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How to Turn a City into a Library

I’ve been in some rather large libraries, including Bryant Park branch of the NYPL and the Library of Congress, but if you want to talk about sheer size I think the city of Klagenfurt, Austria has set a new record. A non-profit group called Project Pingeborg is working to promoting among the population of Klagenfurt, and in doing so they’ve more or less turned their city into a library.

This project is still in the early stages, but what they’ve done so far is to place 70 QR codes around the city:

The QR codes each lead to a particular ebook or mp3, all of which can be downloaded for free. According to Project Pingeborg, the mp3s are drawn from Librivox, the CC licensed audiobook project, while the ebooks are pulled from Project Gutenberg which now offers over 40 thousand titles, including around a thousand in German (according to Project Pingeborg).

Technically the contents aren’t at each location, so this is more of an ad campaign than a library. But each title is tied to a specific location, and what’s more the links aren’t going to show up in Google (bless robots.txt). So this project is in effect giving digital content a finite location, thus removing one of the key aspects that separates paper books from ebooks. Each little sign with a QR code is more or less the shelf location of that ebook.

Interesting.

Project Pingeborg

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