Talk:Project Gutenberg/Archive 1

Latest comment: 15 years ago by Cowlinux in topic Gutenberg vs. Gnutenberg

Older Discussion

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Does 'as free as possible' make sense? Surely there aren't varying degrees of 'freeness'? --194.176.105.40 12:03, 27 February 2007 (UTC)Reply


There is a big shortcoming with Project Gutenberg - the lack of documentation of its texts. To find the works of (say) Shakespeare without being told which edition of Shakespeare has served as source - as in fact Gutenberg does not - is to make these texts worthless for serious scholarly research, and less than ideal for casual readers. The editions of many authors vary, sometimes dramatically, from one public domain version to another.

Daniel Eisenberg, daniel.eisenberg@bigfoot.com


Shouldn't it rather read "without restrictions" in the last sentence of the first chapter? Tobias

The Distributed Proofreaders for Project Gutenberg, http://texts01.archive.org/dp/ Is a great place! I've really been enjoying the proofing process.

Where does the $100,000,000 figure for the value of the computer time come from, please? Every reliable source I've ever seen said $100,000, and I was the one who straightened out all PG's accounting records when I formally organized it as a trust and got it a tax i.d. for Michael. -- isis 02:07 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

The number has nothing to do with PG's accounts; rather it is the arbitrary value placed on the time he was allowed on the mainframe at the university before he started the project. See http://promo.net/pg/history.html and http://www.gutenberg.net/fundraising/hart-his.txt -- Stephen Gilbert 02:22 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

No, my point was that when I reviewed all the documentation going back to the beginning to create its accounting history, they all had $100,000 as the value Michael put it on it during the first 20+ years. It's only within the past less than a decade that he's started using the inflated figure, and you know how he is with numbers, using them figuratively to make a point, much as people did in Gutenberg's time. I assure you the number we reported to the IRS was a hundred thousand, not a hundred million, and I think that makes the lower figure the better one to go with in an encyclopedia article. (And I'd really hate to have the IRS after me wanting to know why I reported only a thousandth of that "income.") -- isis 02:38 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

Ah, I see. We can't have the IRS tracking you down. However, I suspect you're in more danger because of the Gutenberg report of 100,000,000, not ours. :) I will certainly take your word for it Isis, but it does leave us with a problem. The official PG website lists $100,000,000; if we list $100,000, that puts our article in conflict with the history page at PG. I don't suppose you could convince Michael to knock off those extra zeros, could you? Barring that, I see two options:

  1. Reduce the number to $100,000 and explain in the article the descrepency. This leaves us with the annoying problem of having to correct the article constantly when people add those zeros back on.
  2. Remove the number althogether, and reword thatsection so that we can convey that he was given some extremely valuable computer time without pinning down the exact number.

What do you think? -- Stephen Gilbert 03:10 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

How about if we lay it at Michael's door by saying he estimated it as worth a hundred thou then and calls it worth a hundred mill in today's dollars? Or that what seemed to be worth a hundred thou then has turned out to be worth a hundred mill now? Or something like that. I don't mind being in conflict with PG's webpage, because there's no real authority for its figures about this or how many e-texts there are or anything -- Michael doesn't even count dates by any real-world convention. If you know him, you know his mind is completely unfettered by such mundane limitations. -- isis 03:22 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

Sounds good. I'll make the changes and then go to bed. Oh, and I don't know Michael personally, but I've heard the rumours. :) -- Stephen Gilbert 03:34 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

Ok, I've changed it to this:

He was given an operator's account with a vast amount of computer time; sources differ on whether it was $100,000 or $100,000,000 worth.

How's that? I'm off to bed now; I'll check in tomorrow. -- Stephen Gilbert 03:42 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

I've added a couple of interviews with Michael to his article page for the cultural enrichment of those who don't know him in person. -- isis 04:31 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)


There is no way it could be $100,000,000 in 1972 dollars or 2002 dollars. I worked for a company in 1988 (now deceased) that had $100 million in annual revenue. It had 900 employees, a five-story headquarters building and a factory, sales offices in 40 cities and a dozen countries, etc etc etc. I don't think PG has ever been quite so big. Ortolan88

As I understand it, he was given that much in computer time. That figure was the abitrary value set on the computer time in Hart's account, but no one was actually paying for it. The operators of the university computer were free to give out the time as they saw fit. Look at it this way. At my university, print credits cost 10 cents a page. If I was a university sysop, I wouldn't have to pay for my printing. I could set the value of my print credit account to $100,000,000, which simply means I have unlimited printing privleges, not that I actually have something worth $100,000,000. -- Stephen Gilbert 19:54 Dec 11, 2002 (UTC)

You're expressing my attitudinal problem with letting that value stand in an encyclopedia article. The truth (as nearly as I was able to reconstruct it a few years ago) is that there was no set amount of time in his account -- he was given free access, period. But if you remember how university computer centers operated in those days, usage was accounted at some ridiculous number of dollars per fraction of a second (that's actual processing time, not reading the cards in or printing or waiting in the time-sharing queue or such). Even if you figure it at only $1 per second, $100,000,000 isn't as outrageous a figure as it appears at first blush. But the reality is that it wasn't really "worth" that, even in an accounting sense, because the time the computer operators used was not billed to any department and so was "free" in virtually every sense of the word. -- isis 08:07 Dec 12, 2002 (UTC)


"Thus, PG Australia is able to produce and host e-texts that would be illegal for Project Gutenberg in the United States while some texts from the US project cannot be hosted there."


Can someone clarify the legal issues concerning the use of material which is public domain in one country but not in another? Scott McNay 04:53, 2004 Feb 14 (UTC)


It is hard to believe that the project startetd 1971 to provide texts "for the internet". pls correct.

Check http://www.gutenberg.net/about.shtml . Dysprosia 06:32, 18 Feb 2004 (UTC)

--I know. But ther haven´t be a term like that at that time, perhaps a vague imagination. Don´t take me wrong: it would just confuse readers. And I really don´t want to discuss who is the father/mother of the internet (and its birthday)

I don't quite understand what you're looking for, but if you feel you know how best to correct the article, you can be bold and edit yourself :) Dysprosia 06:39, 18 Feb 2004 (UTC)
This also looked strange to me when I read it, even though it's explained later in the article. I've changed it to 'what would later become the Internet', which I think is correct. -- Lady Lysine Ikinsile 17:23, Jun 10, 2004 (UTC)

Hi, Dysprosia; your inter-country copyright clarification has me confused.  :(

You said "PG Australia is able to produce and host e-texts, that otherwise would be illegal for Project Gutenberg in the US to host" (you added "otherwise"), which makes it sound like the US Gutenberg is currently hosting them; is that what you intended?

The next sentence is unclear to me also; would texts in the US only be available in the US, and Ausralians would have to be blocked, and vice versa?

Scott McNay 07:45, 2004 Feb 18 (UTC)

$100.000 worth of computer time

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I think this was misleading. The account given to Michael was never worth $100.00 or $100.000.000 as he never could have used up that time. This was just a quick way for the operators to make sure the account would never expire.

Also there are too much particulars that just slow down the reading and don't give much value to the reader, eg. the best friend of the brother etc. Cleaned up a bit.

Marcello 13:25, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Project Gutenberg linking to Wikipedia

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I was nosing around Project Gutenberg just now (the site, not our article), whilst helping out in the development of {{gut-author}}, and discovered that PJ has lots of lovely links back to Wikipedia (take a look at this page and search the text for "wiki"…). When did this happen, how "official" is it, and is there any work needs doing to make sure PJ keeps up-to-date? --Phil | Talk 10:56, Apr 15, 2005 (UTC)

The old author records had the capacity for "Interesting Links", the majority of which were to WP. It's very official (indeed, the capacity for them was added by User:Marcello above, who is the PG webmaster), and the only work to be done keeping the links up to date is emailing the PG catalogue email address about any authors with corresponding Wikipedia entries that aren't yet linked. — MikeX (talk) 12:37, Apr 15, 2005 (UTC)
As one of the editors of the PG online catalog, I believe that the two projects can be very complimentary. Wikipedia articles can benefit from having appropriate book-length items mentioned; Project Gutenberg can benefit by having encyclopedia-type articles for authors in the collection readily available.
I add reciprocal links between the two when I happen to come across them. There is one wikipedian — User:Grendelkhan — who is gradually working through the PG catalog and notifying me of author links to add to the PG catalog. However, this is rather a time-consuming task, and anyone who would like to help (perhaps by checking authors alphabetized under one particular letter) would be most welcome. Andrew Sly 06:21, 22 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

That Thomas Edison files

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I couldn't find the Thomas Edison files at Project Gutenberg that are mentioned in this article. --Abdull 23:42, 1 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/10137 AND http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/10311 among others. Rick Boatright 01:10, 2 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

Official and unofficial

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Michael Hart has sent out an email saying that:

This is simply because a worldwide effort that was previously concentrated on the single site:

http://www.gutenberg.org

is now a multiple effort placed on several sites:

http://gutenberg.net.au http://gutenberg.cc http://pge.rastko.net [Project Gutenberg Europe] http://dp.rastko.net [Distributed Proofreaders Europe]

Not to mention upcoming sites for operations in:

Canada The Philippines Portugal

Thus, it is obvious that without counting all the eBooks as being present on one site, the count for that one site will no longer reflect the grand total.

Uncategorised

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That is, several of the related projects are official, and some are unofficial, contrary to some recent edits.--Prosfilaes 21:33, 19 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

Project Gutenberg has been around for a long time, and is quite well-known. Because of that, the potential list of "projects inspired by Project Gutenberg" could be very lengthy and already takes up a disproportionate amount of the article.
I would suggest changing the heading "Other projects inspired by Project Gutenberg" to "Affiliated projects" and only mention affiliated projects as described in the PG Faq. Any items which don't belong in that group can then be moved to List of digital library projects.

Andrew Sly 17:26, 22 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

See also from article

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From the article:

For external links to Project Gutenberg content from wikipedia articles:
*Template:Gutenberg
*Template:Gutenberg author

Prosfilaes' ongoing vandalism

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Oh my, they just made everything a thousandfold more complex. There used to be a time when you could just report destructive behaviour at a Vandalism In Progress page, but apparently that now only applies to specific types of vandalism.

What is going on: a while ago, some user removed factual data from the article, namely mentions of related projects, i.e. Aozora Bunko and Projekti Lönnrot. Especially the latter is only mentioned in this article, and would be otherwise hard to find.

When I put these back under the header Affiliated Projects, two users started reverting my changes, without as much as an explanation on the talk page, which is the bare minimum a Wikipedian should do when deleting facts.

From the Edit summaries it could be inferred, after much reverting to and fro, that Prosfilaes thinks these two projects are not affiliated with Project Gutenberg.

They may not be official affiliates, but neither are most of those in the list that remained. What's more, Project Gutenberg DE is listed as being not-affiliated (which is a lie, it is), so apparently there is room for unofficial affiliates.

Aozora Bunko and Projekti Lönnrot are more than just some electronic libraries; they are projects that aspire to be like Project Gutenberg. They may not be recognised by PG as friends of PG, but they are certainly related. The Finnish project is even run by PG volunteers, and would have been called Project Gutenberg Finland if the domain name had not been taken.

If, and this is a big if, these two projects should be banned from this page, then all projects that are not official affiliates should be, and Gutenberg-DE should be "re-instated" as an official affiliate.

How do I know what the official affiliates are? Well, Project Gutenberg lists the following names[1]: ClassicalArchives.com, LiteralSystems, Librivox.org, Project Gutenberg of Australia, Projekt Gutenberg-DE, Project Runeberg. With the exception of Project Gutenberg Australia, none of these are listed in Wikipedia's list of official Project Gutenberg affiliates.

Also, if the two projects I mentioned are banned, they should not just be removed from the site, but they should appear on a page that lists friends of PG. Any deletion of a fact is the worst type of vandalism known to Wikipedia, and not just a content dispute.82.92.181.129 23:58, 18 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Dispute over mentioning other projects

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First of all, thank you for caring about this Wikipedia article about Project Gutenberg.

I will begin by stating that I am the user who first removed the material under discussion back on September 18, 2005, as part of an overhaul of the whole article. Please note that my edit summary was: "Major reorganization, editing and expansion. Some material moved to other, more appropriate, articles." To my best recollection, the material removed was some links to other digital library projects, and some information about Distributed Proofers. I thought that I had ensured this was all accounted for in "other, more appropriate, articles"; my apologies if I missed any of it.

Also, I am not sure why you are suggesting that "Aozora Bunko" and "Projekti Lönnrot" should be mentioned in this article, but not the other projects that were removed, such as "The Hungarian Electronic Library", "Project Ben-Yehuda", and "Project Coster".

I would suggest being careful about inflammatory use of the word "vandalism". If you read Wikipedia:Vandalism, I believe you will find that the point of contention here does not match the definition of a "deliberate attempt to reduce the quality of the encyclopedia". Continuing to claim this is vandalism and accusing another user of lying could be taken as a sign of someone who is more interested in being confrontational and creating argument, rather than constructively dealing with differences of opinion.

If we look at the first user to revert your changes, we see that User:Superm401 is an administrator, and an experienced wikipedian. His edit summary stated: "those are not affiliated projects; they're similar projects, which is far to broad a category". Personally, I would agree with that. The two projects that you would like to have mentioned in this article do not (at first glance) belong under the heading "affiliated projects". (However, see my note about Projekti Lönnrot below.)

The second user to revert your changes, Prosfilaes, has shown himself to be a long-time, valuable contributor to Wikipedia, (and also incidentally to Project Gutenberg). He has made valid points that removing this material is not vandalism but "a content dispute"; and that removal of this material has already been discussed on this talk page.

You make a valid point that there is some confusion around the definition of a "Project Gutenberg affiliated project". To be honest, there is no "official" definition. (I say this as a volunteer who is very involved in PG, and has discussed the matter with others before.) A while ago, I mentioned the idea of trying to make a clear definition of affiliate status, but it has not yet happened.

The PG webpage you cite could use some updating. Please be assured that various organizations mentioned in the article do use the "Project Gutenberg" trademark with permission, and can beyond question be considered affiliated projects.

As for Projekt Gutenberg-DE, it asked for permission to use the Project Gutenberg name years ago, which was given. I understand that if it were to ask today, that permission would likely not be given. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say in the article "some do not consider it to be an affiliated project". What do you think of that? I believe Projekt Gutenberg-DE should be mentioned in this article, because of the potential for confusion if it is not, due to similarity of name.

Your argument for Projekti Lönnrot certainly makes it seem like a good candidate to be considered as a Project Gutenberg affiliate.

However, I still maintain that the Project Gutenberg article is not the place to mention every project which is "inspired by" or "similar to" Project Gutenberg. As soon as you have one, there is no reasonable argument for not including 20 more, at which point the article is over-balanced.

In an effort to make my meaning clear, I had written in the article:

For a list of other similar projects, some of which have been inspired by Project Gutenberg, see the list of digital library projects.

Can you suggest a better solution?

If you would like create an article along the lines of Projects similar to Project Gutenberg please go ahead and do so, although I would suggest that "list of digital library projects" is sufficient.

Andrew Sly 08:48, 19 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks for your intermediating (is that a word?).

A List of Digital Library Projects is fine.

"some do not consider it to be an affiliated project" contains that weasel-word some; but it is better than what there is now, considering that PG itself considers PG-DE an official affiliate.

I am not sure what you mean by "be assured that various organizations mentioned in the article do use the "Project Gutenberg" trademark with permission". Has the trademark been registered in any country beside the USA?

As you probably know, the formalizing of a PG "philosophy" is a pretty recent affair, and gutenberg.org's new description of PG-DE was only written last summer.

--82.92.181.129 15:53, 19 February 2006 (UTC)Reply


Just to be sure we're on the same wavelength, here's a summary of what's been done so far.

  1. I've removed mention of Aozora Bunko per the reasoning mentioned above. The material is not lost, as it is identical to what appears in the article about that project, and it is linked to from the "list of digital library projects".
  2. I've reworded mention of Projekti Lönnrot in an effort to make its relation to Project Gutenberg clear.
  3. I've reworded mention of Projekt Gutenberg-DE to mention different opinions on PG affiliate status.

At this point, the most helpful thing to do would be to get some PG volunteers together to agree on a definition of what makes an affiliate, and update the page mentioned above.

Your point about trademarks is a good one, and I must admit that is an area I know little in. However, I have been told that the various projects listed, using the Project Gutenberg name, have been given permission to do so (whether or not it is legally required.)

Andrew Sly 20:45, 23 February 2006 (UTC)Reply

e...

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etext, e-text, ebook, etc. someone want to unify?

Self reference

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== See also ==
Template:Gutenberg 	 
Template:Gutenberg author

I removed the above from the article because it looked like a self reference. I do agree it's useful, but I feel uneasy about including it in article space. --Kjoonlee 04:49, 2 July 2006 (UTC)Reply

I've just removed Template talk:Gutenberg from the See also section. JRawle (Talk) 12:48, 21 September 2006 (UTC)Reply


Full Plays on the Internet

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Is is legal to put full plays on the internet??

Am a library and Information science lecture in Kenya Nairobi and would like my country to join the Project Guntenberg. Kindly advice on how to go about it. My e-mail address is <removed email and phone for privacy concerns>

Thank you for your kind cooperation.

I'm afraid we can't provide that information, you're better off asking a lawyer about copyright law in Kenya. —Vanderdeckenξφ 10:52, 1 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
If you want to work with PG, you're wasting your time talking to a lawyer about Kenyan law. PG doesn't care; PG is solely a US organization. If you want to set up a new PG organization in Kenya, you're still better off talking to PG first.--Prosfilaes 16:40, 27 February 2007 (UTC)Reply
If you want to work with Project Gutenberg, talk to Project Gutenberg. There's a contact info link on the front page of the PG site linked from the article.--Prosfilaes 16:40, 27 February 2007 (UTC)Reply

Redirect

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Do you think it is appropriate to put a redirect from "Project guttenberg" to here? I'm not sure if other people mis-spell this word that often, but I always forget to use one 't'. --Culix 06:17, 10 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Mention of the CTEA.

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I removed mention of the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act; while it's tragic, and its passage has hurt Project Gutenberg significantly, it's also hurt plenty of other projects and other people. On the other hand, if the Uruguay Round Agreements Act has caused the removal of any previously-published works from the archive, due to copyright restorations, then that definitely should be mentioned. I don't know of any such events, however. grendel|khan 14:07, 16 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Why Doesn't Project Gutenberg Classify its Books Like a Library?

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I love Project Guternberg and have downloaded and read many of its books. But when I go to a library I go to the card catalog or wander the shelves where the books are classified by the Dewey Decimal System. The PG books are classified like a book store which is good for some searches, but not nearly good enough if you are researching a subject. I assume most of the books have already been classified in libraries, etc. Why not add the DD system as a search and browse option?

The PG site does not seem to provide for sugestions so I thought I would comment here.

Also, I have the same comment for Google Books.

Regards, 68.159.67.90 16:51, 30 April 2007 (UTC)HHallReply

Academic libraries use the Library of Congress Classification system rather than Dewey Decimal. Some of the Project Gutenberg records (e.g., [2]) do have two-character LCC codes (which you can browse by, see [3]), but new records don't get those codes. I'll be working on a more conventional type of catalog for PG records next spring, but for now, there's not much you can do to find works that way. Sorry. grendel|khan 16:52, 15 July 2007 (UTC)Reply
I'm just curious if you were planning to use the MARC standards? It would be excellent if my local library could download the archive into their catalogue database. Thanks. — RJH (talk) 15:51, 2 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

New Spoken Article

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Valerieinto 19:22, 23 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

After a useful and nice comment from Macropode, I converted the .ogg file I'd mistakenly encoded in stereo at 160kbps to the recommended quality of mono at 96kbps. Sorry for the mixup. :-) -- Valerieinto 13:36, 10 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

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The name in the link to this page (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Gutenburg) is spelled incorrectly. The name of the man was "Gutenberg" not "Gutenburg".—Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.14.120.161 (talk)

Vandalized paragraph

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I reverted the paragraph that compares PG with the other Digital Libraries because I did not believe the history comments about why it was censored. To be a fair and balanced article, it is appropriate to compare PG with other digital libraries. We can discuss whether the current description is appropriate, but summary removal of relevant and referenced material is not appreciated. — RJH (talk) 17:57, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

The cite doesn't say what the article claimed; that is, that JSTOR had more public domain content than Project Gutenberg. We can compare random numbers all we want, but it only has value if we compare numbers that make sense.
And using the word censored makes every editor who disagrees with your opponent. It's rude, uncalled for, and false.--Prosfilaes 18:02, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
Then my bad. Sorry, I misunderstood your intent. I see too many arbitrary deletions of valid material, so sometimes I find it appropriate to simply revert and then ask for a discussion.
I don't think the statement about "comparing apples and oranges" applies, since the material is available in digital form in either case. To me this is an opportunity to distinguish the benefit of PG versus other digital libraries. I just hadn't reached the point where I could expand on that point; as references are lacking.—RJH (talk) 18:14, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Public domain content

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Since its inception, other digital libraries have come to exceed Project Gutenberg's public domain content, either in terms of number of items or in total size. For example JSTOR, an online system of academic journals, has scanned over 165,000 jounal issues, many of which are in the public domain.

That makes no sense. You can't compare the amount public domain content in PG to JSTOR by comparing the amount of content in PG to JSTOR, especially given that the public domain content of JSTOR is a small fraction of the whole.--Prosfilaes 17:58, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
I have removed the statement about "Public Domain". — RJH (talk) 18:06, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply
Ah, now I see you just summarily deleted the paragraph. Well I have better things to do than wrestle with this mess. Bye. — RJH (talk) 18:17, 30 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

How to refer to material from PG in Wikipedia.

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Is there an article on how to refer to material from PG in Wikipedia (considering most material can be freely referenced)? Chirag (talk) 23:18, 9 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Why not cite as usual, and insert a link at the end of the footnote or under the title that appears in it? Anyway, I think it's preferable to link to a download page with multiple options, not directly to a text file. trespassers william (talk) 12:19, 10 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

PG's hardware and software

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I think this article may describe PG's book-scanning hardware, software and workflow. This information may be both useful and entertaining. -- Toytoy (talk) 19:30, 23 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

How to cite gutenberg texts

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I'm doing a research paper for an essay and I need to cite some project gutenberg texts in MLA format. Do any of you know how to cite texts from the website? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.20.73.65 (talk) 01:58, 8 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

Images

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Source says 'Images and diagrams were included in the encyclopedia, and will be included as and when they become available (probably via Project Gutenberg)'. Does Gutenburg include images? It isn't mentioned in the article and I can't find an immediate answer on their site. I've downloaded a book or two there but they were always plain text, never had any images. Richard001 (talk) 08:43, 28 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

The HTML books include images; [4] is one example. Some small percentage have raw page scans, like [5].--Prosfilaes (talk) 13:52, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Western bias

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Project Gutenberg is much more exclusively Western in its orientation than the Internet as a whole. English is the dominant language of Gutenberg, followed by French, German, Finnish, Dutch and Spanish.

Compare this to Wikipedia's 10.4 million articles. Over 3/4 of these are in some 250 languages other than English. I counted 78 languages not (customarily) written in the Roman alphabet that collectively account for more than 1/8 of Wikipedia's total articles.

I see no mention of Russian works in this Gutenberg article, although most Russians live in Europe and almost every significant Russian work from the tsarist and soviet eras has already been published online. Apparently the Russians have already out-Gutenberged the West! I don't read any CJK (Chinese/Japanese/Korean) languages, but assume there must be a growing body of online literature in these too. LADave (talk) 01:22, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

What's your point? This is an encyclopedia; it's best to make every statement on the talk page about what should be changed in the article, not about the subject of the article. A breakdown of languages without commentary could easily be added to the article (referenced, of course, to Gutenberg); any commentary would have be sourced to a reliable source.--Prosfilaes (talk) 13:45, 25 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

hmmm

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just to say that some of the content of this page requires updating as well as some references not being references. I will read the page tomorrow and comment

For example, there is a question of bias towards languages and such, as well as whether there are changes made

The most basic rule of DP proofreading in Project Gutenberg is the primary rule, which is the main purpose of checking, to ensure that the proofreaders do not change text :-

The Primary Rule "Don't change what the author wrote!"

Chaosdruid (talk) 01:21, 17 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

sry !! No explanations on edits

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Hi all

I have to apologise as i forgot to put explanations on many of the edits I have just done

Anyway, hope they are satisfactory and don't cause any controversy !!

I have added a few references, as well as more formats used, mainly due to the addition of Plucker, and the increase in illustration friendly formats.
I have also added to the criticism section, it is a bit out of date as some of the points it raises and I have included refs to where they are needed them


cheers Chaosdruid (talk) 14:21, 19 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Gutenberg vs. Gnutenberg

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for a while there was a project gnuterberg. what was the difference and what happened to them? did realize they were beaten to the idea by a couple of decades and give up? Zeos386sx (talk) 16:42, 19 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

I will try and explain it but I am not sure about it 100% - Gnutenberg was a political stab at copyright laws and used GNU licencing to "copyleft" and release works under a "if you revert it you are liable not us" theory. This meant that they could release copies of works before the copyright had expired and code it in a way so as to need the reader to reverse the coding to read it and so GnuTenBerg would not be prosecuted.
There are some links still around through google etc. and some works can still be found.--Chaosdruid (talk) 00:02, 20 February 2009 (UTC)Reply


Site Offline —Preceding unsigned comment added by Cowlinux (talkcontribs) 15:36, 19 October 2009 (UTC)Reply