![]() Once all the pages have completed these steps, a post-processor carefully assembles them into an e-book, optionally makes it available to interested parties for 'smooth reading', and submits it to the Project Gutenberg archive. The book then similarly progresses through a third proofreading round and two formatting rounds using the same web interface. A second volunteer is then presented with the first volunteer's work and the same page image, verifies and corrects the work as necessary, and submits it back to the site. ![]() ![]() This allows the text to be easily compared to the image, proofread, and sent back to the site. By dividing the workload into individual pages, many volunteers can work on a book at the same time, which significantly speeds up the creation process.ĭuring proofreading, volunteers are presented with a scanned page image and the corresponding OCR text on a single web page. ![]() Site Conceptĭistributed Proofreaders provides a web-based method to ease the conversion of Public Domain books into e-books. Please try our Walkthrough for a preview of the steps involved when proofreading on this site. ![]()
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