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From Gutenberg to the Internet Timeline An Annotated Chronology of the History of Information from about 30,000 B.C.E. to the present, by Jeremy M. Norman. |
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2003 February 23 |
Michael Day of UKOLN publishes a comprehensive review of worldwide projects for preservation of web data: Collecting and Preserving the World Wide Web. |
| April 7-9 | Lotfi Belkhir (formerly of the Venture Lab at Xerox) introduce the Kirtas BookScan 1200 produced by Kirtas Technologies at the AIIM Exhibition in Conference in New York City. This is the first automatic, page-turning scanner for the conversion of bound volumes to digital files. It claims to scan volumes at up to 1200 pages per hour. The motto of the company is "Moving knowledge from Books to Bytes." |
| July | The International Internet Preservation Consortium (netpreserve.org) is founded. |
| August | Brad Greenspan and eUniverse found MySpace. |
| December 10-12 | The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) convenes its first meeting. |
How much information 2003: The research project first published on the web in 2000 updates its findings. Strikingly it is estimated that each person in the U.S. generates 800 MB of recorded information. This is more than three times the data that the same research project calculated was being produced in 2000. The remaining data in this frame of the timeline is quoted from the 2003 website: "How much new information is created each year? Newly created information is stored in four physical media -- print, film, magnetic and optical --and seen or heard in four information flows through electronic channels -- telephone, radio and TV, and the Internet. This study of information storage and flows analyzes the year 2002 in order to estimate the annual size of the stock of new information recorded in storage media, and heard or seen each year in information flows. Where reliable data was available we have compared the 2002 findings to those of our 2000 study (which used 1999 data) in order to describe a few trends in the growth rate of information.
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| 2003 | Linden Lab makes publicly available the privately owned, partly subscription-based, virtual world, Second Life. |
2004 |
At this time OCLC (Online Computer Library Center) serves more than 50,540 libraries of all types in the U.S. and 84 countries and territories around the world. OCLC WorldCat contains 56 million records representing 894 million holdings. |
| With Eighteenth Century Collections Online Thomson-Gale provides fully searchable digital texts for the 150,000 titles published in England during the 18th century. These will include the searchable texts of 26,000,000 pages. | |
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800,000,000 people in the world are using the Internet. |
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The Library of Congress, contains 130,000,000 physical items on approximately 530 miles of bookshelves. The collections include more than 29 million books and other printed materials, 2.7 million recordings, 12 million photographs, 4.8 million maps, and 58 million manuscripts |
During 2004 1,200,000 unique book titles are sold. Only two percent sell more than 5000 copies. According to R.R. Bowker, publisher of Books in Print, 375,000 new unique books are published in English during 2004. |
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| March | The National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress found the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP). " Ultimately over a period of approximately 20 years, NDNP will create a national, digital resource of historically significant newspapers from all the states and U.S. territories published between 1836 and 1922. This searchable database will be permanently maintained at the Library of Congress (LC) and be freely accessible via the Internet. An accompanying national newspaper directory of bibliographic and holdings information on the website will direct users to newspaper titles available in all types of formats." |
| May | There are 50,000,000 websites on the Internet. |
| May 1 | The Index-Catalogue of the Surgeon-General's Office, a 61 volume bibliographical resource for the history of medicine and science, which began publication in 1870 under the direction of John Shaw Billings, is made available online at the National Library of Medicine. This is the culmination of a data conversion project which began in 1996. |
| May 12 | Archaeologists announce the finding what they believe to be the remains of the building site of the Library of Alexandria. The 13 lecture halls could have housed as many as 5000 students, raising the possibility that the Library of Alexandria might have been the world's first university. |
| October 5-7 | The first Web 2.0 Conference is held in San Francisco. |
| October 27 | The NASA supercomputer, Project Columbia, a cluster of 20 computers with a total of 10,240 processors, built by Silicon Graphics and Intel at NASA’s Ames Research Center, achieves sustained performance of 42.7 trillion calculations per second or teraflops. “If you could do one calculation per second by hand, it would take you a million years to do what this machine does in a single second.” (NY Times). |
| November | 8,000,000 American adults say they have created blogs. |
| December | Google announces the Google Print project to scan and make searchable on the Internet the texts of more than ten million books from the collections of the New York Public Library, and the libraries of Michigan, Stanford, Harvard and Oxford Universities. |
| 1920194019501960 |
(This page was last revised on
September 21, 2007
. Please report errors
and broken links to jnorman@jnorman.com.) |
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