Monday, August 14, 2006
Google's library project was, in part, an effort to make certain that researchers in the sciences and other fields didn't miss out on the vast store of information contained in the books of some major libraries, as well as the ones at Harvard, Oxford, Stanford, and the University of Michigan. The project aims to scan the contents of these libraries, digitize the text, and index the resulting information for typical Google-style searching. As with other Google book projects, the work has run into the clash between copyright concerns and fair use. In response to these problems, some of the institutions involved have limited the digitizing to works known to be in the public domain.
The quality of the collection is also predictable to be very important. Collectively, the UC schools considered the top public university systems in the US, and include some of the top research programs in the world. As such, the 34 million books in its collection would be a extremely significant addition. But UC is in fact following Michigan's lead in allowing the scanning of their entire collection, rather than only those works that are definitely in the public domain. Hopefully, the combination of the UC collection and Google's indexing skills would mean more researchers would have to rely less on luck to find older information.
Earthlink
Netscape
Netvouz
RawSugar
Shadows
Sphinn
StumbleUpon
Yahoo MyWeb



0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home