Friday, September 9, 2011

Project Gutenberg Founder Michael Stern Hart, 1947-2011

gutenbergIn 1971, Michael Hart was given some operator time on a Xerox mainframe, and felt obligated to produce something worthwhile. Struck by an idea, he typed in, letter by letter, the text of the Declaration of Independence, from a copy he had been given on the fourth of July. He then attempted to send it to everyone connected to the mainframe, and narrowly escaped bringing the network (such as it was) down around their heads. An inauspicious start for Project Gutenberg, one of the most forward-thinking projects in the history of technology. The basic principles of the web as we know it are embodied in Project Gutenberg. The idea of digitizing and making freely available the world's information found its first real traction there. YouTube, iTunes, and Google Books of course are merely scaled-up versions of that first impetus, to take the written page and translate it to ones and zeros. And in an age of copyright conflicts, patent disputes, and trademark bullying, the project is a sobering reminder that posterity cares very little for our vain squabbling.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/qVFF3FXzGHg/

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