Showing posts with label British. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

British Library makes Google deal

20 June 2011 Last updated at 11:02 GMT The British Library The British Library receives more than one million visitors a year Thousands of pages from one of the world's biggest collections of historic books, pamphlets and periodicals are to be made available on the internet.

The British Library has reached a deal with search engine Google about 250,000 texts dating back to the 18th Century.

It will allow readers to view, search and copy the out-of-copyright works at no charge on both the library and Google books websites.

The library gets more than a million visitors a year.

The works selected to be digitised date from between 1700 and 1870, and the project will take some years to complete, with Google covering the costs of digitising.

Among the first works to go online are a pamphlet about French Queen Marie Antoinette and Spanish inventor Narciso Monturiol's 1858 plans for one of the world's first submarines.

Google has similar partnerships with about 40 libraries around the world.

Library chief executive Dame Lynne Brindley said the scheme was an extension of the ambition of the library's predecessors in the 19th Century to provide access to knowledge to everyone.

"The way of doing it then was to buy books from the entire world and to make them available in reading rooms.

"We... believe that we are building on this proud tradition of giving access to anyone, anywhere and at any time.

"Our aim is to provide perpetual access to this historical material, and we hope that our collections coupled with Google's know-how will enable us to achieve this aim."

Director of external relations at Google Peter Barron said: "What's powerful about the technology available to us today isn't just its ability to preserve history and culture for posterity, but also its ability to bring it to life in new ways."

Google's plan to digitise copyrighted texts has run into serious legal problems in the US. Among critics were the Authors Guild of America and the Association of American Publishers.

The digitised works are just a small fraction of the library's collection which totals more than 150 million items representing every age of written civilisation, including books, journals, manuscripts, maps, stamps, music, patents, photographs, newspapers and sound recordings in all written and spoken languages.


View the original article here

Saturday, June 18, 2011

British Museum wins arts accolade

15 June 2011 Last updated at 20:47 GMT Seated Buddha from Gandhara A seated Buddha from Gandhara was one of the objects included in the History of the World project The British Museum has been named Museum of the Year by the Art Fund.

The accolade was awarded to the museum after the success of its History of the World project which attempted to tell the world's history in 100 objects.

The project, which included a 100-part series on BBC Radio 4, featured objects such as the world's oldest football.

Other shortlisted museums were the University of Cambridge's Polar Museum, Robert Burns Birthplace Museum in Alloway and Roman Baths Museum in Bath.

The British Museum was presented with a ?100,000 prize at a ceremony held at Tate Britain on Wednesday evening.

Former cabinet minister Michael Portillo, who chaired the judging panel, said: "We were particularly impressed by the truly global scope of the British Museum's project, which combined intellectual rigour and open heartedness, and went far beyond the boundaries of the museum's walls.

"Above all, we felt that this project, which showed a truly pioneering use of digital media, has led the way for museums to interact with their audiences in new and different ways."

The museum's director Neil MacGregor said: "The British Museum is delighted to win the Art Fund Prize on behalf of the extraordinary coalition of UK museums that made A History of the World so successful.

"A History of the World celebrated objects and the stories they tell; the prize will pay for a series of Spotlight Tours, lending star British Museum objects around England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales."

The project involved 550 heritage partners and museums across the country as well the BBC.

This is the first time a London-based national museum has won the prize.

Previous winners include the Ulster Museum, Stoke-on-Trent's Wedgwood Museum and the National Mining Museum in Wales.


View the original article here