[Nfbv-announce] Internet Archive Launches Library for the Visually Impaired With 1M Books
Corbb O'Connor
corbbo at gmail.com
Sat May 8 01:59:23 UTC 2010
Please distribute as appropriate.
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Internet Archive today launched a new service that will provide more
than a million books in a specially designed format that can be read
by visually impaired readers. The new service is part of the the non-
profit’s Open Library project, which has been scanning and digitizing
hundreds of thousands of books for the past several years and now has
more than a million in its index. Internet Archive founder Brewster
Kahle, who funds some of the Archive’s costs through his charitable
foundation, said the new service more than doubles the number of books
previously available to visually impaired readers.
“Every person deserves the opportunity to enhance their lives through
access to the books that teach, entertain and inspire,” Kahle said in
a statement. “Bringing access to huge libraries of books to the blind
and print disabled is truly one of benefits of the digital
revolution.” The Archive founder — who also founded Alexa.com and
later sold it to Amazon — said the project is also asking individuals
to donate books to add to the digital library, the first 10,000 of
which the project will fund the digitization of (the rest will be
financed by donations from foundations, companies and government).
The books being offered as part of the project are scanned by Archive
volunteers and employees in 20 locations across the U.S. (and in
several other countries), including San Francisco, Los Angeles, New
York and the Library of Congress. The books are then digitized using a
special format called DAISY, which can be used by the visually
impaired or downloaded to devices that read the text aloud. Some books
have come from other digitization projects, while scanned books come
from the collections of more than 150 libraries that belong to the
Open Content Alliance, which is also affiliated with the Internet
Archive.
The Open Library, which was originally launched in 2007 and whose
motto is “A web page for every book,” just got a new design and
features, including improved search. Google also has a book-scanning
and digitization project called Google Books, which the company
claims has more than 10 million books in digital format. Kahle has
been building the Internet Archive and the Open Library since the late
1990s, with a vision of providing millions of digital books for free.
A video of his talk at the TED conference in 2007 is embedded below.
(Video on website.)
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