By Susan B. Shor TechNewsWorld Part of the ECT News Network
12/14/04 10:42 AM PT
Stanford, with 8 million volumes, is the only other library whose entire
collection will be scanned. To start, about 40,000 works in Harvard's
collection will go into the project. At Oxford's Bodleian Library, Google
will scan only books published before 1900.
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Google's (Nasdaq: GOOG) quest to aggregate all content on the Web has expanded to encompass
whole libraries.
The search engine company announced it would be scanning all or parts of
the collections of the New York Public Library, Harvard, Oxford,
Stanford and the University of Michigan, which will then be searchable online.
University of Michigan spokesperson Nancy Connell said the technology is
non-destructive, so no materials will be harmed in the process.
Michigan has
been working on its own to scan its system, which contains 7 million
volumes, at a pace of 5,000 works per year. Google plans to have the entire
system completed in six years.
Connell said the speed is a result of the
technology Google will be using. The company would not discuss the
technology, but said the project will cost millions of dollars.
University Ties That Bind
Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin met as graduate students at
Stanford. Page earned his bachelor's degree at Michigan. Connell said Google
and the university had been discussing the project for several years.
Searches will provide only blurbs of copyright-protected books. They will
include directions for finding the hard copies at a library. Works whose
copyrights have expired will be available online in their entireties. The
libraries will get digital copies of all the works scanned so that they can
make them accessible as they see fit.
Stanford, with 8 million volumes, is the only other library whose entire
collection will be scanned. To start, about 40,000 works in Harvard's
collection will go into the project. At Oxford's Bodleian Library, Google
will scan only books published before 1900. At the New York Public Library,
only fragile scholarly material with expired copyrights fall within the
parameters of the project.
Search Links
Google said it will provide links to search and to partner
Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN), as well as to libraries where the books can be found.
The search engine company is not the only one working to get hard copy
volumes online. The Library of Congress announced it would work with several
libraries around the world to digitize and make available to the public a
million books.
The announcement by Google will likely escalate the search-engine wars that
have been raging. Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) recently announced it was jumping on the
bandwagon with its own engine. Yahoo (Nasdaq: YHOO) has also been trying to keep step with
Google, and Amazon has its own book search function.
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