Digital library hits 1.5 million volumes

Project exceeds all expectations

Written by Iain Thomson

The Million Book Project, a digital archive set up by the world's universities, has announced that it has exceeded its own expectations.

The repository has 1.5 million books in over 20 languages so far, all of which are available free on its website.

This represents just one per cent of the world's books, but the team behind the project sees total digitisation as the way forward.

"Anyone who can get on the internet now has access to a collection of books the size of a large university library," said Raj Reddy, professor of computer science and robotics at Carnegie Mellon University.

"This project brings us closer to the ideal of the 'universal library' making all published works available to anyone, anytime in any language. The economic barriers to the distribution of knowledge are falling."

The scheme was set up primarily using staff and resources from Carnegie Mellon, Zhejiang University in China, the Indian Institute of Science and the Library at Alexandria in Egypt.

The US, China and India provided $10m each in cash and in-kind contributions to the project, and 7,000 books are scanned onto the system daily by 1,000 staff. The bulk of the scanning is done at 40 specialist centres in India and China.

Protecting and preserving texts is the major goal, according to Pan Yunhe, leader of the Million Book Project in China, and former president of Zhejiang Un iversity.

"Paper gets old and brittle, and artwork fades, and books become so delicate that no one can read them without damaging them," he said.

"But once we have digitised texts and illustrations, we can keep them in circulation indefinitely. And by storing them at multiple sites, we can minimise the risk of them being destroyed, as occurred in Alexandria."

About half the works are out of copyright and open to all without charge.

Tags:

Further reading

British Library starts email archive

Email Britain campaign takes a 'snapshot of British society'   More...

Encyclopaedia of Life to classify 1.8m species

The animals and plants went in one-by-one   More...

Charles Darwin's wife's diaries head online

Emma Wedgwood's writing shows evolution of Darwin's mystery illness   More...

Google to digitise University of Texas library

Latin American collection among one million works to be available online   More...

Related articles

US boffins promise organic semiconductors

New material could be used in flexible e-book screens   More...

Mag-lev interface offers sense of touch

Haptic device developed at Carnegie Mellon   More...

Official databases fail to protect personal data

Organisations face challenge in protecting confidential records   More...

Boffins take gigapixel photos using ordinary camera

Robotic arm takes multiple pictures of the same scene   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

16 May 2008

2.97 MBXP on OLPC, broken dreams and Yahoo fights back More...

15 May 2008

3.28 MBDark fibre, mobile TV and solar power More...

14 May 2008

2.66 MBOnline inequality, mobile thumbprints and corporate raids More...

Poll

HOME WORKING

HOME WORKING

Do you let any or all of your employees work from home?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

OLPC

OLPC to ship with Windows XP

Microsoft teams up with One Laptop per Child project   More...

The Sims

The Sims goes flat-pack with Ikea

Virtual world gets Swedish wood   More...

Advertisement

Microsoft-Yahoo

Yahoo board fights back at Icahn

Investor accused of 'significant misunderstanding' in Microsoft saga   More...

MySpace

Woman charged over MySpace suicide

Lori Drew indicted on federal charges   More...

Advertisement