icommons

log in
new to icommons.org? register

            
type a tag | tag cloud
meu painel
publish/create
editing queue
voting queue
icommons blog

Eerko on flickr.com 1 week to go until iSummit registration closes

Well, believe it or not but the iSummit is only 14 days away, which means that the staff in South Africa and Japan need to start tallying numbers and assigning hotel rooms to all those who intend on coming to the iSummit in Sapporo. This means that registration is closing on Monday 21 July, at 4pm GMT + 2, giving you one week to login to the system to book your seat at the event... more

 
Open Library - All The Books You Could Ever Read
1
Rebecca Kahn, iCommons reporter (South Africa) · Sep 07th, 2007 4:15 pm · 53 votes · 7 comments
 
Open Library by JaunJaen on Flickr, JuanJaen on Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/)
Open Library by JaunJaen on Flickr, by JuanJaen on Flickr
Back in the mists of time, when we used to look things up in books, and not on Google, libraries were the first place we used to go. For many people, the person you turned to when you wanted to know something, was a librarian. They would direct you to the book, dictionary or other resource where you could find what you were looking for.

Libraries were also the place where we could wander, picking up books that appealed to us just because they looked interesting, browsing and moving on. Much like many people now use the Internet – wandering from source to source, reading a bit here and there and then moving on.

One would imagine that, in the digital age, libraries and online communities would meld really well, since, for many people, the process of (and pleasure they take in) finding information is the same. It hasn’t always been the case, though. Many libraries have resisted using and cataloguing on the internet, and many developers baulk at the volume of content, and prefer to look at ways of presenting new information, rather than reformatting information that already exists.

But the instances where libraries and developers have come together, the results have been spectacularly exciting. Google Book Search, LibraryThing, and Librivox are some of the examples. And now there is another one: an elegant, useful, totally comprehensive and exciting project called Open Library, a brainchild of the Internet Archive.

Due to launch in October, Open Library is the big daddy of online libraries – it’s a place where entire books are housed, as beautiful, elegant scans. You can see the illustrations and covers of books long out of print. You can also find the metadata about the book – in a pop-up that looks just like an old fashioned catalogue card, you can find a book’s ISBN number, publisher, date of publication, what collection the physical book belongs to, and where it was housed. It’s a phenomenal wealth of information, tailor-made for the bookworms and data-freaks.

But Open Library has taken this degree of access one step further. If a book is in the public domain, it is free to download, print and share from the site. Or you can send it to a third-party printer, who will print it for a nominal fee. If an audio version of the book exists, you can listen to it. And if you have a collection of your own public domain books, you can load them up onto the site. Books can be read in different viewers, and some of them will be offered on the $100 laptops for children around the world.

Open Library aims to, one day, include all books that have ever been published. That’s a huge task. At the moment, they’re partnering with over 30 different libraries, including the Smithsonian Institution, the Missouri Botanical Garden and the University of Toronto to scan and load all or part of their collections.

It’s a beautiful, exciting, inspiring project. iCommons spoke to Aaron Swartz, the Tech lead on the Open Library project, a man who reads a lot of books…


What was the initial impetus to start this very ambitious project?
I think the first inclinations I got toward it were when I was reading a magazine article and it gushed about some classic book. I went to find it on the Internet but the book was old and out of print so there was nothing. Amazon does carry out of print books and libraries don't have much more than a sentence. I wished there could be a site that had information about every book, not just the ones publishers were pushing at the time.

Digital libraries free up public domain books that often would never be noticed on a library shelf. This is important. But I wonder sometimes if these odd, sometimes wonderful, often obscure books don't just bog down digital libraries with oddities and clutter metadata?

Certainly we need to get better at search – at Open Library we're hoping to rank more highly books that have been reviewed in major papers and magazines, that lots of users buy or visit, that have lots of copies, etcetera. But there is still some joy in coming across an oddity, just like in a grand real library.

Open Library offers content, covers, different versions of the same text - where did you source all your scans from, and how long did it take to scan and upload them all?
The scans are being done our parent project, the Internet Archive – companies and libraries have been funding them to take books off their shelves and run them through the scanner. They've been at it for several years now.

Reading a book on Open Library is very easy and elegant, unlike some other digital libraries that are very clunky and rough. What factors influenced the design of this interface?
Thanks. We still have some ways to go with the book interface, but we wanted something that felt comfortable to read. We can do so much more with digital books that we thought we should try to make a reading experience that was even more comfortable than with paper.

How does the Internet Archive plan to keep a project like this sustainable?

We're hoping to get grants form library associations and make some money of book sale commissions. But our costs are surprisingly low.

I'm interested in the potential for online and traditional libraries to compliment each other as sources and repositories of knowledge. How does the Internet Archive see the Open Library complimenting and working with the libraries that have partnered in the project into the future?
We hope to push people towards libraries in their area. When they find a classic old book they want, we'll tell them which local libraries have a copy and how to get to them.

The official launch is in October. How many books are you planning to have uploaded for the launch?
We're hoping to have several hundred thousand with full text and tens of millions with catalogue records.

Book people are often a bit funny about where they read (by daylight, lamplight, sitting up, lying down…) Where do you like to read?
Heh. I find it hard to find a comfortable position. I usually switch between sitting up and lying down. I read all day on many occasions so I often have to go through the switch from daylight to lamplight.


If you visit Open Library before October, be aware that you will be looking at the demo site. Which is a lovely thing in itself, but not final. So keep your eyes open for their launch.

tags: johannesburg south africa culture library web-20 books archives knowledge


  comments rss add a comment  
 
Wow, what a great project!!!

Do you know what sort of software the Open Library uses for the book-reading interface? Is the source code freely available? I've heard from some people that they are looking to set up their own digital library, and they didn't have the software to make it happen...yet the Open Library has developed such a nice, smooth way of browsing and even "turning the pages!" Lovely!
Michelle Thorne · Berlin (Germany) · Sep 05th, 2007 6:58 pm
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame

It is an amazing project - I'm going to watch this one very carefully.

I don't know what the software is - there seems to be a lot of discussion on this topic going on at the moment, though. If you go to Open Library and click on the link that says The Vision on the left hand side, they go into a lot of detail about the process of setting up the reader, so maybe they'll reveal their secrets!

Glad you liked the story
Rebecca Kahn, iCommons reporter (South Africa) · Sep 06th, 2007 12:43 am
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame

there's info about software used hidden on the page. basically they've written their own database software, linked this to a hand-written wiki system, and placed on top of this a book display app from the British Library, I think. but the plan is to have multiple user interfaces on top of the database.
Alek Tarkowski · Warszawa (Poland) · Sep 06th, 2007 11:47 pm
2 out of 2 people believe this is useful
your take: useful lame

Thanks Alek.
I think a lot of people will find this really useful.

Rebecca Kahn, iCommons reporter (South Africa) · Sep 06th, 2007 11:50 pm
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame

At the university of Oslo faculties are able to put texts together that a student might want to use from the point of view of the people that run the course. Only students doing that course are able to buy that text and the course book is very expensive. From what I understand they are able to use any content from the library to create the student text book. I wondered if different copyright law in Norway might allow the university to do this without permission ? My partner who is doing research here mentioned that the physical and digital libraries here are the best equipped she has been to. The course books are perfect from her point of view, they save a lot time and make the process much easier. Does it work this way at many universities ? I'm not really that sure how it works, yet i can try get more information if you like.
Jamison · Oslo (Norway) · Sep 08th, 2007 4:12 pm
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame

Steve Cisler, Director, KnowledgeX Project In May of this year the state of California officially recognized the Internet Archive as a library.

The author says that many libraries "have resisted using and cataloguing on the internet" but many academic libraries put their catalogs online in the late 80's, and in terms of metadata standards they have worked with industry and people like Brewster Kahle, the head of Internet Archive. Libraries have been at the forefront of data interchange standards, something that can't be said for social software sites. Imagine trying to move your Facebook content to some other social networking site.
Steve Cisler, Director, KnowledgeX Project · Sep 14th, 2007 2:25 am
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame

Awe-inspiring project. But it would also be nice to have a machine-readable, e-readable version, or is this duplicating Project Gutenberg? If so, does room for collaboration exist?
Matt Hanson (International) · Mar 13th, 2008 4:36 am
your call: is this comment useful?
your take: useful lame
 


  add a comment: you must be logged on in order to comment. please log in or register at iCommons.org and and your comments right after.