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Archive for May, 2005

eBookAd president: We’re thriving–even in the wake of overseas fraud attempts against us
May 31, 2005 | 11:32 pm

eBookAd logoeBookAd says it's thriving and is paying publishers every penny owed--despite a series of attempted credit card frauds from the Middle East and Asian countries such as Vietnam. I've talked to the company at length and so far I find its explanations entirely credible. "Full royalties have been sent to all publishers who've had their cashouts delayed and have their accounts in good standing," says Dustin Revin, president of the e-book retailer, distributor and Web infrastructure provider with more than 600 small publishers as customers. Dustin shared with me an indication of the scope of the attempted fraud. Just one fraudster...

E-books and John Edwards’ $6 million house
May 31, 2005 | 2:48 pm

John EdwardsFirst, let get one thing straight. It's okay for people to be rich--that's not the issue. But could John Edwards' roomy $6 million mansion in Georgetown be one reason why he has been so aggressively mute about Draconian copyright laws, the scourge of e-book lovers? "Recently, to get the house ready for sale," the Washington Post reports, "the Edwardses shipped hundreds of books to their home in Raleigh and cleared out clutter." Hundreds? Edwards could have stored thousands. Somewhere in Edwards' One America, however, no small number of people lack room for as large a collection. E-books, especially the free...

Obsolete computer books–and a solution
May 31, 2005 | 12:24 pm

How many times have you bought a paper computer book and felt it was obsolete by the time you got it home from the store? Could e-books do a better job--and in new ways? Naba Barkakati, a prolific computer-book writer and a recent endorser of OpenReader, has some ideas....

How to Build a Computer and other offerings at Wikibooks
May 31, 2005 | 6:01 am

Wikibooks logoIn the 1990s a White House staffer assured me that books with many collaborators could substitute in K-12 for the usual copyrighted variety written by individuals. That was a pretty simplistic vision compared to a well-stocked national digital library system. Still, I don't think he was entirely wrong. The delightful surprise is that some of the most useful collaborative works could potentially come not from bureaucratic institutions but from the Wiki crowd. Check out Wikibooks for "collection of open-content textbooks that anyone can edit." Wikibooks' May Book of the Month is How to Build a Computer, described this way: ...teaches you...

P-books and steam engines: Oh, the smell of it all!
May 30, 2005 | 10:59 pm

train imageP-book defenders are extolling the "vices" of dead-tree books as if they were "virtues"--just like old railroad lovers romanticizing the filthy smoke of coalfired steam engines. That's one viewpoint in a newly revisited debate betweeen ibiblio archivist Paul Jones and a poet named Betty Adcock. Himself a poet, Jones says p-books, like e-books, "have many not so great sides to them. The smell that Betty talks about of an old library is the smell of the books rotting."...

Universities, John Edwards and the Entertainment-Copyright Complex
May 30, 2005 | 9:27 pm

EisenhowerHad Nikita Khrushchev really banged his shoe against a desk at the U.N. in October 1960? The spring before, missiles had downed an American U-2 spy plane deep in Soviet territory, and Khrushchev was now waging the Cold War in full fury after a delegate from the Philippines accused the USSR of "swallowing up" Eastern Europe. Witnesses could not agree whether or not the shoe had hit the desk. But something else was clear on a grander level. When Dwight Eisenhower gave his farewell address in early 1961, Washington was undeniably fixated on defeating the Russians. Many in Eisenhower's place...

Terje Hillesund’s academic presentation on OpenReader for critical text editions
May 30, 2005 | 3:25 pm

You can now see Terje Hillesund's academic presentation of Digital Reading: Can Critical Text Editions Make Use of OpenReader? Earlier details here and here....

‘Capitol’ idea: Podcasting the U.S. Congress–in full
May 30, 2005 | 3:20 pm

Ernest MillerPodcasting may take off for real when the technology becomes part of iTunes and millions of iPod owners can tune in even if they are techno-dunces. Shouldn't the U.S. Congress do something about this? No, no, Senator Hatch, I'm not saying ban it. In fact, cyberlaw expert Ernie Miller has a better idea--something that Congress could implement now or at least very soon: Why doesn't every single darn committee, subcommittee, whatever, have a podcast (in the future, broadcatch) of its hearings? Why isn't there a floor podcast? How long will it take Congress to get a clue? Might not this be something...

Google News: Just a megaphone for MSM?
May 30, 2005 | 6:22 am

Yahoo! Mindset SearchDetails from Joi Ito. Also on the search-engine front: Yahoo! Mindset Search: Intent Driven Search, via LISNews....

Daniel Boone’s Kentucky tale reaches the electronic frontier
May 30, 2005 | 2:16 am

Daniel Boone"The Adventures of Colonel Daniel Boon," discussing his 1769-1782 exploits and using only one e in the last name, has reached cyberspace. Find his tale at the Archiving Early America site. June 7, in case you didn't know, is Boone Day--when the famous frontiersman first saw the state of Kentucky. (Via the American Memory Project and Librarians' Index to the Internet.)...

Librarian Rex vs. free-form labeling: Roger Sperberg’s take
May 30, 2005 | 2:00 am

"If, as Clay Shirky persuasively argues, formal taxonomies are (often) inferior to collaborative tagsonomies, why shouldn't digital libraries involve the library users as cataloguers?" - Roger Sperberg's essay Tagsonomies and digital libraries in Electric Forest. Also see earlier item....

Ahead: Copyright zealots vs. digital radio recording?
May 30, 2005 | 2:00 am

Digital radio recording raises eyebrows, via J.D. Lasica's Darknet. Also see Reuters and P2Pnet.net articles....