[bksvol-discuss] Re: BAEN BOOKS

  • From: talmage@xxxxxxxxxx
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2008 12:10:43 -0500

Pratik,

You're not differing from my point, you're changing the issue altogether. My difficulty is not with page demarcations, but the decimal value 13 embedded in a file as a sacrosanct character. There are other indicators, and ways of knowing that you've moved from page 12 to page 13 without a decimal 13. Regarding the citation and discussion issue, if you are citing a source, you indicate copyright, edition, etc. So if you're citing an electronic version you so annotate, and indicate where it can be found. My concern here is that we are becoming slaves to minutia. The files we are perusing here aren't the database at The Center For Disease Control. No one is going to die because the font isn't quite right, or there is a page break only every 2 pages, and yes I should note I said page break not demarcation. As for adding the Baen books to the collection, I think it's a shame to schlep them off on the staff when all the e-text versions need, is for the soft breaks to be replaced by hard breaks. It would seem to me that the books from O'Reilly and Gutenberg would be a better focus for the staff, as neither of their's are already in RTF, rather than the Baen books which are. If the staff gathered all the Baen offerings, and placed them on the Step 1 page, it would be a simple matter for the volunteers to go through and put hard breaks where the soft breaks are. For that matter, as far as the gathering goes, I would be willing to collect them all and submit them on CD or DVD.

Dave

At 10:11 AM 1/10/2008, you wrote:
Dave,

I beg to differ.  Page breaks, or better yet, page demarcation, is used in
the academic area (or anywhere) for citation purposes.  Page breaks (or
control characters thereof) weren't only invented for printing purposes.
They are there so that intelligent conversations can reference correct
pages.  The emphasis on correct page breaks or pagination is absolutely
essential for books so long as the  sighted world continues to use the
system.  Whether or not this should be the case is an entirely different
question.

As to the Baen books being scanned or added to the collection by
Bookshare.org automatically--I'll say this.  I'm sure Bookshare has all the
intentions to process these books in a quick manner.  But, until that
happens, I'll continue to advocate that volunteers continue to scan books
that they want to see in the collection immediately.

Pratik

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