Gutenberg Monthly Newsletter--Mar. 21, 2010
> eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since 1971
>
>
> The 40th Year of PG eBooks Starts on July 4, 2010!!!!!!
>
>
> Please note TWO new Project Gutenberg web pages below--
> new features, new search engines, etc. Please test and
> make comments, suggestions, etc.
>
>
>
> 33 Months to The End of the World Via Mayan Calendaring
> on December 21, 2012 [some now saying October 11, 2011]
>
> Leaving 2 years 9 months, 11 seasons, or 33 months.
> [Leaving 1 year 7 months, 6 1/3 seasons, or 19 months.]
> [All bracketed figures minus 10 days, of course.]
>
> Not to worry, I will still make long range predictions,
> such as that there will be affordable petabytes [2021],
> and enough eBooks to fill an entire petabyte around the
> same time. Current long range prediction for drives:
> 1 petabyte drives in 2025, possibly even in 2022, along
> with 1 terabyte solid state drives [SSDs]. 1 petabyte=
> enough storage for every word ever published, 1 billion
> books of 1 million characters each.
>
>
> Help! In Spanish!
>
> I need a Spanish speaking PG volunteer, as an interview
> is not going well because I can't tell what they want.
>
>
>
> Portuguese and Chinese Battling for Top Five List
>
> Yesteday Portuguese finally managed to catch Chinese to
> enter our Top Five List of non-Enlish eBooks, with just
> over 400 PG eBooks now available in each. Given bigger
> Internet access in China these days, I should think out
> Chinese collection would be taking off, but it appears,
> stongly appears, that we need some real help there.
>
> In addition, given that relative Spanish and Portuguese
> population difference, that Spanish would catch up, and
> then surpass Portuguese, but at this rate it will be on
> the order of months before Spanish reaches 300 eBooks.
>
>
> Request:
>
> 1894 Dr. Johnson Edition of:
> The Complete Works of Shakespeare collection.
> Missing volumes 2 & 6. Got all the other volumes for a
> couple dollars at a garage sale, but will pay 20 dollars
> each for for volumes 2 & 6.
>
>
>
> Come See Project Gutenberg's CEO and Founder Together
>
>
> PGLAF CEO Greg Newby will join PG founder Michael Hart
> at a symposium on the U. Illinois campus. Registration
> is free but limited. The panel with Michael & Greg is:
>
> Thursday April 15 from 1:30-3pm
> Alice Campbell Alumni Center
> 601 S Lincoln Ave, Urbana, IL 61801
>
>
> In or near Illinois: Please save the date for the upcoming
> symposium:
> "Fifty Years of Public Computing at the University of Illinois."
>
> Participants will discuss the meaning and legacy of ten Illinois
> projects
> that shaped public computing, beginning with PLATO in 1960. The
> innovative
> founders of these projects, as well as prominent scholars in the
> field and
> early users, will discuss Illinois' special place in the history of
> public
> computing, reflect on current and future projects such as the
> Urbana-Champaign Big Broadband (UC2B) proposal, and discuss how to
> extend
> this culture of innovation into the future.
>
>
> These Projects Include
>
> * PLATO (1960)
> * Project Gutenberg (1971)
> * Urbana Free Library on the Internet (1984))
> * CCNet (1993)
> * Mosaic (1993)
> * PrairieNet (1994)
> * U-C Indymedia Center (1999)
> * C-U Wireless Network (2001)
> * eToysIllinois (2004) and other recent K-12 teaching projects)
>
>
> The Graduate School of Library and Information Science and the
> Department
> of Computer Science are working in open collaboration to coordinate
> this
> event. Participation and support are welcome!
>
> http://50years.lis.illinois.edu/
>
>
> GENERATION CHANGE
>
> I got a book this week called "Generation Change," that
> lists "150 Ways We Can Change Ourselves, Our Country,
> and Our World." Most of these 150 items come with some
> suggestion of sites to visit on the Internet. #1 is:
>
> PROJECT GUTNBERG!!!!!!!
>
> "Generation Change" is available from:
>
> http://www.skyhorsepublishing.com
>
>
>
>
> HEADLINE NEWS
>
>
> APPLE SEEMS READY TO RELEASE iPAD EREADER/TABLET
>
> Help create the "http://m.gutenberg.org" web pages!!!
>
> We are working on making all our eBooks optimized to do
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> devices, and to do our web pages to the same degree.
>
> Let us know if you have any of these and can test them,
> or would like to optimize for any other devices.
>
> There are 4.5 billion such devices in the world, versus
> only 1.15 billion computers, and more and more readers,
> in spite of what the pundits say, are surfing, reading,
> and everything else on such mobile devices.
>
> More and more such devices will ONLY surf to "m" sites
> such as "m.gutenberg.org"
>
>
>
> In Our Own News Bin
>
>
> New Project Gutenberg Web Pages
>
>
> We have two new Project Gutenberg web sites up for testing.
>
> I think you will find some interesting additional searching
> and expanded lists of other eBook sites worth trying out:
>
> http://gutenberg.trulymail.comi
>
>
> and another new effort at:
>
>
> http://domainunltd.weebly.com/
>
> Details:
>
> The goal I'm aiming at with this initiative is twofold.
>
> I'd like to provide as much useful information as possible
> about e-books (freely) available on the web, where to find them.
>
> And secondly, to offer people the opportunity to help out,
> producing e-text for PG, in first instance by doing a first
> round of proofreading on texts I deliver.
>
> People who want to do more are welcome to and can count on help
> in going through the process from start to finish.
>
> Experienced proofers who enjoy working on a complete book
> are also very welcome.
>
> Marc D'Hooge
> marcdH(a)belgium-mail.com
>
>
>
>
> We posted our 400th Portuguese eBook.
>
>
> And our 500th eBook from PG of Canada.
>
>
> Details were posted in an Extra Newsletter 10 days ago.
>
>
>
> PG of Europe should be posting their 700th eBook today!
>
>
>
> OLDER NEWS. . . .
>
>
> ONGOING U.S. COPYRIGHT EXTENSIONS
>
> U.S. COPYRIGHTS TO BE EXTENDED TO 115 YEARS,
> DECADE BY DECADE FROM THE ORIGINAL 14 YEARS!
>
> THE SUPREME COURT SAYS IT NEVER HAS TO STOP!!!
>
>
>
> Apparently everyone is keeping silent about the various
> copyright extensions coming up in Canada and the U.S.
>
> In just a few years yet another bill will be introduced
> in the U.S. Congress to extend copyright that has quite
> literally been extended from 14 years to 115 years.
>
>
> Can anything be done to stop the next U.S. extension?
>
> or
>
> If not stop them, at least publicize them a little?
>
>
> Suggestions are more than welcome.
>
>
> I should add that this is probably a losing battle even
> if it looks as if we are winning.
>
> Here's why:
>
> When the last Australian Copyright Act was discussed in
> Parliament, they passed a resolution stating they would
> NOT extend copyrights.
>
> Really.
>
> However, just three years later, under economic warfare
> from, shall we just say, outside sources, they crumbled
> to the pressure and gave in.
>
>
> The Canadian Parliament is currently in that position--
> and while some tell me they have enough signatures from
> those against any extensions, I will bet you lunch that
> they, too, crumble before it is over.
>
> I would gladly lose every one of those wagers!!!
>
>
>
> Further Information
>
>
> As you may already know, any time the copyrights in the
> characters Winnie the Pooh [1926], or The Mouse [1928],
> start coming close to expiration The U.S. Congress will
> be sure to start a very quiet frenzy of copyright bills
> that are designed to go into effect before anything can
> happen to those two copyrights.
>
> As I understand it, Disney(R) made a huge lobby effort,
> successful, to create the 1976 U.S. Copyright Act; paid
> as a result an additional $200 million for the right to
> another 20 years of Winnie the Pooh, and still made the
> fabled laughing trip to the bank as a result, since the
> effective date of 1978.
>
> As a result I have to imagine their sales of The Mouse,
> Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, etc., must have been predicted
> to be so terribly large as to devour Avatar's gross.
>
> Given that next bill passed right in the middle of what
> must have been the busiest day in Congress for the last
> few decades, the impeachment of President Clinton, this
> means we should expect something of equal secrecy quite
> soon, as the current copyright extension runs out 2018.
>
> Usually they would make an effort to pass the new one a
> session or two early, such as in 2016, but given that a
> snag or two has hit before, we should probably look out
> starting in 2015, though it will be hard to see.
>
> Why?
>
> Even during the election just before the last extension
> I went to ask televised press conference questions on a
> new U.S. Copyright Act I had heard about, but candidate
> responses were uniform. . ."I know nothing."
>
> I would have to expect that even if the big anchors ask
> the same question in 2015 they will get that answer.
>
> Or non-answer.
>
> >From what I have heard there is an ever larger movement
> to keep everything copyrighted permanently, and to make
> all media as pay-per-view as possible, to the points of
> making all broadcast television pay-per-view on a first
> viewing premise [except public stations].
>
> We are very likely to see a dissolving out boundaries--
> cable products showing up on network television and the
> opposite direction as well.
>
> What else CAN we expect when Comcast cable has been the
> allowed buyer of NBC?
>
> If you think programming won't leak over:
>
> Consider what happened when Disney took over ABC.
>
> Not only did Disney flood ABC with their own programmed
> output, but they killed off the best of all cartoons.
>
> Anyone remember Reboot?
>
>
> I can put you in touch with many copyright experts, and
> I fear that all of them underestimate the power working
> to make copyright permanent, in spite of the fact words
> "limited time" are the U.s. Constitution's description.
>
> However, the U.s. Supreme Court decided that limited is
> really unlimited in "Eldred v Ashcroft."
>
>
>
> Welcome To Our Newest PG Mirror. . .In Africa!!!
>
> Continent: Africa
> Nation: Namibia
> Location: Windhoek
> Provider: Polytechnic of Namibia
> Url: http://gutenberg.polytechnic.edu.na
> Url: http://ftp.polytechnic.edu.na/pub/gutenberg
>
> The mirror is updated thrice daily.
>
>
>
>
> PROJECT GUTENBERG TAG CLOUD
>
> We invite interested persons to visit a tag cloud visualization and
> search system at www.bookdownloadlibrary.com
>
> This is updated weekly, from the Project Gutenberg catalog.
>
>
> iPHONE SOUGHT
>
> Project Gutenberg is seeking donation of an iPhone, and perhaps
> other modern cell phones and eBook readers. We are working on some
> new versions of content at www.gutenberg.org
>
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> unlockable. We are particularly interested in devices that have
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> without using the cellular network at all.
>
> Project Gutenberg is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization in the US.
>
>
>
> Our All Time Hottest Requests!!!!!!!
>
>
> FLASH RAM
>
>
> I am looking for the earliest flash RAM possible.
>
> The ideal piece around which to center this collection is
> one of the 8 megabyte USBs.
>
> 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.
>
> These totals do NOT include 75,000+ at
>
> http://www.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 ~31,000+ at
>
> http://www.gutenberg.org
>
> and our other Project Gutenberg Sites
>
>
>
> week up to Mar. 21
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Sun 2010-03-14 | 9
> Mon 2010-03-15 | 16
> Tue 2010-03-16 | 11
> Wed 2010-03-17 | 12
> Thu 2010-03-18 | 16
> Fri 2010-03-19 | 6
> Sat 2010-03-20 | 11
> ==
> 81
>
>
> Week up to Feb. 21
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Sun 2010-02-14 | 5
> Mon 2010-02-15 | 12
> Tue 2010-02-16 | 10
> Wed 2010-02-17 | 16
> Thu 2010-02-18 | 11
> Fri 2010-02-19 | 4
> Sat 2010-02-20 | 4
> ==
> 62
>
>
> Week up to Jan. 21st:
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Thu 2010-01-14 | 8
> Fri 2010-01-15 | 13
> Sat 2010-01-16 | 16
> Sun 2010-01-17 | 8
> Mon 2010-01-18 | 12
> Tue 2010-01-19 | 5
> Wed 2010-01-20 | 11
> ==
> 73
>
> Previous Month
>
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Mon 2009-12-14 | 11
> Tue 2009-12-15 | 4
> Wed 2009-12-16 | 4
> Thu 2009-12-17 | 10
> Fri 2009-12-18 | 7
> Sat 2009-12-19 | 7
> Sun 2009-12-20 | 9
>
>
> Previous month:
>
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Sat 2009-11-14 | 6
> Sun 2009-11-15 | 4
> Mon 2009-11-16 | 6
> Tue 2009-11-17 | 9
> Wed 2009-11-18 | 3
> Thu 2009-11-19 | 6
> Fri 2009-11-20 | 5
>
>
> Thanks to Marcello Perathoner!
>
>
> ///
>
>
> Here are the current language totals
> for languages with 200 or more eBooks.
>
> Mar 21st
>
>
> Grand total for today: 31616
>
> 26540 English en
> 1568 French fr
> 662 German de
> 524 Finnish fi
> 472 Dutch nl
> 410 Portuguese pt
> 405 Chinese zh
> 283 Spanish es
> 235 Italian it
>
>
> Feb. 21st
>
>
> Grand total for today: 31234
>
> 26241 English en
> 1557 French fr
> 647 German de
> 521 Finnish fi
> 470 Dutch nl
> 405 Chinese zh
> 395 Portuguese pt
> 275 Spanish es
> 234 Italian it
>
>
> Jan. 21st
>
> Grand total for today: 30935
>
> 25995 English en
> 1547 French fr
> 628 German de
> 518 Finnish fi
> 459 Dutch nl
> 405 Chinese zh
> 391 Portuguese pt
> 274 Spanish es
> 230 Italian it
>
>
> Compared to last month:
>
>
> Grand total
>
> 25757 English en
> 1520 French fr
> 618 German de
> 515 Finnish fi
> 453 Dutch nl
> 405 Chinese zh
> 376 Portuguese pt
> 270 Spanish es
> 220 Italian it
>
>
>
> Compared to previous month's:
>
>
> Grand total for today: 30399
>
> 25587 English en
> 1498 French fr
> 614 German de
> 515 Finnish fi
> 451 Dutch nl
> 404 Chinese zh
> 371 Portuguese pt
> 268 Spanish es
> 218 Italian it
>
>
>
> Previous increases:
>
> +214
> +205
> +254
> +281
> +294
> +287
>
>
> All Reported Languges
>
>
> Not counting PrePrints, Canada, Australia, PG Europe
>
>
> Thanks to Greg Newby!
>
>
> ///
>
>
> >From Project Gutenberg Sites Worldwide
>
> [Don't forget ~75,000 at http://www.gutenberg.cc in .pdf]
>
>
>
> Mar 21st
>
> 31,616 up from 31,234 up 382 PG General Automated Count
> 1,845 up from 1,842 up 3 PG of Australia
> 699 up from 684 up 15 PG of Europe
> 2,008 -- 2,008 -- 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
> 504 up from 486 up 18 PG of Canada
> ======
> 36,672 up from 36,254 up 418 Grand Total
>
>
>
> Feb 21st
>
> 31,234 up from 30,935 up 299 PG General Automated Count
> 1,842 up from 1,834 up 8 PG of Australia
> 684 up from 680 up 4 PG of Europe
> 2,008 -- 2,008 up 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
> 486 up from 462 up 24 PG of Canada
> Posted #400 on October 10
> July: 14 (Title 349 to 362)
> August: 16 (Titles 363 to 378)
> September: 17 (Titles 379 to 395)
> October: 13 (Titles 396 to 408)
> November: 9 [up to November 21]
> December: 19[up to December 21]
> ======
> 36,254 up from 35,919 up 335
>
>
> Jan 21st
>
> 30,935 up from 30,613 up 322 PG General Automated Count
> 1,834 up from 1,830 up 4 PG of Australia
> 680 up from 664 up 16 PG of Europe
> 2,008 -- 2,008 up 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
> 462 up from 436 up 26 PG of Canada
> Posted #400 on October 10
> ======
> 35,919 up from 35,551 up 368
>
>
>
> Previous month:
>
> 35,551 up 240 [Not including Canada's illustrations]
>
>
> 35,311 up 235 [Including correcting above estimate by 2]
>
>
>
> 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 2009
>
>
>
> day | cnt
> ----------------+-----
> Wed 2009-12-30 | 9
> Thu 2009-12-31 | 12
> Fri 2010-01-01 | 6
> Sat 2010-01-02 | 10
> Sun 2010-01-03 | 2
> Mon 2010-01-04 | 21
> Tue 2010-01-05 | 5
>
> Weekly Total 65
>
>
>
> Grand total for today: 30761 from automated in house counter
>
> 25866 English en
> 1531 French fr
> 625 German de
> 517 Finnish fi
> 455 Dutch nl
> 405 Chinese zh
> 384 Portuguese pt
> 270 Spanish es
> 225 Italian it
> etc.
>
>
>
> 30,761 Up 3,145 From 27,616 PG General Automated Count
> 1,830 Up 104 From 1,726 Project Gutenberg of Australia
> 675 Up 121 From 554 Project Gutenberg of Europe
> 468 Up 243 From 225 Project Gutenberg of Canada
> [Estimated]
> 2,008 DN 423 From 2,431 PrePrints [Subtracted 307 Chinese
> eBooks]
> ====== ======
> 35,742 Up 3,190 From 32,552 Grand Total [Counting
> subtractions]
>
>
> 9.825 eBooks Per Day
> 68.773 eBooks Per Week
> 297.850 eBooks Per Month
>
>
>
>
> ///
>
>
> 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 Calculating
> 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
>
> ///
>
>
> Many thanks to all who have helped us reach our 39th year!
>
>
> Michael S. Hart
> Founder
> Project Gutenberg
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> gmonthly mailing list
> gmonthly(a)lists.pglaf.org
> http://lists.pglaf.org/mailman/listinfo/gmonthly
>
>
>
>
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The Project Gutenberg Monthly Newsletter--Mar. 21, 2010
eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since 1971
The 40th Year of PG eBooks Starts on July 4, 2010!!!!!!
Please note TWO new Project Gutenberg web pages below--
new features, new search engines, etc. Please test and
make comments, suggestions, etc.
33 Months to The End of the World Via Mayan Calendaring
on December 21, 2012 [some now saying October 11, 2011]
Leaving 2 years 9 months, 11 seasons, or 33 months.
[Leaving 1 year 7 months, 6 1/3 seasons, or 19 months.]
[All bracketed figures minus 10 days, of course.]
Not to worry, I will still make long range predictions,
such as that there will be affordable petabytes [2021],
and enough eBooks to fill an entire petabyte around the
same time. Current long range prediction for drives:
1 petabyte drives in 2025, possibly even in 2022, along
with 1 terabyte solid state drives [SSDs]. 1 petabyte=
enough storage for every word ever published, 1 billion
books of 1 million characters each.
Help! In Spanish!
I need a Spanish speaking PG volunteer, as an interview
is not going well because I can't tell what they want.
Portuguese and Chinese Battling for Top Five List
Yesteday Portuguese finally managed to catch Chinese to
enter our Top Five List of non-Enlish eBooks, with just
over 400 PG eBooks now available in each. Given bigger
Internet access in China these days, I should think out
Chinese collection would be taking off, but it appears,
stongly appears, that we need some real help there.
In addition, given that relative Spanish and Portuguese
population difference, that Spanish would catch up, and
then surpass Portuguese, but at this rate it will be on
the order of months before Spanish reaches 300 eBooks.
Request:
1894 Dr. Johnson Edition of:
The Complete Works of Shakespeare collection.
Missing volumes 2 & 6. Got all the other volumes for a
couple dollars at a garage sale, but will pay 20 dollars
each for for volumes 2 & 6.
Come See Project Gutenberg's CEO and Founder Together
PGLAF CEO Greg Newby will join PG founder Michael Hart
at a symposium on the U. Illinois campus. Registration
is free but limited. The panel with Michael & Greg is:
Thursday April 15 from 1:30-3pm
Alice Campbell Alumni Center
601 S Lincoln Ave, Urbana, IL 61801
In or near Illinois: Please save the date for the upcoming symposium:
"Fifty Years of Public Computing at the University of Illinois."
Participants will discuss the meaning and legacy of ten Illinois projects
that shaped public computing, beginning with PLATO in 1960. The innovative
founders of these projects, as well as prominent scholars in the field and
early users, will discuss Illinois' special place in the history of public
computing, reflect on current and future projects such as the
Urbana-Champaign Big Broadband (UC2B) proposal, and discuss how to extend
this culture of innovation into the future.
These Projects Include
* PLATO (1960)
* Project Gutenberg (1971)
* Urbana Free Library on the Internet (1984))
* CCNet (1993)
* Mosaic (1993)
* PrairieNet (1994)
* U-C Indymedia Center (1999)
* C-U Wireless Network (2001)
* eToysIllinois (2004) and other recent K-12 teaching projects)
The Graduate School of Library and Information Science and the Department
of Computer Science are working in open collaboration to coordinate this
event. Participation and support are welcome!
http://50years.lis.illinois.edu/
GENERATION CHANGE
I got a book this week called "Generation Change," that
lists "150 Ways We Can Change Ourselves, Our Country,
and Our World." Most of these 150 items come with some
suggestion of sites to visit on the Internet. #1 is:
PROJECT GUTNBERG!!!!!!!
"Generation Change" is available from:
http://www.skyhorsepublishing.com
HEADLINE NEWS
APPLE SEEMS READY TO RELEASE iPAD EREADER/TABLET
Help create the "http://m.gutenberg.org" web pages!!!
We are working on making all our eBooks optimized to do
their best on iPads, iPhones, iPods, cellphones and PDA
devices, and to do our web pages to the same degree.
Let us know if you have any of these and can test them,
or would like to optimize for any other devices.
There are 4.5 billion such devices in the world, versus
only 1.15 billion computers, and more and more readers,
in spite of what the pundits say, are surfing, reading,
and everything else on such mobile devices.
More and more such devices will ONLY surf to "m" sites
such as "m.gutenberg.org"
In Our Own News Bin
New Project Gutenberg Web Pages
We have two new Project Gutenberg web sites up for testing.
I think you will find some interesting additional searching
and expanded lists of other eBook sites worth trying out:
http://gutenberg.trulymail.comi
and another new effort at:
http://domainunltd.weebly.com/
Details:
The goal I'm aiming at with this initiative is twofold.
I'd like to provide as much useful information as possible
about e-books (freely) available on the web, where to find them.
And secondly, to offer people the opportunity to help out,
producing e-text for PG, in first instance by doing a first
round of proofreading on texts I deliver.
People who want to do more are welcome to and can count on help
in going through the process from start to finish.
Experienced proofers who enjoy working on a complete book
are also very welcome.
Marc D'Hooge
marcdH(a)belgium-mail.com
We posted our 400th Portuguese eBook.
And our 500th eBook from PG of Canada.
Details were posted in an Extra Newsletter 10 days ago.
PG of Europe should be posting their 700th eBook today!
OLDER NEWS. . . .
ONGOING U.S. COPYRIGHT EXTENSIONS
U.S. COPYRIGHTS TO BE EXTENDED TO 115 YEARS,
DECADE BY DECADE FROM THE ORIGINAL 14 YEARS!
THE SUPREME COURT SAYS IT NEVER HAS TO STOP!!!
Apparently everyone is keeping silent about the various
copyright extensions coming up in Canada and the U.S.
In just a few years yet another bill will be introduced
in the U.S. Congress to extend copyright that has quite
literally been extended from 14 years to 115 years.
Can anything be done to stop the next U.S. extension?
or
If not stop them, at least publicize them a little?
Suggestions are more than welcome.
I should add that this is probably a losing battle even
if it looks as if we are winning.
Here's why:
When the last Australian Copyright Act was discussed in
Parliament, they passed a resolution stating they would
NOT extend copyrights.
Really.
However, just three years later, under economic warfare
from, shall we just say, outside sources, they crumbled
to the pressure and gave in.
The Canadian Parliament is currently in that position--
and while some tell me they have enough signatures from
those against any extensions, I will bet you lunch that
they, too, crumble before it is over.
I would gladly lose every one of those wagers!!!
Further Information
As you may already know, any time the copyrights in the
characters Winnie the Pooh [1926], or The Mouse [1928],
start coming close to expiration The U.S. Congress will
be sure to start a very quiet frenzy of copyright bills
that are designed to go into effect before anything can
happen to those two copyrights.
As I understand it, Disney(R) made a huge lobby effort,
successful, to create the 1976 U.S. Copyright Act; paid
as a result an additional $200 million for the right to
another 20 years of Winnie the Pooh, and still made the
fabled laughing trip to the bank as a result, since the
effective date of 1978.
As a result I have to imagine their sales of The Mouse,
Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, etc., must have been predicted
to be so terribly large as to devour Avatar's gross.
Given that next bill passed right in the middle of what
must have been the busiest day in Congress for the last
few decades, the impeachment of President Clinton, this
means we should expect something of equal secrecy quite
soon, as the current copyright extension runs out 2018.
Usually they would make an effort to pass the new one a
session or two early, such as in 2016, but given that a
snag or two has hit before, we should probably look out
starting in 2015, though it will be hard to see.
Why?
Even during the election just before the last extension
I went to ask televised press conference questions on a
new U.S. Copyright Act I had heard about, but candidate
responses were uniform. . ."I know nothing."
I would have to expect that even if the big anchors ask
the same question in 2015 they will get that answer.
Or non-answer.
>From what I have heard there is an ever larger movement
to keep everything copyrighted permanently, and to make
all media as pay-per-view as possible, to the points of
making all broadcast television pay-per-view on a first
viewing premise [except public stations].
We are very likely to see a dissolving out boundaries--
cable products showing up on network television and the
opposite direction as well.
What else CAN we expect when Comcast cable has been the
allowed buyer of NBC?
If you think programming won't leak over:
Consider what happened when Disney took over ABC.
Not only did Disney flood ABC with their own programmed
output, but they killed off the best of all cartoons.
Anyone remember Reboot?
I can put you in touch with many copyright experts, and
I fear that all of them underestimate the power working
to make copyright permanent, in spite of the fact words
"limited time" are the U.s. Constitution's description.
However, the U.s. Supreme Court decided that limited is
really unlimited in "Eldred v Ashcroft."
Welcome To Our Newest PG Mirror. . .In Africa!!!
Continent: Africa
Nation: Namibia
Location: Windhoek
Provider: Polytechnic of Namibia
Url: http://gutenberg.polytechnic.edu.na
Url: http://ftp.polytechnic.edu.na/pub/gutenberg
The mirror is updated thrice daily.
PROJECT GUTENBERG TAG CLOUD
We invite interested persons to visit a tag cloud visualization and
search system at www.bookdownloadlibrary.com
This is updated weekly, from the Project Gutenberg catalog.
iPHONE SOUGHT
Project Gutenberg is seeking donation of an iPhone, and perhaps
other modern cell phones and eBook readers. We are working on some
new versions of content at www.gutenberg.org
These need to work, including in Europe , but without having a paid
cell phone plan. In other words, they need to be unlocked or
unlockable. We are particularly interested in devices that have
built-in WiFi, so they can access content at www.gutenberg.org
without using the cellular network at all.
Project Gutenberg is a charitable 501(c)(3) organization in the US.
Our All Time Hottest Requests!!!!!!!
FLASH RAM
I am looking for the earliest flash RAM possible.
The ideal piece around which to center this collection is
one of the 8 megabyte USBs.
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.
These totals do NOT include 75,000+ at
http://www.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 ~31,000+ at
http://www.gutenberg.org
and our other Project Gutenberg Sites
week up to Mar. 21
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Sun 2010-03-14 | 9
Mon 2010-03-15 | 16
Tue 2010-03-16 | 11
Wed 2010-03-17 | 12
Thu 2010-03-18 | 16
Fri 2010-03-19 | 6
Sat 2010-03-20 | 11
==
81
Week up to Feb. 21
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Sun 2010-02-14 | 5
Mon 2010-02-15 | 12
Tue 2010-02-16 | 10
Wed 2010-02-17 | 16
Thu 2010-02-18 | 11
Fri 2010-02-19 | 4
Sat 2010-02-20 | 4
==
62
Week up to Jan. 21st:
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Thu 2010-01-14 | 8
Fri 2010-01-15 | 13
Sat 2010-01-16 | 16
Sun 2010-01-17 | 8
Mon 2010-01-18 | 12
Tue 2010-01-19 | 5
Wed 2010-01-20 | 11
==
73
Previous Month
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Mon 2009-12-14 | 11
Tue 2009-12-15 | 4
Wed 2009-12-16 | 4
Thu 2009-12-17 | 10
Fri 2009-12-18 | 7
Sat 2009-12-19 | 7
Sun 2009-12-20 | 9
Previous month:
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Sat 2009-11-14 | 6
Sun 2009-11-15 | 4
Mon 2009-11-16 | 6
Tue 2009-11-17 | 9
Wed 2009-11-18 | 3
Thu 2009-11-19 | 6
Fri 2009-11-20 | 5
Thanks to Marcello Perathoner!
///
Here are the current language totals
for languages with 200 or more eBooks.
Mar 21st
Grand total for today: 31616
26540 English en
1568 French fr
662 German de
524 Finnish fi
472 Dutch nl
410 Portuguese pt
405 Chinese zh
283 Spanish es
235 Italian it
Feb. 21st
Grand total for today: 31234
26241 English en
1557 French fr
647 German de
521 Finnish fi
470 Dutch nl
405 Chinese zh
395 Portuguese pt
275 Spanish es
234 Italian it
Jan. 21st
Grand total for today: 30935
25995 English en
1547 French fr
628 German de
518 Finnish fi
459 Dutch nl
405 Chinese zh
391 Portuguese pt
274 Spanish es
230 Italian it
Compared to last month:
Grand total
25757 English en
1520 French fr
618 German de
515 Finnish fi
453 Dutch nl
405 Chinese zh
376 Portuguese pt
270 Spanish es
220 Italian it
Compared to previous month's:
Grand total for today: 30399
25587 English en
1498 French fr
614 German de
515 Finnish fi
451 Dutch nl
404 Chinese zh
371 Portuguese pt
268 Spanish es
218 Italian it
Previous increases:
+214
+205
+254
+281
+294
+287
All Reported Languges
Not counting PrePrints, Canada, Australia, PG Europe
Thanks to Greg Newby!
///
>From Project Gutenberg Sites Worldwide
[Don't forget ~75,000 at http://www.gutenberg.cc in .pdf]
Mar 21st
31,616 up from 31,234 up 382 PG General Automated Count
1,845 up from 1,842 up 3 PG of Australia
699 up from 684 up 15 PG of Europe
2,008 -- 2,008 -- 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
504 up from 486 up 18 PG of Canada
======
36,672 up from 36,254 up 418 Grand Total
Feb 21st
31,234 up from 30,935 up 299 PG General Automated Count
1,842 up from 1,834 up 8 PG of Australia
684 up from 680 up 4 PG of Europe
2,008 -- 2,008 up 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
486 up from 462 up 24 PG of Canada
Posted #400 on October 10
July: 14 (Title 349 to 362)
August: 16 (Titles 363 to 378)
September: 17 (Titles 379 to 395)
October: 13 (Titles 396 to 408)
November: 9 [up to November 21]
December: 19[up to December 21]
======
36,254 up from 35,919 up 335
Jan 21st
30,935 up from 30,613 up 322 PG General Automated Count
1,834 up from 1,830 up 4 PG of Australia
680 up from 664 up 16 PG of Europe
2,008 -- 2,008 up 0 PG PrePrints, Reserved [42?]
462 up from 436 up 26 PG of Canada
Posted #400 on October 10
======
35,919 up from 35,551 up 368
Previous month:
35,551 up 240 [Not including Canada's illustrations]
35,311 up 235 [Including correcting above estimate by 2]
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 2009
day | cnt
----------------+-----
Wed 2009-12-30 | 9
Thu 2009-12-31 | 12
Fri 2010-01-01 | 6
Sat 2010-01-02 | 10
Sun 2010-01-03 | 2
Mon 2010-01-04 | 21
Tue 2010-01-05 | 5
Weekly Total 65
Grand total for today: 30761 from automated in house counter
25866 English en
1531 French fr
625 German de
517 Finnish fi
455 Dutch nl
405 Chinese zh
384 Portuguese pt
270 Spanish es
225 Italian it
etc.
30,761 Up 3,145 From 27,616 PG General Automated Count
1,830 Up 104 From 1,726 Project Gutenberg of Australia
675 Up 121 From 554 Project Gutenberg of Europe
468 Up 243 From 225 Project Gutenberg of Canada [Estimated]
2,008 DN 423 From 2,431 PrePrints [Subtracted 307 Chinese eBooks]
====== ======
35,742 Up 3,190 From 32,552 Grand Total [Counting subtractions]
9.825 eBooks Per Day
68.773 eBooks Per Week
297.850 eBooks Per Month
///
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 Calculating
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
///
Many thanks to all who have helped us reach our 39th year!
Michael S. Hart
Founder
Project Gutenberg
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12 Mar '10
Project Gutenberg of Canada Releases 500th eBook!!!
Project Gutenberg Releases 400th Portuguese eBook!!
and
Please test our experimental new web page at:
http://gutenberg.trulymail.com/
[The last two menu entries don't work yet,
and "normal" search isn't in yet.]
Project Gutenberg of Canada Releases 500th eBook!!!
It is:
"Forty Years of Song" by Emma Albani, first published in 1911.
Emma Albani (1847-1930) was the first Canadian singer to gain
a worldwide reputation, which is rather something considering
the combination of Canada's low population and remoteness for
the time period. Think of how much "easier" it was for Piaf.
"Easier" quotes because Edith Piaf did not have an easy time,
but it was certainly easier for the world to find HER.
Here's some information about Albani:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Albani [en.wikipedia.org]
http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=7930
In addition Project Gutenberg just released our 400th eBook
in Portuguese:
Novo Dicionario da Lingua Portuguesa, by Candido Figueiredo
eBook # 31552
[Language: Portuguese]
[Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/3/1/5/5/31552 ]
[Files: ; 31552-0.txt]
Thanks to Rita Farinha, Alberto Manuel Brandao Simoes
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
generously made available by National Library of Portugal
(Biblioteca Nacional de Portugal).)
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