CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public- 20 years of speakers
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October 10, 2003 Increases in storage densities and falling costs make it possible to envision a future when all the publicly available human knowledge is made available to anyone, anywhere at anytime. In spite of determined praiseworthy efforts for two decades, projects such as Guttenberg have only been able capture a few thousand books accessible online. At a rate of under a thousand books per year, the estimated 100 million books ever published in the world will take 100,000 years to digitize. And we may never be able to catch up with the ever increasing new publications. Capturing born-digital publications at the time of creation (by requiring publishers to submit a digital copy as well the currently mandated physical copy) and scanning all the older publications at a rate of million books per year is one of the solutions being explored at this time to resolve this conundrum. Digitizing a million books a year requires finding, scanning, processing,
and storing in a web accessible form about 5000 books every day. The million
book project is an attempt to understand and solve the technical, economic
and social policy issues of providing online access to all creative works
of the human race. This talk will provide a status report on the Million
Books Project. |
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