Print
Category: Virtual Library Building: an Overview of the Proce
Hits: 285

The "Gist" of the Need for Small Scale Virtual Library Building

Draft 1 as of: 10.07.05

Question: What can small, poor schools and school systems do while waiting for the "big commercial book publishers" to come to save them and rebuild their hard-copy paper-based libraries of books with their expensive digital eBooks?  Answer: the schools and universities can buy a new or used scanner, computer and get the software.  Then they can make their own, your own, small digital libraries, serve the digital library books privately just to their students when those students are on campus using the school's computer.  BUt also eventually they can inter-connect their small libraries of digital eBooks via the Internet so that all of their students -- the students in all of the schools and universities who have done this digitizing work -- so that any student can use any digital eBook at any time they want or need to read it.

The book digitizing process in brief:

 

"Gist" means brief, simple summary or overview of an otherwise more complex idea, concept or process.

Virtual Library Building means digitizing (scanning, converting scans to computer text and graphics) ordinary paper books, papers, records, etc.  The results are digital books, lately also called eBooks, and anyone with a computer with a display screen can read a digital eBook... whether the computer is a desktop, a laptop, a tablet computer, or a more tiny computer such as a smart phone.  The reading computer devices can store 10s or 100s or even 1000s of digital books, or eBooks, within the reading device (i.e. on computer memory cards or chips located inside the device).  But the "main library" or "central library", so to speak, of digital books, or eBooks, a digital book library which contains many thousands, tens or hundreds of thousands of digital eBooks, is typically located on a "web server" computer, or group of computers, of some kind which have enough additional storage capacity to hold tens or hundreds of thousands of digital eBooks.  (For technical people, the additional storage capacity on an eBook web server is several orders of magnitude larger than the storage on the personal computers and smart phones, i.e. 103 or 104 greater.)

Commercial book sellers who are converting to selling digital eBooks as well as to continue selling their ordinary paper-based products of hard-bound and soft-bound, i.e. paper-back, books and textbooks "only" need to setup a "web server" of the kind I described which is itself "enveloped" (digitally surrounded by) an "electronic commerce" or e-commerce web server system.  The e-commerce system lets them set a price for the an eBook and sell it to the end-user.  Once paid for, the end-user of the eBook "downloads" the digital eBook to their home or office computer, or to their laptop, netbook, notbook, iPad, iPhone, or to some more specialized "eReader" computer device or to a "Smart Phone" of some kind.  All display text and some still graphics (i.e. still pictures).   All can serve as reading devices on which the end-user and new purchaser of an eBook can read their book.

But libraries have existed for millenia.  They have real paper-based (and leather and papyrus and engraved stone and metal) books stored within them.  Ordinary people who's eyesight is working well, and who can read what has been written, have been able to visit libraries and read almost any of the books stored within them.  For several centuries in developed countries public libraries have made their paper-based book collections available to the general public merely for taking the trouble to get a "library card" and showing that card whenever they visit the library.  But here is the "kicker", the huge history change.

All of the world's paper-based (and metal and stone, etc. based) books can be digitized and stored on ONE and only only Internet connected computer.  Then anyone with another computer connected to the Internet can theoretically (i.e. in principle) read any of those digital books on their local computer!  And theoretically (i.e. in principle) anyone in the world could do so for free.

Why do these free digital libraries not yet exist online already in 2010?  Because many book publishers, book sellers, and other large corporations want to SELL to readers as many digital books including textbooks to those readers as possible.

Â