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Apr 12, 2001
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125132-ibookstore_gutenberg_500.jpg


Following up on yesterday's report regarding $9.99 price points for most best sellers in Apple's iBookstore, App Advice now reports that it has observed a significant number of free titles from Project Gutenberg included directly in the store.

If you're not familiar with the Gutenberg Project, it's a free online digital library supported by volunteers. This library already includes over 30,000 free eBooks from the public domain; it is an amazing popular resource.

Well, when checking out Apple's iBookstore, I noticed that Apple has decided to include these directly. I obviously haven't had the chance to count them, but it appears that the entire catalog is available for free download.

Apple's iBooks feature page posted earlier this month confirmed that the iPad's iBooks application will support the open ePub standard used by Project Gutenberg, so its contents' compatibility with the iPad is not unexpected. Integration of Project Gutenberg content directly into the iBookstore for free download, however, is undoubtedly welcome news for many readers.

iBooks and the iBookstore are scheduled to launch in the U.S. alongside the iPad on April 3rd.

Article Link: iBookstore to Include 30,000 Free eBooks From Project Gutenberg?
 
Even though Project Gutenberg material is free for anyone to use, the project needs funding. I hope Apple has made a donation if they are using the whole library. A couple of bucks / ipad would be fair.
 
How could anyone vote negative on this? Project Gutenberg is full of excellent literature that coming generations (especially the ones who buy iPods and such) need to be exposed to. Heck, maybe Apple will make reading literature cool.

How publishers get away with selling these books for sometimes up to $10 a title is beyond me. These books do not need any marketing, edititing, and are off copyright. One should just have to pay printing costs to get these books. And as other posters have pointed out in other threads, these costs are very small $1-$2. Ebooks of this sort should be complete free.

As for the donations to PG, I believe this is going to give the project a lot more exposure and more people will donate to it.
 
Good news. Apple is really pushing those content deals in the days before launch. It seems to be daily news.

Including Gutenberg's books isn't any achievement... anyone can do many things with them...

I presume Apple includes these towards the big day so it can say that there are thousands of books available among those many are free...
 
Excellent. This is also the beginning of the end of the free ebooks repackaged in pseudo-apps that clog the App Store.
 
As for the donations to PG, I believe this is going to give the project a lot more exposure and more people will donate to it.

Of course alternatively Apple could include "donate" button in the reader so that the public could donate to the project easily. Corporations only taking from the community and not giving anything back sucks. That's how one can vote this negative.
 
Even though Project Gutenberg material is free for anyone to use, the project needs funding. I hope Apple has made a donation if they are using the whole library. A couple of bucks / ipad would be fair.
+1 ...

Essentially it's piggybacking on the work of volunteers. Glad it's happening, but a donation would be nice.
 
How could anyone vote negative on this? Project Gutenberg is full of excellent literature that coming generations (especially the ones who buy iPods and such) need to be exposed to. Heck, maybe Apple will make reading literature cool.

How publishers get away with selling these books for sometimes up to $10 a title is beyond me. These books do not need any marketing, edititing, and are off copyright. One should just have to pay printing costs to get these books. And as other posters have pointed out in other threads, these costs are very small $1-$2. Ebooks of this sort should be complete free.

As for the donations to PG, I believe this is going to give the project a lot more exposure and more people will donate to it.

1) There are people who troll these forums and vote everything negative, unless it's bad news which they vote positive.

2) There are people who think that Apple is abusing project Gutenberg.
 
1) There are people who troll these forums and vote everything negative, unless it's bad news which they vote positive.

2) There are people who think that Apple is abusing project Gutenberg.

I thought that voting was more about the possible accuracy or validity of a given rumor, not about the content of the rumor itself. Not that I'd ever vote negative :D
 
I think this is a great idea. I was already going to download a number of Gutenberg ebooks myself and manually sync them onto my ipad from my mac, so this just makes it that much easier to merely download them directly!
 
Well, at last this project could gain some support. I bet more volunteers will help this project regarding this movement from Apple.
 
Including Gutenberg's books isn't any achievement... anyone can do many things with them...

I presume Apple includes these towards the big day so it can say that there are thousands of books available among those many are free...

I think we found one negative vote. Ah, the joys of pessimism.
 
Including Gutenberg's books isn't any achievement... anyone can do many things with them...

I presume Apple includes these towards the big day so it can say that there are thousands of books available among those many are free...

anyone CAN but didn't. Apple's a doer not a talker.
 
How could anyone vote negative on this? Project Gutenberg is full of excellent literature that coming generations (especially the ones who buy iPods and such) need to be exposed to. Heck, maybe Apple will make reading literature cool.

I didn't (and don't, generally) vote negative, but while I'm happy that the Gutenberg project is getting this publicity, and that these books are freely available, the quality of the texts is too low for my tastes. I've read books that are in Gutenberg on my Kindle, at least once or twice (Shirley by Charlotte Bronte, Wings of the Dove by Henry James), and I found paying for properly edited and digitally typeset commercial copies well worth it.
 
I thought that voting was more about the possible accuracy or validity of a given rumor, not about the content of the rumor itself. Not that I'd ever vote negative :D

I've never understood the positive/negative rating system. It's too ambiguous.
 
Very good news...I was going to download a bunch of books from Gutenberg to sync to my iPad when it arrives on 4/3 but now I won't have to bother!

I just wonder how much reformatting Apple has done / has had to do. Probably not much but I'd be interested to know as I have some epub-formatted books already.
 
+1 ...

Essentially it's piggybacking on the work of volunteers. Glad it's happening, but a donation would be nice.

So you're telling me that the volunteers put in all that work and hope that no one reads the books they've put together?

Seems to me that they do it BECAUSE they want people to see it. And it seems to me that those volunteers would LIKE the fact that Apple is bringing more eyeballs to their efforts.

What if USA Today wrote a story about the Gutenberg project...should USA Today then need to donate money to them because it sent readers their way? Or is good publiciity...you know...a good thing?
 
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