Free as in Books?
donkeyDevil writes "Forget free software, contribute to free books! The Chronicle has an interesting story about bookcrossing.com's effort to track feral books through their captors. Read about it, then do it.
(Although the focus of the story is on Bay Arean book releasors, it looks like you'd have a better chance of snagging a free book here.)"
... has been going on for a long time making out-of-copyright works available to the public.
Here you have it: Project Guttenberg
How long before this is hijacked by publishers to promote novels in a fake "grass roots" caompaign? Maybe they'd just release a teaser version missing the last 10 pages or something.
I thought about some how starting sumthing like this while traveling abroad, I would stop at many hostels and read whatever books were laying around or swap one i had for one there. I always wondered how far certain books had gone or where they had come from.
;)
But on another note.. tagging the book's with ID's!! thats horrible! don't the books have a right to not just be a #!!! maybe they wanna have words identify themselves
Ummmm it's volountary dude. If you "find" a book crossings book, you're under no obligation whatsoever to register that fact, or to re-release it. Nobody is MAKING you do anything you don't want to. Sheeeeeesh.
As to books of dubious nature, have yiu actually been to the bookcrossings site and seen the titles that are being released and found? many great works of literature.
This is a FUN thing to do, no sense of Big Brother at all.
People who participate enjoy it, and a lot of them that have found books, read something they would never have read before, and have enjoyed doing so.
And the people shall be oppressed, every one by another, and every one by his neighbour Isaiah 3:5
The problem is that I want to keep the really good books so that I can read them again. If everybody else does this there'll be only bad books floating around
Hopefully tastes differ enough that someone will love a book that I dont, and it can have a good home. And when I read a great book in paperback I often buy a hardback copy to keep since it'll last longer, I think I'll start releasing those paperbacks. That way I can still reread the books I love, and give someone else the chance to discover them
- We are the slashdot. Resistance is futile. Prepare to be moderated -
Yes, because the absolute best message we can present to kids is "Reading is only meaningful when digested in a suitable, prepackaged form", followed by "Literature has no room for spontaneity" and of course the all-time favorite, "There's no way that reading could be fun, something you do on your own time."
Yessiree, that's sure to spike the interest of kids in reading...
Of course, the sane answer is, Why can't we do both? Teach literature in school and make it available to everyone?
The Mongrel Dogs Who Teach
Because it's voluntary.
Because it's non-intrusive.
Because it's opt-in.
Because it's not done by the government.
Because it's not done by a corporation whose only god is the bottom line.
Because it's non-exhaustive: you can ignore the books, pick one up and read it without tracking it, etc.
The threats to human freedom are real and urgent. But they're not omnipresent... sometimes, data can be a good thing. And I'd much rather see volunteer-driven, indivudal-centric projects like this than a mandated, national, bureaucratic effort like a national ID.
The Mongrel Dogs Who Teach
Think about it. Buy a chart CD and then register it on a site and release it. Persuade people to listen to it and then pass it on (Remember kids, copying is bad).
Everyone can then listen to the latest CDs without having to buy them first.
Then sit back and wait to see how long it will be before the RIAA makes giving away your personal property illegal.
People look for books in the library not on park benches and in seat backs.
:-)
Talk to the folks at your local Libary and give your books to them. I might be missing something but I think there would be better results working with your local libraries.
Then again, maybe not.
Keep the Classic Slashdot.
The most popular subjects there are "Science, Math and Computing" with 289 titles. There are quite a few other subjects covered there too.
The Assayer is more than just a list of books though - it has reader-contributed reviews. For example, here is the entry for DocBook: The Definitive Guide by Norman Walsh (available at www.docbook.org). There is a review at the bottom of the entry page.
I'm writing a Free book, although it is at a very early draft stage. The ZooLib Cookbook is a tutorial for the ZooLib cross-platform application framework.
I'm also slowly creating a copylefted collection of articles on software quality at the Linux Quality Database.
-- Could you use my software consulting serv
Sharing books a threat to privacy?
Ideology is fine and good,but when it starts seeing threats in every innocuous thing it crosses the line to paranoia.
It's not like the books have little GPS receivers and glom onto unsuspecting and unwilling people to transmit their reading habits to big brother. It's just a way for people to say "thank you" to a the chain of kind-hearted souls who released and rereleased the books before them, by making the good results of their actions visible.
Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
Check out the Book Thing of Baltimore if you're around Charm City some weekend. Russell just gives away books. You show up to the "free book place" and take as many as you want. The minimum is ten (he really won't let you leave) and the maximum is 150,000 books per person per day. Corner of 27th & N Charles St, look for the Free Books signs. Open Saturday & Sunday 9 AM - 6 PM.
This isn't an ad, but honestly a post from someone who knows & loves books -- especially those at the Book Thing. I was turned on by a friend, and I've introduced my friends and so on. Probably 95% of the books I've gotten in the past two years were from the Book Thing.
No really, they're free
It's surprising just how long books can stay in circulation.
20 odd years ago I sold a large part of my Moorcock "Eternal Champion" Series to a local 2nd handbook dealer. Last year my son discovers those I hadn't flogged of and decides he likes them enough to pursue the series.
He sets off for the 2nd hand bookstores in the next suburb and turns up several of the originals I sold - my name in the cover removes all doubt.
Approximately 20 years in circulation, all within a couple of suburbs radius. The original bookshop has long gone - (Cory & Collins in Melb, Aust., they were good for Sci-Fi)
So draw your own conclusions but I still find it amazing, believable only because it was first hand experience.
This site is similar in spirit, run by one man: www.booklend.net
Jesus, watching the display of jaundiced and paranoiac viewpoints in this thread is enough to make me want to never read this forum again.
This isn't a damn privacy rights thing. Nor is it about how people should be donating these books to libraries, or whether they should or shouldn't be tracking them, or if some publisher is going to game the system for nefarious means. It's just harmless fun -- an all-volunteer effort by a group of people who love to read.
I mean, kick ass. Buona sera. I love it. More power to them. Can't some of you just revel in one of the wonders of the 'net without reaching for your tinfoil hats? Can't you just stop being critical asses long enough to see something that's really, truly good? Are you all that cynical?
Maybe I should drop a copy of The Power of Positive Thinking in a comic book store somewhere and try to help one of you.
The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.
While we're waiting for Bookcrossing to share CDs and DVDs, you can already donate and borrow movies and music by the carload from your library. I donate every manga and anime I buy to the library.