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Acme Book News

Friday, March 1, 2002 Day Link Icon
Acme to move T1 line

On Monday, March 4th at 4:30 pm EST, we will be moving our T1 line to a more secure location. We expect this to only disrupt service for a short time. Allow up to 1 hour for this change over to take place and please accept our apologies, in advance, for any inconvenience

It's all there 

Linus Pauling Research Notebooks
As with many scientists, Linus Pauling utilized bound notebooks to keep track of the details of his research as it unfolded. A testament to the remarkable length and diversity of Dr. Pauling's career, the Pauling Papers holdings include forty-six research notebooks spanning the years of 1922 to 1994 and covering any number of the scientific fields in which Dr. Pauling involved himself. In this regard, the notebooks contain many of Pauling's laboratory calculations and experimental data, as well as scientific conclusions, ideas for further research and numerous autobiographical musings. [read the notebooks]
Read any good e-books lately? 
Though the dot-com boom is over, e-book sales still on the rise
The theme at this year's annual meeting of the Association of American Publishers seems left over from the dot-com boom: ``Protecting Intellectual Property in the Digital Age.''

The recent shutdown of electronic imprints at Random House and AOL Time Warner Inc. makes e-books look like a dying fashion. Between the slow economy and the events of Sept. 11, publishers apparently had higher priorities than worrying about hackers and electronic copyrights.

The e-market continues to expand nevertheless. While annual numbers for individual publishers remain small -- in the tens of thousands of copies sold -- Simon & Schuster, St. Martin's Press, HarperCollins and others report double-digit growth over the past year. [read more]

Read any good websites lately? 
The Literary Web: Web sites featuring the word are thriving
In the fickle world of the Web, it's nice to know there are sites that are resistant to shifts in fashion and economy. Literary Web sites, for example, traffic in a form that moves at a less frenetic pace than other online media does. Communities of writers, especially those poets, spoken-word artists and experimental-prose writers whose works rarely make it to the shelves at Barnes and Noble, or even into the farther reaches of Amazon.com's warehouses, have made effective and enduring use of literary webzines -- and they may barely have noticed the fallout of the technology crash.

For a publishing cottage industry of small, independent presses and copy-machine poetry rags that, in pre-Internet days, were by necessity limited to three-figure circulation, the advent of the Web has made the prospect of distributing new, difficult, highbrow or edgy pieces of writing cheap and globally accessible. As one poet jests, "When those poems go live, everybody and their mother will be reading them." [read more]

Bad idea 
Senators talk tough on digital piracy
At a hearing over a proposed bill that could require security technology on computers and other digital devices, the Senate Commerce Committee chairman gave technology and media companies a deadline for working out their differences.

Hollings gave media and technology companies 12 to 18 months to come up with their own solution before federal agencies set a standard, according to Reuters.

"Almost no legal high-quality content (is) available on the Internet" because companies can't agree on one open standard for providing anti-copying features, Hollings, a Democrat from South Carolina, said in his statement to the committee.

Hollings and Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, are co-sponsoring a bill that could require computer and device makers to install a government-approved anti-copying technology intended to thwart piracy of digital works.

The proposed Security Systems Standards and Certification Act (SSSCA) would prohibit people from removing or altering such technology. The bill would also make it illegal for someone to make a copyrighted work publicly available after its protections have been removed or altered. [read more]



Thursday, February 28, 2002 Day Link Icon
Acme to move T1 line 
On Monday, March 4th at 4:30 pm EST, we will be moving our T1 line to a more secure location. We expect this to only disrupt service for a short time. Allow up to 1 hour for this change over to take place and please accept our apologies, in advance, for any inconvenience.
Librarians and Publishers 
Librarians and Publishers Find Common Ground in Joint Working Group by Deanna B. Marcum
...With a commitment to work together more effectively on behalf of the user community, the AAP Professional and Scholarly Publishing Division has joined with CLIR to create a Working Group of Librarians and Publishers. The first meeting of the group, held in New York City on January 31, 2002, was devoted to identifying common concerns and developing a problem-solving strategy. [read more]
USA Patriot Act and The Library 
The Patriot Act: Last Refuge of a Scoundrel by Karen G. Schneider
ìPatriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.î
--Samuel Johnson

First of all, Iím a hawk. I believe we should be in Afghanistan, Iíd like to see bin Laden oh, say, six feet under, and behind my bifocals, this middle-aged veteran cheers her colleagues in the armed forces defending our nation.

However, the USA Patriot Act (AL, Jan., p. 20) is treason pure and simple, and you need to know how and why, because it presents particularly pernicious issues for the users who rely on your Internet services.

The Patriot Act is not antiterrorism legislation; itís antispeech legislation, and is no more a direct response to the September 11 attacks than the Childrenís Internet Protection Act is a direct result of sincere concern by members of Congress about the safety of minors. The cold, cynical reality is that the Patriot Act is a bloated hodgepodge of speech-chilling law that lurked in congressional corridors not only before September 11 but in large part before the Bush administration. It was hustled into reality in the post-9/11 environment so quickly, secretively, and undemocratically that our Bill of Rights had been clocked with a one-two punch well before any of us realized it was under attack. [read more]

From ALA--Alert: USA PATRIOT Act

SSSCA 
From Library Juice--SSSCA? What Now?!
The SSSCA is the "Security Systems Standards and Certification Act," and it is scheduled to be introduced in congress soon by Senator Fritz Hollings (D-S.C.), the chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee. It's being pushed by the record industry as a copy-prevention guarantee. What the bill would do, most significantly, would be to make it an offense to make or sell any kind of computer equipment that doesn't have built in copy protection technology (which, logically, would be an abridgement of our fair use rights). [read more]


Wednesday, February 27, 2002 Day Link Icon
Still don't have a DVD player? 
Replacement for DVD unveiled by Barry Fox
The world's Big Nine electronics companies have swallowed corporate pride and agreed on a single standard and name - Blu-Ray - for the next generation video and computer optical disc. Although good for the consumer, they are putting the future of their fledgling recordable DVD systems in jeopardy.

Blu-Ray is backed by Hitachi, LG, Matsushita (Panasonic), Pioneer, Philips, Samsung, Sharp, Sony and Thomson. Only Toshiba, the main inventor of DVD, and JVC, which has a vested interest in VHS, are missing.

The new format will use a blue laser for recording and playback. A single-sided 12 centimetre Blu-Ray disc stores 27GB of computer data, records 13 hours of broadcast TV or holds 2 hours of High Definition video.

Prototypes already exist, and have been demonstrated by Philips, Sony and Panasonic. Licensing for manufacture begins within a couple of months and the first Blu-Ray recorders could go on sale next year. [read more]

History of the Book 
Soviet Children's Picture Books from the Twenties and Thirties
{pictureRef(, align:"right")} The IISH houses a rich collection of manuscripts, books and pamphlets documenting the social and political history of Russia and the Soviet Union. It is also home to a fine collection of Russian children's picture books from the 1920s and 1930s, which is presented here.

The collection numbers around 375 books. Subjects vary from friendly animal stories and everyday events in a child's life to educational texts and political themes such as Lenin, the Soviets and May Day celebrations. Cars, trains and airplanes often appear in the stories. Among the authors and illustrators many famous names can be found. In this collection there are texts by Vladimir Maiakovskii, Kornei Khukovskii, Samuil Marshak and Daniil Kharms. [read more]

Don't miss the cover designs.

(link via librarian.net)

Future of the History of the Book 
Chaucer edition goes online
A rare first edition of Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, believed to be the first book ever printed in England, is to be published on the internet. The British Library has agreed to digitise the volume, worth £4.6m, so scholars and the public can access it.

The book was first published 500 years ago by the man considered the father of the printing press in England, William Caxton.

A team from Keio University in Tokyo, the project's sponsor, are photographing the work into 1,300 high-definition images which will then be put on the web. [read more]

What the heck? 
UNC gets $530,000 to create 3-D, digital rare book library
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has received a $530,000 grant from E.S.P. Das Educational Foundation, a private organization in New York City, to produce a three-dimensional, digital rare book library.

UNCís School of Information and Library Science and academic libraries and ibiblio.org., a free library on the World Wide Web that is based at UNC, will use the funding to introduce the experience of viewing a book in three dimensions to the digital form. [read more]

All I have to say is "weird".

(link via library_geek)

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