Scan This Book!

By KEVIN KELLY
The New York Times
May 14, 2006

In several dozen nondescript office buildings around the world, 
thousands of hourly workers bend over table-top scanners and haul 
dusty books into high-tech scanning booths. They are assembling the 
universal library page by page.

The dream is an old one: to have in one place all knowledge, past and 
present. All books, all documents, all conceptual works, in all 
languages. It is a familiar hope, in part because long ago we briefly 
built such a library. The great library at Alexandria, constructed 
around 300 B.C., was designed to hold all the scrolls circulating in 
the known world. At one time or another, the library held about half 
a million scrolls, estimated to have been between 30 and 70 percent 
of all books in existence then. But even before this great library 
was lost, the moment when all knowledge could be housed in a single 
building had passed. Since then, the constant expansion of 
information has overwhelmed our capacity to contain it. For 2,000 
years, the universal library, together with other perennial longings 
like invisibility cloaks, antigravity shoes and paperless offices, 
has been a mythical dream that kept receding further into the 
infinite future.

Until now. When Google announced in December 2004 that it would 
digitally scan the books of five major research libraries to make 
their contents searchable, the promise of a universal library was 
resurrected. Indeed, the explosive rise of the Web, going from 
nothing to everything in one decade, has encouraged us to believe in 
the impossible again. Might the long-heralded great library of all 
knowledge really be within our grasp?

Brewster Kahle, an archivist overseeing another scanning project, 
says that the universal library is now within reach. "This is our 
chance to one-up the Greeks!" he shouts. "It is really possible with 
the technology of today, not tomorrow. We can provide all the works 
of humankind to all the people of the world. It will be an 
achievement remembered for all time, like putting a man on the moon." 
And unlike the libraries of old, which were restricted to the elite, 
this library would be truly democratic, offering every book to every 
person.

But the technology that will bring us a planetary source of all 
written material will also, in the same gesture, transform the nature 
of what we now call the book and the libraries that hold them. The 
universal library and its "books" will be unlike any library or books 
we have known. Pushing us rapidly toward that Eden of everything, and 
away from the paradigm of the physical paper tome, is the hot 
technology of the search engine.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/14/magazine/14publishing.html?ex=1305259200&en=c07443d368771bb8&ei=5090



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