PG Monthly Newsletter (1998-06-03)

by Michael Cook on June 3, 1998
Newsletters

========
Subject: June Project Gutenberg Newsletter
From: "Michael S. Hart" <hart@prairienet.org>
To: Michael Hart <hart@pobox.com>
Date: Wed, 3 Jun 1998 13:47:20 -0500 (CDT)

This is the Project Gutenberg Newsletter for June, 1998

We have now completed 14% of our 10,000 Etext goal. . .
and selected Great Expectations as #1400, Anna Karenina
as #1399, and Tarzan the Untamed as #1401, hopefully we
will always have something for everyone to read.


We lost touch with our volunteer at the Library of Congress,
if anyone can put us in touch with a friend there, thanks!!!


Dianne Bean will away from her email until June 22; please hold your mail
til then. If you need to send a completed etext, send it to Michael Hart.


Geof Pawlicki has purchased a set of O Henry, as below.  If you would
like any of these to work on and/or to keep, all you have to do is to
pay the shipping.  [geof@netcom.com]

These are mostly collections titled after one story in the collection.

The Whirligigs
Cabbages and Kings
The Trimmed Lamp
Sixes and Sevens
Options
Rolling Stones
Strictly Business
Heart of the West
The Voice of the City
The Four Million
Roads of Destiny

***

Here are the 36 July Etexts for 1998.  The Federalist Papers tops the list to
commemorate the 27th Anniversary of the first Project Gutenberg Etext, the US
Declaration of Independence.  Since we are currently two months ahead of this
year's schedule, we are posting most of these books in June, so they would be
currently arriving at the best time for people to include them in some of the
4th of July celebrations, and also Bastille Day.  Therefore the month of June
will primarily be filled with "History of Democracy" Etexts, as was our first
10 years at Project Gutenberg.  We hope you will find them enlightening.

These Etexts are from  http://www.constitution.org/liberlib.htm
Our Thanks to The Constitution Society for Providing This Etext!


Mon Year    Title and Author                               [filename.ext]####

Jul 1998 The Federalist Papers, by Hamilton, Jay & Madison [federxxx.xxx]1404
Jul 1998 A Start in Life, by Honore de Balzac  [Balzac #25][stlifxxx.xxx]1403
Jul 1998 Where the Blue Begins, by Christopher Morley      [wtbbgxxx.xxx]1402
Jul 1998 Tarzan the Untamed, by Edgar Rice Burroughs[TARZ7][tarz7xxx.xxx]1401

Jul 1998 Great Expectations, by Charles Dickens[Dickens#38][grexpxxx.xxx]1400
Jul 1998 Anna Karenina, by Leo Tolstoy/Tolstoi [Tolstoy #5][nkrnnxxx.xxx]1399
Jul 1998 Dore Lectures on Mental Science, by Thomas Troward[dorelxxx.xxx]1398
Jul 1998 The Ruins by C. F. [Constantin Francois de] Volney[ruinsxxx.xxx]1397

Jul 1998 Rienzi, last of the Roman Tribunes, by E. B.Lytton[rienzxxx.xxx]1396
Jul 1998 Letters on Literature, by Andrew Lang   [Lang #8] [ltlitxxx.xxx]1395
Jul 1998 The Holly-Tree, by Charles Dickens  [Dickens #37] [hlytrxxx.xxx]1394
Jul 1998 Amours de Voyage, by Arthur Hugh Clough           [mrvygxxx.xxx]1393

Jul 1998 The Seven Poor Travellers, by Charles Dickens[#36][svprtxxx.xxx]1392
Jul 1998 Penelope's Irish Experiences by Kate D. Wiggin[#7][pnliexxx.xxx]1391
Jul 1998 The Jimmyjohn Boss and Other Stories by Wister    [jmyjnxxx.xxx]1390
Jul 1998 Gobseck, by Honore de Balzac[Honore de Balzac #24][gbsekxxx.xxx]1389

Jul 1998 Padre Ignacio, by Owen Wister   [Owen Wister #7]  [igncoxxx.xxx]1388
Jul 1998 Mother, by Owen Wister          [Owen Wister #6]  [mothrxxx.xxx]1387
Jul 1998 Lady Baltimore, by Owen Wister  [Owen Wister #5]  [lbaltxxx.xxx]1386
Jul 1998 Lin McLean, by Owen Wister      [Owen Wister #4]  [lmclnxxx.xxx]1385

Jul 1998 The Ayrshire Legatees, by John Galt [John Galt #3][ayrlgxxx.xxx]1384
Jul 1998 Poems by George Meredith - Volume 3 [Meredith #5] [pmgm3xxx.xxx]1383
Jul 1998 Poems by George Meredith - Volume 2 [Meredith #4] [pmgm2xxx.xxx]1382
Jul 1998 Poems by George Meredith - Volume 1 [Meredith #3] [pmgm1xxx.xxx]1381

Jul 1998 The Two Brothers, by Honore de Balzac [Balzac #23][brthrxxx.xxx]1380
Jul 1998 A Straight Deal, by Owen Wister  [Owen Wister #3] [strdlxxx.xxx]1379
Jul 1998 The Land of Footprints, by Stewart Edward White #3[fprntxxx.xxx]1378
Jul 1998 The Talisman, by Walter Scott[Sir Walter Scott #3][tlsmnxxx.xxx]1377

Jul 1998 The Little White Bird, by J.M. Barrie  [Barrie #4][tlwbdxxx.xxx]1376
Jul 1998 New Chronicles of Rebecca by Kate Douglas Wiggin 7[tncorxxx.xxx]1375
Jul 1998 Vendetta, by Honore de Balzac[Honore de Balzac#22][vndtaxxx.xxx]1374
Jul 1998 Study of a Woman, by Honore de Balzac [Balzac #21][sowmnxxx.xxx]1373

Jul 1998 The Adventures of Captain Bonneville, by Irving #4[taocbxxx.xxx]1372
Jul 1998 Astoria, by Washinton Irving[Washington Irving #3][striaxxx.xxx]1371
Jul 1998 Autobiography of Andrew Dickson White  Volume II  [2aadwxxx.xxx[1370
Jul 1998 Paz, by Honore de Balzac, #20 by Honore de Balzac [pzhdbxxx.xxx]1369

and here are the first 8 we have scheduled for August:

Mon Year    Title and Author                               [filename.ext]####

Aug 1998 Masterman Ready, by Captain Marryat   [Marryat #1][mmrdyxxx.xxx]1412
Aug 1998 Domestic Peace by Honore de Balzac [de Balzac #28][dmspcxxx.xxx]1411
Aug 1998 The Commission in Lunacy by Honore de Balzac [#27][lunacxxx.xxx]1410
Aug 1998 The Soul of the Far East, by Percival Lowell  [#1][sofrexxx.xxx]1409
4
Aug 1998 The Natural History of Selborne, by Gilbert White [tnhosxxx.xxx]1408
Aug 1998 A Message From the Sea by Charles Dickens [CD #39][amftsxxx.xxx]1407
Aug 1998 Perils of Certain English Prisoners by Dickens #38[pocepxxx.xxx]1406
Aug 1998 The Collection of Antiquities, by Balzac [HDB #26][clntqxxx.xxx]1405

>From Edupage:

SENATE PASSES ONLINE COPYRIGHT EXTENSION
The Senate unanimously approved the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which
offers the same protection to online computer software, music, movies and
written works that they enjoy in more tangible form.  In a key provision,
the legislation exempts libraries and online services from prosecution for
copyright violations committed by patrons and customers.  Individuals who
violate copyrights for financial gain will be liable for $1 million in fines
and up to 10 years in prison.  (Wall Street Journal 15 May 98)

INTERNET GROWTH
A study by the U.S. Commerce Department ( http://ecommerce.gov/ ) says that
traffic on the Internet is doubling every hundred days and predicts that
electronic commerce will grow to $300 billion a year by 2002.  (USA Today 16
Apr 96)  [So. . .anyone who says they can make the Internet 100 time faster,
will have to deal with the fact that traffice with double as fast as they do
any doubling of the speed.  Don't expect any real speedups.    Michael Hart]

[Note Well:  This means traffice is multiplying by 10 every year. . . .
When you listen to those people promising to make the Internet run 100
time faster in 10 years, ask them if the Internet won't be slowing down
because they aren't proposing increasing the speed as fast as traffic.
None of them are saying they could possibly make the Internet handle
100 times more traffic every year. . . .  This is smoke and mirrors.

ECONOMIST PREDICTS Y2K PROBLEM WILL CAUSE RECESSION
In an op-ed piece, Edward Yardeni, chief economist and managing director of
Deutsche Morgan Grenfell says that problems arising from the Year 2000
computer glitch could cause a major recession, as businesses fail and
government agencies become incapable of delivering basic services, including
tax collection, welfare payments, national defense and air traffic control:
"The likely recession could be at least as bad as the one during 1973-74,
which was caused mostly by a disruption in the supply of oil.  Information,
stored and manipulated by computers, is as vital as oil for running modern
economies.  If information is harder to obtain, markets will allocate and
use resources inefficiently.  Market participants will be forced to spend
more time and money obtaining information that was previously available at
little or no cost...  Furthermore, a 2000 recession is bound to be
deflationary.  The U.S. may experience a $1 trillion drop in nominal GDP and
a $1 trillion loss in stock market capitalization."  (Wall Street Journal 4
May 98)  [and you heard it here first, years ago. . .mh]

NEW DOS IS YEAR 2000-COMPLIANT
IBM has launched a new PC DOS 2000 that automatically corrects the two-digit
dates that threaten to befuddle older computer systems, and also supports
the European Monetary Union's new euro currency symbol -- a management
problem that could prove even more troublesome for European businesses than
the Y2K problem.  According to recent research, there are between 120
million and 150 million people who still use DOS on their desktop machines.
"We believe about half of those are business users," says a manager at IBM's
Network Computing Software division.  That figure doesn't include users of
Microsoft Windows 3.1, which includes DOS as a component.  (InternetWeek 27
May 98)

Edupage ... is what you've just finished reading excerpts of--
to subscribe to Edupage: send mail to: listproc@educom.unc.edu
with the message:           subscribe edupage Susan B. Anthony
(if your name is Susan B. Anthony; otherwise use your own name
To unsubscribe send a message to:      listproc@educom.unc.edu
with the message: unsubscribe edupage.   If you have problems,
send email to manager@educom.unc.edu.)   "I love Edupage."  mh
Edupage is written by John Gehl (gehl@educom.edu), and Suzanne
Douglas (douglas@educom.edu).     USA Telephone:  770-590-1017

http://www.educom.edu/web/pubs/pubHomeFrame.html

Edupage is supported by Educom

***

This concludes the June Project Gutengberg Newsletter. . . .

Thanks so much for your continuing support!

Michael

***

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Thanks!!

Michael S. Hart
[hart@pobox.com]
Project Gutenberg
Executive Director
Internet User ~#100







pgmonthly_1998_06_03.txt

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