Microsoft to digitise 100,000 British Library books for MSN service
Posted on 4 Nov 2005 at 13:45
Microsoft is working with the British Library to digitise 100,000 books and make them available online as part of its MSN Book Search service.
To avoid the legal problems that have dogged Google Print in this field, the collection comprises out-of-copyright books from the 19th century and earlier, approximately 25 million pages worth of content. More books are promised to follow, but a spokesperson for the British Library insisted they would also be out-of-copyright works.
As an official 'Legal Deposit' that holds every published work in the UK - and soon to be an e-Legal Deposit for equivalent electronic publications - the Library knows to tread carefully around controversial copyright issues.
The British Library also stresses that this is a non-exclusive agreement providing free access and that it has worked with a number of other partners on digitisation projects, most recently the Turning Pages project with Armadillo Systems.
It is a miscellaneous collection of works. Titles include the likes of The tale of King Florus and the fair Jehane, printed by William Morris (1893, pictured), The Matlock tourist (1838) and Pack gear for elephants (1883), which includes 13 illustrations to show the most suitable gear 'to prevent the terrible sorebacks from which elephants often suffer'.
As is the way in Internet matters, search is the key issue for Microsoft. It declares that the new book service - due to launch, in beta form, next year - will help better deliver search results. It is already a crowded and controversial field, however. Google's early efforts (which have just resumed after a legal hiatus have provoked responses from both German publishers and French academics
This has not deterred Microsoft from the fray. 'Our partnership with the British Library is not only about digitisation and preservation,' said Bill Gates, 'but also about delivering a great experience for people accessing this amazing collection through British Library and MSN Web sites.'
Redmond has already been working with the British Library on its National Digital Library project. This is part of the library's 21st century digital strategy. As well as books the system will incorporate e-journals, e-books and CDs and DVDs. The library declares it is committed to use open standards, allowing it to adapt to future shifts in storage, preservation and access technologies.
Among the libraries signed up to the Google project are Oxford University's Bodleian Library of 19th Century works, Harvard, Stanford, the University of Michigan and New York's Public Library.
The British Library has not joined the Yahoo! and HP-backed Open Content Alliance, but a spokesperson said that it largely agreed with its aims and principles.
Author: Alun Williams
advertisement
- Microsoft shows courage at Tech-Ed 09
- PowerPoint and Silverlight: a perfect match?
- Why all the fuss over Windows Explorer?
- Your iPhone has a virus? Well it's your fault
- Motorola pays Lucas for its Droid
- Where are the killer apps for Windows?
- Will you hit the Orange iPhone "unlimited" cap?
- USB 3 first benchmark - it's here, and it's fast
- Why Windows 7 has forced me to worry about security
- How Dixons is (under)selling Windows 7
- The bulletproof Dell that costs an arm and a leg
- Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview: Q&A
- Lawnmowers, the TyTN II and one odd insurance request
- There'll never be a bulletproof OS
- How far can we trust apps?
- Five nice touches in Outlook 2010
- Building a better Google
- Beware HP's horrendous printer-driver glitch
- Microsoft debuts free Morro antivirus package
- Getting started with Search Server 2008 Express
advertisement

Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

