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Internet Archive Puts 1.6M E-Books On OLPC Laptops

waderoush writes "Brewster Kahle of the San Francisco-based Internet Archive announced today that all 1.6 million books scanned and digitized by the Archive will be available for reading on XO laptops built by the Cambridge, MA-based One Laptop Per Child Foundation. The announcement came during a session on electronic books and electronic publishing at the Boston Book Festival. Kahle said the Archive has been collaborating with OLPC for a year to format the e-books for display on the XO laptops, some 750,000 of which are in use by children in developing countries."

3 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. What's the story? by earlymon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From TFA:

    Kahle says the Internet Archive books will be available through the reading "activity" on the XO Laptop. (Software on the laptop is organized into groups called activities pertaining to different types of creative and educational projects.) In an upcoming version of the XO's basic software, the reading activity will also allow students to browse books from a variety of providers, Kahle says, including libraries and commercial publishers.

    He drew an explicit contrast between these approach and the more closed and controlled e-book sales models being forwarded by Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other distributors. But getting new, copyrighted books onto platforms that don't provide strict digital rights management protections is still a tricky business proposition--so for now, the book sharing arrangement between the Archive and OLPC is restricted to free, public-domain books.

    While I'm all for this project - tell me again HOW those books are going to get to an OLPC-using kid's hands?

    As other posters have pointed out - there's the issue of indexing this stuff properly.

    And there's still distribution to think about.

    http://idle.slashdot.org/story/09/09/10/0318203/Pigeon-Turns-Out-To-Be-Faster-Than-S-African-Net

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    Pathological kinda promises Path + Logical - but instead, you get stuck with pathetic.
  2. You can contribute time to publish free e-books by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I cannot help but mention the Project Gutenberg [http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page] which provide e-books for free. This is achieved by the use of volunteers who may proofread a single page (or more) a day. Everyone one can participate. There are opportunities at all levels of difficulty for proof-reading, in many languages and on many topics.

  3. Re:Nice try, but one hard-core fail by soupforare · · Score: 3, Interesting

    If you switch to Teapot's ubuntu release, there's a hotkey to drop down to high dpi B&W mode, even with backlight full on. It's pretty great.
    I'm extremely pleased with mine running like this. FBreader(?) works very well for ebook duties. I wish the screen was available on other machines, it's really great tech.
    I do like the keyboard tech as well, but it's not as standout as the screen, I think.

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    --- Do you believe in the day?