The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Wired Campus

November 26, 2008

New European Digital Library Proves Too Popular

Too many people are excited about Europeana, a pan-European digital library, archive, and museum. Last week, when the project’s prototype Web site debuted, it got 10 million hits per hour — and crashed.

Reporting the news, Library Journal quoted Martin Selmayr, a spokesman for Viviane Reding, the commissioner in charge of the project. Mr. Selmayr managed to find a silver lining in the situation, telling reporters that Europeana was a “victim of its success.”

With 27 countries participating, the online venture already has some two million digitized objects in its virtual collection, including not just books, newspapers, maps, and manuscripts, but also sound recordings, paintings, and even movies. The journal described it as “Europe’s answer to the potential cultural dominance portended by Google.”

Ah, but what about France, which has contributed more than half the items in Europeana’s collections, according to a recent article in The New York Times? “So comprehensive is France’s cultural dominance over this cyberspace outpost that other countries are having their own history written for them — in French, of course,” the Times noted.

“I find the figures extraordinary,” Commissioner Reding told the newspaper. “France has half the content — the collapse of the Berlin Wall is illustrated with a French TV documentary.”

Vive l’Europeana! —Jennifer Howard

Posted on Wednesday November 26, 2008 | Permalink |

Comments

  1. Google will figure out a way to appropriate this content too, no?

    — Mark Rocha    Nov 30, 11:42 PM    #

  2. . This is definitely an interesting blogg. Most college campuses would kill to have this function of being able to download information into their iPods or iPhones. The only thing I worry about is security? Who will monitor who gets such information outside of those students who should not have it? Such as potential people who intend to harm students on campus such as terrorists. for example

    — Colette Martin    Dec 1, 03:14 AM    #

  3. Typically, it is a government (EU) project, and equally typically, the French government propagates its dying language.

    — Lawman    Dec 1, 06:13 AM    #

  4. I find all three of the above comments rather bizarre.

    — swish    Dec 1, 10:18 AM    #

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