Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Education Channel Partner
- > Home
- >
- McGill U Library Scanning Rare Books with Kirtas
McGill U Library Scanning Rare Books with Kirtas
By: Dian Schaffhauser
8/28/2008
McGill University Library in Montreal will be using a
Kirtas Technologies
APT BookScan 2400RA to digitize its collections. The company said that
the 2400RA is capable of acquiring page images at the rate of 2,400
pages per hour. The library will be working with
Ristech, a Canadian reseller, to implement the digitization solution.
"The
technology made available by Kirtas will allow us to reveal the
treasures of McGill Library to the world and enable sophisticated means
of resource discovery," said Janine Schmidt, Trenholme director of
libraries.
While the library was an early adopter of digitizing
books--its efforts began in 1996--this is its first attempt at a
large-scale, mass digitization of texts from its diverse rare book
collections. Among the 300,000 titles housed in Rare Books and Special
Collections at McGill are collections of art and architecture,
Canadiana, history, literature, philosophy (including a renowned David
Hume Collection), travel and exploration, and the history of the book.
Once
the books are digitized and processed, files will be made available
worldwide through the library's online catalog. Readers will be able to
obtain books printed on demand through major online retailers such as
Amazon.com and
Lulu.com.
Dian Schaffhauser is a writer who covers technology and business. Send your higher education technology news to her at dian@dischaffhauser.com.