Talk:Books

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editing the page directly

I put five or six books directly into the article, imitating the macro I saw used elsewhere on the page. After that I noticed that it said to add links here on the talk page. Hope that's not a problem. The ones I listed were by Crowell (me), Hefferon, Raymond, and Keisler.--bcrowell

PDF format

Is the OLPC laptop going to use pdf format? How does this interact with any intellectual rights which Adobe http://www.adobe.com might have in pdf? Is pdf now an ISO format rather than Adobe's intellectual property?

PDF is a data file format. Adobe has no rights to other people's data. That said, there are several open-source tools to produce, read or manipulate PDF data files. I'll stick something about this on the PDF page.

I learned to produce pdfs using Serif PagePlus 9 http://www.serif.co.uk in 2003. I found that pdf is a very effective format as it enables one to embed fonts in it, so one can use one's own fonts even if the person reading the document does not have the fonts installed on his or her computer.

Here is a link to a pdf document which I produced back in 2003 which might be of interest in a general sense in passing.

http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~ngo/poster.PDF

PDF is not a proprietary format. PDF is widely implemented in open-source software (pdftex, scribus, a gazillion others). If Adobe has any IP in pdf, it's not in the basic format, it's in relatively new and/or obscure features. --bcrowell


PDF and HTML

It should be noted that almost every composition program also includes save-as-HTML as an option; the output is eclectic, but no moreso than PDF output. Since an ebook has no need for "pages", PDF seems like a peculiar format. PDF is not particularly well suited to rewriting, splicing and recombining, or collaborative editing.

HTML seems obvious to me, with a rich toolset, good readers already available, a large number of people intimately familiar with the format, and an even larger number of people casually familiar with the format. All for a format that has always been best suited for reading. It seems like a natural fit.

We have more control over what the kids do than over what the content developers do. If content developers know PDF, they will produce PDF content. The OLPC needs to be able to support such a ubiquitous format. HTML is a no-brainer but tools which save as HTML often include Javascript and rely on ActiveX controls.
Also, I question the assertion about pages. An ebook will not fit all on one screen so it either needs "pages" or it needs to scroll like the ancient books that were burned when the library in Alexandria was destroyed. The OLPC screen has enough resolution to view an entire A4 page at once if it is rotated and the OLPC is held like an open book.

When you generate a PDF, you do it from a source file. For instance, it's very common to generate PDFs from LaTeX source; Scribus, IIRC, uses XML source files. If you want to edit collaboratively, you do it on the source files. It's exactly like a program written in C. Just because Linux is usually distributed in binary executable format, that doesn't mean Linux is somehow evil and closed source, or can't be freely modified.--bcrowell


On a PC one can get a free reader for pdf from the http://www.adobe.com webspace. However, I remember the issues about Intellectual Property Rights and the OLPC laptop and therefore ask the following questions please.

1. What is the application that will be distributed with the OLPC laptops to read pdf documents?

2. Would Adobe Acrobat actually run on an OLPC laptop?

This is a total nonissue. There are plenty of free pdf readers that run on Linux, including xpdf and evince.--bcrowell

and Evince

Khim: Of course it's possible to install Adobe Acrobat on OLPC, no problem. But... Adobe Acrobat is prime example of the famous "Two-thirds of their software is used to manage the other third, which mostly does the same functions nine different ways". It's own libcurl and libssl, spellchecker and expat... No wonder it's huge: 18.5Mb binary, 16.1Mb - libraries, 47Mb - set of plugins, 4.7Mb - browser plugin. 86.3Mb just to read PDF file! I've seen whole linux distributions (with PDF reader and browser) smaller then that... And, of course, it needs a lot of memory to do it as well...

So no, Adobe Acrobat is out of question - something poppler-based (like evince, for example). No ECMAScript, no Forms but small and fast...

Evince will be used by the OLPC.
Forms support was recently added to poppler, and Evince supports it in current versions. (You still can't save modified forms or import form data as of right now, but they're working on it.) Also, JavaScript support is likely to be in some future version of Evince. Grendelkhan 12:50, 18 February 2008 (EST)

Evince, FBReader, PDF

I'm a PocketPC ebook reader since 2000 so you can take my thoughts with a grain of salt. PDF is simply awful. It is huge, clumsy, and usually crashes whatever opens it. I recently opened an atlas on the XO and sure enough, I had to reboot.

Not sure about Evince. FBReader looks good. Whichever one is fast and allows us to make quick ebooks with pictures is my choice. Harriska2 13:42, 21 December 2007 (EST)

Bookreader features

Some desired bookreader features, for pdf and other:

  • Fast loading of pages
  • Quick [pre]loading of TOC and other frontmatyter
  • Loading of text before images, or other partial rendering, for speed?
  • Streaming of long books
  • "Full screen View" (no options, just keyboard interface to navigate, only contents will be shown on the display)
  • Some link to text-to-speech to try reading the document

Filtering up of metadata

  • Attribution/authorship/naming
  • Page #, place in work (section title?)
  • Size/load-time of entire work

Annotation

  • Storing of notes
  • Sharing/aggregation of notes (show/hide others?)
  • Bookmarking, within a doc and across docs; likewise deep linking


ASCII/Unicode/txt

No matter what other program/Activity could be used to read a text file, this should be a basic option for the e-book reader. Other formats may come and go, but a text file is the essential e-book. Tinktron 03:45, 23 December 2007 (EST)

book links to be formatted for main page

I think the entire group of listings for e-book sites, ebooks, etc. needs it's own page or sub-page, separated from the general info about books/e-book reading on the XO. Perhaps they should be part of an entire area about external resources that can be used with or on the XO. I agree with the comment at the bottom that both the talk and the main page here are too cluttered. :Tinktron 01:37, 19 June 2008 (EDT)

Pages listing open-content books

Pages hosting books

Copyrights reserved

Direct links to books

Quaternionic electrodynamics by Saint Alban http://www.scribd.com/doc/4445/quaternionic-electrodynamics

Buck the System by James Glave A former wired and outside magazine editor takes local eating to hilarious new heights. (There's protein in them woods!) http://www.glave.com/?p=19

Quantum Microeconomics by Yoram Bauman An alternative introductory/intermediate textbook that focuses on optimization analysis and game theory. http://www.smallparty.org/yoram/quantum/quantum.pdf

Quantum Microeconomics with Calculus by Yoram Bauman An alternative introductory/intermediate textbook that focuses on optimization analysis and game theory. http://www.smallparty.org/yoram/quantum/quantumcalc.pdf

Ariel Rubinsetin Modeling Bounded Rationality, MIT Press, 1998. http://arielrubinstein.tau.ac.il/book-br.html http://gametheory.tau.ac.il/el/getPDF.asp?Pfile=br.pdf

Ariel Rubinstein Economics and Language Cambridge University Press, 2000 http://arielrubinstein.tau.ac.il/el.html http://gametheory.tau.ac.il/el/getPDF.asp?Pfile=E.pdf

Econometrics by Michael Creel An open source econometrics textbook. http://pareto.uab.es/wp/2003/57503.pdf

Discovering information systems (1.7 Mbytes pdf) by Jean-Paul Van Belle, Jane Nash, and Mike Eccles (University of Cape Town). http://www.globaltext.org/file/DiscoveringInformationSystems.pdf

Linear Algebra by Jim Hefferon, Saint Michael's College http://joshua.smcvt.edu/linalg.html/ ftp://joshua.smcvt.edu/pub/hefferon/book/book.pdf

Calculus, from Whitman College, CC-BY-NC-SA http://www.whitman.edu/mathematics/multivariable

Elementary Algebra by Keith Matthews, 1991 http://www.numbertheory.org/book/ http://www.numbertheory.org/book/mp103.pdfhttp://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/probability_book/book.html http://www.numbertheory.org/book/sol.pdf

Introduction to Probability, 2nd revised edition Charles M. Grinstead J. Laurie Snell American Mathematical Society http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/probability_book/book.html http://math.dartmouth.edu/~prob/prob/prob.pdf http://math.dartmouth.edu/~prob/prob/prob.tar.gz http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/probability_book/Answersodd-5-17-03.pdf http://www.dartmouth.edu/~chance/teaching_aids/books_articles/probability_book/errata-10-20-07.pdf

A Course in Universal Algebra: The Millennium Edition by Stanley N. Burris and H.P. Sankappanavar http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/~snburris/htdocs/ualg.html http://www.math.uwaterloo.ca/~snburris/htdocs/UALG/univ-algebra.pdf

Lecture Notes on Optimization, by Pravin Varaiya http://robotics.eecs.berkeley.edu/~varaiya/papers_ps.dir/NOO.pdf

A Problem Course in Mathematical Logic is a freeware mathematics text by Stefan Bilaniuk. Released under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or later. http://euclid.trentu.ca/math/sb/pcml/pcml.html http://euclid.trentu.ca/math/sb/pcml/pcml-16.pdf

http://shoup.net/ntb/ A Computational Introduction to Number Theory and Algebra by Victor Shoup, Cambridge University Press, creative commons http://shoup.net/ntb/ntb-v2_1.pdf

http://www.ecp6.jussieu.fr/pageperso/bondy/books/gtwa/gtwa.html Graph Theory with Applications J.A. Bondy and U.S.R. Murty http://www.ecp6.jussieu.fr/pageperso/bondy/books/gtwa/pdf/GTWA.pdf

http://www.physics.miami.edu/~nearing/mathmethods/ Mathematical Tools for Physics Physics 315, University of Miami James Nearing http://www.physics.miami.edu/~nearing/mathmethods/mathematical_methods.pdf

Notes on Differential Equation, by Bob Terrell. http://www.math.cornell.edu/~bterrell/dn.pdf http://www.math.cornell.edu/~bterrell/

http://www.cosc.brocku.ca/~duentsch/papers/methprimer1.html Sets, Relations, Functions, by Ivo Düntsch and Günther Gediga. http://www.cosc.brocku.ca/~duentsch/archive/methprimer1.pdf Another one by Düntsch and Gediga is Rough Set Data Analysis. http://www.cosc.brocku.ca/~duentsch/archive/nida.pdf

Predicative Arithmetic, by Edward Nelson. http://www.math.princeton.edu/~nelson/books/pa.pdf

http://www.case.edu/artsci/math/wells/pub/ttt.html Toposes, Triples and Theories by Michael Barr and Charles Wells http://www.case.edu/artsci/math/wells/pub/pdf/ttt.pdf

Linear Partial Differential Equations and Fourier Theory , by Marcus Pivato. http://xaravve.trentu.ca/305/305.pdf http://xaravve.trentu.ca/pivato/index.html Another one by Professor Pivato is Voting, Arbitration, and Fair Division: The Mathematics of Social Choice. http://xaravve.trentu.ca/pivato/Teaching/voting.pdf

Gretchen Angelo, Liberte, http://www.lightandmatter.com/french/ (a French language textbook)

A Musical Look at Waste, by José Lúcio. website:http://pwp.netcabo.pt/jose-lucio/Pagina2/Pag2E.htm bundle:File:Musical-look-at-waste.xol

That All May Read: Instructional Manual for Braille Transcribing. Produced by the Library of Congress, public domain. http://loc.gov/nls/bds/manual/

Fields, by Warren Siegel. No licensing information. http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/~siegel/Fields3.pdf

Introduction to string field theory, by Warren Siegel. No licensing information. http://insti.physics.sunysb.edu/~siegel/sft.pdf

Superspace, or One thousand and one lessons in supersymmetry, by Jim Gates, Marc Grisaru, Martin Roček and Warren Siegel. No licensing information. http://arxiv.org/pdf/hep-th/0108200v1

Music Scores

There are many music scores which would be a good addition. The International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP) worked on collecting and cataloguing scans of public domain pieces before it was shutdown due to legal threats. Many scores are still available (i.e. [1]), but they usually don't come with the metadata which IMSLP had. In any case, many people are still active on the forums. I'm sure we could pick out a good set of scores to include. What's the level of interest in including music scores? What are reasonable space limitations? Thanks! Horndude77 00:26, 17 February 2008 (EST)

weeding

I think it's time for someone to go through and do some weeding here. The XO is for children, so, e.g., I don't think books on string theory or topos theory are relevant. How much space does OLPC intend to devote to the collection of books? bcrowell

ck12 collaborations?

To consider: what sort of projects we can start up with CK12 - considering their target includes open wiki schoolbooks for K-8, our core audience, they are compatible are expanding beyond simply the US.

PD works

works usable as books

What PD works can be used as is?

Works reworkable into chapters of a modern text?

Which works could be reworked into modern textbook chapters?

LOC internship program?

Last year the LOC was willing to provide mentorship and office space for 2-3 interns that could sit in their sci/tech division and extract PD books that weould make good materials for modern texts, and then prioritize these for their internal scanning project. Would they still be open to this? We could definitely promote this ide and give local high school students and majors everywhere an option to get to know the LOC through this.

Connect this with the spring open video party for bonus points.


other collab on STEM books

come up with meshes of books by topic

Define a spanning set of suitable STEM books for a given target (audience, set of years/experience)

list existing/available books

Define great existing works, rgardless of their availability and status; and use these to update topic meshes.


The seven layers of freedom of information

  1. identity -- knowing something exists and where; indexes (can have multiple entities)
  2. authority -- knowing the full citation, source and cloud of associated works (all editions of a work), about a piece of information
  3. metadata -- links, licensing, categories, tags - knowing how to find something, where it is used and what others have done with it (can be multiple classifications). Includes abstracts.
  4. comments -- making all comments and associated works accessible to people interested in a piece of information. Includes reviews.
  5. reading -- making it possible to experience and benefit from a work
  6. sources -- making the components of a work, including text and media that go into it, available in fundamental formats that allow reuse / review by a variety of tools
  7. sharing -- legal freedom to reuse information in other works