**The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, August 21, 2002* *eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since Before The Internet* *Main URL is promo.net Webmaster is Pietro di Miceli of Rome, Italy* Check out our Websites at promo.net/pg & gutenberg.net, and see below to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalogue. The eBooks are posted throughout the week. You can even get daily lists. Oct 1998 eBook 1500 Started A New Edition Of Shakespeare [?ws??xxx.xxx]1500 Oct 1998 Beacon Lights of History, by John Lord [V3 Part 2][32blhxxx.xxx]1499 Oct 1998 Beacon Lights of History, by John Lord [V3 Part 1][31blhxxx.xxx]1498 Oct 1998 The Republic by Plato, Tr. Benjamin Jowett/see 150[repub11x.xxx]1497 Oct 1998 Massacre at Paris, by Christopher Marlowe [CM #5][msprsxxx.xxx]1496 Oct 1998 The Golf Course Mystery, by Chester K. Steele [glfmsxxx.xxx]1495 Oct 1998 The Legends of the Jews by Louis Ginzberg Volume 2[2lotjxxx.xxx]1494 Oct 1998 The Legends of the Jews by Louis Ginzberg Volume 1[1lotjxxx.xxx]1493 Oct 1998 The Life of Columbus, [in his own words] by Hale [tloccxxx.xxx]1492 Oct 1998 Letters to Dead Authors, by Andrew Lang [Lang #9] [letdaxxx.xxx]1491 Oct 1998 The New McGuffey Fourth Reader[McGuffey Reader #2][4nmcgxxx.xxx]1490 Oct 1998 The New McGuffey First Reader [McGuffey Reader #1][1nmcgxxx.xxx]1489 Oct 1998 True Story of Christopher Columbus, by E.S. Brooks[ttsccxxx.xxx]1488 Oct 1998 Perfect Wagnerite, Commentary the Ring, by GB Shaw[sringxxx.xxx]1487 Oct 1998 The Unseen World and Other Essays, by John Fiske [nswoexxx.xxx]1486 Oct 1998 The Use and Need of the Life of Carrie A. Nation [crntnxxx.xxx]1485 Oct 1998 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, by Ibanez [4hrsmxxx.xxx]1484 Oct 1998 Forty Centuries of Ink, by David N. Carvalho [40cnkxxx.xxx]1483 Oct 1998 Modeste Mignon, by Honore de Balzac [de Balzac#45][mdmgnxxx.xxx]1482 Oct 1998 A Daughter of Eve, by Honore de Balzac [Balzac#44][doevexxx.xxx]1481 Oct 1998 Tom Brown's School Days, by Thomas Hughes ][tbssdxxx.xxx]1480 Oct 1998 A Vanished Arcadia, by R. B. Cunninghame Graham ][vajipxxx.xxx]1479 Oct 1998 A Parody Outline of History, by D. O. Stewart [#2][apoohxxx.xxx]1478 Oct 1998 The Toys of Peace by H.H. Munro ("Saki") [Saki #3][toypcxxx.xxx]1477 Sep 1998 Chance, by Joseph Conrad [Joseph Conrad #22][chancxxx.xxx]1476 Today Is The 226th Day of 2002 139 Days/20 Weeks Left Until 2003 We did 1240 eBooks in 2001 We did 1490 So Far in 2002 The 19th Week Of Our SECOND 5,000 eBooks 17 Months From Today, Perhaps Our 10,000th eBook! 1,990 New eBooks In The Last Year 3,782 eBooks This Week Last Year 5,790 Tree-Friendly Titles Now Online 202 Monthly Average This Year 534 New At This Time Last Year In this issue of the Project Gutenberg Weekly newsletter: - Intro (above) - Requests For Assistance - Making Donations - Access To The Collection - Information About Mirror Sites - Weekly eBook update: - Headline News from Newsscan and Edupage - Information about mailing lists *** Requests For Assistance: We are seeking a physical copy of the book RUR in Czeck by Karel Capek, published in 1920-1922. These copies are hard to find, but available at the U. Nebraska Lincoln, Texas A&M, U. Texas Austin, NY Public Library & Waseda University. If you are near these and can compare the eBook we have against the physical book, please contact Greg Newby <gbnewby@ils.unc.edu>. *** Aaron Cannon is looking for any pre-1923 English/foreign Language dictionaries that can be added to the archive. He is especially interested in English/Spanish Spanish/English dictionaries, but any language is acceptable. If you have any of these lying about, or if you know where they can be had for less than $20, please contact Aaron at cannona@fireantproductions.com *** The Distributed Proofreading Team is proud to annouce that they have now completed over 400 e-texts! Stop on by and give us a hand with the next 400! http://charlz.dns2go.com/gutenberg *** David Widger would like to complete the works of Edward Bulwer Lytton for Project Gutenberg and has two bookshelves of these books scanned--but he is running out of steam. He will mail a printed book and email the raw text file ready for proofing to anyone who would like to produce one of these books giving any guidance needed to those who are new to the game. Many Thanks! Please Reply to: widger@cecomet.net *** Project Gutenberg has a new way to prepare digital editions of books which can not be read on a conventional flat bed scanner. Brewster Kahle has generously donated time on The Internet Archive's (http://www.archive.org) Minolta 7100 orbital scanner http://bpg.minoltausa.com 02 While its physical location in San Francisco at the Presidio effectively limits access to people local to the area, we can offer a limited scanning service. Ideal candidate projects would be large format (up to 17" by 23"), fragile or rare books which cannot be unbound. Specifically, when scanned, the book is opened to lay flat on its spine, and is well supported on 2 variable height platens, producing a level surface upon which the overhead scanhead focuses. Pages can be scanned singly or in tandem, with resolution ranging from 300-600 dpi, depending upon the size of the scan area. (400 is the max resolution at max size). The correction software for eliminating center lines and curved pages is outstanding. While not as fast as a sheet feeder, it is physically less demanding to use than a flat bed scanner, and of course is much kinder to delicate pages and bindings. Contact me if this sounds like something you can use! *** I have some copyright research for McNees, but no email address. *** A new mailing list "gut-tv@listserv.unc.edu" has been added. This mailing list is intended for those interested in helping or monitoring the progress of a public access cable TV show "Free eBooks This Week" which highlights the free eBooks posted in the past week. Those interested in helping could offer to help write, help find interviews, be interviewed, and those local to Maryland can help in the filming, staging, etc. Please subscribe to this mailing list if you are interested in being up to date on all the TV goings on! *** Gutenberg Music expands offerings to include MusicXML In response to user requests for a non-proprietary - and preferably text-based - music format and equally significant developments in the music software industry, Project Gutenberg is pleased to announce that all music titles are now available in MusicXML format. While still a relatively new standard, MusicXML has gained broad based support, and clearly responds to a well understood need for music software to interoperate. The evolving standard economically and unambiguously encodes all notes, rhythms, articulations, and expression commonly used in classic period music. It also enables the extraction of a basic MIDI performance automatically. Extensive details about MusicXML and its adoption are available from http://www.recordare.com/xml.html. As with the main project, any Public Domain works are fair game for Music, but we are specifically trying to complete the Beethoven String Quartets as a first major series too. If you'd be interested in a unique outlet for your love of music (and perhaps dormant expertise ?), please contact Geof Pawlicki (gpawlicki@earthlink.net) or check out the volunteer pages at http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/music for further information. Thanks for your interest ! *** Personal Request: I am looking for a keyboard for my Visor Edge. The only one I am SURE will work is the: PA810U Targus but there may be others. I have tried to order many times, nothing ever arrived. Thanks for any assistance you can provide! Michael *** We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests! We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages, and in more formats, including music, artwork, movies, etc. *** QUICK WAYS TO MAKE A DONATION TO PROJECT GUTENBERG A. Send a check or money order to: Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation PMB 113 1739 University Ave. Oxford, MS 38655-4109 B. Donate by credit card online NetworkForGood: http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541 PayPal to "donate@gutenberg.net": https://www.paypal.com /xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.net&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of volunteers over more than 30 years. Your donations make it possible to support these volunteers, and pay our few employees to continue the creation of free electronic texts. We accept credit cards, checks and money transfers from any country, in any currency. Donations are made to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (PGLAF). PGLAF is approved as a charitable 501(c)(3) organization by the US Internal Revenue Service, and has the Federal Employee Information Number (EIN) 64-6221541. For more information, including several other ways to donate, go to http://promo.net/pg/donation.html or email gbnewby@ils.unc.edu *** --WHERE TO GET EBOOKS http://promo.net/pg (aka http://www.gutenberg.net) allows searching by title, author, language and subject. Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world. http://www.promo.net/pg/list.html can get you to the nearest one. These sites and indices are not instant, as the cataloguing needs to be done by our professional Chief Cataloguer. . .who is half way around the world for the next week or three. . .so this is more important than usual. --"INSTANT" ACCESS TO EBOOKS Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download site (or a mirror) if you know the filename you want. Try: http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04 or ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext04 and look for the first five letters of the filesname. Note that updated eBooks usually go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.) *** Correction From Last Week's Newsletter: My apologies, even though we all agreed on the numbers up to the last moment, apparently I counted one too many as the last other totals should also obviously be one less. Was 5749 total. Here Are The Updated Listings For This Week +33 New this week: ***] CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS [*** Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, xxxxx11.txt, and VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, xxxxx10a.txt, as --Please note the following changes, corrections and improvements: We have posted the following eBooks in new formats as indicated: May 2004 String Quartet No. 10 in E-flat Major, Schubert[1][s1251xxx.xxx]5627 (MusicXML in s125110x.zip, zipped file only) Jan 2004 String Quarted No. 17, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart[#3][wm458xxx.xxx]4951 (MusicXML in wm45810x.zip, zipped file only) Sep 2001 Dubliners, by James Joyce [James Joyce #1] [dblnrxxx.xxx]2814 (HTML in dblnr11h.htm/.zip) Aug 1999 North America, Vol. 1, by Anthony Trollope [AT #3][1noamxxx.xxx]1865 (PDF in 1noam10p.zip/.zip, PDF Folio in 1noam10pf.pdf/.zip) (TeX in 1noam10t.tex/.zip) Sep 1998 Some Christmas Stories, by Charles Dickens[CD #50][cdscsxxx.xxx]1467 (PDF in cdscs10p.pdf/.zip, PDF Folio in cdscs10pf.pdf/.zip) (TeX in cdscs10t.tex/.zip) Apr 1996 The Art of Writing, Robert Louis Stevenson [RLS22][artowxxx.xxx] 492 (HTML in artow10h.htm/.zip) Mar 1996 In the South Seas, by Robert Louis Stevenson [#20][sseasxxx.xxx] 464 (HTML in sseas10h.htm/.zip) Mar 1996 Lavengro, by George Borrow [George Borrow #3] [lvgroxxx.xxx] 452 (HTML in lvgro10h.htm/.zip) Feb 1996 The Romany Rye, by George Borrow [Borrow #2] [trryexxx.xxx] 422 (HTML in trrye10h.htm/.zip) Jan 1996 Ballads, by Robert Louis Stevenson [Stevenson #16][rlsbaxxx.xxx] 413 (HTML in rlsba10h.htm/.zip) Jan 1996 The Holy War, by John Bunyan [Bunyan #2] [hlywrxxx.xxx] 395 (HTML in hlywr10h.htm/.zip) Jan 1996 Cranford, by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell [crnfdxxx.xxx] 394 (HTML in crnfd10h.htm/.zip) Dec 1995 Lay Morals, by Robert Louis Stevenson [RLS #10] [lamorxxx.xxx] 373 (HTML in lamor10h.htm/.zip) Aug 1995 The Ways of Men, by Eliot Gregory [waymnxxx.xxx] 319 (HTML in waymn10h.htm/.zip) Jan 1994 A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens [CD#1] [2cityxxx.xxx] 98 (PDF in 2city12p.pdf/.zip, PDF Folio in 2city12pf.pdf/.zip) (Tex in 2city12t.tex/.zip) ***] 33 NEW U.S. POSTS [*** May 2004 The Evil Shepherd, by E. Phillips Oppenheim [#13][vlshpxxx.xxx]5743 May 2004 The Bird-Woman, by Katherine Chandler [bwmnlxxx.xxx]5742 [Title: The Bird-Woman of the Lewis and Clark Expedition] May 2004 Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus Ludwig Wittgenstein[tlophxxx.xxx]5740 May 2004 A Korean--English Dictionary, Leon Kuperman [kedctxxx.xxx]5739C (Plain text in kedct10.txt/.zip, HTML in kedct10h.htm/.zip) (PDF in kedct10p.pdf/.zip, encapsulated PostScript in kedct10ps.eps/.zip) (TeX in kedct10t.tex/.zip) May 2004 Cappy Ricks, by Peter B. Kyne [cpyrkxxx.xxx]5738 May 2004 Smoke Bellew, by Jack London [Jack London #50][smkblxxa.xxx]5737 (See also previous version: (Jan 1999 Smoke Bellew, by Jack London [Jack London #50][smkblxxx.xxx]1596) May 2004 The Professional Aunt, by Mary C.E. Wemyss [pauntxxx.xxx]5736 May 2004 The Valley of the Giants, by Peter B. Kyne [vlgntxxx.xxx]5735 May 2004 Life in the Grey Nunnery at Montreal,S. Richardson[lfgnnxxx.xxx]5734 [Author: Sarah J Richardson] May 2004 Autobiography, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe [#36][?tbgtxxx.xxx]5733 [Translated by John Oxenford] May 2004 Bunny Brown and his Sister Sue, Laura Lee Hope[#6][bnnbrxxx.xxx]5732 May 2004 Patty in Paris, by Carolyn Wells [Wells#5][pttypxxx.xxx]5731 May 2004 Friends and Helpers, by Sarah J. Eddy [frhlpxxx.xxx]5730 May 2004 Navy Girl at Home, by Gabrielle E. Jackson [nvghmxxx.xxx]5729 [Title: Peggy Stewart: Navy Girl at Home] May 2004 The Tale of Freddie Firefly, by Arthur Bailey [#2][tlfflxxx.xxx]5727 [Author's Full Name: Arthur Scott Bailey] May 2004 The Fairy-Land Of Science, by Arabella B. Buckley [frlscxxx.xxx]5726 May 2004 English Literature For Boys and Girls,[Marshall#2][?ngltxxx.xxx]5725 [Author: H.E. Marshall] May 2004 A Book Of Operas, by Henry Edward Krehbiel [Hek#3][?opraxxx.xxx]5724 May 2004 Press Cuttings, by George Bernard Shaw [Shaw#35][prsctxxx.xxx]5723 May 2004 The Shewing-Up Of Blanco Posnet, by Shaw [Gbs#34][shwbpxxx.xxx]5722 May 2004 A House Of Gentlefolk, by Ivan Turgenev [hsgtfxxx.xxx]5721 May 2004 A Shropshire Lad, by A. E. Housman [shrpsxxx.xxx]5720 Apr 2004 Complete Short Works by Georg Ebers, [Ge#153][g153vxxx.xxx]5592 [Contains Ebooks #5587-5591] Apr 2004 The Nuts, by Georg Ebers, [Ge#152][g152vxxx.xxx]5591 Apr 2004 The Greylock, by Georg Ebers, [Ge#151][g151vxxx.xxx]5590 Apr 2004 The Elixir, by Georg Ebers, [Ge#150][g150vxxx.xxx]5589 Apr 2004 A Question, by Georg Ebers, [Ge#149][g149vxxx.xxx]5588 Apr 2004 In The Blue Pike, by Ebers, Complete [Ge#148][g148vxxx.xxx]5587 [Author: Georg Ebers] [Contains Ebooks #5584-5586] Apr 2004 In The Blue Pike, by Georg Ebers, V3 [Ge#147][g147vxxx.xxx]5586 Apr 2004 In The Blue Pike, by Georg Ebers, V2 [Ge#146][g146vxxx.xxx]5585 Apr 2004 In The Blue Pike, by Georg Ebers, V1 [Ge#145][g145vxxx.xxx]5584 *** (This number includes the 85 etexts posted at the PG Australia web site) *** Statistical Review (This number includes the 85 etexts posted at the PG Australia web site) In the first 33 weeks of the new year, we have produced 1,490 new eBooks. The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks of production, each production-week starting/ending Wednesday noon, starting with the first Wednesday in January. January 2nd was was the first Wednesday of 2002, and thus ended the production With 5,790 eTexts online as of August 21th, 2002 it now takes an average of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $1.73 from each book, for Project Gutenberg to have currently given away $1,000,000,000,000 [One Trillion Dollars] in books. 100,000,000 readers is only about 1.6 percent of the world's population! This "cost" is down from $2.64 when we had 3782 Etexts A Year Ago Can you imagine 5,000 books each costing $.91 less a year later??? Or. . .would this say it better? Can you imagine 5,000 books each costing 33% less a year later??? At 5790 eBooks in 31 Years We Averaged At 1490 eBooks Done In 2002 We Averaged ***Headline News*** [My Comments In Brackets] Headlines From Newsscan GROUP WARNS OF EU SURVEILLANCE Statewatch, a U.K. group dedicated to protecting civil liberties on the Internet, is warning that European governments are planning changes to the 1997 EU Directive on privacy in telecommunications that would require phone companies, mobile network operators and ISPs to store details of their customers' Web use, e-mails and phone calls for between one to two years. Current law states that traffic data may be retained for billing purposes only and then must be deleted. "EU governments claimed that changes to 1997 EC Directive on privacy in telecommunications to allow for data retention and access by the law enforcement agencies would not be binding on member states -- each national parliament would have to decide. Now we know that all along they were intending to make it binding, compulsory across Europe," says Tony Bunyan, editor of Statewatch. The changes may include the provision that police would need a judicial order before accessing traffic data, but Statewatch warns that such conditions have been sidestepped before. (CNet News.com 20 Aug 2002) http://news.com.com/2100-1023-954487.html THE EVER-EVOLVING LAPTOP Laptop computers are making significant inroads in the computer market, with notebook growth pegged at 6% in the second quarter, despite a decline in overall sales. And while desktop machines are not likely to change much in style over the next few years, the laptop of the future will be smaller, lighter, and may even run on methane. PolyFuel, a spinoff of SRI International, is developing fuel cells that break down methane molecules into protons, electrons and carbon dioxide. While the protons pass through a special membrane, the electrons are maneuvered into a wire that powers the laptop. The replacement fuel cartridges initially will last two to three times longer than conventional batteries but eventually will last 10 times longer. Other companies are seeking to expand battery life by supplementing them with supercapacitators, which store energy at the chip level. "Supercapacitators hold more electricity than capacitators and transfer and recharge faster than batteries," says Anthony Kongats, CEO of supercapacitator startup Cap-XX. Batteries can be completely removed and the notebook will continue to run for about five minutes. Supercapacitator-enhanced notebooks could begin hitting the shelves in 2004 and notebooks powered by fuel cells could be available by late 2004 to 2005. Other likely laptop improvements include wireless capability that can switch effortlessly between WiFi and cellular networks, as well as low-power screens and new types of heat-dissipation techniques. (CNet News.com 19 Aug 2002) http://news.com.com/2100-1001-951449.html?tag=fd_lede A study funded by the Pew Internet and American Life Projects has found that students are increasingly comfortable with the World Wide Web, and frustrated that more of their classroom work isn't built around it. The schools, we're not all that well prepared to use it. The kids really do know how to use the Internet and they want it to be exploited in the ways they know it can be exploited. Outside the classroom and outside of any formal instruction, the Internet is a key part of their educational instruction." (Washington Post 15 Aug 2002) http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19910-2002Aug14.html THE UNFIXED LIFE subscribers nationwide at the end of 2001, and industry analyst Keith Mallinson predicts that number will grow to 200 million by 2006. That's about 70% of the total U.S. population. Mallinson also expects that the number of people who rely completely on a wireless phone will rise from the current 3% of the population to somewhere between 5% and 10% in the next five years. (San Jose Mercury News 15 Aug 2002) http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/3867413.htm *** Headlines From Edupage: STUDENTS, FACULTY UPSET AT NEW COURSE REQUIREMENT The Canadian subsidiary of Microsoft this week launched the Microsoft Canada Academic Innovation Alliance to support technology research at Canadian universities. Its first grant, however, has some students and faculty upset about apparent influence from Microsoft. The $2.3 million grant went to the University of Waterloo, which agreed to institute a new class on Microsoft's C# programming language and make the course a requirement for entering students in the electrical and computer engineering departments. Many at the university, including the Federation of Students, object to what they perceive as Microsoft's buying influence. The vice president of education for the Federation of Students said it "sets a dangerous precedent." One graduate of the university said it shows that the administration "will do just about anything for money." CNET, 15 August 2002 http://news.com.com/2100-1001-949945.html ELECTRONIC GRE DRAWS HEAVY CRITICISM Despite predictions that migrating from pencil-and-paper testing to computer-based tests would result in more efficiency and convenience, evidence of significantly increased cheating has prompted officials to return to a pencil-and-paper version of the GRE in some countries. An investigation discovered Web sites in China, Taiwan, and Korea that posted answers to GRE questions. Officials from the GRE Board and the Educational Testing Service (ETS) said that for now, the only way to administer the test in these countries with adequate expectations for security is with pencil and paper. Critics of computer-based testing said this is simply the latest in a series of problems that have plagued the system since computer testing began. Officials from GRE and ETS remain committed to electronic testing, though, saying that its promise can be realized when the bugs are worked out. Wired News, 15 August 2002 http://www.wired.com/news/school/0,1383,54459,00.html [What Did I Say About More and More Becoming Pay-Per-View?] GOVERNMENT WANTS TO SHUT DOWN PUBSCIENCE The U.S. Department of Energy runs a Web site called PubScience that allows users to simultaneously search more than 1,000 scientific journals for abstracts and citations. But the department wants to close the Web site, saying that two commercial operations, Scirus and Infotrieve, offer almost the same services. A notice at the PubScience site (http://pubsci.osti.gov/) says that 90 percent of PubScience's content is covered by these other sites and that their offerings are expected to increase. A 30-day public comment period will end on September 30, after which a final decision will be made on the future of PubScience. Publishers of some small scientific journals argue that closing the government-run site would be a bad idea because their journals are not covered by either Scirus or Infotrieve. Chronicle of Higher Education, 14 August 2002 http://chronicle.com/free/2002/08/2002081401t.htm You have been reading excerpts from Edupage: If you have questions or comments about Edupage, To SUBSCRIBE to Edupage, send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.EDUCAUSE.EDU and in the body of the message type: SUBSCRIBE Edupage YourFirstName YourLastName *** About the Project Gutenberg Monthly Newsletter: [Goes out approximately first Wednesday of each month. 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