Human race is sustained by such a gem of human beings.

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ketan Kothari
Sent: Thursday, September 15, 2011 11:36 AM
To: accessindia
Subject: [AI] Father of E books dies

Father of e-Books (Project Gutenberg) Dies


http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/sep/13/michael-hart-obituary?INTCMP=SRC
H



Michael Hart obituary - He invented ebooks and made them freely available
through Project Gutenberg
http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page



Article by Jack Schofield guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 13 September 2011 14.45
BST Article history



Michael Hart, who has died of a heart attack aged 64, referred to himself as
the "grandfather of ebooks", but his real aim was to change the world. In
1971, he realised that electronic texts could be copied and distributed at
no cost, and he founded Project Gutenberg to make out-of-copyright books
freely and universally available. His mission was to "help break down the
bars of ignorance and illiteracy".



Since this was in the pre-internet days of the early Arpanet, there were
only a couple of dozen computers on the network, but as Hart said, echoing
Confucius: "Even the greatest journeys start with but a single step." At the
end of Hart's journey, Project Gutenberg's aim was to distribute a billion
free ebooks: 10m books in 100 languages.



The project started by accident, after a Fourth of July fireworks display. A
student at the University of Illinois, Hart had been given some free time on
the mainframe computer. "We were just coming up on the American bicentennial
and they put faux-parchment historical documents in with the groceries," he
said in 2002. "So, as I fumbled through my backpack for something to eat, I
found the US Declaration of Independence and had a lightbulb moment. I
thought for a while to see if I could figure out anything I could do with
the computer that would be more important than typing in the Declaration of
Independence, something that would still be there 100 years later, but
couldn't come up with anything, and so Project Gutenberg was born."



Hart thus became the internet's first information provider, before the
internet had been invented. As he said later: "Project Gutenberg was just
one of those great combinations of luck and being the right person in the
right place at the right time." In the beginning, he typed every word
himself, originally on a Teletype terminal on to punched paper tape. After
the Declaration of Independence, John F Kennedy's inaugural address,
Lincoln's Gettysburg address and other civic documents, he started on the
King James Bible. It finally appeared online in 1989. The first novel was
Moby-Dick.



For 17 years, "it was just me tilting at windmills," said Hart. He typed in
313 books before the next breakthrough: he linked up with the University of
Illinois's new PC user group. With help from a colleague, Mark Zinzow, Hart
set up a mailing list to publicise his project, and started asking for
volunteers to contribute. By the end of the year, the e-library had grown to
about 1,600 titles. It was an early example of "crowdsourcing" and
paralleled the growth of personal computing and the open-source programming
movement.



As volunteers took over the rapidly growing project, Hart set up the
non-profit Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation in 2000. With books
increasingly being scanned rather than retyped, Distributed Proofreaders was
set up, providing volunteers to check them. These scans now make up a large
proportion of the project's 36,000 texts.



In an email interview with the journalist Richard Poynder in 2006, Hart
stated: "The biggest problem is the time it takes to do the necessary
copyright research before making an e-text. The next biggest is dealing with
the constant threat of lawsuits, which come in every year."



In particular, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act (1998), which
extended US copyright terms by 20 years, had a devastating effect, shrinking
the public domain by, in Hart's view, a million books. He told Poynder: "We
spent nearly the entire 1980s working on an edition of Shakespeare that was
expected to go into the public domain, but failed to do so when the
copyright laws were changed."



Hart was born in Tacoma, near Seattle, in Washington state. His father was
an accountant, and his mother - a former wartime codebreaker - was a
business manager at a department store. Both decided to retrain as teachers.
In 1958, the family moved to Urbana, Illinois, where his father taught
Shakespeare studies and his mother taught mathematics at the University of
Illinois. After various adventures and a stint in the army, where he served
in Korea, Hart enrolled at the university's Urbana-Champaign campus in 1971.
He graduated in two years. Then Project Gutenberg took over his life.



He supported himself by doing odd jobs, and was extremely frugal. He told
Poynder: "It's hard for me to spend $10 on dinner; the average is well under
$5. I have no cable [TV] or cell phone. I ride a bicycle most of the time. I
also wear garage sale clothes; in fact I live just about totally on garage
sales." An unpaid appointment as adjunct professor at Illinois Benedictine
College helped him to solicit donations for his project. "I know that sounds
odd to most people, but I just never bought into the money system all that
much. I never spent it when I got it. It's all a matter of perspective; most
people spend the vast majority of their money on things I just don't care
about."



Earlier this year, on 16 July, Hart wrote to supporters such as the Internet
Archive's Brewster Kahle to say he was "working to create a graceful exit"
from the project "without any of the repercussions that could take place
when I shuffle off this mortal coil". He was feeling his age, and planned to
move to Hawaii.



Hart is survived by his mother, Alice, and his brother, Bennett.



. Michael Stern Hart, digital archivist, born 8 March 1947; died 6 September
2011

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