Moving ahead with PGCanada
Seeing the messages posted to this mailing list in the last week has made me reevaluate my position relative to PG of Canada. I had just assumed that work was going on behind the scenes, and eventually, something would come out. When I read James' message of Jan. 6, that made me consider what the possibility was of taking a more active role myself. Right now, I really want this to happen, so I will begin trying to act as "main organizer" unless any objections are made. First of all, I assume that we are working together, doing this as a group. Because we are a group, there are issues that will have to be worked out, either ahead of time, or as they happen to come up. If you are a single person making your own collection of books, such as Stephen Davies at Gaslight (http://gaslight.mtroyal.ab.ca/), or Aurthur Wendover at Arthur's Classic Novels (http://arthursclassicnovels.com/), then you can work details out as you go along, and handle them in your own way, because no one else needs to be aware of the details. But with more people, communication of some kind is needed. In my experience, if you get four PG volunteers discussing a particular topic, you already are likely to have five different viewpoints. These are the kind of ever-circling discussions that James has expressed a distaste for. But an exchange of views must happen unless we want to just have one person dictating "This is how it's going to be!" I must make comparisons here with what I know, which is what I've seen with volunteers for PG-US. Despite some people who argue to the contrary, PG has traditionaly avoided dictating how details ought to be handled and been very open to volunteers who want to do things a little differently. What this means is that there have been many times when, for one particular detail, you have had various volunteers each use their own preferred method, and then eventually a consensus would emerge, and later it would be stated as a "rule". A good example of this is italics. In PG plain text files, you can find italics indicated /like this/ or LIKE THIS or _like this_ as well as occasionally other methods. In the end the use of _underscores_ has become the "rule". This approach of gradually letting a consensus find itself can be seen in many other places, such as the encoding of emdashes, use of HTML markup, how and when "new editions" are made, etc. This has the benefit of encouraging volunteers, and, I would argue, is partly responsible for the continuous growth PG has seen. However, it does mean that there are a vast number of undocumented inconsistencies in the PG archive, ranging from the very small to the glaringly large. I would like PG of Canada to be more restrictive in its "guidelines", even if this does mean that fewer titles will be contributed. Right now I would suggest that effort should go toward getting the legalities and a basic framework for a preliminary set of test files in place. Andrew
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Andrew Sly