PRINCETON, N.J. — About 1 million books in Princeton University’s collection will be made available online through Google Inc.’s book-scanning project, the school announced Monday. The university library will work with the Google’s Book Search Library Project over the next six years to digitize books that are a part of the public domain and no longer under copyright, according to a school news release. ‘Generations of Princeton librarians have devoted themselves to building a remarkable collection of books in thousands of subjects and dozens of languages,’ Princeton librarian Karin Trainer said. ‘Joining the Google partnership allows us to share our collection with researchers worldwide.’ Princeton is the 12th institution to make its books available through Google Book Search, joining schools like Harvard University, University of Texas-Austin and Oxford University. Internet users will be able to use key words to search the full texts of the books, which can then be downloaded. ‘We will be working with Google in the next several months to choose the subject areas to be digitized and the timetable for the work,’ Trainer said, adding that library staff, faculty and students will be able to suggest what should be digitized. The […]
Wednesday, February 7th, 2007
Princeton Joins Google’s Book-scanning Project
Author:
Source: The Mercury News/Associated Press
Publication Date: 6-Feb-07
Link: Princeton Joins Google’s Book-scanning Project
Source: The Mercury News/Associated Press
Publication Date: 6-Feb-07
Link: Princeton Joins Google’s Book-scanning Project
Stephan: As a person who once delayed a move to another state for two years because I could not see how I could live without the Library of Congress, efforts such as the Google library project fill me with joy. Having access to these kinds of resources means you can live anywhere and still have access to intelllectual resources that were formerly only available in the libraries of large cities and universities. The implications for shaping society in the future are profound. Project: http://books.google.com/googleprint/library.html