I just put in a preliminary bid on a partial set (missing 2 volumes) at eBay http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=3575193499&catego... There's an unspecified reserve on this.
Ec
Fred Bauder wrote:
Cheapest set I can find is
http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=214483227
There are odd volumes availble, such as this 1885 Volume 1
http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/BookDetailsPL?bi=224154342
Fred
From: Imran Ghory imran@bits.bris.ac.uk
On Wed, 24 Dec 2003, Jimmy Wales wrote:
Imran Ghory wrote:
Something else we could do is use the money to obtain public domain books (e.g. biographical encyclopedias) that can be scanned/ocred and used for creating basic articles in areas which wikipedia currently lacks coverage.
What would something like that cost, anyway? My guess is that if someone wanted to do this, the cost would be close to zero anyway, am I wrong?
The cost is primarily in buying the books, we could work with Project Gutenberg to get them scanned (they have several high-speed destructive scanners - you just remove the covering and spine of the book and put the pages into a feeder system), ocred and proofread.
What a terrible way to mistreet a book!!!
If we wanted to get something major like the full 1st edition of the "Dictionary of National Biography" (20 volumes) we'd be lucky to find it for under a couple of hundred dollars. Although if we're just looking for any works that we could use we might be get lucky just by looking in second-hand bookstores. There are many books such as Joseph Thomas' "Universal pronouncing dictionary of biography and mythology" which have articles which we could import into Wikipedia with minimal changes to form useful stubs.