PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1 (2005-08-17)

From hart at pglaf.org  Wed Aug 17 10:15:40 2005
From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart)
Date: Wed Aug 17 10:15:46 2005
Subject: [gweekly] PT1 Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.60.0508171015130.12016@pglaf.org>

Weekly_August_17.txt
The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, Auguest 17, 2005 PT1
******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******

Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart@pobox.com or gbnewby@pglaf.org
Anyone who would care to get advance editions:  please email hart@pobox.com

*

HOT REQUESTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

WANTED!

>>>   !!!People to help us collect ALL public domain eBooks!!!  <<<

*

Wanted:  People who are involved in conversations on Slashdot, Salon, etc.

*

              We Have Produced 2000+ eBooks This Year!!!


            Next Week The Grand Total Should Be ~17,000!!!


*

TABLE OF CONTENTS
[Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.]

*eBook Milestones
*Introduction
*Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements
*Continuing Requests and Announcements
*Progress Report
*Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report
*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report
*Permanent Requests For Assistance:
*Donation Information
*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections
  *Mirror Site Information
  *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
*Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet?
*Flashback
*Weekly eBook update:
   This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter
   Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter
   Corrections in separate section
    1 New From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.]
   32 New Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright
*Headline News from Edupage, etc.
*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

***


                          *eBook Milestones*

                     16,960 eBooks As Of Today!!!

               13,898 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001

              That's 250+ eBooks per Month for ~55 Months

                 We Have Produced 2004 eBooks in 2005!!!

                        3,040 to go to 20,000!!!


     We have now averaged ~497 eBooks per year since July 4th, 1971

           We Averaged About 339 eBooks Per Month In 2004

        We Are Averaging About 267 books Per Month This Year

         We Are Averaging About 63 eBooks Per Week This Year

                              32 This Week


It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks

It took ~32 months, from 2002 to 2005 for our last 10,000 eBooks

It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100

It took ~1.25 years from Oct. 2003 to Jan. 2005 from 10,000 to 15,000

*


***Introduction

[The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly
go to the portions you find most interesting:  1.  Founder's Comments,
News, Notes & Queries, and  2. Weekly eBook Update Listing.]

[Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a
few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor.   Email us:
hart@pobox.com and gbnewby@pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.]


   This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter


***


***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements

*

We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections
of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks.

http://www.archive.org

Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date,
but you should get all the files when you pass through
to the original sites.

Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any
of the eBooks you would like to work on.

Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive!

*

Please visit and test our newest site:

"PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE"

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

*

There is a new experimental online reader available. Start from any
bibliographic record page, e.g.

    http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300


Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position
in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off.

Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file
where the encoding is known.

*

MACHINE TRANSLATION

We are seeking as much information as possible on the various
approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact
information would be greatly appreciated.

***

Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc.

http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject

and

The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running.
Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test.
You can access it by visiting
http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969

***

Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at:

http://www.gutenberg.org/about


*

We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files
for the visually impaired and other audio book users.

Let us know if you'd like to join this group.

More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio


***

Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners


So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!!

We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners.  If you have a DVD burner
and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon

<cannona@fireantproductions.com>

We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs
for you to copy.  You can either snail them directly
to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can
do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping.
We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish.

Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format,
as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format.

***

Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web
pages and publicity materials.  If you have original graphics
depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them!

To see some of what we have now, please see:

   ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images


*** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES

Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers.
We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice
(both US and international) and other areas.  Please email
Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby <gbnewby AT pglaf.org> ,
if you can help.

This is much more important than many of us realize!


***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders


     In the first 07.50 months of this year, we produced 2004 new eBooks.

It took us from July 1971 to Nov 1999 to produce our first 2004 eBooks!

            That's 32 WEEKS as Compared to ~28 Years!!!

                  33   New eBooks This Week
                  85   New eBooks Last Week
                 118   New eBooks This Month [Aug]

                ~267   Average Per Month in 2005
                 336   Average Per Month in 2004
                 355   Average Per Month in 2003
                 203   Average Per Month in 2002
                 103   Average Per Month in 2001

                2004   New eBooks in 2005
                4049   New eBooks in 2004
                4164   New eBooks in 2003
                2441   New eBooks in 2002
                1240   New eBooks in 2001
                ====
               13898   New eBooks Since Start Of 2001
                         That's Only 55.50 Months!
                         Over 250 books per month!

              16,960  Total Project Gutenberg eBooks
              13,538   eBooks This Week Last Year
                ====
               3,422   New eBooks In Last 12 Months

                 468   eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia
                       [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted
                       at the U.S. site:  www.gutenberg.org ]

*

PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE:

Since starting production in October 2000,
Distributed Proofreaders has contributed
7,322 eBooks to Project Gutenberg.

For more complete DP statistics, visit:
http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php

*

Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, 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 catalog.

eBooks are posted throughout the week.  You can even get daily lists.

Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs:

http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto
or
http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml

***

*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report

Please note the addition of the Internet Archive
marked with <<< below.

PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings
of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as:

Alex-Wire Tap Collection,           2,036 HTML eBook Files
Black Mask Collection,             12,000 HTML eBook Files
The Coradella Bookshelf Collection,   141 eBook Files
DjVu Collection,                      272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files
eBooks@Adelaide Collection,        27,709 eBook Files
Himalayan Academy,                  3,400 HTML eBook Files
Internet Archive                  ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress]  <<<
Literal Systems Collection,            68 MP3 eBook Files
Logos Group Collection,           ~34,000 TXT eBook Files
Poet's Corner Poetry Collection,    6,700 Poetry Files
Project Gutenberg Collection,      15,035 eBook Files
PGCC Chinese eBook Collection       ~300 eBook files   <<< Note Name Change
Renaisscance Editions Collection,     561 HTML eBook Files
Swami Center Collection,               78 HTML eBook Files
Tony Kline Collection,                223 HTML eBook Files
Widger Library,                     2,600 HTML eBook Files
CIA's Electronic Reading Room,      2,019 Reference Files
=======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files=====

Average Size of the Collections     8,067.18 Total Files


These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of
their donors:  some are one file per book; some have a
file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a
single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons
I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the
overcounting or duplication of numbers.

If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~45,714 Unique eBooks

If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~34,286 Unique eBooks

***

Please also note that over 23,000 eBooks are listed via
The Online Books Page, of which over 5,300 are from PG.
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/

In addition:  The Internet Public Library had a similar
listing which is now in limbo.  If anyone knows what is
happening with the IPL, please let us know.  Inquiries,
made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up
any current information.

You can try a new IPL service at:

http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/

It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended
its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which
has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page.

Still looking for more Internet Public Library info.

***

Today Is Day #224 of 2005
This Completes Week #32 and Month #07.50  [364 days this year]
   147 Days/22 Weeks To Go  [We get 52 Wednesdays this year]
3,040 Books To Go To #20,000
[Our production year begins/ends
1st Wednesday of the month/year]

    63   Weekly Average in 2005
    78   Weekly Average in 2004
    79   Weekly Average in 2003
    47   Weekly Average in 2002
    24   Weekly Average in 2001

    41   Only 41 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers list
          [Used to be well over 100]


*** Permanent Requests For Assistance:


DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES


Please visit the site:

http://www.pgdp.net

for more information about how you can help a lot by
simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more.

If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run
through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed,
and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it,
please email dphelp@pgdp.net and we will get things started.

Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the
Project Gutenberg collection.  To see what is already online,
visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file)
listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading.

Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive?
Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed
Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp@pgdp.net with your geographic
location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner.
[Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which
will not be returned.]  We have high-speed scanners currently located in
the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier.

Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive
and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at:

http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html

to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if
you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK'
lines to

dphelp@pgdp.net

Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time
or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself?
Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution!  Just send us email
telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help
find a project you would like to work on.

Please contact us at:

dphelp@pgdp.net

if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders.



***Donation Information

We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests!


We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages,
as well as 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
809 North 1500 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84116
USA

B. Donate by credit card online:

NetworkForGood:
http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541

or

PayPal to "donate@gutenberg.org":
http://www.paypal.com
/xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of
volunteers over more than 33 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
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://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html  or email donate@gutenberg.org


*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections


*Mirror Site Information

Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world.
To find the sites nearest you, go to:

http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL


*Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
http://www.gutenberg.org/find
allows searching by title, author, language and subject.

Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download
site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want.  Try:

http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs
or
ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/

and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first
five characters of the file's name.  Note that updated eBooks usually
go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.)


***


Statistical Review

In the 32 weeks of this year, we have produced 2004 new eBooks.
It took us from 7/71 to 10/99 to produce our FIRST 2004 eBooks!!!

          That's 32 WEEKS as Compared to ~28 YEARS!!!


FLASHBACK!

Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #2004

Mon Year Title and Author                                  [filename.ext] ###
A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright

[Note:  books without month and year entries have been reposted]

Dec 1999 The Library, by Andrew Lang      [Andrew Lang #20][lbrryxxx.xxx] 2018
Dec 1999 The Dhammapada, Translated by F. Max Muller       [dhmpdxxx.xxx] 2017
Dec 1999 The 1998 CIA World Factbook[CIA Factbook #8][No#7][world98x.xxx] 2016
Dec 1999 A Miscellany of Men, by G. K. Chesterton [GKC #13][miscyxxx.xxx] 2015

The Lodger, by Marie Belloc Lowndes                                       2014
Dec 1999 The Pit Prop Syndicate, by Freeman Wills Croft    [ptprpxxx.xxx] 2013
The Children, by Alice Meynell                                            2012
Dec 1999 Rudder Grange, by Frank R. Stockton  [Stockton #4][rgrngxxx.xxx] 2011

Dec 1999 The Autobiography of Charles Darwin    [Darwin #6][adrwnxxx.xxx] 2010
Dec 1999 Origin of Species, 6th Ed., by Charles Darwin [#5][otoos6xx.xxx] 2009
Dec 1999 Mazelli, and Other Poems, by George W. Sands[GS#1][mzllixxx.xxx] 2008
Dec 1999 We Two, by Edna Lyall                             [wetwoxxx.xxx] 2007

Dec 1999 A Fair Penitent, by Wilkie Collins   [Collins #23][frpntxxx.xxx] 2006
Dec 1999 Piccadilly Jim, by Pelham Grenville Wodehouse [#1][pccjmxxx.xxx] 2005
Dec 1999 "Pigs is Pigs," by Ellis Parker Butler            [pgpgsxxx.xxx] 2004
Dec 1999 Spirits in Bondage [Lyrics Cycle], by C. S. Lewis [spbndxxx.xxx] 2003
[Title:  Spirits In Bondage, A Cycle Of Lyrics]
[Author Note:  C. S. Lewis writing as Clive Hamilton]

Sonnets from the Portuguese, by Elizabeth Barrett Browning                2002
Dec 1999 [Reserved for 2001, by Arthur C. Clarke]          [     xxx.xxx] 2001*
Dec 1999 Don Quijote, by Cervantes in Spanish .txt & .htm  [2donqxxx.xxx] 2000
   [Language: Spanish]
Dec 1999 Crome Yellow, by Aldous Huxley [Aldous Huxley #1] [crmylxxx.xxx] 1999

Dec 1999 Thus Spake Zarathustra, by Friedrich Nietzsche #1 [spzarxxx.xxx] 1998
   [Tr.: Thomas Common]
Dec 1999 Paradise, Divine Comedy, Dante, Tr. by Norton     [3ddcnxxx.xxx] 1997
   [Tr.: Charles Eliot Norton]
Dec 1999 Purgatory, Divine Comedy, Dante, Tr. by Norton    [2ddcnxxx.xxx] 1996
   [Tr.: Charles Eliot Norton]
Dec 1999 Hell/Inferno, Divine Comedy, Dante, Tr. by Norton [1ddcnxxx.xxx] 1995
   [Tr.: Charles Eliot Norton]

Adventures among Books, by Andrew Lang                                    1994
Dec 1999 Told After Supper, by Jerome K. Jerome  [JKJ #15] [tldspxxx.xxx] 1993
Dec 1999 Travels in England, and Fragmenta Regalia         [trvfgxxx.xxx] 1992
[Title: Travels in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth by Paul
[Hentzner, AND Fragmenta Regalia by Sir Robert Naunton]
Dec 1999 Old Friends, Epistolary Parody, by Andrew Lang[18][oldfnxxx.xxx] 1991

Dec 1999 The Bedford-Row Conspiracy, by Thackeray [WMT #11][bdfrcxxx.xxx] 1990
Dec 1999 The Foolish Dictionary, by Gideon Wurdz           [fldctxxx.xxx] 1989
Dec 1999 History of Tom Thumb, etc. Edited by Henry Altemus[thumbxxx.xxx] 1988
(Includes:  The Stories of the Cat and the Mouse; Fire! Fire! Burn Stick!)
Dec 1999 The Outlet, by Andy Adams                         [outltxxx.xxx] 1987

Dec 1999 Life and Death of Mr. Badman, by John Bunyan[JB#3][badmnxxx.xxx] 1986
Dec 1999 Men's Wives, by William Makepeace Thackeray[WMT10][mnwvsxxx.xxx] 1985
Dec 1999 [Reserved: George Orwell's 1984/Did it come true?][o1984xxx.xxx] 1984*
Dec 1999 Monsieur Beaucaire, by Booth Tarkington   [BT #8] [mbeauxxx.xxx] 1983

Nov 1999 Rashomon, by Akutagawa Ryunosuke [in Japanese]    [rshmnxxx.xxx] 1982
   [Language: Japanese]
Nov 1999 The Right to Read, by Richard M. Stallman [of GNU][tychoxxx.xxx] 1981C
   [Language: French] (French version in:)                  [tychoxxf.xxx]

*

Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet???

If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of
6,460,779,861 that would be 16,960 x 64,607,796 = ~1.1 Trillion !!!
6,460,779,861
64,607,796

With 16,960 eBooks online as of August 17, 2005 it now takes an average
of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.91 from each book.
1% of the world population is 64,607,796 x 16,960 x $.91 = ~$1.1 Trillion]
[Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.]

With 16,960 eBooks online as of August 17, 2005 it now takes an average
of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.59 from each book.
This "cost" is down from about $.74 when we had 13,538 eBooks a year ago.
100 million readers is only ~1.5% of the world's population!

At 16,960 eBooks in 34 Years and 01.50 Months We Averaged
      ~497 Per Year
        41.4 Per Month
         1.36 Per Day

At 2004 eBooks Done In The 224 Days Of 2005 We Averaged
     8.9 Per Day
      63 Per Week
     267 Per Month


If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S.
you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear,
are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope.

Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment,
who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the
districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that
all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details].

However, I just this moment heard a news item that made me wonder a
bit more about the accuracy of the U.S. Census.  A "Special Census"
is taking place in Normal, Illinois, that is expected to count more
people, by a factor of 3,000 or 3,400, depending on which source.

45,386 was the population as per the 2000 Census, so 3,000 added to
this would be an increase of 6.6%, and 3,400 would be 7.5%, above a
possibly automatic increase of 5% as per the same terms above but I
presume this is in addition to previous adjustments.

Of course, we should consider that we would have to double figures,
perhaps to 15% from those above, if are considering the normal time
between censuses of 10 years, these are for 5 years' growth.

In previous news I heard about the U.S. Census, no mention was made
about the annexation of various nearly locations as a cause of this
normally unexpected growth, but it is mentioned at the site I found
on the subject of the current Special Census.

If annexation is the primary cause of such increases, country wide,
then we should not be expecting a huge rise in the 2010 Census, but
rather should expect something more along the norm.  However, if it
is not annexation, but more actual people on the average, then this
might be an indicator that the population of the U.S. may have seen
300 million go by some time ago.

For more details, see:  www.normal.org/WhatsNew/Census.htm


The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks'
production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon,
starts with the first Wednesday of January.  January 5th was
the first Wednesday of 2005, and thus ended PG's production
year of 2004 and began the production year of 2005 at noon.

This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week.

***

*Headline News from Edupage

[PG Editor's Comments In Brackets]


IBM DONATES ACCESSIBILITY CODE TO FIREFOX
This week, IBM said it will donate code to the Firefox browser that
will make the application more usable for people with visual or other
types of disabilities. According to the World Health Organization, as
many as one billion people worldwide have a speech, vision, hearing,
mobility, or cognitive disability, and legislation in at least some
countries sets requirments for accessibility of information for
individuals with disabilities. Expected in the 1.5 release of Firefox,
the code from IBM will allow Firefox users to manipulate and navigate
Web pages without a mouse or with reduced numbers of keystrokes. The
code also facilitates "rich Internet applications," which are designed
for individuals with specific disabilities. Previously, IBM has helped
the Mozilla Foundation, the maker of Firefox, make the browser
compatible with Microsoft Active Accessibility, a widely used standard
for accessibility tools such as screen readers.
ZDNet, 15 August 2005
http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9588_22-5833354.html

GOOGLE MODIFIES LIBRARY PROJECT
Google has announced some changes to its Library Project following
vocal criticism from a number of publishers. Under the terms of the
project, Google made arrangements with five major libraries to scan
some or all of their books, posting at least a portion of each book in
an online repository for public access. Publishers complained that
making such electronic copies of copyrighted works--regardless of
whether they are put online--violates the rights of the copyright
holder. Google now says it will not scan any book that a publisher
specifically asks to be exempted, and it will not scan any copyrighted
books until November, giving publishers time to review titles they
might want excluded. Publishers appeared unmoved, however, with the
Association of American Publishers (AAP) saying that Google's new plan
"places the responsibility for preventing infringement on the copyright
owner rather than the user." Peter Givler of the Association of
American University Presses echoed the AAP's dissatisfaction with the
changes to the project. He was glad that Google is trying to address
publishers' concerns but said of the new policy that it "doesn't seem
to me that it gets us very far."
Chronicle of Higher Education, 12 August 2005
http://chronicle.com/free/2005/08/2005081201t.htm

LINUX GOES TO FRENCH SCHOOLS
A Linux group in the Auvergne region of France, working with the local
government, will distribute CDs with free and open source software to
students in the region. In September, every student in Auvergne between
15 and 19 years of age will receive two CDs. One includes
OpenOffice.org software, as well as the Firefox browser and GIMP image
software. The other is a Linux Live CD, which will allow the users to
experiment with a Linux operating system without installing it on their
computers. Nicolas Spallinger, a member of the local Linux group, said
the idea is to let students try Linux without committing to a
particular version. If they are sold on Linux over other operating
systems, they can then install their preferred variety of Linux.
Organizers of the program hope it will encourage students and their
families to consider free and open source applications as an
alternative to proprietary software.
CNET, 11 August 2005
http://news.com.com/2100-7344_3-5828644.html

COLLEGE BOOKSTORES TEST ACCESS TO DIGITAL TEXTBOOKS
Ten colleges and universities are participating in a pilot project of
selling electronic texts through the campuses' bookstores. Previously,
electronic textbooks typically have only been available from individual
publishers or online. Organizers of the project hope that by making the
texts available from the campus bookstores, they will be able to
accurately gauge student demand for the technology. Each participating
institution will offer 25 to 30 texts electronically, though the books
will also be available in paper form. Electronic texts will be priced
at one-third less than hard-copy textbooks. Students who choose the
electronic option will download a copy of the text to a computer, where
they can read it, print it, search it for keywords, or listen to an
audio version of it. The electronic text will have restrictions,
however. The text cannot be transferred to any other computer, it
cannot be printed in its entirety at one time, and it will only be
available for five months, after which point it cannot be sold back to
the bookstore.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 9 August 2005 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/08/2005080901t.htm

UNIV. RECEIVES FEDERAL SUPPORT FOR VOIP TRACKING TECHNOLOGY
The National Science Foundation has given researchers at George Mason
University a grant of more than $300,000 to develop a technology that
would allow limited eavesdropping on voice over Internet protocol
(VoIP) phone calls. Xinyuan Wang, assistant professor of software
engineering at the university and principal investigator, has shown
that his method can successfully trace VoIP users without their
knowledge. As VoIP service has become more common, law enforcement
officials have pointed out that they have no way of tapping such phone
calls, potentially resulting in a "haven for criminals, terrorists, and
spies," according to the Federal Communications Commission. The
technology that Wang and his colleagues are working on does not decrypt
conversations. It tracks packets as they move from one user to another,
allowing authorities to see who is talking to whom, but not to see what
they are saying. Wang conceded that "from a privacy advocate's point
of view, this is an attack on privacy," but he also noted that "from a
police point of view, this is a way to trace things."
CNET, 9 August 2005
http://news.com.com/2100-7348_3-5825932.html


STUDENTS FACE PUNISHMENT FOR COMPUTER TAMPERING

[Legal action for looking the other way through the one-way mirror,
and, they gave the students the administrators' passwords.  Does the
term "attractive nuiscance" ring a bell?"  Perhaps law enforcement
should be looking the other way?]

Thirteen high school students in the Kutztown Area School District in
Pennsylvania face felony charges of tampering with computers after
defeating security measures on laptops issued to them by the school
district. The laptops included Internet filters and an application that
allowed district administrators to see what students did with the
computers. The 13 used administrator passwords--which, for unknown
reasons, were taped to the backs of the computers--to override the
filters and download software such as iChat that the district policy
forbids. The students also modified the monitoring program so that they
could see what the administrators did with their computers. The
students and their parents argued that the felony charges are
unwarranted, but, according to the district, students and parents
signed acceptable use policies that clearly state what activities are
not allowed and that warn of legal consequences if the policy is
violated. The students continued to violate district policies for use
of the computers even after detentions, suspensions, and other
punishments, according to the district. Only then did school officials
contact the police.

SPAMMER SETTLES WITH MICROSOFT
Microsoft has reached a settlement with Scott Richter, a man once
described as one of the top three spammers in the world. Efforts by
Microsoft and New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer in 2003 resulted
in the collection of 8,000 e-mail messages containing 40,000 fraudulent
statements sent by Richter's company, OptInRealBig. Richter earlier
agreed to pay New York State $50,000; under the new settlement, Richter
will pay Microsoft $7 million. According to Bradford L. Smith, chief
counsel for the software giant, $5 million would be used to "increase
our Internet enforcement efforts and expand technical and investigative
support to help law enforcement address computer-related crimes," while
another $1 million will be spent on improving computer access for the
poor in New York State. The settlement also requires Richter to comply
with state and federal laws governing e-mail and to submit to oversight
of his company's operations for three years.
New York Times, 10 August 2005 (registration req'd)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/10/technology/10spam.html


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
or
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings,
or access the Edupage archive, visit
http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639

***

One more item from alternate sources

[More on DNA, and, of course, this new rice will likely be patented,
and in the same vein as GMO corn, any DNA that accidentally ends up
in "normal" rice, will be considered an actionable offense.]


SCIENTISTS CRACK DNA CODE OF RICE
from Associated Press

NEW YORK, (AP) -- An international team of scientists has deciphered the
genetic code of rice, an advance that should speed improvements in a crop
that feeds more than half the world's population.

It's the first crop plant to have its genome sequenced, which means
scientists identified virtually all the 389 million chemical building
blocks of its DNA. Certain sequences of these building blocks form genes,
like letters spelling words.

The advance will help breeders produce new rice varieties with traits such
as higher yield, improved nutritional content and better resistance to
disease and pests, said one of the project's leaders, W. Richard McCombie
of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in New York.
http://tinyurl.com/ccor7




*HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA

China booted out of Unocal purchase by hostile U.S. Congress,
but Congress seems to have no idea of the "virtual" deals in
China's financial portfolio.  Just look at Yahoo! China deals
and the Ali Baba deals.  "A billion here, a billion there and
suddenly you're talking about real money."

[The vetoed Unocal deal would have been about $20 billion.]

More on China's Energy Policy

CHINA TO BUILD OFFSHORE WIND POWER COMPLEX
from Associated Press

SHANGHAI, China -- China plans to construct its first offshore wind power
complex next year in hopes of easing chronic electricity shortages, the
official Xinhua News Agency reported Monday.

The complex, to be built in the Bohai Sea off the northern province of
Hebei, is designed to have a generating capacity of 1 million kilowatts
when
completed in 2020, Xinhua said.

An initial phase to begin construction late next year will generate 50,000
kilowatts, it said, citing Gao Xihai, a vice manager of the Huanghua Port
Development Zone which is promoting the project.
http://tinyurl.com/anfu4

*

Remember that $67 million dollar bank robbery in Brasil?

It now appears that the taxpayers will get billed for it!

*

Global Warming Refuters Now Refuted


ERRORS CITED IN ASSESSING CLIMATE DATA
from The New York Times (Registration Required)

Some scientists who question whether human-caused global warming poses a
threat have long pointed to records that showed the atmosphere's lowest
layer, the troposphere, had not warmed over the last two decades and had
cooled in the tropics.

Now two independent studies have found errors in the complicated
calculations used to generate the old temperature records, which involved
stitching together data from thousands of weather balloons lofted around
the world and a series of short-lived weather satellites.

A third study shows that when the errors are taken into account, the
troposphere actually got warmer. Moreover, that warming trend largely
agrees with the warmer surface temperatures that have been recorded and
conforms to predictions in recent computer models.
http://tinyurl.com/7pmgc

[and, in a separate story]

WARMING HITS 'TIPPING POINT'
from The Guardian (UK)

A vast expanse of western Sibera is undergoing an unprecedented thaw that
could dramatically increase the rate of global warming, climate scientists
warn today.

Researchers who have recently returned from the region found that an area
of permafrost spanning a million square kilometres - the size of France
and Germany combined - has started to melt for the first time since it formed
11,000 years ago at the end of the last ice age.

The area, which covers the entire sub-Arctic region of western Siberia, is
the world's largest frozen peat bog and scientists fear that as it thaws,
it will release billions of tonnes of methane, a greenhouse gas 20 times
more potent than carbon dioxide, into the atmosphere.
http://tinyurl.com/93equ


*STRANGE WORDS OF THE WEEK

"Since December 2000 employment in U.S. manufacturing has fallen 17%,
but membership in the National Association of Realtors has risen 58%."
The New York Times



DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK

What does the above mean?  It means there is a scramble going on to buy
and/or sell real estate as the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

A bit more on real estate from Edupage:

RESEARCH CENTER COMING TO NEW YORK
A real estate company based in California will build a research park in
New York City with the hope of attracting scientific and biomedical
companies that are routinely spun off from colleges and universities in
the city. The city's academic institutions consistently produce
start-up companies in biotech fields, but few remain in the city,
instead settling in less expensive areas such as New Jersey and
California. Despite years of efforts at creating such a research park,
previous proposals have been abandoned because developers were
reluctant to commit to such a project without guaranteed tenants.
Officials from Alexandria Real Estate Equities said projects like this
one rarely have tenants before the facility is built. Construction is
expected to begin next year, and companies can start moving into the
research park in 2008.
New York Times, 11 August 2005 (registration req'd)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/11/nyregion/11bio.html



*PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK

China will continue bidding for, and buying, more and more
of the world's infrastructure, to the sad detriment of U.S.
Congress' inability to veto purchases in other countries.

Even the New York Times appears to know what is going on:


August 11, 2005
America's Summer of Discontent

"Yesterday, Unocal shareholders agreed to be bought by Chevron for about
$18 billion in the biggest oil acquisition in years. The deal brought to
a final close a sad hostile takeover fight in which a Chinese
government-owned company, Cnooc, was effectively blocked from the game
by a hostile United States Congress.

"When analysts and economic historians look back, this summer may well
prove to be the turning point in Chinese-American relations, the time
when America chose short-range paranoia over rational behavior."


*QUOTE OF THE WEEK

"Where they burn books, they will, in the end, burn human beings too."
Heinrich Heine



*ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK

Worldwide, only 1 person in 100 reaches the age of 79,
but in some countries that is the average lifespan.

The average lifespan for the world is 63, much shorter
than the duration of the average copyright.

*

CBS was one of those pillars of society who rejected women's
right to wear pants and required skirts or dresses, but they
finally gave up forcing women to give the men a chance to do
some looking up their skirts.  Recently, CBS counted women's
choices of clothing as they reported to work one morning and
the result was 90 to 11 in favor of pants.

Source:  60 Minutes, Andy Rooney, August 14, 2005

*

99% of the United States goverment, the President, Senators,
Congresspersons, etc., required to pass and sign a new law--
NEVER EVER READ IT!!!

*

Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries.

"If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely
100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same,
it would look something like the following. There would be:

57 Asians
21 Europeans
14 from the Western Hemisphere, both north and south
  8 Africans
  52 would be female
  48 would be male
  70 would be non-white
  30 would be white
  70 would be non-Christian
  30 would be Christian
   6 people  would  possess  59%  of the entire world's wealth
   and all 6 would be from the United States
80 would live in substandard housing
70 would be unable to read
50 would suffer from malnutrition
  1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth
  1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education
  1 would own a computer [I think this is now much greater]
  1 would be 79 years old or more.

Of those born today, the life expectancy is only 63 years,
but no country any longer issues copyrights that are sure
to expire within that 63 year period.

I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date,
as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer
then there would be only 60 million people in the world who
owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States
households have computers, out of over 100 million households.
Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in
the United States.

I just called our local reference librarian and got the number
of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at:
111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports.

If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households
is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million,
and that's counting just one computer per household, and not
counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc.

I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate
given above, and would like some help researching these and other
such figures, if anyone is interested.

BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic
that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old.

This means that basically 90% of the world's population would
never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations
offered it to them free of charge.  Then I realized that the US
population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich
live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer
than the non-whites.  Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is
distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they
can receive more per year, but because they will live more years
to receive Social Security.  The average poor non-white may never
receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in.

*

POEM OF THE WEEK

This is number three of a series of five poems from a volume named:

"Thoughts of My Exiled Self."

The motto for this poetry volume is,
"Upon this Word I shall build my life."


Tonight

Tonight is hard to get in touch with my thoughts
as my eyelids are heavy with a dreamless sleep
in which I feel I am floating like a feather
detached from the wings of a mother swan
who once knew about a lake,
and how the vivid waters felt to the touch
but then she got bored, took off
and learned about the lightness of air,
like the angels who sit on my eyelids tonight
Alas, I must be dreaming of flight
while I cry myself to sleep under the starry skies
of your eyes.


Copyright 2005 by Simona Sumanaru and Michael S. Hart
Please send comments to:  simona_s75 AT yahoo.com & hart AT pobox.com

***

*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists,
including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters:
and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists:

The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the
first Wednesday of the month.

To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription
preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server:

http://lists.pglaf.org

If you are having trouble with your subscription, please
email the list's human administrators at: help@pglaf.org



pgweekly_2005_08_17_part_1.txt

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 2 (2005-08-17)

From news at pglaf.org  Thu Aug 18 16:49:36 2005
From: news at pglaf.org (Project Gutenberg Newsletter)
Date: Thu Aug 18 16:49:42 2005
Subject: [gweekly] Pt2 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.60.0508181647330.17277@pglaf.org>

GWeekly_August_17_part2.txt

The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter 17 Aug 2005
eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since 1971

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Part 2 of the Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter:
    - Obtaining Project Gutenberg eBooks
    - Updates/corrections to previously posted eBooks
    - 33 New U.S. eBooks this week
    - 1 New eBooks at Project Gutenberg of Australia
    - Last, but not least:  insights and other fine stuff
    - Mailing list information

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

:: HOW TO GET EBOOKS FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG ::.

The easiest way to obtain our eBooks is at our search page at

   http://gutenberg.org/find

which allows searching by title, author or eBook number; there is also
an Advanced Search page which allows for additional search criteria
(note that our newer postings may not yet be indexed for all additional
criteria).  And please note:  you can now obtain a listing by language
at the above link.

Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the
world, and you can select one nearer to your location from the link on
the search results page.  To see a listing of mirror sites, and locate
the one nearest to you, visit:

   http://gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL

If you prefer to download eBooks via other methods than from the search
page, and need additional information, please refer to the file
GUTINDEX.ALL, available for viewing or downloading at:

   http://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL

That file contains descriptions and explanations about the filenaming
process, directory structure, file formats, and more.

And to directly access the file directories:

   http://gutenberg.org/dirs/

Please note that the Project Gutenberg Production Team continues the
process of manually re-posting those eBooks originally posted prior to
Nov 2003 to the new filenaming and directory system (based on the eBook
number).  This process includes some file maintenance (repairing,
correcting and re-formatting to current PG standards where practicable).
These re-postings are noted in the "corrections" listings below.  More
information can be found in the file GUTINDEX.ALL mentioned above.

* * *

Please see Part 1 of this week's newsletter for more information about
Project Gutenberg.  And if you haven't done so lately, please visit the
website at http://www.gutenberg.org to see what's new.

* * *

                      ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

      Note:  this listing best viewed with a fixed-width font, such as
             Courier New or similar.

To report an error in the listings below, please write to news_at_pglaf.org
and include the word CORRECTION in the subject line.

=========================================================================
           [ Here Are The Updated Listings For This Past Week ]
=========================================================================

TOTAL COUNT as of today, Wed, 17 Aug 2005: 16961 (incl. 468 Aus.).

Last week the Total Count was 16927, including 467 at PG of Australia.
This week we added 34 new.

RESERVED/PENDING count: 43


=-=-=-=[ CORRECTIONS, REVISIONS AND NEW FORMATS ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

:: During the past week the following ebooks were manually updated and
reposted with the indicated filenames and transferred into the corresponding
new directories:

Metamorphosis, by Franz Kafka                                            5200C
   [Translator: David Wyllie]
   [Updated edition of etext04/metam10.txt]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.net/5/2/0/5200 ]
   [Files: 5200.txt; 5200-h.htm; 5200-r.rtf]


:: Please note the following additional changes, corrections, improvements:

Correct title and author, clarify edition and editor:
Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome, ed. by William C. Taylor                16387
   [Title: Pinnock's Improved Edition of Dr. Goldsmith's History of Rome]
   [Author: Oliver Goldsmith]

Correct title ("Miss", not "Mrs."):
Miss Mink's Soldier and Other Stories, by Alice Hegan Rice               15230

Correct author:
The Amber Witch, by Wilhelm Meinhold                                      8743
   [Title AKA: Mary Schweidler, The Amber Witch]
   [Translator: Lady Duff Gordon]


-=-=-=-=[  33 NEW U.S. EBOOKS ]-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of England (4 of 8), by Holinshed      16536
   [Subtitle: The Fovrth Booke Of The Historie Of England]
   [Author: Raphael Holinshed]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16536 ]
   [Files: 16536.txt; 16536-8.txt; 16536-h.htm]

Myth and Romance, by Madison Cawein                                      16535
   [Subtitle: Being a Book of Verses]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16535 ]
   [Files: 16535.txt; 16535-8.txt; 16535-h.htm]

History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, by Anderson  16534
   [Title: A Young Folks' History of the Church of Jesus Christ of
    Latter-day Saints]
   [Author: Nephi Anderson]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16534 ]
   [Files: 16534.txt; 16534-h.htm]

Korpelan Tapani, by Heikki Merilinen                                     16533
   [Subtitle: Kuvaus kansan elmst]
   [Language: Finnish]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16533 ]
   [Files: 16533-8.txt]

The Plastic Age, by Percy Marks                                          16532
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16532 ]
   [Files: 16532.txt; 16532-8.txt; 16532-h.htm]

Old St. Paul's Cathedral, by William Benham                              16531
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16531 ]
   [Files: 16531.txt; 16531-8.txt; 16531-h.htm]

The Ridin' Kid from Powder River, by Henry Herbert Knibbs                16530
   [Illustrator: Stanley L. Wood and R. M. Brinkerhoff]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/3/16530 ]
   [Files: 16530.txt; 16530-8.txt; 16530-h.htm]

Lost Leaders, by Andrew Lang                                             16529
   [Editor: W. Pett Ridge]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16529 ]
   [Files: 16529.txt; 16529-h.htm]

Forty-one years in India, by Frederick Sleigh Roberts                    16528
   [Subtitle: From Subaltern To Commander-In-Chief]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16528 ]
   [Files: 16528.txt; 16528-8.txt; 16528-h.htm]

1001 tasks for mental calculation, by Sergej Aleksandrovich Rachinskij   16527
   [Language: Russian]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16527 ]
   [Files: 16527-8.txt; 16527-h.htm]

Morocco, by S.L. Bensusan                                                16526
   [Illustrator: A.S. Forrest]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16526 ]
   [Files: 16526.txt; 16526-8.txt; 16526-h.htm]

The Fat of the Land, by John Williams Streeter                           16525
   [Subtitle: The Story of an American Farm]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16525 ]
   [Files: 16525.txt; 16525-8.txt; 16525-h.htm]

The Nursery, No. 107, November 1875, Vol. 18, by Various                 16524
   [Subtitle: A Monthly Magazine for Youngest Readers]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16524 ]
   [Files: 16524.txt; 16524-h.htm]

The Kitab-i-Aqdas, by Baha'u'llah                                        16523
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16523 ]
   [Files: 16523.txt; 16523-8.txt; 16523-0.txt; 16523-h.htm]

The Nursery, No. 106, October 1875, Vol. 28, by Various                  16522
   [Subtitle: A Monthly Magazine for Youngest Readers]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16522 ]
   [Files: 16522.txt; 16522-h.htm]

Fanny Goes to War, by Pat Beauchamp                                      16521
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16521 ]
   [Files: 16521.txt; 16521-8.txt; 16521-h.htm]

The Girl and Her Religion, by Margaret Slattery                          16520
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/2/16520 ]
   [Files: 16520.txt; 16520-8.txt; 16520-h.htm]

Prime Ministers and Some Others, by George W. E. Russell                 16519
   [Subtitle: A Book of Reminiscences]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16519 ]
   [Files: 16519.txt; 16519-8.txt; 16519-h.htm]

A Day's Tour, by Percy Fitzgerald                                        16518
   [Subtitle: A Journey through France and Belgium by Calais, Tournay,
    Orchies, Douai, Arras, Bthune, Lille, Comines, Ypres, Hazebrouck, Berg]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16518 ]
   [Files: 16518.txt; 16518-8.txt; 16518-h.htm]

Liza of Lambeth, by W. Somerset Maugham                                  16517
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16517 ]
   [Files: 16517.txt; 16517-8.txt; 16517-h.htm]

Walker's Appeal, by David Walker and Henry Highland Garnet               16516
   [Title: Walker's Appeal, with a Brief Sketch of His Life]
   [Subtitle: And Also Garnet's Address to the Slaves of the United States
    of America]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16516 ]
   [Files: 16516.txt; 16516-8.txt; 16516-h.htm]

Dreaming of Dreaming, by Peter E. Williams                               16515C
   [Subtitle: Poetry by Peter E. Williams]
   [Editor: Tim McCann]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16515 ]
   [Files: 16515-8.txt; 16515-h.htm; ]

A Little Cook Book for a Little Girl, by French Benton                   16514
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16514 ]
   [Files: 16514-8.txt; ]

World's War Events, Volume III, by Various                               16513
   [Subtitle: Recorded by Statesmen, Commanders, Historians and by Men Who
    Fought or Saw the Great Campaigns]
   [Editor: Francis J. Reynolds, Allen L. Churchill]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16513 ]
   [Files: 16513.txt; 16513-8.txt; 16513-h.htm]

An Apology for Atheism, by Charles Southwell                             16512
   [Subtitle: Addressed to Religious Investigators of Every Denomination
    by One of Its Apostles]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16512 ]
   [Files: 16512.txt]

Chronicles (1 of 6): The Historie of England (3 of 8), Raphael Holinshed 16511
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16511 ]
   [Files: 16511.txt; 16511-8.txt; 16511-h.htm]

Essays on Education and Kindred Subjects, by Herbert Spencer             16510
   [Subtitle: Everyman's Library]
   [Introduction: Charles W. Eliot]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/1/16510 ]
   [Files: 16510.txt; 16510-8.txt; 16510-h.htm]

Punch, Vol. 158, February 25th, 1920, ed. by Sir Owen Seaman             16509
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16509 ]
   [Files: 16509.txt; 16509-8.txt; 16509-h.htm]

American Men of Action, by Burton E. Stevenson                           16508
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16508 ]
   [Files: 16508.txt; 16508-8.txt; 16508-h.htm]

Lazy Thoughts of a Lazy Girl, by Jenny Wren                              16507
   [Subtitle: Sister of that "Idle Fellow."]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16507 ]
   [Files: 16507.txt; 16507-8.txt; 16507-h.htm]

Epistle to a Friend, and Essay on Heroic Poetric, by Samuel Wesley       16506
   [Title: Epistle to a Friend Concerning Poetry (1700) and the Essay on
    Heroic Poetry (second edition, 1697)]
   [Introduction: Edward N. Hooker]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16506 ]
   [Files: 16506.txt; 16506-8.txt]

The Voice of the People, by Ellen Glasgow                                16505
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16505 ]
   [Files: 16505.txt; 16505-8.txt; 16505-h.htm]

Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2, by John Addington Symonds         16504
   [Subtitle: The Catholic Reaction]
   [Link: http://www.gutenberg.org/1/6/5/0/16504 ]
   [Files: 16504.txt; 16504-8.txt; 16504-h.htm]


-=-=-=-=[ 1 NEW EBOOKS AT PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA ]=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

Aug 2005 C, by Maurice Baring                              [050073xx.xxx] 0468A


eBooks are posted in uncompressed and/or compressed formats.  To access these
ebooks, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty.html

For more information about Project Gutenberg of Australia, including
accessing those etexts from outside of Australia, please visit:
http://gutenberg.net.au/

--Project Gutenberg of Australia--
--A treasure trove of Literature--
*treasure-trove n. treasure found hidden with no evidence of ownership

For more information about copyright restrictions in other countries,
please visit:
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/okbooks.html


=============================================================================

pgweekly_2005_08_17_part_2.txt

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1b (2005-08-10)

From hart at pglaf.org  Wed Aug 10 10:04:49 2005
From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart)
Date: Wed Aug 10 10:04:51 2005
Subject: [gweekly] CORRECTED!  PT1 Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.60.0508101003190.22035@pglaf.org>

Weekly_August_10.txt
The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, Auguest 10, 2005 PT1
******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******

One new book added at the last moment!!!  And the new Sumanaru Poem.

Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart@pobox.com or gbnewby@pglaf.org
Anyone who would care to get advance editions:  please email hart@pobox.com

Please note that we are still in the process of correcting our statistical
program data.  Last week we subtracted a few that we thought had been in a
duplicate count situation, but either that correction didn't stick or some
new similar problem has occured.  As always, the total count should be the
consideration of some attention as to possibly being off by a few eBooks.

Please note that PT2 of this Newsletter is currently in flux, as we shift
from to an automated PT2 sender.  The situation with Monthly Newsletters
is in flux to an even greater degree.  Our apologies as we make changes.

*

HOT REQUESTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

WANTED!

People to help us collect ALL public domain eBooks!!!

*

Wanted:  People who are involved in conversations on Slashdot, Salon, etc.

*

TABLE OF CONTENTS
[Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.]

*eBook Milestones
*Introduction
*Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements
*Continuing Requests and Announcements
*Progress Report
*Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report
*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report
*Permanent Requests For Assistance:
*Donation Information
*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections
  *Mirror Site Information
  *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
*Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet?
*Flashback
*Weekly eBook update:
   This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter
   Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter
   Corrections in separate section
    1 New From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.]
   84 New Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright
*Headline News from Edupage, etc.
*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

***


                          *eBook Milestones

                     16,927 eBooks As Of Today!!!

               13,865 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001

               That's 250+ eBooks per Month for 55 Months

                  We Have Produced 1970 eBooks in 2005

                         3,073 to go to 20,000!!!


     We have now averaged ~495 eBooks per year since July 4th, 1971

           We Averaged About 339 eBooks Per Month In 2004

        We Are Averaging About 272 books Per Month This Year

         We Are Averaging About 64 eBooks Per Week This Year

                              85 This Week


It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks

It took ~32 months, from 2002 to 2005 for our last 10,000 eBooks

It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100

It took ~1.25 years from Oct. 2003 to Jan. 2005 from 10,000 to 15,000

*


***Introduction

[The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly
go to the portions you find most interesting:  1.  Founder's Comments,
News, Notes & Queries, and  2. Weekly eBook Update Listing.]

[Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a
few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor.   Email us:
hart@pobox.com and gbnewby@pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.]


   This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter


***


***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements

*

We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections
of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks.

http://www.archive.org

Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date,
but you should get all the files when you pass through
to the original sites.

Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any
of the eBooks you would like to work on.

Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive!

*

Please visit and test our newest site:

"PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE"

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

*

There is a new experimental online reader available. Start from any
bibliographic record page, e.g.

    http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300


Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position
in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off.

Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file
where the encoding is known.

*

MACHINE TRANSLATION

We are seeking as much information as possible on the various
approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact
information would be greatly appreciated.

***

Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc.

http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject

and

The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running.
Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test.
You can access it by visiting
http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969

***

Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at:

http://www.gutenberg.org/about


*

We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files
for the visually impaired and other audio book users.

Let us know if you'd like to join this group.

More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio


***

Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners


So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!!

We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners.  If you have a DVD burner
and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon

<cannona@fireantproductions.com>

We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs
for you to copy.  You can either snail them directly
to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can
do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping.
We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish.

Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format,
as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format.

***

Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web
pages and publicity materials.  If you have original graphics
depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them!

To see some of what we have now, please see:

   ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images


*** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES

Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers.
We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice
(both US and international) and other areas.  Please email
Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby <gbnewby AT pglaf.org> ,
if you can help.

This is much more important than many of us realize!


***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders


     In the first 07.25 months of this year, we produced 1971 new eBooks.

It took us from July 1971 to Nov 1999 to produce our first 1971 eBooks!

            That's 31 WEEKS as Compared to ~28+ Years!!!

                  85   New eBooks This Week
                  59   New eBooks Last Week
                  04   New eBooks This Month [Aug]

                ~272   Average Per Month in 2005
                 336   Average Per Month in 2004
                 355   Average Per Month in 2003
                 203   Average Per Month in 2002
                 103   Average Per Month in 2001

                1971   New eBooks in 2005
                4049   New eBooks in 2004
                4164   New eBooks in 2003
                2441   New eBooks in 2002
                1240   New eBooks in 2001
                ====
               13865   New eBooks Since Start Of 2001
                         That's Only 55.25 Months!
                         Over 250 books per month!

              16,926  Total Project Gutenberg eBooks
              13,484   eBooks This Week Last Year
                ====
               3,442   New eBooks In Last 12 Months

                 467   eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia
                       [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted
                       at the U.S. site:  www.gutenberg.org ]

*

PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE:

Since starting production in October 2000,
Distributed Proofreaders has contributed
7,297 eBooks to Project Gutenberg.

For more complete DP statistics, visit:
http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php

*

Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, 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 catalog.

eBooks are posted throughout the week.  You can even get daily lists.

Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs:

http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto
or
http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml

***

*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report

Please note the addition of the Internet Archive
marked with <<< below.

PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings
of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as:

Alex-Wire Tap Collection,           2,036 HTML eBook Files
Black Mask Collection,             12,000 HTML eBook Files
The Coradella Bookshelf Collection,   141 eBook Files
DjVu Collection,                      272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files
eBooks@Adelaide Collection,        27,709 eBook Files
Himalayan Academy,                  3,400 HTML eBook Files
Internet Archive                  ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress]  <<<
Literal Systems Collection,            68 MP3 eBook Files
Logos Group Collection,           ~34,000 TXT eBook Files
Poet's Corner Poetry Collection,    6,700 Poetry Files
Project Gutenberg Collection,      15,035 eBook Files
PGCC Chinese eBook Collection       ~300 eBook files   <<< Note Name Change
Renaisscance Editions Collection,     561 HTML eBook Files
Swami Center Collection,               78 HTML eBook Files
Tony Kline Collection,                223 HTML eBook Files
Widger Library,                     2,600 HTML eBook Files
CIA's Electronic Reading Room,      2,019 Reference Files
=======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files=====

Average Size of the Collections     8,067.18 Total Files


These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of
their donors:  some are one file per book; some have a
file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a
single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons
I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the
overcounting or duplication of numbers.

If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~45,714 Unique eBooks

If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~34,286 Unique eBooks

***

Please also note that over 23,000 eBooks are listed via
The Online Books Page, of which over 5,300 are from PG.
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/

In addition:  The Internet Public Library had a similar
listing which is now in limbo.  If anyone knows what is
happening with the IPL, please let us know.  Inquiries,
made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up
any current information.

You can try a new IPL service at:

http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/

It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended
its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which
has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page.

Still looking for more Internet Public Library info.

***

Today Is Day #217 of 2005
This Completes Week #31 and Month #07.25  [364 days this year]
   147 Days/22 Weeks To Go  [We get 52 Wednesdays this year]
3,074 Books To Go To #20,000
[Our production year begins/ends
1st Wednesday of the month/year]

    64   Weekly Average in 2005
    78   Weekly Average in 2004
    79   Weekly Average in 2003
    47   Weekly Average in 2002
    24   Weekly Average in 2001

    41   Only 41 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers list
          [Used to be well over 100]


*** Permanent Requests For Assistance:


DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES


Please visit the site:

http://www.pgdp.net

for more information about how you can help a lot by
simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more.

If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run
through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed,
and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it,
please email dphelp@pgdp.net and we will get things started.

Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the
Project Gutenberg collection.  To see what is already online,
visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file)
listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading.

Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive?
Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed
Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp@pgdp.net with your geographic
location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner.
[Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which
will not be returned.]  We have high-speed scanners currently located in
the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier.

Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive
and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at:

http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html

to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if
you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK'
lines to

dphelp@pgdp.net

Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time
or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself?
Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution!  Just send us email
telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help
find a project you would like to work on.

Please contact us at:

dphelp@pgdp.net

if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders.



***Donation Information

We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests!


We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages,
as well as 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
809 North 1500 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84116
USA

B. Donate by credit card online:

NetworkForGood:
http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541

or

PayPal to "donate@gutenberg.org":
http://www.paypal.com
/xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of
volunteers over more than 33 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
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://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html  or email donate@gutenberg.org


*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections


*Mirror Site Information

Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world.
To find the sites nearest you, go to:

http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL


*Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
http://www.gutenberg.org/find
allows searching by title, author, language and subject.

Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download
site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want.  Try:

http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs
or
ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/

and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first
five characters of the file's name.  Note that updated eBooks usually
go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.)


***


Statistical Review

In the 30 weeks of this year, we have produced 1903 new eBooks.
It took us from 7/71 to 10/99 to produce our FIRST 1903 eBooks!!!

          That's 30 WEEKS as Compared to ~28+ YEARS!!!


FLASHBACK!

Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #1903

Mon Year Title and Author                                  [filename.ext] ###
A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright

[Note:  books without month and year entries have been reposted]

Nov 1999 Stories by English Authors in Africa, Scribners Ed[sbeaaxxx.xxx] 1980
   Contains:
     The Mystery of Sasassa Valley by A. Conan Doyle
     Long Odds, by H. Rider Haggard
     King Memba's Point, by J. Landers
     Ghamba, by W. C. Scully
     Mary Musgrave, Anonymous
     Gregorio, by Percy Hemingway
Nov 1999 The Perdue Chicken Cookbook, by Mitzi Perdue      [mitzixxx.xxx] 1979C
Nov 1999 Buttercup Gold, et. al., by Ellen Robena Field    [btrcpxxx.xxx] 1978
Nov 1999 Phaedra, by Jean Baptiste Racine [Tr.: RB Boswell][phrdrxxx.xxx] 1977
   [Tr.: Robert Bruce Boswell]
Nov 1999 Peter Ruff and the Double Four, by Oppenheim[EPO8][rff44xxx.xxx] 1976
Nov 1999 The Legacy of Cain, by Wilkie Collins [Collins#22][lcainxxx.xxx] 1975

Nov 1999 Poetics, by Aristotle, Tr. SH Butcher[Aristotle#1][poetcxxx.xxx] 1974
Tales of Troy: Ulysses the Sacker of Cities, by Andrew Lang               1973
Nov 1999 History Of The Britons, by Nennius                [brtnsxxx.xxx] 1972
   [Tr.: J. A. Giles]
Erewhon Revisited, by Samuel Butler                                       1971
   [Subtitle: Twenty Years Later.  Both by the Original Discoverer of the
    Country and by his Son]

Nov 1999 A Poor Wise Man, by Mary Roberts Rinehart[MRR #12][pwsmnxxx.xxx] 1970
Nov 1999 Catherine: A Story, by William Thackeray[W.M.T.#9][cthrnxxx.xxx] 1969
The Human Comedy:  Introductions & Appendix, by Honore de Balzac          1968
   [Introduction: George Saintsbury]
The Brotherhood of Consolation, by Honore de Balzac                       1967
   [Tr.: Katharine Prescott Wormeley]

Nov 1999 The Path of the King, by John Buchan   [Buchan #6][tpotkxxx.xxx] 1966
Nov 1999 Captain Blood, by Rafael Sabatini [R. Sabatini #3][cpbldxxx.xxx] 1965
Nov 1999 [Reserved for Pietro di Miceli]                   [     xxx.xxx] 1964*
Nov 1999 The Confession, by Mary Roberts Rinehart [MRR #11][cnfsnxxx.xxx] 1963

Nov 1999 A Defence of Poesie and Poems, by Philip Sidney   [dfncpxxx.xxx] 1962
Nov 1999 Books and Bookmen, by Andrew Lang[Andrew Lang #16][bkbkmxxx.xxx] 1961
Nov 1999 Sight Unseen, by Mary Roberts Rinehart[Rinehart10][stnsnxxx.xxx] 1960
Nov 1999 The Crown of Thorns, by E. H. Chapin              [thrnsxxx.xxx] 1959

Nov 1999 Hermann and Dorothea by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe[handdxxx.xxx] 1958
Beatrix, by Honore de Balzac  [Tr.: Katharine Prescott Wormeley]          1957
Nov 1999 And Even Now, by Max Beerbohm    [Max Beerbohm #7][evnowxxx.xxx] 1956
Nov 1999 The Darrow Enigma, by Melvin L. Severy            [dngmaxxx.xxx] 1955

Colonel Chabert, by Honore de Balzac [Tr.: Ellen Marriage & Clara Bell]   1954
Nov 1999 The Diary of an Old Soul, by George MacDonald [#6][doaosxxx.xxx] 1953
Nov 1999 The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman2[ylwlpxxx.xxx] 1952
Nov 1999 The Coming Race, by Edward Bulwer Lytton[Lytton#5][cmgrcxxx.xxx] 1951

Nov 1999 A Woman of Thirty, by Honore de Balzac[Balzac #87][thrtyxxx.xxx] 1950
Nov 1999 On The Ruin of Britain, by Gildas Sapiens         [otrobxxx.xxx] 1949
Nov 1999 The Story of a Bad Boy, by Thomas Bailey Aldrich 7[soabbxxx.xxx] 1948
Nov 1999 Scaramouche, by Rafael Sabatini[Rafael Sabatini#2][scmshxxx.xxx] 1947

Oct 1999 On War, by Carl von Clausewitz [Volume 1] [CvC #1][1onwrxxx.xxx] 1946
Oct 1999 Egmont, by Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe  [Goethe #2][egmntxxx.xxx] 1945

*

Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet???

If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of
6,459,357,434 that would be 16,927 x 64,593,574 = 1.09 Trillion !!!

With 16,927 eBooks online as of August 10, 2005 it now takes an average
of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.91 from each book.
1% of the world population is 64,593,574 x 16,926 x $.91 = ~$1 trillion]
[Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.]

With 16,927 eBooks online as of August 10, 2005 it now takes an average
of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.59 from each book.
This "cost" is down from about $.74 when we had 13,484 eBooks a year ago.
100 million readers is only ~1.5% of the world's population!

At 16,927 eBooks in 34 Years and 01.25 Months We Averaged
      ~496 Per Year
        41.4 Per Month
         1.36 Per Day

At 1971 eBooks Done In The 217 Days Of 2005 We Averaged
     9.1 Per Day
      64 Per Week
     272 Per Month


If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S.
you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear,
are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope.

Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment,
who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the
districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that
all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details].

However, I just this moment heard a news item that made me wonder a
bit more about the accuracy of the U.S. Census.  A "Special Census"
is taking place in Normal, Illinois, that is expected to count more
people, by a factor of 3,000 or 3,400, depending on which source.

45,386 was the population as per the 2000 Census, so 3,000 added to
this would be an increase of 6.6%, and 3,400 would be 7.5%, above a
possibly automatic increase of 5% as per the same terms above but I
presume this is in addition to previous adjustments.

Of course, we should consider that we would have to double figures,
perhaps to 15% from those above, if are considering the normal time
between censuses of 10 years, these are for 5 years' growth.

In previous news I heard about the U.S. Census, no mention was made
about the annexation of various nearly locations as a cause of this
normally unexpected growth, but it is mentioned at the site I found
on the subject of the current Special Census.

If annexation is the primary cause of such increases, country wide,
then we should not be expecting a huge rise in the 2010 Census, but
rather should expect something more along the norm.  However, if it
is not annexation, but more actual people on the average, then this
might be an indicator that the population of the U.S. may have seen
300 million go by some time ago.

For more details, see:  www.normal.org/WhatsNew/Census.htm


The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks'
production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon,
starts with the first Wednesday of January.  January 5th was
the first Wednesday of 2005, and thus ended PG's production
year of 2004 and began the production year of 2005 at noon.

This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week.

***

*Headline News from Edupage

[PG Editor's Comments In Brackets]


FCC DROPS TELECOM RULES ON NETWORK ACCESS

[Why do they say they can't tell if prices will change as a result?]

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has dropped regulations
that forced telephone companies to lease network access at
FCC-determined rates to rival providers of broadband services. Internet
service providers will have a year to transition from the current system.
Whether the change will affect prices and availability of DSL is not known,
since phone companies can profit by leasing their lines to rivals
and benefit from all increased DSL purchases by U.S. customers.
DSL service providers are more concerned by competition for broadband
customers from cable companies, which claim 56 percent of broadband
customers versus 36.5 percent for DSL, according to data from the FCC.
San Jose Mercury News, 8 August 2005
www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/business/technology/12331081.htm


FBI ISSUES RFP FOR SENTINEL

[Carnivore Reincarnate?]

Following cancellation in March of the Trilogy program at the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which was meant to modernize the
agency's computer systems, the bureau has issued a request for
proposals for Sentinel, its next-generation information management
system. Submissions are due by fall, with a contract expected by the
end of the year. The FBI announced last week that it had deployed its
public key infrastructure, which is a prerequisite for Sentinel.
Federal Computer Week, 8 August 2005
http://www.fcw.com/article89836-08-08-05-Web


KANSAS SUPREME COURT TO RULE ON OWNERSHIP OF FACULTY WORK

[I suppose this would allow Kansas to censor evolution materials.]

The Kansas Supreme Court will evaluate an appellate court decision
giving public institutions in Kansas the right to claim ownership of
any faculty work, including books, with no negotiation on terms
required. The lower court treated faculty work as "work for hire" under
federal copyright law, classifying scholarly work as within the scope
of employment of a faculty member. The current policy, designed in
1998, allows faculty to keep their book rights and has a
revenue-sharing model for technology copyrights. Should the higher
court decide in favor of the board, the policy could be changed at
will. The case pits the Kansas Board of Regents against the Kansas
National Education Association.
Inside Higher Ed, 7 August 2005
http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/08/08/kansas

***More on Kansas this week from alternate sources***

KANSAS BOARD OKAYS EVOLUTION KNOCK
from CBS/Associated Press

The Kansas Board of Education voted 6-4 to include greater criticism of
evolution in its school science standards, but it decided to send the
standards to an outside academic for review before taking a final vote.

The Kansas school system was ridiculed around the country in 1999 when the
board deleted most references to evolution. The system later reversed
course, but the language favored by the board Tuesday comes from advocates
of intelligent design or creationism.

The belief, which many say is deeply tied to religious belief, holds that
some features of the natural world are best explained by an unspecified
intelligent cause. Evolution is a fundamental scientific theory that
species evolved over millions of years through natural selection.
http://tinyurl.com/ceuec

***

SURVEY SHOWS MIXED IMPACT OF INTERNET ON STUDENTS
A survey conducted in May 2004 by Steve Jones, professor of
communciation at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Camille
Johnson-Yale, a graduate student in communication at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, determined that 42 percent of the
professors surveyed saw a decline in the quality of student work with
the advent of the Internet, while 22 percent noted an improvement.

[One might suspect a study in which declines outweighed unchanged,
and the unchanged was never mentioned.  42% decline 34% same 22% improve,
thus the majority were either unchanged or showed improvement]

However, a majority of respondents, 67 percent, indicated that the
Internet had improved their communication with students. The nationwide
survey of 2,316 faculty elicited a concern with student plagiarism, and
74 percent of respondents said they use the Internet or other tools to
detect plagiarism. The researchers have presented some of their
findings at academic conferences and have submitted their work to a
peer-reviewed academic journal.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 7 August 2005 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i49/49a03201.htm


CHINESE SEARCH ENGINE IPO TAKES OFF

[Remember the previous predictions about China?]

Chinese search engine company Baidu.com launched its initial public
offering (IPO) of shares Friday on the Nasdaq stock market. The stocks
were priced at $27, opened at $66, and rose to $122.54 by market close.
Investors in Baidu include Google and several Silicon Valley venture
capital firms. Baidu is the top search engine in China, followed by
Google, and there is speculation that Google might attempt to acquire
the company in the future.
New York Times, 7 August 2005 (registration req'd)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/08/technology/08baidu.html

UT TO RECEIVE $1.8 FROM BLACKBERRY
The maker of BlackBerry devices will pay the University of Texas System
$1.8 million to settle a patent-infringement case over technology that
allows users to enter text into telephone-style keypads. Under the
terms of the settlement, Research in Motion, based in Canada, will also
be granted a license to continue using the technology. Part of the
settlement will fund research at the UT Ssystem's Arlington campus,
where the technology was developed by George Kondraske, a professor of
electrical and biomedical engineering, and Adnan Shennib, who was a
graduate student when the technology was invented in 1987. The UT
System is pursuing similar charges against more than 40 other companies
for illegally using the patented technology. The university, which
earns between $11 and $14 million annually from royalties on patents it
holds, has recently hired a vice chancellor for research and technology
transfer and will soon appoint an associate vice chancellor to help
protect its patents.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 3 August 2005 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/08/2005080305n.htm

COURT REJECTS APPLE DEAL WITH GEORGIA SCHOOLS
A Georgia court has issued a ruling that seemingly puts an end to a
deal between Apple Computer and the Cobb County School District to
provide as many as 63,000 iBook laptops to the district's teachers and
middle and high school students. Critics of the deal argued that the
school district did not adequately inform voters that a sales tax
increase passed in 2003 would be used to fund the laptop program. The
issue was taken to court, and the judge in the case agreed with the
plaintiffs. The school board held a meeting to discuss its options,
which might include appealing the ruling. For the moment, however, the
deal appears to be over. Kathie Johnstone, president of the school
board, said that providing a laptop to all of the district's students
"is no longer an option." Because district officials had promised
teachers computers before the sales tax ballot issue, teachers might
still receive laptops.
CNET, 2 August 2005
http://news.com.com/2100-1047_3-5816034.html


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
or
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings,
or access the Edupage archive, visit
http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639

***

One more item from alternate sources

SCIENCE OF DNA
from The New York Times (Registration Required)

The sequence of deals, intrigue and lawsuits would not have raised an
eyebrow in the art world. But the target this time was a collection of
scientific papers from the early days of molecular biology, a set that
some scientists had hoped to buy for an archive at the Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory on Long Island.

Instead, it has been bought for several million dollars by J. Craig Venter,
the maverick biologist who forced the government to a draw in a race to
produce a draft sequence of the human genome.

The Jeremy Norman collection, as the papers are known, was put together
before the materials had any clear market value. Mr. Norman and Al Seckel,
two private collectors in California, started gathering the papers at a
time when some scientists were discarding their archives, and many
institutions had no interest in them.
http://tinyurl.com/c9etz


*HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA


When Did The News People Become The News?

Something that no one will report is that the three major TV
networks spent more time talking about ABC's Peter Jennings'
death on Monday than they did reporting the actual news, for
their evening broadcasts.


*STRANGE WORDS OF THE WEEK

Peter Jennings never completed the 10th grade.


DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK

Companies that mismanage their pension funds and then as their
governments to free them from responsibility are like children
who kill their parents and then "throw themselves on the mercy
of the court" and say the court must help them because they're
now orphans.

[I have heard several versions of this, but have no idea where
it was originally said, sorry.]


*PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK

People will accept the forced change to HDTV, even though it will
cost the country a fortune [100,000,000 sets at $1,000 each would
be 100 billion dollars] but by putting more and more "fine print"
and scrollbars on the screen, the television industry is making a
significant portion of the public dissatisfied with current TVs.


*ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK

Allergies in the U.S. have doubled since 1970.
Asthma has doubled since 1980.

"Since 1980, the number of Americans suffering from asthma has doubled."

*

Apple's new iTunes site in Japan sold its first million singles in
just four days.

*

The error level accepted in the Chinese census is greater than the
level of the entire United States population.  [In fact I think it
might be double the US population]

*

Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries.

"If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely
100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same,
it would look something like the following. There would be:

57 Asians
21 Europeans
14 from the Western Hemisphere, both north and south
  8 Africans
  52 would be female
  48 would be male
  70 would be non-white
  30 would be white
  70 would be non-Christian
  30 would be Christian
   6 people  would  possess  59%  of the entire world's wealth
   and all 6 would be from the United States
80 would live in substandard housing
70 would be unable to read
50 would suffer from malnutrition
  1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth
  1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education
  1 would own a computer

I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date,
as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer
then there would be only 60 million people in the world who
owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States
households have computers, out of over 100 million households.
Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in
the United States.

I just called our local reference librarian and got the number
of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at:
111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports.

If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households
is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million,
and that's counting just one computer per household, and not
counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc.

I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate
given above, and would like some help researching these and other
such figures, if anyone is interested.

BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic
that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old.

This means that basically 90% of the world's population would
never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations
offered it to them free of charge.  Then I realized that the US
population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich
live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer
than the non-whites.  Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is
distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they
can receive more per year, but because they will live more years
to receive Social Security.  The average poor non-white may never
receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in.

*

POEM OF THE WEEK

This is number one of a series of five poems from a volume named:

"Thoughts of My Exiled Self."

The motto for this poetry volume is,
"Upon this Word I shall build my life."


At the Death Of My Fish

At the death of my fish
I mourned with the seagulls on a late fall's day
When the mountains of empty shells stand still at the
shores
and the water ripples the wind plays with
turn white with foam
as if they were asked to dress up in lace for the
ceremony.
At my fish's funeral
I decided to bury them inside my heart.

Copyright 2005 by Simona Sumanaru and Michael S. Hart
Please send comments to:  simona_s75 AT yahoo.com & hart AT pobox.com

***

*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists,
including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters:
and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists:

The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the
first Wednesday of the month.

To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription
preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server:

http://lists.pglaf.org

If you are having trouble with your subscription, please
email the list's human administrators at: help@pglaf.org



pgweekly_2005_08_10_part_1b.txt

PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1a (2005-08-10)

From hart at pglaf.org  Wed Aug 10 09:57:14 2005
From: hart at pglaf.org (Michael Hart)
Date: Wed Aug 10 09:57:17 2005
Subject: [gweekly] PT1 Weekly Project Gutenberg Newsletter
Message-ID: <Pine.LNX.4.60.0508100955320.22035@pglaf.org>

Weekly_August_10.txt
The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, Auguest 10, 2005 PT1
******eBooks Readable By Both Humans And Computers Since July 4, 1971******

Newsletter editors needed! Please email hart@pobox.com or gbnewby@pglaf.org
Anyone who would care to get advance editions:  please email hart@pobox.com

Please note that we are still in the process of correcting our statistical
program data.  Last week we subtracted a few that we thought had been in a
duplicate count situation, but either that correction didn't stick or some
new similar problem has occured.  As always, the total count should be the
consideration of some attention as to possibly being off by a few eBooks.

Please note that PT2 of this Newsletter is currently in flux, as we shift
from to an automated PT2 sender.  The situation with Monthly Newsletters
is in flux to an even greater degree.  Our apologies as we make changes.

*

HOT REQUESTS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

WANTED!

People to help us collect ALL public domain eBooks!!!

*

Wanted:  People who are involved in conversations on Slashdot, Salon, etc.

*

TABLE OF CONTENTS
[Search for "*eBook" or "*Intro". . .to jump to that section, etc.]

*eBook Milestones
*Introduction
*Hot Requests, New Sites and Announcements
*Continuing Requests and Announcements
*Progress Report
*Distributed Proofreaders Collection Report
*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report
*Permanent Requests For Assistance:
*Donation Information
*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections
  *Mirror Site Information
  *Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
*Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet?
*Flashback
*Weekly eBook update:
   This is now in PT2 of the Weekly Newsletter
   Also collected in the Monthly Newsletter
   Corrections in separate section
    1 New From PG Australia [Australian, Canadian Copyright Etc.]
   83 New Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright
*Headline News from Edupage, etc.
*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

***


                          *eBook Milestones

                     16,926 eBooks As Of Today!!!

               13,797 New eBooks Since The Start Of 2001

               That's 250+ eBooks per Month for 55 Months

                  We Have Produced 1970 eBooks in 2005

                         3,074 to go to 20,000!!!


     We have now averaged ~495 eBooks per year since July 4th, 1971

           We Averaged About 339 eBooks Per Month In 2004

        We Are Averaging About 272 books Per Month This Year

         We Are Averaging About 64 eBooks Per Week This Year

                              84 This Week


It took ~32 years, from 1971 to 2003 to do our 1st 10,000 eBooks

It took ~32 months, from 2002 to 2005 for our last 10,000 eBooks

It took ~10 years from 1993 to 2003 to grow from 100 eBooks to 10,100

It took ~1.25 years from Oct. 2003 to Jan. 2005 from 10,000 to 15,000

*


***Introduction

[The Newsletter is now being sent in two sections, so you can directly
go to the portions you find most interesting:  1.  Founder's Comments,
News, Notes & Queries, and  2. Weekly eBook Update Listing.]

[Since we are between Newsletter editors, these 2 parts may undergo a
few changes while we are finding a new Newsletter editor.   Email us:
hart@pobox.com and gbnewby@pglaf.org if you would like to volunteer.]


   This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter


***


***Continuing Requests New Sites and Announcements

*

We have been invited to peruse the various eBook collections
of the Internet Archive for potential Project Gutenberg eBooks.

http://www.archive.org

Don't worry, many of the numbers listed are out of date,
but you should get all the files when you pass through
to the original sites.

Click on "texts" to get started, feel free to pick up any
of the eBooks you would like to work on.

Many Thanks To Brewster Kahle and the Internet Archive!

*

Please visit and test our newest site:

"PROJECT GUTENBERG EUROPE"

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

*

There is a new experimental online reader available. Start from any
bibliographic record page, e.g.

    http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/4300


Basically this paginates the .txt file and remembers your last position
in a cookie so you can later resume reading where you left off.

Please test it. It should work with any book that has a text file
where the encoding is known.

*

MACHINE TRANSLATION

We are seeking as much information as possible on the various
approaches to Machine Translation. Any brand names or contact
information would be greatly appreciated.

***

Please use our new site for downloading DVD and CD images, etc.

http://www.gutenberg.org/cdproject

and

The PG bittorrent tracker is up and running.
Aaron Cannon has placed the CD and DVD there if anyone wants to test.
You can access it by visiting
http://snowy.arsc.alaska.edu:6969

***

Please checkout the various Project Gutenberg FAQs, etc. at:

http://www.gutenberg.org/about


*

We're building a team to read our eBooks into MP3 files
for the visually impaired and other audio book users.

Let us know if you'd like to join this group.

More information at http://www.gutenberg.org/audio


***

Project Gutenberg Needs DVD Burners


So far we have sent out 15 million eBooks via snailmail!!!

We currently have access to a dozen DVD burners.  If you have a DVD burner
and are interested in lending a hand, please email Aaron Cannon

<cannona@fireantproductions.com>

We can set you up with images, or snail you these DVDs
for you to copy.  You can either snail them directly
to readers whose addresses we can send you, or you can
do a stack of these and send the whole box back for reshipping.
We can also reimburse you for supplies and postage if you wish.

Please note that we can only use DVDs which are burnt in the dvd-r format,
as we have had some compatibility issues with the dvd+r format.

***

Project Gutenberg is seeking graphics we can use for our Web
pages and publicity materials.  If you have original graphics
depicting Project Gutenberg themes, please contribute them!

To see some of what we have now, please see:

   ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/images


*** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES

Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers.
We have regular need for intellectual property legal advice
(both US and international) and other areas.  Please email
Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby <gbnewby AT pglaf.org> ,
if you can help.

This is much more important than many of us realize!


***Progress Report, including Distributed Proofreaders


     In the first 07.25 months of this year, we produced 1970 new eBooks.

It took us from July 1971 to Nov 1999 to produce our first 1970 eBooks!

            That's 31 WEEKS as Compared to ~28+ Years!!!

                  84   New eBooks This Week
                  59   New eBooks Last Week
                  04   New eBooks This Month [Aug]

                ~272   Average Per Month in 2005
                 336   Average Per Month in 2004
                 355   Average Per Month in 2003
                 203   Average Per Month in 2002
                 103   Average Per Month in 2001

                1970   New eBooks in 2005
                4049   New eBooks in 2004
                4164   New eBooks in 2003
                2441   New eBooks in 2002
                1240   New eBooks in 2001
                ====
               13864   New eBooks Since Start Of 2001
                         That's Only 55.25 Months!
                         Over 250 books per month!

              16,926  Total Project Gutenberg eBooks
              13,484   eBooks This Week Last Year
                ====
               3,442   New eBooks In Last 12 Months

                 467   eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia
                       [This does NOT include PGAu eBooks posted
                       at the U.S. site:  www.gutenberg.org ]

*

PROJECT GUTENBERG DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS UPDATE:

Since starting production in October 2000,
Distributed Proofreaders has contributed
7,297 eBooks to Project Gutenberg.

For more complete DP statistics, visit:
http://www.pgdp.net/c/stats/stats_central.php

*

Check out our website at www.gutenberg.org, 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 catalog.

eBooks are posted throughout the week.  You can even get daily lists.

Info on subscribing to daily, weekly, monthly Newsletters, listservs:

http://www.gutenberg.org/howto/subscribe-howto
or
http://www.gutenberg.org/subs.shtml

***

*Project Gutenberg Consortia Center Report

Please note the addition of the Internet Archive
marked with <<< below.

PGCC's current eBook and eDocument Collections listings
of 18 collections. . .with this week's listing as:

Alex-Wire Tap Collection,           2,036 HTML eBook Files
Black Mask Collection,             12,000 HTML eBook Files
The Coradella Bookshelf Collection,   141 eBook Files
DjVu Collection,                      272 PDF and DJVU eBook Files
eBooks@Adelaide Collection,        27,709 eBook Files
Himalayan Academy,                  3,400 HTML eBook Files
Internet Archive                  ~30,000 eBook Files [In Progress]  <<<
Literal Systems Collection,            68 MP3 eBook Files
Logos Group Collection,           ~34,000 TXT eBook Files
Poet's Corner Poetry Collection,    6,700 Poetry Files
Project Gutenberg Collection,      15,035 eBook Files
PGCC Chinese eBook Collection       ~300 eBook files   <<< Note Name Change
Renaisscance Editions Collection,     561 HTML eBook Files
Swami Center Collection,               78 HTML eBook Files
Tony Kline Collection,                223 HTML eBook Files
Widger Library,                     2,600 HTML eBook Files
CIA's Electronic Reading Room,      2,019 Reference Files
=======Grand Total Files=========~137,142 Total Files=====

Average Size of the Collections     8,067.18 Total Files


These eBooks are catalogued as per the instructions of
their donors:  some are one file per book; some have a
file for each chapter; and some even have a file for a
single page or poem. . .or are overcounted for reasons
I have not mentioned. . .each of which could cause the
overcounting or duplication of numbers.

If we presume 2 out of 3 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~45,714 Unique eBooks

If we presume 3 out of 4 of these files are overcounts,
that leaves a unique book total of
                                   ~34,286 Unique eBooks

***

Please also note that over 23,000 eBooks are listed via
The Online Books Page, of which over 5,300 are from PG.
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/

In addition:  The Internet Public Library had a similar
listing which is now in limbo.  If anyone knows what is
happening with the IPL, please let us know.  Inquiries,
made months ago, and again recently, have not turned up
any current information.

You can try a new IPL service at:

http://www.ipl.org/div/subject/browse/hum60.60.00/

It would appear that The Internet Public Library ended
its first incarnation with about 22,284 entries, which
has now been surpassed by the Online Books Page.

Still looking for more Internet Public Library info.

***

Today Is Day #217 of 2005
This Completes Week #31 and Month #07.25  [364 days this year]
   147 Days/22 Weeks To Go  [We get 52 Wednesdays this year]
3,074 Books To Go To #20,000
[Our production year begins/ends
1st Wednesday of the month/year]

    64   Weekly Average in 2005
    78   Weekly Average in 2004
    79   Weekly Average in 2003
    47   Weekly Average in 2002
    24   Weekly Average in 2001

    41   Only 41 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers list
          [Used to be well over 100]


*** Permanent Requests For Assistance:


DISTRIBUTED PROOFREADERS NEEDS CONTENT, PROOFERS AND SCANNER TYPES


Please visit the site:

http://www.pgdp.net

for more information about how you can help a lot by
simply proofreading just a few pages per day, or more.

If you have a book that has been scanned, but not yet run
through OCR (optical character recognition) or proofed,
and you would like the Distributed Proofreaders to work on it,
please email dphelp@pgdp.net and we will get things started.

Also, DP is seeking public domain books not already in the
Project Gutenberg collection.  To see what is already online,
visit http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/GUTINDEX.ALL (a text file)
listing Project Gutenberg eBooks and is available for downloading.

Do you have Public Domain books you would like to see in the archive?
Can they be destructively scanned? If so send them to the Distributed
Proofreading Team! Please email dphelp@pgdp.net with your geographic
location. You will be given the address of the nearest high-speed scanner.
[Note that the high-speed scanner requires destruction of the book(s) which
will not be returned.]  We have high-speed scanners currently located in
the east, west and central portions of the US to make shipping easier.

Please make sure that any books you send are _not_ already in the archive
and please check them against David's "In Progress" list at:

http://www.dprice48.freeserve.co.uk/GutIP.html

to ensure no one is currently working on them. It would also be helpful if
you obtain copyright clearance before mailing the books, and send the 'OK'
lines to

dphelp@pgdp.net

Do you like to work on an entire book at once but don't have the time
or technology to do the scanning, OCR, and initial proofing yourself?
Distributed Proofreaders has the perfect solution!  Just send us email
telling us that you are interested in post-processing and we will help
find a project you would like to work on.

Please contact us at:

dphelp@pgdp.net

if you would like to know more about the Distributed Proofreaders.



***Donation Information

We Have Included Quick and Easy Ways to Donate. . .As Per Your Requests!


We Are Looking For Volunteers To Add eBooks In More Languages,
as well as 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
809 North 1500 West
Salt Lake City, UT 84116
USA

B. Donate by credit card online:

NetworkForGood:
http://www.guidestar.org/partners/networkforgood/donate.jsp?ein=64-6221541

or

PayPal to "donate@gutenberg.org":
http://www.paypal.com
/xclick/business=donate%40gutenberg.org&item_name=Donate+to+Gutenberg

Project Gutenberg's success is due to the hard work of thousands of
volunteers over more than 33 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
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://www.gutenberg.org/donation.html  or email donate@gutenberg.org


*Access To The Project Gutenberg Collections


*Mirror Site Information

Mirrors (copies) of the complete collection are available around the world.
To find the sites nearest you, go to:

http://www.gutenberg.org/MIRRORS.ALL


*Instant Access To Our Latest eBooks
http://www.gutenberg.org/find
allows searching by title, author, language and subject.

Use your Web browser or FTP program to visit our master download
site (or a mirror) if you know the file's name you want.  Try:

http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs
or
ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/

and then navigate to the appropriate directory and look for the first
five characters of the file's name.  Note that updated eBooks usually
go in their original directory (e.g., etext99, etext00, etc.)


***


Statistical Review

In the 30 weeks of this year, we have produced 1903 new eBooks.
It took us from 7/71 to 10/99 to produce our FIRST 1903 eBooks!!!

          That's 30 WEEKS as Compared to ~28+ YEARS!!!


FLASHBACK!

Here's a sample of what books we were doing around eBook #1903

Mon Year Title and Author                                  [filename.ext] ###
A "C" Following The eText # Indicates That This eText Is Under Copyright

[Note:  books without month and year entries have been reposted]

Nov 1999 Stories by English Authors in Africa, Scribners Ed[sbeaaxxx.xxx] 1980
   Contains:
     The Mystery of Sasassa Valley by A. Conan Doyle
     Long Odds, by H. Rider Haggard
     King Memba's Point, by J. Landers
     Ghamba, by W. C. Scully
     Mary Musgrave, Anonymous
     Gregorio, by Percy Hemingway
Nov 1999 The Perdue Chicken Cookbook, by Mitzi Perdue      [mitzixxx.xxx] 1979C
Nov 1999 Buttercup Gold, et. al., by Ellen Robena Field    [btrcpxxx.xxx] 1978
Nov 1999 Phaedra, by Jean Baptiste Racine [Tr.: RB Boswell][phrdrxxx.xxx] 1977
   [Tr.: Robert Bruce Boswell]
Nov 1999 Peter Ruff and the Double Four, by Oppenheim[EPO8][rff44xxx.xxx] 1976
Nov 1999 The Legacy of Cain, by Wilkie Collins [Collins#22][lcainxxx.xxx] 1975

Nov 1999 Poetics, by Aristotle, Tr. SH Butcher[Aristotle#1][poetcxxx.xxx] 1974
Tales of Troy: Ulysses the Sacker of Cities, by Andrew Lang               1973
Nov 1999 History Of The Britons, by Nennius                [brtnsxxx.xxx] 1972
   [Tr.: J. A. Giles]
Erewhon Revisited, by Samuel Butler                                       1971
   [Subtitle: Twenty Years Later.  Both by the Original Discoverer of the
    Country and by his Son]

Nov 1999 A Poor Wise Man, by Mary Roberts Rinehart[MRR #12][pwsmnxxx.xxx] 1970
Nov 1999 Catherine: A Story, by William Thackeray[W.M.T.#9][cthrnxxx.xxx] 1969
The Human Comedy:  Introductions & Appendix, by Honore de Balzac          1968
   [Introduction: George Saintsbury]
The Brotherhood of Consolation, by Honore de Balzac                       1967
   [Tr.: Katharine Prescott Wormeley]

Nov 1999 The Path of the King, by John Buchan   [Buchan #6][tpotkxxx.xxx] 1966
Nov 1999 Captain Blood, by Rafael Sabatini [R. Sabatini #3][cpbldxxx.xxx] 1965
Nov 1999 [Reserved for Pietro di Miceli]                   [     xxx.xxx] 1964*
Nov 1999 The Confession, by Mary Roberts Rinehart [MRR #11][cnfsnxxx.xxx] 1963

Nov 1999 A Defence of Poesie and Poems, by Philip Sidney   [dfncpxxx.xxx] 1962
Nov 1999 Books and Bookmen, by Andrew Lang[Andrew Lang #16][bkbkmxxx.xxx] 1961
Nov 1999 Sight Unseen, by Mary Roberts Rinehart[Rinehart10][stnsnxxx.xxx] 1960
Nov 1999 The Crown of Thorns, by E. H. Chapin              [thrnsxxx.xxx] 1959

Nov 1999 Hermann and Dorothea by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe[handdxxx.xxx] 1958
Beatrix, by Honore de Balzac  [Tr.: Katharine Prescott Wormeley]          1957
Nov 1999 And Even Now, by Max Beerbohm    [Max Beerbohm #7][evnowxxx.xxx] 1956
Nov 1999 The Darrow Enigma, by Melvin L. Severy            [dngmaxxx.xxx] 1955

Colonel Chabert, by Honore de Balzac [Tr.: Ellen Marriage & Clara Bell]   1954
Nov 1999 The Diary of an Old Soul, by George MacDonald [#6][doaosxxx.xxx] 1953
Nov 1999 The Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman2[ylwlpxxx.xxx] 1952
Nov 1999 The Coming Race, by Edward Bulwer Lytton[Lytton#5][cmgrcxxx.xxx] 1951

Nov 1999 A Woman of Thirty, by Honore de Balzac[Balzac #87][thrtyxxx.xxx] 1950
Nov 1999 On The Ruin of Britain, by Gildas Sapiens         [otrobxxx.xxx] 1949
Nov 1999 The Story of a Bad Boy, by Thomas Bailey Aldrich 7[soabbxxx.xxx] 1948
Nov 1999 Scaramouche, by Rafael Sabatini[Rafael Sabatini#2][scmshxxx.xxx] 1947

Oct 1999 On War, by Carl von Clausewitz [Volume 1] [CvC #1][1onwrxxx.xxx] 1946
Oct 1999 Egmont, by Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe  [Goethe #2][egmntxxx.xxx] 1945

*

Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet???

If our average eBook has reached just 1% of the world population of
6,459,357,434 that would be 16,926 x 64,593,574 = 1.09 Trillion !!!

With 16,926 eBooks online as of August 10, 2005 it now takes an average
of ~1% of the world gaining a nominal value of ~$.91 from each book.
1% of the world population is 64,593,574 x 16,926 x $.91 = ~$1 trillion]
[Google "world population" "popclock" to get the most current figures.]

With 16,926 eBooks online as of August 10, 2005 it now takes an average
of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.59 from each book.
This "cost" is down from about $.74 when we had 13,484 eBooks a year ago.
100 million readers is only ~1.5% of the world's population!

At 16,926 eBooks in 34 Years and 01.25 Months We Averaged
      ~496 Per Year
        41.4 Per Month
         1.36 Per Day

At 1970 eBooks Done In The 217 Days Of 2005 We Averaged
     9.1 Per Day
      64 Per Week
     272 Per Month


If you are interested in the population of the world or of the U.S.
you might want to know that these numbers, official as they appear,
are just just estimates, and perhaps not as accurate as we hope.

Recently the U.S. Congress, pertaining to district reapportionment,
who gets to vote for which Congresspeople, decided that many of the
districts were undercounted by 5%, perhaps then later deciding that
all districts had been undercounted by 5% [can't recall details].

However, I just this moment heard a news item that made me wonder a
bit more about the accuracy of the U.S. Census.  A "Special Census"
is taking place in Normal, Illinois, that is expected to count more
people, by a factor of 3,000 or 3,400, depending on which source.

45,386 was the population as per the 2000 Census, so 3,000 added to
this would be an increase of 6.6%, and 3,400 would be 7.5%, above a
possibly automatic increase of 5% as per the same terms above but I
presume this is in addition to previous adjustments.

Of course, we should consider that we would have to double figures,
perhaps to 15% from those above, if are considering the normal time
between censuses of 10 years, these are for 5 years' growth.

In previous news I heard about the U.S. Census, no mention was made
about the annexation of various nearly locations as a cause of this
normally unexpected growth, but it is mentioned at the site I found
on the subject of the current Special Census.

If annexation is the primary cause of such increases, country wide,
then we should not be expecting a huge rise in the 2010 Census, but
rather should expect something more along the norm.  However, if it
is not annexation, but more actual people on the average, then this
might be an indicator that the population of the U.S. may have seen
300 million go by some time ago.

For more details, see:  www.normal.org/WhatsNew/Census.htm


The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks'
production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon,
starts with the first Wednesday of January.  January 5th was
the first Wednesday of 2005, and thus ended PG's production
year of 2004 and began the production year of 2005 at noon.

This year there will be 52 Wednesdays, thus no extra week.

***

*Headline News from Edupage

[PG Editor's Comments In Brackets]


FCC DROPS TELECOM RULES ON NETWORK ACCESS

[Why do they say they can't tell if prices will change as a result?]

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has dropped regulations
that forced telephone companies to lease network access at
FCC-determined rates to rival providers of broadband services. Internet
service providers will have a year to transition from the current system.
Whether the change will affect prices and availability of DSL is not known,
since phone companies can profit by leasing their lines to rivals
and benefit from all increased DSL purchases by U.S. customers.
DSL service providers are more concerned by competition for broadband
customers from cable companies, which claim 56 percent of broadband
customers versus 36.5 percent for DSL, according to data from the FCC.
San Jose Mercury News, 8 August 2005
www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/business/technology/12331081.htm


FBI ISSUES RFP FOR SENTINEL

[Carnivore Reincarnate?]

Following cancellation in March of the Trilogy program at the Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI), which was meant to modernize the
agency's computer systems, the bureau has issued a request for
proposals for Sentinel, its next-generation information management
system. Submissions are due by fall, with a contract expected by the
end of the year. The FBI announced last week that it had deployed its
public key infrastructure, which is a prerequisite for Sentinel.
Federal Computer Week, 8 August 2005
http://www.fcw.com/article89836-08-08-05-Web


KANSAS SUPREME COURT TO RULE ON OWNERSHIP OF FACULTY WORK

[I suppose this would allow Kansas to censor evolution materials.]

The Kansas Supreme Court will evaluate an appellate court decision
giving public institutions in Kansas the right to claim ownership of
any faculty work, including books, with no negotiation on terms
required. The lower court treated faculty work as "work for hire" under
federal copyright law, classifying scholarly work as within the scope
of employment of a faculty member. The current policy, designed in
1998, allows faculty to keep their book rights and has a
revenue-sharing model for technology copyrights. Should the higher
court decide in favor of the board, the policy could be changed at
will. The case pits the Kansas Board of Regents against the Kansas
National Education Association.
Inside Higher Ed, 7 August 2005
http://insidehighered.com/news/2005/08/08/kansas

***More on Kansas this week from alternate sources***

KANSAS BOARD OKAYS EVOLUTION KNOCK
from CBS/Associated Press

The Kansas Board of Education voted 6-4 to include greater criticism of
evolution in its school science standards, but it decided to send the
standards to an outside academic for review before taking a final vote.

The Kansas school system was ridiculed around the country in 1999 when the
board deleted most references to evolution. The system later reversed
course, but the language favored by the board Tuesday comes from advocates
of intelligent design or creationism.

The belief, which many say is deeply tied to religious belief, holds that
some features of the natural world are best explained by an unspecified
intelligent cause. Evolution is a fundamental scientific theory that
species evolved over millions of years through natural selection.
http://tinyurl.com/ceuec

***

SURVEY SHOWS MIXED IMPACT OF INTERNET ON STUDENTS
A survey conducted in May 2004 by Steve Jones, professor of
communciation at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and Camille
Johnson-Yale, a graduate student in communication at the University of
Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, determined that 42 percent of the
professors surveyed saw a decline in the quality of student work with
the advent of the Internet, while 22 percent noted an improvement.

[One might suspect a study in which declines outweighed unchanged,
and the unchanged was never mentioned.  42% decline 34% same 22% improve,
thus the majority were either unchanged or showed improvement]

However, a majority of respondents, 67 percent, indicated that the
Internet had improved their communication with students. The nationwide
survey of 2,316 faculty elicited a concern with student plagiarism, and
74 percent of respondents said they use the Internet or other tools to
detect plagiarism. The researchers have presented some of their
findings at academic conferences and have submitted their work to a
peer-reviewed academic journal.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 7 August 2005 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/weekly/v51/i49/49a03201.htm


CHINESE SEARCH ENGINE IPO TAKES OFF

[Remember the previous predictions about China?]

Chinese search engine company Baidu.com launched its initial public
offering (IPO) of shares Friday on the Nasdaq stock market. The stocks
were priced at $27, opened at $66, and rose to $122.54 by market close.
Investors in Baidu include Google and several Silicon Valley venture
capital firms. Baidu is the top search engine in China, followed by
Google, and there is speculation that Google might attempt to acquire
the company in the future.
New York Times, 7 August 2005 (registration req'd)
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/08/technology/08baidu.html

UT TO RECEIVE $1.8 FROM BLACKBERRY
The maker of BlackBerry devices will pay the University of Texas System
$1.8 million to settle a patent-infringement case over technology that
allows users to enter text into telephone-style keypads. Under the
terms of the settlement, Research in Motion, based in Canada, will also
be granted a license to continue using the technology. Part of the
settlement will fund research at the UT Ssystem's Arlington campus,
where the technology was developed by George Kondraske, a professor of
electrical and biomedical engineering, and Adnan Shennib, who was a
graduate student when the technology was invented in 1987. The UT
System is pursuing similar charges against more than 40 other companies
for illegally using the patented technology. The university, which
earns between $11 and $14 million annually from royalties on patents it
holds, has recently hired a vice chancellor for research and technology
transfer and will soon appoint an associate vice chancellor to help
protect its patents.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 3 August 2005 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2005/08/2005080305n.htm

COURT REJECTS APPLE DEAL WITH GEORGIA SCHOOLS
A Georgia court has issued a ruling that seemingly puts an end to a
deal between Apple Computer and the Cobb County School District to
provide as many as 63,000 iBook laptops to the district's teachers and
middle and high school students. Critics of the deal argued that the
school district did not adequately inform voters that a sales tax
increase passed in 2003 would be used to fund the laptop program. The
issue was taken to court, and the judge in the case agreed with the
plaintiffs. The school board held a meeting to discuss its options,
which might include appealing the ruling. For the moment, however, the
deal appears to be over. Kathie Johnstone, president of the school
board, said that providing a laptop to all of the district's students
"is no longer an option." Because district officials had promised
teachers computers before the sales tax ballot issue, teachers might
still receive laptops.
CNET, 2 August 2005
http://news.com.com/2100-1047_3-5816034.html


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
or
To subscribe, unsubscribe, change your settings,
or access the Edupage archive, visit
http://www.educause.edu/Edupage/639

***

One more item from alternate sources

SCIENCE OF DNA
from The New York Times (Registration Required)

The sequence of deals, intrigue and lawsuits would not have raised an
eyebrow in the art world. But the target this time was a collection of
scientific papers from the early days of molecular biology, a set that
some scientists had hoped to buy for an archive at the Cold Spring Harbor
Laboratory on Long Island.

Instead, it has been bought for several million dollars by J. Craig Venter,
the maverick biologist who forced the government to a draw in a race to
produce a draft sequence of the human genome.

The Jeremy Norman collection, as the papers are known, was put together
before the materials had any clear market value. Mr. Norman and Al Seckel,
two private collectors in California, started gathering the papers at a
time when some scientists were discarding their archives, and many
institutions had no interest in them.
http://tinyurl.com/c9etz


*HEADLINE NEWS AVOIDED BY MOST OF THE MAJOR U.S. MEDIA


When Did The News People Become The News?

Something that no one will report is that the three major TV
networks spent more time talking about ABC's Peter Jennings'
death on Monday than they did reporting the actual news, for
their evening broadcasts.


*STRANGE WORDS OF THE WEEK

Peter Jennings never completed the 10th grade.


DOUBLESPEAK OF THE WEEK

Companies that mismanage their pension funds and then as their
governments to free them from responsibility are like children
who kill their parents and then "throw themselves on the mercy
of the court" and say the court must help them because they're
now orphans.

[I have heard several versions of this, but have no idea where
it was originally said, sorry.]


*PREDICTIONS OF THE WEEK

People will accept the forced change to HDTV, even though it will
cost the country a fortune [100,000,000 sets at $1,000 each would
be 100 billion dollars] but by putting more and more "fine print"
and scrollbars on the screen, the television industry is making a
significant portion of the public dissatisfied with current TVs.


*ODD STATISTICS OF THE WEEK

Allergies in the U.S. have doubled since 1970.
Asthma has doubled since 1980.

"Since 1980, the number of Americans suffering from asthma has doubled."

*

Apple's new iTunes site in Japan sold its first million singles in
just four days.

*

The error level accepted in the Chinese census is greater than the
level of the entire United States population.  [In fact I think it
might be double the US population]

*

Still hoping for more statistical updates and additional entries.

"If we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely
100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same,
it would look something like the following. There would be:

57 Asians
21 Europeans
14 from the Western Hemisphere, both north and south
  8 Africans
  52 would be female
  48 would be male
  70 would be non-white
  30 would be white
  70 would be non-Christian
  30 would be Christian
   6 people  would  possess  59%  of the entire world's wealth
   and all 6 would be from the United States
80 would live in substandard housing
70 would be unable to read
50 would suffer from malnutrition
  1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth
  1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education
  1 would own a computer

I would like to bring some of these figures more up to date,
as obviously if only 1% of 6 billion people owned a computer
then there would be only 60 million people in the world who
owned a computer, yet we hear that 3/4 + of the United States
households have computers, out of over 100 million households.
Thus obviously that is over 1% of the world population, just in
the United States.

I just called our local reference librarian and got the number
of US households from the 2004-5 U.S. Statistical Abstract at:
111,278,000 as per data from 2003 U.S Census Bureau reports.

If we presume the saturation level of U.S. computer households
is now around 6/7, or 86%, that is a total of 95.4 million,
and that's counting just one computer per household, and not
counting households with more than one, schools, businesses, etc.

I also found some figures that might challenge the literacy rate
given above, and would like some help researching these and other
such figures, if anyone is interested.

BTW, while I was doing this research, I came across a statistic
that said only 10% of the world's population is 60+ years old.

This means that basically 90% of the world's population would
never benefit from Social Security, even if the wealthy nations
offered it to them free of charge.  Then I realized that the US
population has the same kind of age disparity, in which the rich
live so much longer than the poor, the whites live so much longer
than the non-whites.  Thus Social Security is paid by all, but is
distributed more to the upper class whites, not just because they
can receive more per year, but because they will live more years
to receive Social Security.  The average poor non-white may never
receive a dime of Social Security, no matter how much they pay in.

*

POEM OF THE WEEK

This is number one of a series of five poems from a volume named:

"Thoughts of My Exiled Self."

The motto for this poetry volume is,
"Upon this Word I shall build my life."


collage

scattered wood shavings fallen feathers
waves of sand tossed on a toasty beach
undulating pattern shows my heart and eyes ensemble
riding on the high tide of beauty without boundaries


Copyright 2005 by Simona Sumanaru and Michael S. Hart
Please send comments to:  simona_s75 AT yahoo.com & hart AT pobox.com

***

*Information About the Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists

For more information about the Project Gutenberg's mailing lists,
including the Project Gutenberg Weekly and Monthly Newsletters:
and the other Project Gutenberg Mailing Lists:

The weekly is sent on Wednesdays, and the monthly is sent on the
first Wednesday of the month.

To subscribe to any (or to unsubscribe or adjust your subscription
preferences), visit the Project Gutenberg mailing list server:

http://lists.pglaf.org

If you are having trouble with your subscription, please
email the list's human administrators at: help@pglaf.org



pgweekly_2005_08_10_part_1a.txt