World digital library moves ahead.
by Swartz, Nikki
The Library of Congress and UNESCO plan to move ahead with the
World Library project, which is currently in testing phase and will not
be available to the public until later this year or early 2009.
Librarian of Congress James H. Billington and UNESCO Assistant
Director for Communication and Information Abdul Waheed Khan recently
signed an agreement at UNESCO headquarters in Paris pledging cooperative
efforts to build the website, www.worlddigitallibrary.org.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Started two years ago with a $3 million grant from Google and
technical assistance from Apple, the World Digital Library will digitize
special and rare materials from libraries and other cultural
institutions around the world and make them available for free on the
Internet. These materials will include manuscripts, maps, books, musical
scores, sound recordings, films, prints, and photographs. Some of the
treasures offered will be an elaborate 17th-century map of the world
that shows California as a separate island, a 1903 Thomas Edison film of
immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, and a 17th-century Arabic
manuscript on geometry basics.
The project aims to promote international and intercultural
understanding, increase the quantity and diversity of cultural materials
online, and contribute to education and scholarship. "The vision is
simply that this is a means for promoting far better intercultural
understanding in the world," Billington told The New York Times.
Under the agreement, the Library of Congress and UNESCO will
cooperate in convening working groups of experts and other stakeholders
to develop guidelines and technical specifications for the project,
enlist new partners, and secure the necessary support for the project
from private and public sources. A key aspect of the project is to
bridge the digital divide in developing nations so all countries and
regions of the world can participate and be represented in the World
Digital Library.
To test the feasibility of the project, the Library of Congress,
UNESCO, and five other partner institutions--the Bibliotheca Alexandrina
of Alexandria, Egypt; the National Library of Brazil; the National
Library of Egypt; the National Library of Russia; and the Russian State
Library--have developed a prototype of the World Digital Library and
expect the complete website to become available to the public in late
2008 or early 2009, according to the Times.
The website will function in seven languages--Arabic, Chinese,
English, French, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish--and feature search
and browse functionality by place, time, topic, and contributing
institution. It will include video commentaries from curators alongside
material such as original maps, manuscripts, photographs, and
recordings, the Times reported. Project coordinators said they hope the
material will ultimately be available on personal computers, handheld
devices, and laptops.
The Times said other national libraries may join the venture, which
is modeled after the Library of Congress' vast American Memory
project that has posted millions of original items on the web, including
the Gettysburg Address.
European libraries have been busy developing their own digital
collections. The European Digital Library will release its prototype
next year, and Google is hard at work digitizing libraries in the United
States and Britain.
World Digital Library project organizers are currently raising
money, discussing alliances with the likes of Nokia and the Vodafone
Group, and gathering commitments from countries to participate.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Association of Records Managers &
Administrators (ARMA) Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.