On 23/09/06, Fastfission <fastfission(a)gmail.com> wrote:
It's time consuming and difficult. It is very easy
to screw up in
scanning something like this, so all of the parts will fit except for
one (i.e. if something is not scanned at exactly the same elevation or
gets skewed slightly in some other way).
It can be done. It's just not very easy. And it's certainly not fun. I
wouldn't do it for free.
In the end I suspect that most digitization of such things will be
done either by countries which will try to sell access to them (i.e.
ProQuest) or as not-for-profit grants (i.e. a university deciding to
put its PD library online, which looks good on a yearly report even if
it doesn't create any revenue). This sort of dull work is not the sort
of thing that too many volunteers would be interested in doing over
time, IMO. (Maybe I'm wrong! Hopefully!)
We'd try to get the best scans we could. But I suspect that if you put
up the raw scans and any of it could be turned to an actual use,
volunteers to do the tedious labour would turn up. I'm amazed at the
tedious jobs people do for Wikimedia projects in the cause of getting
information into the public domain.
See also discussion on wikimediauk-l (to which this is cc'd).
- d.