There you go then: http://toolserver.org/~magnus/book2scroll/index.html
Just one demo book for the moment, but it'll be easy to allow all wikisource books tomorrow, when I have had some sleep...
(page jumping is broken too, but scrolling works just fine...)
Cheers, Magnus
On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 7:59 PM, Neil Kandalgaonkar neilk@wikimedia.org wrote:
Why not make a demo? I think this idea has come up a couple of times here in the last year. People find it easy to argue about mere proposals but an actual demo gives people a vision of what you are going for. Just look at what's happened with WYSIWYG just in the last week.
OpenLayers seems like a good place to start although it's obviously more designed for maps.
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/OpenLayers
On 8/13/10 11:36 AM, Lars Aronsson wrote:
On 08/13/2010 07:36 PM, Aryeh Gregor wrote:
I have doubts about whether this is the right approach for books. Offering the book as plain HTML pages, one for each chapter and also one for the whole book (for printing and searching), seems more useful. Browsers can cope with such long pages just fine,
One web page per chapter, yes, but not for whole books, especially not for the thicker and larger books. Web pages beyond 100 kbytes still load slowly, especially when you're on a wireless network in a crowded conference room. The problem is, after you scan a book you only know where the physical pages begin and end. The chapter boundaries can only be detected by manual proofreading and markup. The sequence from beginning to end of the book is the same for both pages and chapters (except for complicated cases with footnotes, as discussed recently). A smooth web 2.0, map-style scrolling through that sequence can be a way to overcome the delay between fast mechanical scanning and slow manual proofreading.
-- Neil Kandalgaonkar ) neilk@wikimedia.org
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