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Most reliable search tool could be your librarian
September 29, 2006 -
Google: These books are free
August 30, 2006 -
U.C. system signs on to Microsoft book-scan project
June 9, 2006 -
Google argues with U.K. publishers over digital libraries
June 6, 2006
Kirtas Technologies, a maker of high-speed scanners and digitization software, signed a deal Tuesday with Microsoft to scan works for its
The Cornell University Library also signed on Tuesday with Microsoft as a partner, agreeing to let its collection be scanned. The project, when complete, will make public domain works, as well as copyrighted material from publishers who opt-in, freely available through Microsoft's online Web application.
The works scanned by Kirtas will become available via Windows Live Book Search starting in early 2007. Cornell librarians will have a hand in choosing which versions of books to scan and overseeing quality control of the digitization process, according to Cornell.
The program is a direct competitor to
Google, however, has taken the opposite approach to Microsoft, requiring publishers to opt-out if they do not want their copyrighted works to be scanned. The method has resulted in
Google has argued that Google Book Search does not allow full access to copyrighted works, as it does with public domain works--many of which are available as
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- Hopefully they're using ODF...
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by Penguinisto
October 18, 2006 11:41 AM PDT
- No matter what OS we're talking about, there will certainly come a day when MSFT proprietary formats will be dead and gone (even between MS Office versions, this is already true...)
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Reply to this comment
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- Probably a PDF
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by hybris06
October 18, 2006 2:19 PM PDT
- My guess as a recent Cornell graduate and my experience with the Cornell Libraries, the files will probably be PDFs.
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- Hopefully they're using PDF
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by Ryo Hazuki
October 19, 2006 5:59 AM PDT
- Last time I checked, Microsoft proprietary format from Microsoft Office was not dead yet.
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(3 Comments)I just hope Cornell uses a universal, OPEN format that future readers of any type can successfully convert to human-readable text.
/P
The Cornell libraries scan a lot of content from books and journals and post them to a secured site for students to access for classes. Everything they post is in the PDF format.
I do hope though they are using PDF, it's the best IMHO.