-readme The Project Gutenberg -readme file EXPERIMENTAL EDITION (July 23, 1991) (Please send comments to hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu.) This file concerns files in /etext directory mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu ******* You are requested to check your own copyright laws for using a file outside the United States. We will be posting copyrights for use within the US when etexts are first released, and then further information for other countries as we continue.******* Traditionally, the Project Gutenberg etexts are released monthly, with the names, descriptions and locations of these files written up in our monthly email newsletter. Due to a number of requests, either from people who do not or cannot receive these newsletters the information has been transferred to this -readme file which a person logging into the mrcnext machine without information as to what they want, may identify most of the files. Some files which are only placed there on request for short times, will not appear in this listing. 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This -readme file will be under development during 1991 and would be expected to be fully functional and accurate by 1992, and will be updated monthly with one additional etext in 1991 and with two monthly additions in 1992, four in 1993, etc. Our filenaming convention is simple: the first 6 letters are the name of the book (shortened obviously or no one would request the -readme file), the next 2 are the version number and an extension indicates the type of file. Hence: alice26a.txt is a PURE ASCII text file (the a indicating a very minor revision to the alice26; alice26a.zip is the same file in the most popular compression; we recommend using ZIP 1.1 or later to uncompress these files. UNIX versions of the ZIP program are included in the /etext directory, for your convenience. When space limitations decrease, we should be able to include DOS and Mac versions as well, and possibly are going to be able to provide different compressions as well. In our effort to make these etexts as widely available as we can, we have encouraged a policy of using the PURE ASCII files as the! primary means of distribution, and only adding .zip, .tar, .Z and other file types when space permits. Eventually we hope to write a program that will compress the file you want into any temporary format you want for transmission, and delete it when you are done getting it. UNIX programmers are encouraged to assist in this. Definitions: a PURE ASCII file by our definition is a file which any program and any person can read with ease. Of course program differences between operating systems may require slight changes, such as the difference between carriage return/line feed combos a Mac, DOS or UNIX operating machine does differently. DOS uses an extended set by using both CR and LF at the end of each line (WP, and some other word processors leave out the carriage returns), a Mac would use only the CR and UNIX uses only the LF. 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This way people can use them on virtually ALL of an enormous range of hardware and software combinations with only an interspersing of minor adjustments. Thus we don't rule out those persons with Apples, Apricots, Ataris, etc., etc., etc. We have had only a few requests on Project Gutenberg's history so we will be posting only a small file on that subject, with larger file space for our goals as defined by the one trillion etexts we hope to have distributed by 2001. (Ten thousand volumes to those one hundred million predicted users = one trillion volumes,) Our educational goals will also be discussed in the goals file. **** -readme file ends here and the June 30 newsletter begins---- The Project Gutenberg Newsletter__June 30, 1991__Our 20th Year This month's release__Peter Pan (currently withdrawn for copy- right re-evaluation). More in August 31, 1991 newsletter. ******* You are requested to check your own copyright laws for using a file outside the United States. We will be posting copyrights for use within the US when etexts are first released, and then further information for other countries as we continue.******* Due to an ~unprecedented lack of interest in the heavier items released the last two months~ this month we return to our list of family oriented literature with James M. Barrie's Peter Pan classic. Only one response was received concerning Moby Dick, our May selection, and no responses to the World Factbook, the April selection. We will, of course, continue with our reference materials, and with our more literary works, with Paradise Lost, "The Book of Mormon" and other religious materials, and with our references including the Oxford English Dictionary for which our advisors on copyright have assured us we are OK to proceed on the words through the 1916 volume, even though Oxford has yet to respond in a written manner to our requests. However, on another note of similar, but opposite vein, Merriam-Webster has replied and we are permitted to do their first edition of the classic work The International Unabridged Dictionary. Other classic etexts in preparation are the Britannica 11th edition and the Century Dictionary (we still need a 10 volume pre-1916 edition, please advise, we will pay around $100 plus shipping). Works in etext are coming in, and we are feeling some pressure to begin releasing two works per month a little ahead of 1992, as per our projected schedule. [For those unfamiliar with the Project Gutenberg's goal, it is to release 10,000 books by the year 2001 on approximately the schedule of releasing one etext per month in 1991, two per month in 1992, four in 1993, etc, a mathematical expansion that gets us to our goal in easy steps. 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FTP instructions this month must include the possibility of an older copy of PKUNZIP not working on our ZIP files. Use a 1.1 version or later for DOS, we have included the UNIX version in the etext dir, and will include others on request. For June 30, 1991 Will those who have sent us files via FTP or on disk please send us 1. The title page, and 2. the verso of the title page and/or info of any kind about the copyright and address of the publisher. This is what we need to give our copyright advisors to post the texts as Public Domain or Shareware files. Even if we have already posted a copy of a text (Snark), when someone sent us another copy it didn't have this information, so we can't post it (but we can use it as an etext assist to proofreading, so if this information is not readily available, send us the etexts anyway to mrcnext cd /incoming). Any file posted there should be accompanied by a note to: hart@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu (InterNet) or hard@uiucvmd (bitnet) Again our thanks. Here are the latest updates for FTP downloading of Project Gutenberg etexts and others. These updates will be posted on several listserv locations once a month. We hope we have answered most questions, as new files, new locations, and new users arrive each month. We can't answer queries about nameservers or how your local system runs FTP. These files are available in disk formats. Please do not access the mrcnext machine from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM Central Standard Time (Daylight in summer) as this is peak usage, & mrcnext is always the first machine to get the newest editions. Current releases are Alice26a.txt, Lglass15.txt and Snark11.txt. Others texts are also available at the various sites. The July 31, 1991 release is scheduled to be either Paradise Lost or the Book of Mormon. Peter Pan is the June release. If you are interested in getting the electronic books, it's easy if you have access to FTP. Just type ftp mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu (or any of the other systems listed below) (Your system may require this in lower case or quotes around the name.) or ftp 128.174.201.12 login anonymous (This is the login username caps not necessary) (Any password works fine ) cd etext ls -a or dir (This will give you a directory listing, case sensitive) get filename.filetype (examples . . . ) get alice26a.txt get lglass16.txt get peter10.txt quit ***** You may have to get local instructions for linking to FTP, and/or setting memory for FTP. These files also available via disk on request in several formats. **** The current FTP sites are: mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu or (128.174.201.12) cd /etext (Please do NOT use the mrcnext between 10AM and 6PM weekdays) Our newest FTP site is: (and therefore we are in need of testing and of advice for our instruction set) think.com (131.239.2.1) cd /public also try quake.think.com (192.31.181.1) cd pub cd etext (Our thanks to Thinking Machines Corporation) (Located in Cambridge, MA near Boston) cd /pub simtel20.army.mil or (192.88.110.20) pd: Note new numeric name ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Also known as WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL (This computer has great archives and is used a lot, takes time) (Detailed instructions below, but doesn't have the newest editions). The MSDOS portions of simtel are echoed on: wuarchive.wustl.edu Name: wuarchive.wustl.edu Address: 128.252.135.4 (Please report your efforts on wuarchive, we need a guru for it) (wuarchive also echoed on mrcnext.cso.uiuc.edu in the mirrors dir. deneva.sdd.trw.com or (129.193.73.1) cd pub/etext and cd pub/etext/compressed for compresses versions. (Our thanks to TRW) We appreciate your suggestions for corrections and emendations. ****** WSMR-SIMTEL20.ARMY.MIL [26.2.0.74] NOTE; Type B is Binary: Type A is ASCII Directory PD1: Filename Type Length Date Description ============================================== ALICE11.ZIP B 61702 901218 Lewis Carroll-ALICE'S ADVENTURES IN WONDERLAND LGLASS10.ZIP B 70039 901217 THROUGH THE LOOKING GLASS by Lewis Carroll SIMTEL20 allows standard ANONYMOUS ftp with password GUEST. cd pd1: type tenex get alice11.zip get lglass11.zip bye If your FTP does not have TENEX mode, use BINARY mode. If the files are not readable after transferring in BINARY mode, try again with these two commands to set the mode: type binary quote "TYPE L 8" The double quotes are required. ******************************* Again our thanks to all who have supported Project Gutenberg, including those who just say "Thanks, keep up the good work, to those who send us errors (we love improving our texts). We would particularly send thank yous to Apple (who granted us a MacIIci/5M, a 4M video card, a scanner, a portrait monitor, and a few CD's; and to Quantum Leap for their GIGA- ROM CD, MacAdemic CD, and CD7; Caere for giving us help with a software situation beyond our control, to InfoBases (801)375-7371 for the Mormon literature we will be posting (call them for Folio editions of all text files of Mormon interest at very reasonable prices). Information about any of these products available on request. 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