Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Summer Projects

The Verso Project is far enough into reality that I secured some server space for it and gave it a real home. You can now see the work in progress at


You will be able to navigate up to the link that actually goes to the resource. Once I've filled in all of the spaces, I'll be looking for appropriate free e-reference books on the web. Most such items will be eliminated due to ads and popups, but a few have already made the cut. Once I've added the last range I'll go through and standardize the signage a bit, but I'm fairly happy with the look and feel of this. I've been told that there is a commercial operation that has a Verso Project, so we may have to rename is one of these days. If I do, I'll go with GUITARS - Graphic User Interface to Automated Reference Sources. You always have to have a plan B.

The project of finding Library of American Civilization titles in Google Books has already netted us hundreds of new additions. Sometime this summer we will pass that marker where more than half of the records for these microfiche titles will have links.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

A distinguished guest




We just spent a riveting afternoon with Michael Hart, the founder of Project Gutenberg.
Michael and I are both on the Book People listserv put out by the University of Pennsylvania. Last spring he noticed something that we'd done in systematically harvesting Google books and adding the results to our web pages. He wrote me that he visits the Hamden area each July, and asked if he could visit and get a look at what we are doing with book digitization. I wrote back and told him that we would be honored if he came by to see our operation.
Eventually we settled on the date of July 10 - the day after he spoke in Cambridge for Marvin Minsky's institute and the day before he gave the same presentation in a venue in Hartford. In the past I had read that he is reclusive, so I expected a very quiet person.When he came into my office just before noon, I found out just how wrong I was.
.
He was very gregarious and high-energy, passing out DVDs to everyone nearby and giving us permission to copy anything inside and redistribute the texts. We immediately launched into a discussion of baseball after seeing my memorabilia lining the room. I joked that it must have been total culture shock to go from Minsky to Ballard. I showed him a few of the things we were doing with access to ebooks, starting with the work in progress of VERSO, the graphic interface to electronic reference books, and then the systematic access to Googlee books on particular topics. Later, I created a record for him that gave access to a dynamic link of books written by Freud, available in full on Google. I normally add pictures to these records, but there isn't a picture of Freud in my image holdings. Hart suggested that I contact a colleague of his in Honolulu to get a public domain Freud image.
During lunch at Luce's (a popular Italian lunch spot near campus). I asked him about July 4, 1971, the day that he put up the first text on a computer network. He said that he'd been to a fireworks show that evening and didn't feel like going home - opting instead for the computer lab at the University of Illinois, where there was good air conditioning. He had stopped to pick up some food along the way at a small grocery store. This was when America was ramping up for the Bicentennial, and the grocer slipped a faux parchment reproduction of the Declaration of Independence in his bag. When he got to the computer lab, the paper fell out, and a light clicked in his head. He had been pondering the idea of doing something that would endure on computers forever. He took the Declaration and began typing it manually on a teletype machine. He said that by the time he finished it was past 1 AM on the 5th, but he still counts July 4 as the anniversary of etext. Hart is the undisputed father of etexts, and he is unabashedly proud of that. At the time, he wanted to email the file to others on the networks, but learned that this would have taken down the entire net - after all, the file was a full 5 kilobytes. They worked out a system so that remote users could ask for a certain 9-track tape to be mounted containing the file, and thus the first Project Gutenberg downloads began.

He said that he had a variety of careers between 1971 and the mid 1980's. Among other things, he spent some time in San Francisco as a folk singer - both at restaurants and as a street performer. In the mid 1980's he got another career change when he happened to be running a bicycle repair operation to get money for his bike racing habit. He was called in to tune up a bicycle for a monk who was friends with the new Provost at Benedictine College. The Provost asked him what other skills he had, and Hart mentioned that he could work wonders with computers. Hart built the man a computer that had multiple floppy drives and two hard drives sharing data in such a way that if one broke the other was an automatic backup. This souped-up computing was so impressive to the Provost that he hired Hart as an adjunct professor, and gave him the task of creating the world's first electronic library.

By 1991 when the Internet was starting to become an everyday reality for academics, his library had grown to 10 titles - other government documents such as the Constitution and the Bill of Rights and the Bible. He said the addition of Alice in Wonderland "changed everything." "The big difference with Alice was that people of all ages read it,and kids brought their parents and grandparents to the computer to read it, and vice versa. . .it was our first "big hit," and I knew from a few events in 1989, prior to the official release, that the whole eBook thing as actually working. . .people read them, end to end to end. . .even people I never expected!!!"
He said that many of the projects that happen in technology are subject to the 'S' curve. At the beginning, nobody believes that aproject can possibly be done. Then it does happen, and gathers so much momentum that nobody thinks it could ever stop. Then it hits a point where it can no longer sustain the growth and it slows down dramatically. The classic example of this was the "Dot Com Bubble Burst." He quoted an old Chinese proverb that "The person who thinks something cannot be done should not interrupt the person who is doing it."

In the early 1990s, Hart set up a goal of 10,000 books freely available online. He attracted enough attention that a volunteer army formed of people who typed public domain works into the computer. Many people said that the goal was unworkable, but he did reach it in 2003. He admits that he is a workaholic - doing his job until he drops from exhaustion nearly every day. He said that he had a new goal of a billion books. Yes, a billion. The way this could happen is to take every one of the public domain books on the Internet and translate them into every major language on Earth - 250 languages with at least one million speakers. He asked for guesses what the five most prevalent languages are on the internet. The first few are easy -English, Chinese and Spanish. After that it gets rocky - Charles correctly guessed Hindi. Hart said "You'll never guess the last one." I chimed in with "Urdu," and to my great surprise, that was correct. He said that web translation machines are at about the point that OCR was in the late 1980's. Barely good enough to make them a starting point for a project, knowing that much intervention will be necessary. He mentioned that in 1998, he was one of Wired magazine's "Wired 25." He was flown to Los Angeles and hosted at a red carpet party with the other 24 - including Steve Jobs and the man he sat next to - Robert Altman.
I walked Hart to his car after four and a half hours of high energy brainstorming. We all felt quite privileged to meet a major pioneer of access to information.






From now until August 4, you can visit Hart's latest project - an online ebook festival at www.worldebookfair.com/, and choose from 750,000 ebook files for free.


Sunday, July 01, 2007

Capitol Punishment - ALA Tuesday




Things are wrapping up. We gave up on the shuttle and took a cab to the Convention Center to see Garrison Keillor. Unlike the other celeb speakers that we had seen, they decided to stage a crowd control event by locking people out until the last minute. This created a line that doubled and tripled up all around the top floor. At one point, it was so congested that people had to tread backwards on the escalator to keep from causing a massive collision. At the end, everybody got to sit down, so the whole exercise seemed pointless and needlessly dangerous to us. The introductory speechifying was in the acceptable range, and Keillor got up to a huge ovation. We had remarked that whenever an author or celebrity talks to librarians, there is an obligatory "What librarians mean to me" passage that begins to sound the same. Keillor spent the entire session talking about what libraries meant to him, so he got a free pass from us, even when he described libraries as the best cure against terrorism. He talked about going to school in a rural 4 room school house where each classroom covered two grades, and the fourth room was a library. The library was so full of cast offs that he thought people stopped writing in 1920. Later, he went to a town library and was entranced with the selection - new books on every topic. There was, however, one topic missing in the children's room, and he imagined that the librarian kept those books behind the desk. By the end, there was not the wild reception that Bobby Kennedy had generated - just a room full of 1000 people who felt pretty good about themselves after an hour of "Library Home Companion."




Afterwards, we took a farewell tour of the exhibits. We went to the Penguin Group to get a good closeup of Keillor as he was autographing books. He was uncommonly gracioius to each librarian and even went out of his way to greet the people like me who walked by to sneak a picture. Bob went on to catch a shuttle to Capitol Hill, joined by 700 other librarians. He was concerned that he wouldn't know anybody. He didn't going in, but immediately bonded with a collegial group of librarians from New Orleans and Alaska. He said that the events seemed a bit disorganized, but he did finally get to see the offices (if not the persons) of Schumer and Clinton. For some reason, even though she is the Junior Senator, Bob reports that her office is much more palatial. He had to get back early to dress in a black suit and tie for the Loriene Roy inaugural banquet. He said that the food had an authentic Native American theme, and the evening was a treat. Loriene came around to every table to welcome each person individually and everyone was invited to a party afterwards where people would be playing pool. We, on the other hand, were taking advantage of the cool of the evening and walked along the Mall. During the day, the weather was the type we had been dreading - searing heat and high humidity, but now things were fine. On the way to the subway, we met a nice young man from Romania who said that he felt much safer in Washington than he had in New York. We told him that we'd lived in New York for 17 years and felt pretty safe there. When we got back to the hotel, we were surprised to see Bob. Even though the ticket said that the party might go until midnight, it had ended much earlier, and he was just as glad. It had been a pretty intense 5 days, and sleep looked pretty good.




The next day, we left around 10 and got back to Staten Island just in time for some serious delays around 3. When we rounded the corner for home, Yuji looked at where he was and his face lit up - "No more hotel rooms for this Lhasa!"

DOS Capitol - Monday, June 25



We opted for a slightly less hectic day, having a leisurely (and outstanding) breakfast at the Old Ebbit's Grill, around the corner from the White House. Bob and I went to the Library of Congress for a talk by Michael Blake, the author of Dances with wolves. We got there well before the program, sat near the center, and found ourselves in a long-ranging conversation with the very engaging author. He has since written a sequel to Wolves, but it was published on September 11, 2001, so it didn't get the attention that it deserved. It will be produced as a movie soon. His most recent book is Indian Yell, about the American Indian insurgency in 19th century America. If the word "insurgecy" makes you think about another topic in American affairs, that's not entirely coincidental. Blake's talk was one of those sessions that was entirely gripping from start to finish. He told of his rags to riches story of writing the novel Dances with wolves while living in a car and going from handout to handout among his well-connected Hollywood friends. Finally, the novel was finished, and he got it into the hands of Kevin Costner, who he had worked with years before. The rest is history. A very successful movie, and Oscar, and the freedom to live whatever way he wanted. He talked about how we have become a prisonkeeper society, locking up more than 2 million people, many of whom have never committed a violent crime. He suggested a massive WPA for the non violent criminals to create a living space in the north Great Plains and bring back the buffalo. It wasn't too long before I realized that this was a perfect match piece for Robert Kennedy's talk the day before. Blake also said he is working on a mini-series about Quantrill's Raiders in Kansas during the Civil War for a basic cable channel. At the end, I shook his hand and said in all honesty that it was a privilege getting to know him.




The afternoon afforded me, finally, a time to get a good look at the exhibits. I looked for Ben at Google, but he wasn't around. The wonderful Carol Harker from EBSCO was around, and I mentioned a problem that the facility to send links to EBSCO articles into RefWorks files seems to have disappeared. They are looking into that. I went by the Innovative booth a few times but didn't see anyone I knew. I did talk to the people at the separate booth for Encore and asked, once again the sixty four dollar question - "When is one of the Encore partners going public?" The answer was "Sometime in July." One of the librarians from Scottsdale Public Library was in the booth, and she allowed that Scottsdale may be the first. That would be fitting, since I used that library a lot in my Arizona days, and I'd like to see them make that kind of history. I had a nice talk with a man named Scott Peterson at the CSPAN2 Book TV booth. It was hard to draw him out of a middle-of-the-road position on anything, but he was very knowledgeable and politically aware. He said he recommends that people who get their news from one source, say Fox News, broaden their input a bit. I'm well ahead of that, as I stock my IGoogle account with dozens of news feeds from around the world. Library director Charles Getchell had asked me to keep an eye out for E-Reserve vendors, and I got some literature and a brief demo from Dan at Atlas Systems that provides an e-reserve system that works inside of Blackboard.




The final program of the day was the PLA session with guest keynoter Armistead Maupin. Donna says that Maupin is one of the two remaining authors she had to meet before she dies, so I'll try to make sure that she doesn't meet Murakami for a long time. He was a last-minute replacement for Elizabeth Edwards, and he noted the irony that she broke the engagement to go talk to the Gay community in San Francisco. Further ironic that her husband the candidate is against gay marriage. Maupin went on to describe his early career as a campus conservative, and a hand-picked favorite of Jesse Helms. Eventually they had a falling-out, but not before Helms described him as the "Hope of the future." Maupin talked about his early days of writing "Tales of the city," as a newspaper serial. He said that fan feedback was so important that some of it even inspired changes in the story he would have written. Afterwards, he autographed books in the lobby. You can see from the picture that he was very attentive to Donna as she told him about a decades-long addiction to his work. However, he made every person feel like they were the most important person in the world as they got their 1 minute of face-time with him.




In the evening, we walked around the corner to Georgia Brown's, now one of the trendier eateries in downtown. The specialty is Southern cooking, and everything was wonderful from the fried green tomatoes to the decadent desserts. This was everybody's one blowout dinner in D.C., and we made the most of it.