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Books for free!
Kai Chandler reads up on Project Gutenberg and
studies books on his palmtop.
A free lunch? There’s no such thing as a free lunch.
This is generally true but did you know that you can download free
books from the Internet? Novels, encyclopaedias and dictionaries?
Even movie information?
Thanks to the altruism of hundreds of contributors,
significant numbers of books are now available for free download.
The whole thing started with Professor Michael S.
Hart at Carnegie-Mellon University who was given a significant
amount of computer time by an enlightened employer. He reasoned that
if he could scan books in public domain then he could distribute
them electronically for free.
Project Gutenberg
His
initiative, called Project Gutenberg, has published over 2000 books
or etexts as they call them. They are all available for free
download.
Written by authors as diverse as Sir Arthur
Conan-Doyle and William Shakespeare, the common factor is that most
of the novels were originally published before 1923. This means they
are now out of copyright.
Thanks to a worldwide team of volunteers, a new
etext is published roughly every day. There’s a wealth of material
out there including reference books, Conan-Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes
stories, 178 works by William Shakespeare and Alice’s Adventures in
Wonderland – so there should be something for everyone.
Project Gutenberg is at
http://promo.net/pg/ or you could go straight to their search
engine at
http://promo.net/cgi-promo/pg/t9.cgi
Read them in the bath
The books are all in plain text – there are no
images embedded in the words. This means that you can read the books
using anything from the most basic editor to the most advanced word
processor. A big benefit of having the books electronically is that
you can use the editor’s search function to search for one or more
books for phrases electronically. This is ideal for students.
You could even print the material to read in the
bath although the cost may be prohibitive and the ink might run.
Joking aside, if you do want to print the material then Fineprint
2000 will help you save paper and ink – it’s downloadable
here.
Compressed books
Many of the books are compressed into the .zip
format so you’ll need Winzip to decompress them. If you are not sure
how to download files and decompress files then it’s all explained
in our
Computing Guide: Squeeze those files.
Tomeraider
If you don’t want to be tied to your PC when
reading, then have you considered using your palmtop computer to
read them?
Although you can use the palmtops’ built-in editor,
there’s a special shareware etext reader for Palm, Windows, Pocket
PC and Psion platforms rather imaginatively called Tomeraider.
The benefit over using a built-in editor or database
program is that Tomeraider reads files compressed into special
Tomeraider format so they take up less space on the palmtop. This
makes it incredibly quick to use so it’s ideal for accessing
reference information. You can jump almost instantaneously from one
record to another, even when using a 12 megabyte database with
120,000 entries.
Interactive Movie Database
For me, the Interactive Movie Database is one of the
best reasons for getting Tomeraider. This contains an extract from
www.imdb.com with essential searchable details about just about
every movie known to man!
Webster's Encyclopedia, and Roget's Thesaurus are
also available in Tomeraider format. These, and hundreds of other
etexts and databases are available for free download. A good source
of etexts in Tomeraider format is
www.memoware.com
Creating your own material in Tomeraider format is
straightforward but requires the Windows version of Tomeraider. It
would be an efficient way of producing reference material, perhaps
for a sales force using palmtop computers.
To use Tomeraider you first need to
download
it. As shareware, Tomeraider is free to download and evaluate but
costs £15 to register. Further details from
www.palmtec.com and
www.tomeraider.com.
Kai Chandler
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