Sentences with phrase «university internet archive»

Not exact matches

The library has partnered with Kalev Leetaru, a Yahoo researcher at Georgetown University, to extract over 14 million images from 2 million public domain books available for download from the Internet Archive.
The event is part of a broader effort to help San Francisco - based Internet Archive with its End of Term 2016 project, an effort by university, government and nonprofit officials to find and archive valuable pages on federal weArchive with its End of Term 2016 project, an effort by university, government and nonprofit officials to find and archive valuable pages on federal wearchive valuable pages on federal websites.
One of the most valuable but little - known legal resources on the Internet is the CORI K - Base, an archive of more than 25,000 contracts, 22,000 of them searchable, maintained by the Contracting and Organizations Research Initiative of the University of Missouri.
The scanning is being done by the Internet Archive's text scanning facility at the University of Toronto's Robarts Library and all the documents will be available on the Internet Archive (http://www.archive.org/details/texts).
«Archivists embrace digital page» highlights the University of Toronto's digitization contributions to the Internet Archive.
The gloriously named «Law's mercantile cipher code for forwarding business communications by telegraph, telephone or postal card, with secrecy and economy, in use by subscribers and attorneys of the Canadian Reporting and Collecting Association,» (an excerpt from which you see above) was published in Toronto in 1880 and, unlike the Anglo - American code book (held tight by Harvard and Google Books), is available online, thanks to the University of Alberta Library, which digitized it, and the Internet Archive, which hosts it.
CONTRIBUTOR: Internet Archive; Cornell University Library.
The exception to this last indictment is the University of Toronto: of the more than 250,000 texts scanned to date by the Internet Archive Canada, the vast majority are from the University of Toronto.)
I learned recently that the University of Alberta has been digitizing microfilm or microfiche from the collection of Canadiana.org and placing the scans on the Internet Archive.
Thanks to a tweet by @richards1000 I was reminded about Cornell University Library's digitization project, which has resulted in over 2000 law books» becoming freely available online at the Internet Archive.
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