Archive for August, 2008

British Library Releases Its “Digitisation Strategy 2008-2011″

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Digitisation Strategy 2008-2011.

Over the next 3 years we will build on our existing digitisation programme. Current projects include the digitisation of:

  • 20 million pages of 19th century literature [approximately 80,000 books];
  • 1 million pages of historic newspapers in addition to the 3m already digitised;
  • 4,000 hours of Archival Sound Recordings in addition to the 4,000 hours already digitised;
  • 100,000 pages of Greek manuscripts.

Our top priority digitisation programme in support of the Library’s corporate strategy 2008-2011 is the digitisation of newspapers.

Web Security Words Help Digitize Old Books

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

August 14, 2008

Read full article here

People who use the Internet to talk to friends, set up free e-mail accounts or buy concert tickets are often unknowingly helping to digitize vast libraries of old books and newspapers.

That’s because more than 40,000 Web sites — including popular ones such as Ticketmaster, Facebook and Craigslist — are using a new kind of security program called reCAPTCHA.

It’s the brainchild of Luis von Ahn, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, who helped develop another commonly used Web security system. That one, called CAPTCHA, will allow people to access a Web site only if they prove they are human — and not a spammer’s computer — by typing in a sequence of letters or numbers that appear on the screen in a distorted or garbled image.

“Each time you type one of these, your brain is doing something amazing,” von Ahn says. “Your brain is performing a task that, despite 50 years of research in computer science, we cannot yet get computers to do.”

Something non digital - handcrafted value.

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

The making of a book - before it gets digitized.

Robotics speed up book digitisation

Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Again the British Library book digiti(sz)ation effords are of interest. BL taking big steps towards being a NEXT-LEVEL-LIBRARY.

By the end of this year, 20 million pages of the British Library’s 19th century books will be available electronically. Siân Harris visited the library to see how it is being done

Research Information: August / September 2008

As I write this – and probably as you read it – six sophisticated machines and their operators are hard at work in a corner of the British Library (BL). These machines are busy turning hundreds of pages of old books into digital files every hour.

The BL’s digitisation of 19th century books is one of many digitisation projects around the world that have been funded by Microsoft. The software giant was originally loading the digitised books onto its Live Search platform and about 40,000 British Library items were available on this site before Microsoft pulled its book project at the end of May.

The Live Search Books programme, which also included libraries such as those at the University of California, the University of Toronto, the New York Public Library, the American Museum of Veterinary Medicine and Cornell University, digitised 750,000 out-of-copyright books to put on the platform. However, Microsoft said that it now believes that the best way for a search engine to make book content available is by crawling content repositories created by publishers and libraries.

The end of Live Search Books does not mean an immediate end to the projects it was funding, however. For the British Library, the Microsoft funding covers 20 million pages which is approx 80,000 to 100,000 books, a target that the library anticipates reaching by the end of the year, subject to production variables. And Microsoft is encouraging its partners to keep their own digitised copies and carry on their projects. ‘We are removing our contractual restrictions placed on the digitised library content and making the scanning equipment available to our digitisation partners and libraries to continue digitisation programmes,’ said Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s senior vicepresident for search, portal and advertising when the Microsoft decision was announced.

Making whole collections electronic

The 19th century book project is not the British Library’s first digitisation initiative or its only one – there are 15 such projects going on currently. However, the speed and sheer number of titles being digitised are far greater than past initiatives and this is changing the process of picking which books to digitise.

‘One of the big challenges with digitisation is title selection,’ said Neil Fitzgerald, book digitisation project delivery manager for the British Library. ‘Mass digitisation allows us to deal with historical biases by digitising a whole collection.’

The six machines in the BL, which were provided by Kirtas Technologies, USA can each digitise up to 2,400 pages per hour, although Fitzgerald said that 1,200 pages per hour is more realistic for old and fragile books such as many in the BL’s collections. These machines are being put to work 16 hours per day by digitisation partner, Content Conversion Specialists (CCS) of Germany. ‘The original target was to digitise about one million pages per month but it will soon be two million pages per month,’ commented Fitzgerald. This project was piloted last year and full production began in late October/early November 2007. The pilot was essential in deciding the workflow. According to Fitzgerald, the book scanning itself posed fewer challenges than other parts of the process. ‘The actual digitisation is relatively easy. The robotics are new, but we have been digitising materials for 20 years,’ he explained. ‘New approaches are needed, however, to cope with volumes.’

more

Award helps safeguard UK’s research journals

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Research Information 20 July 2008

The Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) has announced nearly £10 million of funding for a collaboration between higher education libraries led by Imperial College London and the British Library. The funding will enable the creation of the UK Research Reserve (UKRR).

UKRR is an agreement between higher education and the British Library whereby the British Library will store low-use journals for the HE community and make them accessible to researchers and others using state-of-the-art ordering and delivery systems.

Deborah Shorley, director of library services at Imperial, said: ‘The UKRR is a fantastic example of HEFCE, Imperial and the British Library working together to produce a better and more coherent way to access research material. It addresses the problem of libraries up and down the country with duplicate copies of low use periodicals and will offer a more sophisticated approach to providing information for the UK’s research community.’

Imperial College will be managing the scheme in conjunction with the British Library.

Related internet links

British Library
HEFCE
Imperial College London