La predizione che vedere un libro di carta sara' come vedere un
leone
e' secondo me sbagliata (e di parecchio), ma il resto e'
interessante,
anche perche' non sapevo che Kahle avesse gia' iniziato a fare
qualcosa
che solo di recente ho capito essere indispensabile,
puntare sulla carta per long-term storage.
Hugh
Pickens writes "Books are on their way to extinction
writes Kevin Kelly, adding that we are in a special moment
when paper books are plentiful and cheap that will not last
beyond the end of this century. 'It seems hard to believe now,
but within
a few generations, seeing a actual paper book will be as
rare for most people as seeing an actual lion.' But a
prudent society keeps at least one specimen of all it makes,
so Brewster Kahle, the founder of the Internet Archive, has
decided that we should keep a copy of every book that Google
and Amazon scan so that somewhere in the world there was at
least one physical copy to represent the millions of digital
copies so if anyone ever wondered if the digital book's text
had become corrupted or altered, they could refer
back to the physical book that was archived somewhere safe.
The books are being stored in cardboard boxes, stacked five
high on a pallet wrapped in plastic, stored 40,000 strong in a
shipping container, inside a metal warehouse on a dead-end
industrial street near the railroad tracks in Richmond
California. In this nondescript and 'nothing valuable here'
building, Kahle hopes to house 10 million books — about the
contents of a world-class university library. 'It still amazes
me that after 20 years the
only publicly available back up of the internet is the
privately funded Internet Archive. The only broad
archive of television and radio broadcasts is the same
organization,' writes Kelly. 'They are now backing up the
backups of books. Someday we'll realize the precocious wisdom
of it all and Brewster Kahle will be seen as a hero.'"