Global Text Project – Wiki Textbooks
Grooves writes, "A new initiative spearheaded by a University of Georgia professor aims to produce a library of 1,000 wiki textbooks by tapping the collaborative power of wiki. Inspiration for the project came from a computer science course that wrote its own textbook on XML when no suitable commercial offerings were available. From the article: 'The Global Text Project will work a bit differently from most wikis. Each chapter of each book will be overseen by an academic with knowledge of that field. Although the site will allow anyone to make changes, these will not become "official" until an editor signs off on them.' Textbooks free as in speech, and beer? Sign me up."
Connexions - online textbook repository. All XML-ized.
0 518403675&q=http%3A%2F%2Fcnx.org%2F
http://cnx.org/
And the Google Techtalk:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=685228709
Wiki based educational books on just about everything.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page
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While the idea is interesting, the project is still in its early stages (only 3 books are available, 2 are incomplete).
Wikibooks has progressed farther, but as TFA notes, this one operates on slightly stricter policies that might be useful for academic books.
I can explain it for you, but I can't understand it for you.
Why not join forces with Wikibooks or Wikiversity? Though as long as GlobalText is licensed in GFDL (they don't seem to say anywhere on their site?), then the projects will help each other out anyway.