======== Subject: December Project Gutenberg Newsletter From: "Michael S. Hart" <hart@prairienet.org> To: "Michael S. Hart" <hart@pobox.com> Date: Tue, 14 Dec 1999 00:27:26 -0600 (CST) ***The Project Gutenberg Newsletter of Wednesday, December 15, 1999*** Etexts Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since Before The Internet [Usually sent the first Wednesday of each month, delayed if by relay.] Main URL is promo.net Webmaster is Pietro di Miceli, of Rome, Italy *Check out our Websites at promo.net, and ask me for our FTP servers.* I will most likely already be gone by the time you receive this, so if you have questions, you might want to cc: one of these fine people, in addition to emailing me. I should be back by mid to late January. mh Greg Newby <gbnewby@ils.unc.edu>, sysadmin, FTP, mirrors, etc. Dianne Bean <beandp@primenet.com>, US Director of Production Sue Asscher <asschers@satcom.net.au>, AU Production Director David Price <ccx074@ccj.coventry.ac.uk>, UK Production Director John Bickers <jbickers@ihug.co.nz>, New Zealand Production Director *** Table of Contents: Headline News New Site Requests For Assistance Index Listings for the New Files Notes from Edupage and News Scan ***Headline News After much delay the 2 CD set of the Project Gutenberg files is now ready. This set contains the full set of etexts as well as the data from the Human Genome Project, and HTML indexes by Author and Title. Once again, the price is $39.95 (+$5.00 shipping & handling for a total of $44.95). Of this amount, Project Gutenberg will receive $34.95. All prices are in US Dollars. The CDs can be ordered online at http://order.kagi.com/?UYF with the payments being processed by Kagi.com. All major credit cards accepted. Note that due to the amount of data involved, each etext is in zip format (the same format as the compressed files on the Project Gutenberg web site). You will need a separate program to un-zip any file before use. If you have any questionsm please email: gutenberg@monolithic.cc *** Chromosome 22 is complete!!! We will be uploading the first completed chromosome of the Human Genome Project over the holidays. ***New site: The files are at ftp://ftp.sudval.org/gutenberg The Sudbury Valley School Framingham, Massachusetts - no compressed files available ***Requests For Assistance >From me for: Sue Asscher <asschers@satcom.net.au> We might need volume 1 of: The History of Herodotus, by G. C. Macaulay *** Date: Mon, 29 Nov 1999 17:49:17 +0000 (GMT) From: Dianne Bean <beandp@primenet.com> What I need most are people who already have books to scan, or who have books to donate for scanning or typing. Christine Miller <cch@classicalhomeschooling.org> I have. . . . Five Great Monarchies of the Ancient Eastern World by George Rawlinson; no copyright date on the title page. I only have vol 3.: concludes the fourth monarchy (Babylonia) and the fifth monarchy (Persia). ***She is willing to pay for the other two volumes if you can find them. *** Blackstone's Commentaries Request Is this doable? I just got the first of four volumes (I'm not sure when I'll be able to afford the other three -- they're about $16 each) of the paperback facsimile edition the University of Chicago Press put out in 1979. The facsimile title page says it was published in Oxford in M.DCC.LXV. It has "s"s that look like "f"s, footnotes all over the place, and lots of French and Latin phrases scattered thru it, all in Italics. Each volume is about 500 pp. So I ask again, is this doable? From: "K. Kay Shearin" <poach@ezol.com> It's William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England: A Facsimile of the First Edition of 1765-1769, from The University of Chicago Press, copyright 1979. There's a hardbound edition, too, but in paperback the ISBNs are: Vol. 1: 0-226-05538-8 (this is the one I have) Vol. 2: 0-226-05541-8 Vol. 3: 0-226-05543-4 Vol. 4: 0-226-05545-0 The intro says it's "the most important legal treatise ever written in the English language," and this "edition is meant to make the book available to students and scholars in an accurate, accessible, and inexpensive form," so it really does belong on Gutenberg, so I don't feel guilty about pulling strings to get it there. (Of course, I can't remember the last time I did something on purpose that I did feel guilty about.) *** Latin Etexts: we are expanding our collection of Latin Etexts, and also their translations into other languages, please email the Team Leader Marc D Chapman <chap0084@tc.umn.edu> cc:me *** Can anyone find: Artistotle's Categories translated by E. M. Edghill *** From: Sandra Laythorpe <sandra@laythorpe.screaming.net> Would anyone be willing to proofread the works of: Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823-1901) lived in the village of Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, all her life. She was a friend of John Keble, founder of The Oxford Movement, and would have known Florence Nightingale. *** We have cleared four of the eight volume set of Elson Readers [5-8 are ok, but our 1-4 are newer editions, so we need these from before 1923, or at least with all copyright dates listed before 1923] Mike Pullen <globaltraveler5565@yahoo.com> *** From: "Oliver.C.Colt. " <colt@guernsey.net> Dear Professor Hart. Some time ago I sent you a transcript of a tale written by Tolstoy and translated by Aylmer Maude, the title being "A prisoner in the Caucuses". There was some uncertainty about the copyright position, as the book from which I had taken this was published in the U.K. in 1931. However, I find that this translation and others by Aylmer Maude were being published long before that in a variety of publications. It occurs to me that if the matter is investigated it might well be that the story could be used in P.G. without infringing any copyright. May I suggest that if you are interested you set your bloodhounds on the trail, unless you feel quite sure that a search would be pointless. *** From: Sandra Laythorpe. slaythorpe@cwcom.net Charlotte Mary Yonge (1823-1901) lived in the village of Otterbourne, Hampshire, England, all her life. She was a friend of John Keble, founder of The Oxford Movement, and would have known Florence Nightingale, who was a near neighbour, and other notables. She was a very popular novelist, but her books are little read nowadays, because they are considered by modern critics to be sentimental and narrow. Her most popular work is 'The Heir of Redclyffe' (1853), which has recently been reprinted. Miss Yonge was a woman of her time, and records the lives of families living through the great social changes of the 19th Century. I think her works are ideal for the Gutenberg Project, because they are important social records, have been neglected for nearly 100 years, and they deserve to have a wider reading audience. My personal interest began because I live about 2 miles from her house, she was a well known local benefractress. I have enjoyed her books very much, and I think her insights into human nature and spirituality are quite amazing. I intend to start with her most popular works, I believe she wrote about 160 novels. Most of her work is available in Hampshire County Library, so they are easily accessible to me. ***get more*** ***Site Updates*** United Kingdom Continent: Europe Country: UK Locations: Canterbury and Lancaster Organisation Name: UK Mirror Service URLs: http://www.mirror.ac.uk/sites/metalab.unc.edu/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ ftp://ftp.mirror.ac.uk/sites/metalab.unc.edu/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ Updated: daily Access: no restrictions Contact email: mirror-admin@mirror.ac.uk *** A good place to get viewers for reading our files on Palm Pilot's is: www.palmgear.com/faq/faq.cfm?sid=54195319991203011426&faqID=31&catID=1 This page has a selection of the front runners on it with their pros & cons listed. A favourite is Bill Clagett's (wtc@pobox.com) Cspotrun The author's download page is at: http://www.mindspring.com/~clagett/bill/palmos/ ***Index Listings for the New Files *****We Finished Some Index Entries That Were Reserved Earlier***** Sep 2000 Hans Huckebein, by Wilhelm Busch [Three * Stories][7hckbxxx.xxx]2322 Sep 2000 Hans Huckebein, by Wilhelm Busch [Three * Stories][8hckbxxx.xxx]2322 *Hans Huckebein, der Ungluecksrabe; Das Pusterohr; Das Bad am Samstag Abend* German/Two versions/7-bit version without accents/8-bit version with accents. Aug 2000 The Descent of Man, by Charles Darwin [Darwin #7][dscmnxxx.xxx]2300 [This is a new version, which includes comprehensive corrections and index!!] Mar 2000 Carlyle's "History of Friedrich II of Prussia V 13[13frdxxx.xxx]2113 *******And We Redid The Following So Each Volume Had A Single Entry******* Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 8, by Goethe[Goethe 20][8wml8xxx.xxx]2342 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 8, by Goethe[Goethe 20][7wml8xxx.xxx]2342 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 7, by Goethe[Goethe 19][8wml7xxx.xxx]2341 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 7, by Goethe[Goethe 19][7wml7xxx.xxx]2341 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 6, by Goethe[Goethe 18][8wml6xxx.xxx]2340 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 6, by Goethe[Goethe 18][7wml6xxx.xxx]2340 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 5, by Goethe[Goethe 17][8wml5xxx.xxx]2339 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 5, by Goethe[Goethe 17][7wml5xxx.xxx]2339 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 4, by Goethe[Goethe 16][8wml4xxx.xxx]2338 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 4, by Goethe[Goethe 16][7wml4xxx.xxx]2338 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 3, by Goethe[Goethe 15][8wml3xxx.xxx]2337 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 3, by Goethe[Goethe 15][7wml3xxx.xxx]2337 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 2, by Goethe[Goethe 14][8wml2xxx.xxx]2336 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 2, by Goethe[Goethe 14][7wml2xxx.xxx]2336 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 1, by Goethe[Goethe 13][8wml1xxx.xxx]2335 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 1, by Goethe[Goethe 13][7wml1xxx.xxx]2335 [A word of explanation--ALL the texts for the entire 8 volumes WERE posted in the 2 volume names listed below. . .this was because I did not understand the structure of the index entries I received until the last minute, and I wanted to go ahead and make the files available then. In today's Newsletter. . .we have divided these up into the 8 volumes. . .so if you want to keep them in a larger file format, keep the old files. . . .for as of now the same filenames for volumes 1 and 2 will actually only contain 1 volume each/did have 4 each] Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 2, by Goethe[Goethe 14][8wml2xxx.xxx]2336 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 2, by Goethe[Goethe 14][7wml2xxx.xxx]2336 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 1, by Goethe[Goethe 13][8wml1xxx.xxx]2335 Sep 2000 Wilhelm Meisters Lehrjahre 1, by Goethe[Goethe 13][7wml1xxx.xxx]2335 *******Here Are The Project Gutenberg Entries for October, 2000******* Mon Year Title and Author [filename.ext]#### *****A "C" Following a Project Gutenberg Etext Number Indicates Copyright**** Oct 2000 Select Epigrams from the Greek Anthology, Mackail [7efgmxxx.xxx]2378 Oct 2000 Select Epigrams from the Greek Anthology, Mackail [8efgmxxx.xxx]2378 [The 7 bit version does not contain accents, the 8 [binary] bit version does] Oct 2000 The Son of the Wolf, by Jack London [London ###] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 [We stopped numbering such stories individually, but since these are close to the last stories he ever wrote, we will finish Jack London this way. mh] Contains. . . . Oct 2000 An Odyssey of the North, by Jack London [J.L.#87] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The Wife of a King, by Jack London [London #86] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The Wisdom of the Trail, by Jack London [J.L.#85] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The Priestly Prerogative, by Jack London[J.L.#84] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 To the Man on the Trail, by Jack London [J.L.#83] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 In a Far Country, by Jack London [London #82] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The Men of Forty Mile, by Jack London[London #81] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The Son of the Wolf, by Jack London [London #80] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 The White Silence, by Jack London [London #79] [snwlfxxx.xxx]2377 Oct 2000 Up From Slavery, by Booker T. Washington [slvryxxx.xxx]2376 Oct 2000 Tartarin de Tarascon, by Alphonse Daudet [trtrnxxx.xxx]2375 Oct 2000 The Princess de Montpensier by Madame de Lafayette[mntpnxxx.xxx]2374 Oct 2000 The Path of the Law, Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.[#2][pthlwxxx.xxx]2373 Oct 2000 The Woman-Haters, by Joseph C. Lincoln [wmnhrxxx.xxx]2372 Oct 2000 The Filigree Ball, by Anna Katherine Green [AKG#4][flgblxxx.xxx]2371 Oct 2000 Sir Gibbie, by George MacDonald [G. MacDonald #8][sirgbxxx.xxx]2370 Oct 2000 One of Ours, by Willa Cather [Willa Cather #6][1oursxxx.xxx]2369 Oct 2000 The Angel and the Author et al, by J K Jerome[#23][angauxxx.xxx]2368 Oct 2000 Los Bombardeos Atomicos de Hiroshima y Nagasaki/SP[sbombxxh.xxx]2367 Oct 2000 The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki [SP][sbombxxh.xxx]2367 [This is our HTML Spanish edition: please see below for our Enlish edition.] Oct 1996 The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki [abombxxx.xxx] 685 Oct 2000 The Beldonald Holbein, by Henry James [James #22][bldhbxxx.xxx]2366 Oct 2000 The Princess de Montpensier, by Mme. de Lafayette [7mntpxxx.xxx]2365 Oct 2000 The Princess de Montpensier, by Mme. de Lafayette [8mntpxxx.xxx]2365 Oct 2000 Active Service, by Stephen Crane[Stephen Crane #3][tvsrvxxx.xxx]2364 Oct 2000 Incognita, by William Congreve[William Congreve#5][ncogaxxx.xxx]2363 Oct 2000 The Story of Wellesly, by Florence Converse [wlslyxxx.xxx]2362 Oct 2000 Why Go To College, by Alice Freeman Palmer [y2clgxxx.xxx]2361 Oct 2000 Riddle of the Sands, by Erskine Childers [riddlxxx.xxx]2360 Oct 2000 Stories by English Authors in France, Scribners Ed[sbeafxxx.xxx]2359 CONTENTS A LODGING FOR THE NIGHT, by R. L. Stevenson A LEAF IN THE STORM, by Ouida A TERRIBLY STRANGE BED, by Wilkie Collins MICHEL LORIO'S CROSS, by Hesba Stretton A PERILOUS AMOUR, by Stanley J. Weyman Oct 2000 The After House, by Mary Roberts Rinehart[MRR #14][ftrhsxxx.xxx]2358 Oct 2000 Great Jehoshaphat & Gully Dirt, Jewell Ellen Smith[gjagdxxx.xxx]2357C Oct 2000 Great Jehoshaphat & Gully Dirt, Jewell Ellen Smith[gjagdxxh.xxx]2357C [The HTML version of the first edition is named gjadh10h.htm and gjadh10h.zip] [The plain version of this first edition is named gjadh10.txt and gjadh10.zip] Oct 2000 Tommy and Co., by Jerome K. Jerome [Jerome #22][tomcoxxx.xxx]2356 Oct 2000 The Formation of Vegetable Mould, by Darwin [CD#9][vgmldxxx.xxx]2355 Oct 2000 On the Brain, by T. H. Huxley [THH#3] [Darwin #8][huxbrxxx.xxx]2354 Oct 2000 Tea-table Talk, by Jerome K. Jerome [Jerome #21][ttalkxxx.xxx]2353 Oct 2000 Eurasia, by Chris. Evans [uasiaxxx.xxx]2352 Oct 2008 John Halifax, Gentleman, by Mrs. Craik:Dinah Maria[halifxxx.xxx]2351 Oct 2000 His Last Bow, by Arthur Conan Doyle[A.C.Doyle #23][lstbwxxx.xxx]2350 Oct 2000 The Adv. of The Devil's Foot, A. Conan Doyle [#22][dvlftxxx.xxx]2349 Oct 2000 The Disappearance Of Lady Frances Carfax [ACD #21][lcrfxxxx.xxx]2348 Oct 2000 The Adv. Of The Dying Detective, A Conan Doyle #20[dydetxxx.xxx]2347 Oct 2000 The Adv. Of The Bruce-Partington Plans [Doyle #19][bplanxxx.xxx]2346 Oct 2000 The Adv. Of The Red Circle A. Conan Doyle [#18][rcrclxxx.xxx]2345 Oct 2000 The Adv. Of The Cardboard Box, by Connan Doyle #17[crdbdxxx.xxx]2344 Oct 2000 The Adv. Of Wisteria Lodge, A. Conan Doyle [#16][wstraxxx.xxx]2343 Date: Sun, 21 Nov 1999 10:20:18 -0600 From: Judith Boss <jeboss@home.com> To: hart@prairienet.org Subject: Zane Grey book available Michael: In addition to the previous 6 books, I have a copy of Zane Grey's _The Last Trail_ [TAKEN!] available for someone to work with. B. M. Bower, _Casey Ryan_ _The Gringos_ _Skyrider_ Frances Hodgson Burnett, _In Connection with the DeWilloughby Claim_ W. W. Jacobs, _Many Cargoes_ H. G. Wells, _The Undying Fire_ TAKEN! Time to run the copyright rules by them again, and also have had a couple of complaints about the how-to input directions being wordy. I thought I re-wrote them, but that's not what's at the site. Remind me again when the time comes if you want me to do it. Dianne *** A PROPOSAL FOR PUBLISHING PROJECT GUTENBERG BOOKS IN HTML by philip Hunt <phil@comuno.com> There is a problem in that PG books are currently on the web site in ascii, but the prefered format for web-basded information is HTML. One solution would be to copy all the books into HTML. However, this would present other problems, such as: (1) what about other data formats such as WAP, RTF, DocBook, MSWord, PDF, etc? Will we want to transcribe all existing PG books into these formats as well? (2) what about new PG books? We don't want to have to manually enter the same book multiple times, once for each format. (3) HTML is popular now, but will it be in 10 years time? Will something else be popular then? We don't want to have to keep re-translating. These problems can be solved by translating them not into HTML, but into an XML-based format. I envisage that most of ther work in translation can be done programmatically -- I plan writing a few experimental Python scripts to do this over the next few weeks. Of course, it is necessary to define exactly what the XML-based format will look like (i.e. what tags to use, and their meaning). My preference would be for something quite simple: <p>, <h1>, <h2>, <h3> to define types of paragraph, <i> and <b> to define italic and boldface, and <pre> to define preformated text. As you probably know, these are the same tags that HTML uses. Once the data is in the XML format, translating to the other formats I mentioned above will be easy, i.e. it will be able to be done entirely automatically once the right programs are written. I do not envisage these programs as being difficult to write. So once a book is in XML, it is (almost) automatically available in all the other formats that we will support. And if PG decides to use a new format, it is just a matter of writing a smallish translation program, and hey presto all the existing books are converted. New PG books would be typed in in the XML format (another reason for making it as simple as possible). PERSONAL NOTES I've got the programming skills to do the code-writing part of the project, and I have a web server that I can host 500MB of data on. The thing I would probably need most help on is manually formatting text into XML (as I said, I hope most of this process can be automated). *** RACING TO CONVERT BOOKS TO BYTES Although skepticism remains as to whether readers will embrace digital books, interest in the electronic format is growing, with young people leading the trend. The University of Texas at Austin plans to spend $1 million to increase its current collection of 6,000 electronic books. Students are checking out the university's digital books at astonishing rates, says librarian Dennis Dillon. "Usually a book has a one-third chance of being checked out," Dillon says. "So to have some title checked out 25 times in two months--that's shocking." Companies such as Microsoft are preparing for a wave of digital reading, predicting that electronic books will overtake print books within 10 years. Meanwhile, traditional publishers such as Random House are skeptical about the new format but are still moving to digitize all of their titles. Startups such as netLibrary, which sells electronic books to libraries, are working to draw readers by offering a large selection of titles. However, in order to get publishers to sell titles, these companies need to prove that sufficient demand exists for the digital format. (New York Times 12/09/99) You have been reading excerpts from Edupage: If you have questions or comments about Edupage, send e-mail to: edupage@educause.edu To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName *** AMAZON NAME DISPUTE SETTLED Internet retailer Amazon.com and the Amazon Bookstore, a small feminist bookstore in Minneapolis that has used the name "Amazon" since 1970, have settled a legal dispute over the use of their common name. The Minneapolis store will always refer to itself by its full name of Amazon Bookstore Cooperative and will assign its common-law rights to the name to Amazon.com in return for a license from the Internet company to continue using the Amazon name. (AP/USA Today 4 Nov 99) http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/ctg578.htm I have scanner and Omnipage, and would be happy to scan things for others (without proof reading their work). If the person is in the SF Bay area it would be very easy. "David A. Schwan" <davidsch@earthlink.net> You have been reading excerpts from NewsScan Daily Underwritten by Arthur Andersen & IEEE Computer Society If you have questions or comments about NewsScan send e-mail to Editors@newsscan.com To subscribe or unsubscribe to NewsScan Daily, send an e-mail message to NewsScan@NewsScan.com with 'subscribe' or 'unsubscribe' in the subject line. Mac users can download our .txt files in binary mode to avoid the double spacing cr/lf line ends creates. Or download the .zip files, which unzip properly for nearly any operating system they are unzipped for... About the Project Gutenberg Newsletter: [Goes out approximately first Wednesday of each month. But different relays will get it to you at different times; you can subscribe directly, just send me email to find out how, or surf to promo.net/pg to subscribe directly by yourself.] Thanks! Happy Holidays! You can subscribe or unsubscribe by yourself to the listservers we have running. . .if you are trying to unsubscribe, please be aware that MANY different listservers relay the newsletters from Project Gutenberg and Ask Dr. Internet, and that it is quite likely you do not receive our newsletters directly from our listservers. In any case of that nature, you would have to deal with the listserver in question, presuming you still wanted to unsubscribe in that case. 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Rememmber: "gutnberg" = General Public Announcements "gutvol-l" = General Private Announcements "gutvol-d" = Free For All Discussion To SUBSCRIBE to the Project Gutenberg mailing list, "gutnberg" please send an email message to: listproc@listserv.oit.unc.edu The subject line of the message will be ignored. The body of the message should contain the text: subscribe gutnberg Your True Name and/or subscribe gutvol-l Your True Name and/or subscribe gutvol-d Your True Name So, if your name were Dudley P. Duck, your message would contain: subscribe gutnberg Dudley P. Duck You do not need to include your email address, because Listprocessor gets it from the header of your email message. Beware that the address must be "listproc@listserv.oit.unc.edu" You can't address your message to an address like "listserv" or "listprocessor" or "majordom" To UNSUBSCRIBE, just send this message to "listproc@listserv.oit.unc.edu" unsubscribe gutnberg If you are having trouble with the list, send a message to "owner-gutnberg@listserv.oit.unc.edu" and your message will be routed to the person who manages the list. Thanks!! Michael S. Hart [hart@pobox.com] Project Gutenberg Executive Director Internet User ~#100
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