[bksvol-discuss] Re: Does Internet Archive provide e-books?

  • From: Roger Loran Bailey <rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 15 Apr 2012 15:18:48 -0400

I suppose you can get an NLS key for their Web Braille books, but I am not sure because I have never used Web Braille. I would suggest contacting your NLS network library to ask them about it or go to NLSBARD.loc.gov and clicking the link to information about authorizing a device. There are only a limited number of devices that a key can be added to though. Since I don't use Braille I am not sure, but if you read the Braille on your computer you may be out of luck. At least the BARD audio books will not play on a computer.


On 4/15/2012 1:46 PM, John J. Boyer wrote:
Hi Roger,
Thanks for the information. Now I have a question. I don't have a NLS
reader, since I am deaf-blind. How could I get a NLS key? Once I have
one, I can try to make it work with the software that Abilitiessoft
develops, so I could get braille copies.

John

On Sun, Apr 15, 2012 at 12:46:39PM -0400, Roger Loran Bailey wrote:
All of the Internet Archive's ebooks can be more efficiently found at
OpenLibrary.org. That is an Internet Archive project and its stated goal
is to establish a web page for every book that has ever been published.
It is mainly a catalog and most pages will only contain bibliographic
data, but there are also a large number of ebooks available that they
have scanned. They have all the Project Gutenberg books and those are
public domain and can be downloaded by anyone. This does not mean that
you should give up Project Gutenberg, though, because they do not have
Gutenberg's public domain magazines. Open Library does have a lot of
books that are in copyright that can be downloaded too. There is no need
to register or to provide proof of disability because the books can only
be read on a device with an NLS key. They just assume that if you have
such a key then you must be qualified. To find these books, go to the
site and enter the search phrase "accessible book." Be sure to use the
quotation marks because if you don't you will get books that just have
those two words somewhere on their catalog pages. You will get several
million results returned and most of them are not in English. The first
page of results will consist of 100 titles. Go to the bottom of that
page and you will find any number of possible refinements for your
search. One of them will be English. If you refine your search to
English you should get over 600,000 results. You can keep going to the
bottom of the result pages to further refine your results or you may
enter search terms in addition to "accessible book" to find what you are
looking for. Once you download and start reading a book you will find
that these accessible books are raw scans and could really use the
services of Bookshare volunteers to be proofread. They are not awful
scans though. I have yet to download an Open Library book that was
unreadable. I can't say the same about Bookshare fair quality books.
Nevertheless, Open Library has a lot more books in accessible format
than Bookshare does and the collection is growing. Just last night there
was a feature on, I think it was CBS news about the Internet Archive.
They were interviewing the man who is behind it. He has a warehouse in
the San Francisco area in which he is trying to collect at least one
physical copy of every book ever published. He receives donations from
libraries when they discard books. Every book he gets is scanned and
added to the Internet Archive and so to Open Library too. Collecting
every book that has ever been published has to be a really long term
project, but it is impressive to see how much progress has been made.

On 4/15/2012 4:44 AM, John J. Boyer wrote:
You may have heard of this organization. I went to their website,
http://www.archive.org , but I couldn't tell if they provided usa ble
e-books. Fromm what I have heard, they scan books and keep an immage of
each page. I don't knnow if these images can be used for OCR. There is
also the matter off copyright. I don't think they can provide books
except those in the public domain. I've been asked about them, so any
information would be appreciated.

John

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