Closing the Cover on Microsoft Book Scanning 98
Chris_Keene writes "The Live Search blog announces that the Live.com Book and Academic Search are to close. Book search in particular has had quite a bit of coverage, and often seemed like a race with Google. The Live blog says 'we are winding down our digitization initiatives, including our library scanning and our in-copyright book programs. We recognize that this decision comes as disappointing news to our partners, the publishing and academic communities, and Live Search users [...] this past Wednesday we announced our strategy to focus on verticals with high commercial intent, such as travel, and offer users cash back on their purchases from our advertisers.'"
Sad. (Score:5, Insightful)
MS did book scanning? (Score:5, Interesting)
MS makes no sense (Score:1, Interesting)
I agree with you, many many times MS comes across as very schizophrenic. Even on little things: how many times did they rename Vista, for example? And how about them getting into, then out of, then back into, then back out of, then etc etc the peripheral hardware market?
I really do like MS and their quality products, but geez, SO many times they come across as a company with too many people and not enough agreement internally.
Too many cooks ruin th
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Linux can rule the world, and still only be associated with 5% of the server revenue, as the servers can be sold with no OS or another OS, then run linux. Secondly, A few old Unix licences could cost more than a whole universe full Linux licences. Free times 100 trillion is still free.
I think you are the troll... thus posting as AC
P.S. By your metrics, candy bars and pop could be considered more important to the world than water, as water only counts for a fraction
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Neither Microsoft nor Google care about scanning books: all they need is raw text data, translated in as many languages as possible, for their automatic translation work. Proof? The quality of Google books scans is appalling , and none of the two actually implemented tools t
Re:MS makes no sense (Score:4, Interesting)
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> money to put their logos on their peripheral products
That's not really fair. MS has their own hardware development, and I think it's been one of their greatest successes. They introduced (widely at least) the scroll wheel, which is one of the few real advances in input in years (well, until the iPhone/Surface anyway). Their keyboards are some of the best to type on since the Apple Extended II. And the multi-input joystick remains the best on the
Re:MS did book scanning? (Score:4, Insightful)
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I'm an academic (Score:5, Insightful)
RS
Re:I'm an academic (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I'm an academic (Score:5, Insightful)
Its has worked well for MS over the years.
Re:I'm an academic (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I'm an academic (Score:5, Informative)
The fact is that libraries are the good guys in the fight to preserve information for the future generations, while the Googles and Microsofts are just corporate fly by night outfits in comparison.
It's not even that their scanning secrets are worth that much. Generally, the quality of Google's scans is not very good, and somebody will have to do it all again in the future anyway. They skimp on resolution, and don't clean the pages properly.
If you'd like to see scanning done right, take a look at Goettingen's Library [uni-goettingen.de]. Their scans of historical math works are of a very high standard, the best I've seen around the web, certainly better than the Michigan, Cornell or Gallica offerings. Another project with the right humanitarian attitude is the Million Books Project [ulib.org], which is doing highly interesting work in the Chinese universities.
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Microsoft never threatened them.
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Maybe because they were trying to make sure they beat Microsoft?
In any case, not so long ago people were saying the same things about Microsoft, and look how they turned out. Lack of choices is never a good thing.
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If it's a choice between a company with a history of quality and MicroSoft, then it's inevitably worse then only having the first to "choose" from.
MS is very good at sleazy market manipulation and little else. If they get into a market, then they will drag it down. That's the only tactic they know.
In any case, not so long ago people were saying the same things about Microsoft, and look how they turned out.
I don't know anybody who ever thought MS did a good job of anyt
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Microsoft is sleazy? Well no shit. But you didn't explain how having only one product to choose from is better than having two products to choose from.
With two products I can say "I don't like Microsoft'
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Maybe because they were trying to make sure they beat Microsoft?
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Someone has to keep Google on its toes, and it sure isn't going to be Google.
I have been thinking about your argument, and for most companies this would certainly hold true. But doesn't the google system were you can work 1 day of the week on something you decide for yourself, a hobby project so to say, lead to healthy internal academic competition within google itself?
Say you work at google and you do not like google product X but you need / are interested in its functionality. You could start hobbying away on a new product Y. You could even find others to help you for 1 day in
Disappointing (Score:5, Interesting)
I R'ed the FA, but I can't work out whether this is the end of the service altogether, or whether the existing service will live on but without new books being added. Despite the jingoistic tone of the summary, the former would be bad news for everyone -- although Google's tools may be better, it's surely better to have more of this information readily available to everyone.
Either way, I think it's a disappointing climbdown for Microsoft, and surprising given how much money they've been willing to throw at previous projects that were never likely to turn a short-term profit (XBox). I'll be interested to see what the "more sustainable strategies" mentioned in the article turn out to be.
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Coming out with a new book service. Only this time it's bundled with the OS and a pain to remove. Also adding Google books to the list of apps that UAC applies to.
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Really a sign the MS is getting concerned about there quickly dwindling on hand cash.
Oh man oh man (Score:5, Funny)
I no longer care nearly as much as I used to, but goddamn if this isn't a blast to watch.
verticals with high commercial intent (Score:4, Interesting)
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Sitting on a park bench
Eying verticals with commercial intent
Advertiser
Disappointing for Live Search users (Score:4, Funny)
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Cost Cutting (Score:2)
Standard Policy (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Standard Policy (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is that Microsoft has too much money. To a "normal" company, a venture such as this would require a significant investment, which in turn gives the company a big incentive to pull out all the stops to try and make it work. Succeed or die.
To Microsoft, on the other hand, a venture such as this require relatively little investment. If it works, it works; if it doesn't, oh well. Virtually everything Microsoft does outside of their Window and Office monopolies loses money.
These are the same tactics Microsoft has been using since the early 90s. They're just playing defence to whatever the competitor-of-the-day is doing, and they do it solely to protect the monopolies. The venture doesn't need to "successful" in the traditional sense, and it certainly doesn't have to make money, but if it's disruptive in some way to what their competitor is trying to do then it at least has some value for Microsoft, because at least Microsoft can afford to take a financial hit where their competitor usually can't. In the 90s you have Oracle vs. SQL Server, Netscape vs. IE. Now you have whatever-Google-does vs. MSN-Live.NET, iTunes vs. PlaysForSure. The difference is that at least back in the 90s Microsoft was actually capable of turning a disruptive stinker (say, SQLServer 6) into a real and competitive product; these days, not so much. But then again, Microsoft has a lot more money to throw around.
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No, they're lazily copying other people's ideas- that's what all that crap about `innovation` is. They think if they keep saying that you won't think it's bullshit. It's bullshit, though. Cheaper than genuine innovation. Microsoft never invents anything. Well, nothing that catches on. It's just not in their nature. What do you expect of a company founded by a lawyer?
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Didn't even know about this! (Score:4, Interesting)
Mistake in the quote (Score:4, Funny)
Why is users in "Live Search Users" pleural?
-Charlie
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I think Bill has switched to Google at home though.
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No, that's not it.
It's because Microsoft has just ripped the lungs [wikipedia.org] * out of their dreams.
* They were aiming for the heart, but couldn't find a decent anatomy text on Live Search Academic.
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"Microsoft to pay people to search..." (Score:1)
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/05/21/2224228
Looks like that they finally realized (Score:4, Insightful)
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Seriously - I wonder if this is the start of a real strategy shift for MS overall? One thing that's totally mystified me over the last few years is why they think that simply copying everything and anyone is a "stategy" at all. I mean, if I was working ther
Glad I finally heard about this (Score:4, Insightful)
Might disappear after 3 days, no? (Score:1, Insightful)
Better back it up on Google Docs...
MS Live Search users were disappointed... (Score:2)
Gone, already? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's always a shame when anything book-related goes away.
Re:Gone, already? (Score:4, Funny)
Well, assuming you were searching for literature, they got that one right...
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Am I the only one (Score:3, Interesting)
M$ is t3h S4T4N (Score:1, Funny)
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Minor correction (Score:4, Interesting)
Exactly why MS will lose (Score:5, Insightful)
Firstly, MS is starting to build a rather unattractive profile for themselves as "droppers". Any time they can't be bothered with something or some part of "the management" takes a decision then something gets culled. They did it with their DRM music that left thousands high and dry, and now they have done it with this. The folks at MS have to realise that nobody is going to want to deal with them if they keep it up. Because no matter what the gee whiz initiative or idea, everybody knows fine that if MS get frustrated with not having dominance with it, or gets bored and want to spend the money elsewhere, then they will drop it with a "screw you guys, I'm going home" attitude. Will they get as many vendors signing up to the "search cashback" program when they know (and we know) it will likely be scrapped in a year or two?
Secondly, it sums up MS in another way. They just don't get "it". They think of everything through some corporate eyes that requires dominance and control. Google scans books (and I am absolutely sure will continue to scan books) not because they want to "bury MS", but because they want to "organize the worlds knowledge". Criticisms of privacy et al. are all very valid, but part of a different argument strand. When it comes down to it Google scan books because they realise the importance of digitizing knowledge, and aside from the altruistic benefits of digitizing otherwise inaccessible paper - when it is digitised it can be searched, when it can be searched it can be monetized.
MS are stuck - and will always be stuck - in the 1990's. They treat all this as "the search wars" - they treat the whole thing as some second version of the browser wars. The only catch is that the tactics that won them that one won't work any more. The decision to end book scanning just reeks of the war mentality. They didn't scan and weren't scanning books to help the end user, they were doing it in an attempt to "bury Google". That is why they will lose - they are stuck in the past.
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I think their thought process went more like this: "We don't know why Google is doing it, but if they're doing it, it must make money somehow, and we like money, so we're doing it too."
Thank you Microsoft (Score:1, Informative)
What about archive.org (Score:2)
The Internet Archive's scanning of public domain books was one of the efforts being funded by this, it got a passing mention in TFA. Both articles mention that Microsoft are removing 'contractual restrictions placed on the digitized library content'.
Those restrictions were always a bit vague: http://www.archive.org/details/msn_books [archive.org]
Might be OK (Score:1)
I wonder if that includes donating it to Google Books. It seems so! (but I'm in an optimistic mood today)