Launching Gutenberg Radio - Public Domain Audiobooks
tgbg writes "We are proud to announce the launch of "Gutenberg Radio". On these broadcast channels,
you can hear the Gutenberg Library and anything else the Gutenberg
family cares to share with its public."
You can actually hear my frost pist!
They're using Microsoft Sam to read the books.
A truly brilliant idea. Now if only we didn't have to wait indefinitely for copyrighted works from after the 1920s or so to be released into the public domain...
Does anyone find it weird that they're using Gutenburg in a phrase related to sound, not sight? Gutenburg helped end the need for everything to be said...
I thought I could find sound bytes of Police Academy , Short Circuit, or Cocoon on here... where are they? What gives?
According to what I read on the linked site, they are using "Test-to-Speech" software. This seems no different than using a text-to-speech agent on your own computer. What is the advantage for recording the text-to-speech? (When I think of audio books, I usually think of a human reader... not a computer - a human tends to be more accurate, esp. with languages like english)
Accentuate the positive, don't waste your mod points on the negative.
for the first one to mention that "porn audio books" sounds good.
The worst terrorist attack in recorded history occurred in September 2001, followed by a WAR against Islam in Afghanistan and and then ANOTHER war against Islam in Iraq, which seemed likely to be followed by MORE wars against Islam in Syria and Iran, followed by a possible NUCLEAR war with North Korea, but tensions seem to be easing on those lines, and one has to admit, the reconstruction of Iraq is well underway, but you people have the gall to be discussing Project Gutenberg???? My *god*, people, GET SOME PRIORITIES!
The bodies of the thousands of innocent civilians who died (and will die) in these unprecedented events could give a good god damn about obscure science fiction, your childish Lego models, your nerf toy guns and whining about the lack of a "fun" workplace, your Everquest/Diablo/D&D fixation, the latest Cowboy Bebop rerun, or any of the other ways you are "getting on with your life" (here's a hint: watching Cowboy Bebop in your jammies and eating a bowl of Shreddies is *not* "getting on with your life"). The souls of the victims are watching in horror as you people squander your finite, precious time on this earth playing video games!
You people disgust me!
CCR - Sweet Hitch-Hiker
Was Ridin' along side the highway, rollin' up the countryside.
Thinkin' I'm the devil's heatwave, what you burn in your crazy mind?
Saw a slight distraction standin' by the road;
She was smilin' there, yellow in her hair;
Do you wanna, I was thinkin', would you care.
CHORUS:
Sweet Hitch-a-Hiker,
We could make music at the Greasy King.
Sweet Hitch-a-Hiker,
Won't you ride on my fast machine?
Cruisin' on thru the junction, I'm flyin' 'bout the speed of sound,
Noticin' peculiar function, I ain't no roller coaster show me down.
I turned away to see her, Woa! she caught my eye,
But I was rollin' down, movin' too fast;
Do you wanna, She was thinkin' can it last.
CHORUS
Was busted up along the highway, I'm the saddest ridin' fool alive.
Wond'ring if you're goin' in my way, won't you give a poor boy a ride?
Here she comes a ridin', Lord, She's flyin' high.
But she was rollin' down, movin' too fast;
Do you wanna, She was thinkin' can I last.
CHORUS
CHORUS
These are NOT HUMANS reading the Project Gutenberg books to you. This is a COMPUTER generated reading of the books. If you enjoy the soothing voice of Stephen Hawking then you will enjoy listening to Project Gutenberg radio. I could only take about 2 minutes of Tolstoys' "The Cossacks" before I had to shut it off.
I just heard some sad news on talk radio - Iraqi president (holder of the popular vote) Saddam Hussein, was found dead in his Baghdad presidential palace this morning. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an Iraqi icon.
Gutenberg is a great thing. I hope someday they will catalog todays popular software.
Wait. Who the hell are the Gutenberg family? :P
Yo Grark
Canadian Bred with American Buttering
Canadian Bred with American Buttering
it's personal
I wonder if the computer reads that slogan before each audio file...
I don't know about this. Gutenberg (and others including the Chinese) stopped the need for everything being said out loud by putting things down in print that could be carried about and stored in places like libraries and on coffee tables. So now we have the Stephen Hawking voice droning on Tolstoy? Egads.....
Some of us don't have the connection to be able to listen to this. I would rather download this into (insert favorite audio codec here).
"Some fight for law. Some fight for justice. What will you fight for? One day, you will see."
Did you mean 'Johannes Gensfleisch zur Laden zum Gutenberg' the inventor of mobile print?
'Berg' and 'Burg' are different things, a hill is not a fortification.
But now I see that it's just more "streaming audio" crap. How pointless.
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
This is exciting. I just can't wait for Gutenberg video to come out. My votes for priority works to be put into public domain video include: Lady Chatterly's Lover and for the more perverse slashdotters out there, Lolita.
The classics will really come alive!
Man, I hope they do justice to Police Academy, Short Circuit, Cocoon, and Three Men and a Baby. I think those Gutenberg classics will be fabulous as audiobooks.
(And rising every second.) I guess slashdot hasn't quite kicked into top gear yet, then. :)
The Chinese used the print for thousands of years, long before Gutenberg.
Actually, Gutenberg did not invent the printing, but the mobile printing.The Chinese language has thousands and thousands of ideograms and under these circumstances mobile printing is not a practical solution anyway; plate printing is easier to use. If it was useful for them The Chinese would have invented it.
Did you see Police Academy? Steve Guttenberg is a god!
...books read you!
They have lots of public domain movies (anti-communist propaganda from the fifties, old commercials, some documentaties, for example about WWII, etc.)
They started three or four years ago by posting LARGE mpeg2 files (500-700MB); in the meantime they switched to divx and xvid.
Bruce
Bruce Perens.
How about Torrent's for those mp3s of Dracula and the Time Machine? If BitTorrent really wants to gain legitimacy it would do well to become regular practice for free content providers such as this to use it.
*_s_l_a_s_d_o_t_s_u_c_k_s_*_s_l_a_s_h_d_o_t_s_u_x
s_/_____\____ADVERTISE\___ON_______/__P_\_______ s
l|___I___|__SLASHDOT___\LOW RATES_|___U__|______l
a|__LOVE_`.__Call_1-800-BLOWTACO__|____D__:_____a
s`___M____|_____________|________\|_____G_|_____s
h_\__I____|_/_______/__\\\___--___\\_____E_:____h
d__\__C___\/____--~~__________~--__|_\___&_|____d
o___\__H___\_-~____________________~-_\__T_|____o
t____\__A____\_________.--------.______\|A_|____t
s______\__E__\______//_________(_(__C__\_C_|____s
u_______\__L.__C____)_________(_(___C___|O_/____u
c_______/\_|___C_____)/_MORE_\_(____C___|_/_____c
k______/_/\|___C_____)|_DUPES|__(___C___/__\____k
s_____|___(____C_____)\__!!__/__//__C_/_____\___s
*_____|____\__C_____\\_________//_(__/_______|__*
s____|_\____\____)___`----___--'_____________|__s
l____|__\______________\_______/____________/_|_l
a___|______R_______/____|_____|__\____________|_a
s___|___F__E______|____/___/.__\__\____F__G___|_s
d___|___U__A___/_/____|__SERVER_|__\____U_R____|d
o___|__C___L__/_/______\__/\___/____|___C__A___|o
t__|___K__N__/_/________|____|_______|__k__M___|t
s__|______E___|_________|____|_______|_____M___|s
u__|______W__|__________|____|_______|_____A___|u
x__|______S__|__________|____|_______|_____R___|x
*_s_l_a_s_d_o_t_s_u_c_k_s_*_s_l_a_s_h_d_o_t_s_u_x
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They would accept a computer generated voice.
and you're not.....
Click here or a puppy gets stomped!
Imagine being blind and being able to access (maybe in a not far away future)
the entire Gutenberg ebook library by internet. No need to read the whole book
with some kind of Braille device, no need to -own- a text-2-speech program
and, maybe, no need to own a computer if the stream is broadcasted with some other equipement.
Blind people will -love- this and I can't but be happy for them.
Johannes Gutenberg ist unbestritten der größte Sohn der Stadt Mainz. Mit der Erfindung des Buchdrucks mit beweglichen Lettern setzte er das Fundament der modernen Medienkommunikation. Seine herausragende Bedeutung ist international anerkannt: Das renommierte amerikanische Magazin "Time life" kürte Gutenbergs Erfindung 1997 zur bedeutendsten Entdeckung des vergangenen Jahrtausends. Ende 1998 wählten dann amerikanische Journalisten in ihrem Buch "1000 Years - 1000 People" mit dem Prädikat "Man of the Millennium" Gutenberg zur wichtigsten Persönlichkeit des 2. Jahrtausends. Im Jahr 2000 feierten die Mainzer mit ihren Gästen zwölf Monate den 600. Geburtstag des Jahrtausenderfinders.
Mainz is far away, in Germany; Guttenberg, New Jersey is much closer
Maybe if the radio becomes popular some popular people might actually record a reading a commit it to the public domain. As of now, I don't think there are many public domain audiobooks. I think it would be a great way to get some publicity for open source content, especially open source audio.
poop coming out of my pooper! poop!
He is not 54 but 66. His bithday is on April 28. I am sure he is going to celebrate his birthday in a safe place, far away from the American toops.
I am sure Bin Laden WILL NOT BE a guest.
I should suggest CIA to watch you.
yup
"Dohohohooh-no! You sank my Jengaship!"
Listening to these books is somewhat reminiscent of the fine works of MC Hawking. Dig.
Seriously.... I understand the potential that such a project can reach. However, I'm curious what will lie in the future of public domain books, and having human read audio freely available.
from this link, it seems you can download a bootable cd with the player and a hundred or so books. then you can boot the disc and play the books:
bootable cd
i wouldnt be surprised if you looked around and found a link to the player. alas the site is now dead. check back in a day or so though and i bet you'll find it.
-- john
It is a shame that, in all his inventing, Guttenburg didn't take time to invent the humble emoticon. :-(
Actually, funny you should bring that up at all. Yesterday, I was in Barnes and Noble and came across one of Stephen Hawking's audio books on CD, and it's HIM reading it using his voice synthesizer, for the whole damned book.
This is the one I saw, I believe.
Here's the advantage: I can't afford AT&T's excellent Natural Voices and other commercial offerings that make the standard free stuff that comes with your OS sound like crap. Its not just aesthetics, the free voices are simply difficult to understand most of the time. Download Coolspeech(share) or Readplease(free) and find out for yourself. Yuck.
Considering the link has been slashdotted already, I can't listen to tell you what kind of voice they're using, but if its a good commercial voice then more power to them. If its just Microsoft Mary, or whomever, then you're right its a waste of effort and bandwidth.
Anytime you mention Bin Laden, Saddaam Hussein, Allah, or use the phrases "Death to the Infidels", "Dirty Bomb", "Jihad", "GEORGE BUSH SHOULD DIEt", the feds get their knickers in a twist and start scouring the net for any kind of information that can be traced back to you, even if you think the president is getting a little chubby.
He's being watched, so am I, and so are you for being part of this thread. The FBI has an inch thick file on Rob Malda, and probably a whole drawer dedicated my innane ramblings.
Oh well, at least somebody finds me interesting, and I'm no longer paranoid for thinking my telephones have been tapped.
Indignant righetousness doesn't mean as much as it used to.
You think that I'm crazy, you should see this guy!
mp
"The secret to strong security: less reliance on secrets." -- Whitfield Diffie
Couldn't one (with a nice fast connection and large harddrive) set up a server that allows users to make accounts. With these accounts they could start book projects. The new projects could be listed on the front page -- even if they are incomplete. They could be updated chapter by chapter. They could be voted on and commented on, so as to encourage the reader (whose project it is) to finish the book/do more books/redo chapters that had slip-ups.
It seems that you could eventually have a good collection of good public domain readings. Some books could have multiple readings as well. Just a thought...
What comes first, finding a teacher or becoming a student?
The site seems to be dead currently, but that's undoubtedly just the Slashdot Effect.
I have no idea what they're using, but for the sake of accessibility and future-compatibility, I hope they're following the standards of the DAISY Consortium. DAISY has devised a standard for talking books which deserves support, especially as it's been specifically designed to provide accessibility for people with disabilities.
Learn more about the DAISY Consortium here, and in the FAQ here.
--Kynn
Kynn's page: http://kynn.com/
Just because I say something nice about the Chinese it does not mean that I am a Chinaman.
I am a mathematician of Croatian ancestry and live in Tuebingen, Germany, not far from Mainz, where Gutenberg did his work.
If you dont believe my information about the Chinese, please ask any curator of the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz. They all say that Gutenberg did not invent printing but rather MOBILE printing and that printing was invented by the Chinese long before Gutenberg
I just saw some sad news on CNN - popular childrens' figure Easter Bunny was found dead on a Georgia road this evening. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.
Site slashdotted... silenced... catching breath...
I should say that I am no Chinese, but Czech. Czech writing is based on Latin and thus I have no bias towards Chinese.
Chinese writing may be inefficient for computer programmers, but is great for literature and poetry. I have a few Chinese friends and they all say that a writing system based on ideograms is much richer than the ones which try to reproduce (imperfectly) the sounds of human voice. Ideograms favor abstract thinking and can express lots of nuances,feelings etc., which are much harder to represent by phonetic systems.
Phonetic systems derived from Greek, Latin, Arabic, etc have a fundamental flaw. The spoken language is changing all the time and, in order to preserve the phonetic character, you have to change the writing accordingly. If this is not done on a regular basis, say once in 50-100 years, you run into inconsistencies. English is a perfect example, every word has to be learned twice, how to write it and how to pronounce it. Moreover, many nations did not come up with with their own writing system but adopted an existing one and most of the time the choices are poor. For example, English does not have its own writing system but uses Latin instead. Unfortunately Latin writing is a very poor choice for English. Had the Britons invented their own letters, learning English would have been much easier!
All these problems do not exist for ideograms. It is amazing to see that a Japanese can (vaguely) understand a Chinese text, even though he does not know any Chinese word! For me is uselees to look at a Hungarian or Romanian text. Even though both these languages use the Latin letters, I cannot understand a single word.
How did the printing press become so widespread anyways? There is still a tremendous amount of physical labor involved in setting it up to stamp out pages.
Checking out my form of escapism.
http://www.archive.org/movies
If you head over to the main Gutenberg Library site and search for "Time Machine" the audio book appears to come up. It would seem that ibiblio has the book on its FTP (and available for download) for at least "Time Machine". If you're looking to get started here's a direct link to the zip.
Me be from Russia (*giggle*), and me get no access to the site... Me be about to cry.
Would somebody be so kind to explain, why I am 'error403ed' from the Radio? Is it a regional problem, or something is just not okay now?
Second item if you google for it: http://www.cs.umanitoba.ca/~gedetil/poutine.au
I agree on this. it would be extremely nice to have them available in Speex or Ogg Vorbis format. Speex is really great for encoding speech.
Forbidden
You don't have permission to access / on this server.
OK, let's get this straight on who invented what and what the chinese were up to in the 1300s.
Gutenberg did not invent the printing press. Presses existed long before him. The chinese did have them. But G, with some of the advanced european knowledge of metallurgy invented little metal characters which could be set and reset for each page. Movable type.
Before movable type, you carved or smelted, one plate per page, fixed. This advance not only lowered the price for printing books, but more importantly lowered the price for various temporary printed works like newspapers and revolutionary pamphlets.
Not to mention that the leftover clothes of all the people who had died during the black death turned out to be a very chap source for low quality paper.
Now in the 1300s, the chinese developed a rice crop which yielded twice a year instead of once. The result, like building Granaries in Civ, was an instant doubling of the food supply and with food surplus comes time to work on other stuff.
During this period of 'Sung industrialization' the chinese had textile mills, and battle fleets, and, of course, printing, or, more accurately, surplus labor to support these things.
Did they decide to stop? No. In a short time, double food lead to double population, and then china was back with its usual population problems and everyone needed to get back to farming.
Everyone send in ogg samples of them reading a phrases from one of the works published by Gutenberg. String 'em all together and you have a human voice instead of computer reading it to you!
(I'm just kidding, this would sound like crap).
But it would be nice if some humans would read the works and encode them for distribution so that people don't have to be subjected to speech that still doesn't sound much better than SAM (Software Automated Mouth) on my Atari 800.
bcl
Remember Lexington Green!
According to the Emacspeak homepage, this project at etc-edu.com uses Emacspeak.
Apparently they do some pre-processing with scripts before feeding it to Emacspeak, and then save the output as MP3 files. (This is all from reading the guy's public comments here -- in between flames -- as well the Emacspeak blurb.)
If you have Emacspeak -- free software that runs on Linux, natch -- you only need access to ETC's scripts to produce identical files. This seems to be the bit that he wants to sell to institutions.
So, a lot of the software is out there! Enjoy.
--Kynn
Kynn's page: http://kynn.com/
I don't think it is fair to expect perfection on the bleeding edge. Frankly, the voice is monotonous and hard to follow lots of times. Why not take a listen and take notes. Send the notes in and see if you can't help make it better. Heck, it's free! Who knows if everybody contributes a little, maybe there will be a fantastic computer voice generated that can read all the PG works so that they can be enjoyed. Frankly, I've heard some piss-poor human readers do works as well...
I also took switchboard operation with plugboards, in the last year they taught it. To test for busy, press the tip of the plug to the ring of the jack. If it clicks, the line is busy. The next year, the school got an automatic PBX.
Bruce Perens.