Thursday, August 6, 2020

Open Sesame

Open Sesame I was not seated on a jury today at the Middlesex Superior Court, so Im back to work tomorrow, hopefully posting a new Questions Omnibus tomorrow evening. While waiting to be called from the jury pool, I had plenty of time to read both the New York Times and the Boston Globe. The Globes business section today had a nice column by Scott Kirsner on Brewster Kahle 82 (right, courtesy Library of Congress) and the Internet Archive. Check out an excerpt: The Internet Archive has the ambitious goal of offering universal access to human knowledge, and, in pursuit of that, in a small white wooden building that once served the base as a general store, the archivists are collecting every sort of digital file imaginable, from Web pages to podcasts, software programs to movies, presidential phone conversations to recordings of Cowboy Junkies concerts. Brewster Kahle is the MIT-educated former entrepreneur who began building the library in 1996, for the simple reason that nobody else seemed to be doing it, he says. Now, he realizes that he has undertaken a task with no obvious stopping point. In 2001, he started recording 20 television channels, continuously, and recently he has had volunteers scanning thousands of out-of-print books. Each month, the Internet Archive collects the equivalent of one Library of Congress, says Kahle. The collection, available at www.archive.org, has already surpassed one petabyte. Thats a million gigabytes. [] While studying at MIT in the 1970s, Kahle says, there were two big ideas in the air. One idea was encryption, he says. The other was to build a digital library so people could have the Library of Congress on their desktops. After graduating, Kahle chose to follow an entrepreneurial path. He was present at the creation of Thinking Machines, the Cambridge-based supercomputer company, and later started WAIS, a company that helped publishers put information on the Web and make it searchable. WAIS was acquired by America Online, and Kahles next company, a search and ranking service called Alexa Internet, was bought by Amazon.com. Kahle used the money from those two transactions to start and fund the Internet Archive, which is a nonprofit. [] The Internet Archive also sponsors a small fleet of Internet bookmobiles which operate in San Francisco, Egypt, India, and Uganda that allow people to find full-text books online and print out their own paperback copies. Kahle says the cost of lending a book out can approach $2 for some libraries; printing out a black-and-white copy on-demand can cost as little as 50 cents. [] When the organization runs up against technical barriers that seem insurmountable, it chisels away at them. It couldnt find a storage device on the market that was capable of holding a petabyte of data inexpensively, and consuming little power. So the Internet Archive simply built one on its own, called the petabox. (You can build your own in the basement, since they made the design available as an open-source document.) [..] Technologists are often accurately depicted as people more interested in the possible than the past. Brewster Kahle and his colleagues defy that depiction, using technology in clever ways to preserve our shared past. [Read the entire column] One of the fun parts of the Internet Archive is the Wayback Machine, where you can see archival versions of your favorite web page, going back to the early days of the web. Here are a few interesting examples: MIT Homepage: web.mit.edu www.mit.edu (note the change January 1999, when the student group SIPB gave hostname www to the MIT administration, which SIPB had administered since www.mit.edu:8001 began in 1993 as one of the first 100 pages on the web) MIT Admissions Yahoo! MTV Perhaps the bottom line to this story is that MIT values openness. Besides the Internet Archive, you can also see this with OpenCourseWare, MITWorld, MITs commitment to the open source software movement, the accepting attitudes towards guests practiced by the MIT libraries, etc. I like MITs commitment to openness; it was something I could sense from my very first visit to campus. I guess these blogs are another good example of MITs openness. Were happy to be open and available for you.

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