truly thankful to them and the G'vir from Los Angeles who bankrolls the project. I have found it to be an invaluable resource, research tool and whenever I'm on the site I feel like a kid in a candy store.
After you smell your smelling salts and get up off the floor, you better download them fast as there's a chance that they will not stay there; The copyright situation may not be so poshut.
Sometimes I just can't believe how fortunate we are to live in this digital age. Years ago I needed to travel to the rare books rooms of libraries to access old Seforim. Now available with a click of a mouse.
I agree. It's a shame that it's also somewhat paralyzing - then again, that happens to me in libraries with browseable stacks too.
I generally think in terms of not now, but in 10 or 20 years, what it will be like. I recently saw someone forecast that in 15 - 20 years on-demand printers that can spit out an entire book in a few seconds or a minute will be what normal printers are capable of. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that this is probably correct. Who ever dreamed we would see this, even what we see now? Incredible.
truly thankful to them and the G'vir from Los Angeles who bankrolls the project. I have found it to be an invaluable resource, research tool and whenever I'm on the site I feel like a kid in a candy store.
ReplyDeleteHalevai we both should have as many hits as they have Seforim! :-)
ReplyDeletehttp://thepartialview.blogspot.com/2011/12/time-to-rebuke-time-to-dance.html
ReplyDeleteThey just added 44 volumes of the Torah Shelemah.
ReplyDeleteAfter you smell your smelling salts and get up off the floor, you better download them fast as there's a chance that they will not stay there; The copyright situation may not be so poshut.
Wow. Thanks for sharing that, S.
ReplyDeleteSometimes I just can't believe how fortunate we are to live in this digital age. Years ago I needed to travel to the rare books rooms of libraries to access old Seforim. Now available with a click of a mouse.
I agree. It's a shame that it's also somewhat paralyzing - then again, that happens to me in libraries with browseable stacks too.
ReplyDeleteI generally think in terms of not now, but in 10 or 20 years, what it will be like. I recently saw someone forecast that in 15 - 20 years on-demand printers that can spit out an entire book in a few seconds or a minute will be what normal printers are capable of. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that this is probably correct. Who ever dreamed we would see this, even what we see now? Incredible.