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Robin O'Brien
Lynch, Irish Times, 26 March 2005
Some of the State's rarest and most valuable
antiquarian books are available on CD, thanks to a collaboration
between Trinity College Library and one of the college's subsidiary
companies.
The 25 books available offer historical
volumes and invaluable archives such as city directories,
almanacs, marriage indexes and maps, all in PDF format. The
company plans to make 150 more books available by the end
of the year.
Archive CD Books Ireland is part of a
worldwide project that has already enjoyed success in England,
the Netherlands and Australia. The project makes rare literature
widely available and helps preserve the original.
The digital process used to copy the material
produces archive preservation standard without harming the
originals.
The company expects to be working in the
thousands rather than the hundreds in a very short time.
As a British
and Irish copyrighted library since the 17th century, Trinity
has more than two million books in its archives but these
are not generally available to the public.
Mr Brian Donovan of Archive CD Books says that the CDs are
faithful reproductions of the original while also being much
more accessible.
The CDs are fully searchable, so
material will be far easier to find than ever before. Plus,
the books are archive presentation standard, which means
they will reproduce perfectly in print or on screen, while
the college will be able to put the original away into cold
storage.
END
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