DIY Book Scanner

From Domains, Publics and Access
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Screenshot-www diybookscanner org 2016-08-13 19-08-18.png

Self-portrait

We are a community of people who build book scanners. We have taken preservation into our own hands. We are the missing link between your bookshelf and your e-reader. Join us! Get involved by trying a simple scanner, building a kit, or pushing the limits of scanning technology. If your questions can't be answered by reading, write us an e-mail: diybookscanner [at] gmail.com.

A book scanner is any device used to digitize the pages of a book. Every book scanner has three parts. Cameras are used to capture images of each page. A controller triggers the cameras and saves the resulting photographs somewhere convenient. The scanner rig provides an ideal photographic environment while holding everything together.

http://www.diybookscanner.org/

Description

It is a project that provides free software to digitize texts, as well as digital scanners designs that anyone can build. The idea was developed by the artist and engineer Daniel Reetz, who had scanned most of the books he owned. After a water accident in his building, he lost 100% of his printed books, so he decided to develop the DIY Book Scanner, an open-source artifact in order to share it so that anyone can build it with materials that are easy to get, or order a kit on the web site with a cheaper price than the market.

The evolution of different DIY Book Scanner designs makes the process faster, and takes care of the original material in addition to easily converting it into any type of format for any type of reading device. The scanners contain their own light, platen, cradle, electronic components and of course a system that turns the pages.

Copyright issues remain controversial in legal terms, as Reetz sees it copyright belongs to an era and a way of making books that is no longer compatible with the contemporary technological age. The DIY Book Scanner project tries to transform this situation, in addition to empowering users not to depend on companies that sell, rent or distribute cultural capital, limiting it to their interests and for profit.

Interview

Evelin Heidel http://dpya.org/en/index.php/Evelin_Heidel

Links

URL: http://www.diybookscanner.org/

Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.diybookscanner.org/