Subject: The Book Machine
Date: 14 Aug 91 Sender: Public-Access Computer Systems Forum <PACS-L [at] UHUPVM1__BITNET> From: Glee Willis <willis [at] unssun__nevada__edu> Subject: For the tidbit files ... ... [Excerpted from Engineering Education, July/Aug 1991, 81(5):461] NOW READ THIS! BOOKS PRINTED WHILE YOU WAIT Went to the local library, tried the nearest bookshop, phoned the best bookstore in town, but you can't get get the book you're after except by special order? If only you didn't have to wait. Soon you may not have to. Three British inventors have developed a machine to print and bind books in less than an hour. Last summer they enlisted the help of three mechanical engineering seniors from Worchester Polytechnic Institute in surveying customers, authors, publishers, and bookshop managers to determine the feasibility and viability of marketing the machine. The Book Machine consists of a compact printer/binder system that uses a conventional laser printer. At a bookstore or proposed Book Machine Center, customers would select from texts stored on compact discs (which can hold as many as 400 each), and the book would be produced on the spot. This service promises to give readers access to books that would otherwise be difficult or time-consuming to obtain. Physicians, professors, and researchers are expected to be the initial audience. *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:15 Distributed: Saturday, August 17, 1991 Message Id: cdl-5-15-008 ***Received on Thursday, 15 August, 1991