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----------------------------Original message----------------------------
Forwarded from the NINCH list.

>>> "David L. Green" <[log in to unmask]> 04/08/00 10:09am >>>
NINCH ANNOUNCEMENT
News on Networking Cultural Heritage Resources
from across the Community
April 7, 2000

                              QUESTIA PRESS RELEASE
                             http://www.questia.com

In the context of the relationship of e-commerce ventures with our
own mostly nonprofit enterprise, I thought readers would be
interested in this recent announcement of a commercial service
enterprise promising rich access to digitized research tools. This
is, at least currently, a library service restricted to books and
journals.

David Green
===========

>Date: Thu, 6 Apr 2000 17:42:50 -0400 (EDT)
>From: Ann Okerson <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Questia Press Release
>
>More on the e-books front:  a large new vendor positions self to license
>academic books.  Limited contact with this vendor suggests a different
>approach: targeting content.  Will be worth following their progress.
Ann Okerson
>
>---------- Forwarded message ----------
>4 April 2000
>
>FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
>
>FOR BUSINESS & TECHNOLOGY EDITORS
>
>Questia Reveals Development of Revolutionary Online Research
Service  Will deliver on the true promise of the Internet by providing
access to the wealth of human knowledge.
>
>Houston TX (April 4, 2000) - Questia Media, Inc., a new media venture
>driven by an extraordinary team of experienced leaders and
visionaries, today revealed the development of a revolutionary online
research service that will deliver on the true promise of the Internet by
providing access to the wealth of human knowledge.  Through ongoing
funding projected to total $210 million during this year and next, Questia
is building the first online service to provide unlimited access to the full
text of hundreds of thousands of books, journals and periodicals, as well
as tools to easily use this information.  For millions of college students,
the Questia service will enable them to research and compose their
papers at any time, from every connected corner of the world.
>
>"Throughout history, many people have struggled with inadequate
access to knowledge," noted Questia founder and CEO Troy Williams.
"Important events such as Gutenberg's printing press and the emergence
of the public library have made books accessible to larger audiences.
Yet still today, many people struggle with inadequate access.  Even
those with access to the world's largest libraries cannot avoid the fact
that books are finite resources that are available to only one person at a
time - an access limitation that Questia overcomes."
>
>"Questia is different from most eBusinesses," Williams continued.  "Most
have been merely translating today's brick-and-mortar activities to the
Internet, converting brochures into websites or setting up eCommerce to
sell goods and services online.  But none of this activity really delivers
on the promise of the Internet -- to provide access to the wealth of
human knowledge.  By digitizing the books most needed by college
students, by making them accessible to all students at any time, and by
hyperlinking footnotes and references to the precise page cited, Questia
is creating a revolutionary research tool that enables users to
instantaneously follow a complete train of thought from one book to
another.  This has never before been accomplished in the history of
human learning, and it offers the possibility to truly change how people
learn," Williams concluded. Similar to a traditional library model, emerging
Internet-based library and electronic book services are limited by the
actual number of copyrighted books they purchase - one copy of a book
can only be accessed by one person at a time.  In contrast, Questia will
offer a complete research service with rights secured directly from
publishers so that an unlimited number of people may access a given
book at a given time.  Questia expects to have a robust 50,000 volumes
digitized by early 2001 and is projected to have over 250,000 within
three years - that's greater than the number of volumes in over 80
percent of all academic libraries in the United States.
>
>Substantial investment in people and dollars
>
>Questia has quietly amassed over $45 million dollars in venture funding
from the venture capital firm TA Associates of Boston and individuals,
and has grown in just a few months to over 200 employees in Houston
and New York.
>
>"The Questia vision is so compelling that we have been able to attract
the very best talent to our team," said Williams.  "Compaq co-founder Rod
Canion, Enron chairman and chief executive officer Ken Lay - both
extraordinary visionaries in their own right - are on our board of
directors and actively participating in our mission.  With the recent
funding from TA Associates, senior managing director Andy McLane
also joins the board.  Moreover, we have built an experienced senior
management team from the publishing, Internet, and computer industries
that is absolutely first-rate.  Finally, we have enrolled important academic
and publishing partners," Williams said.
>
>Williams founded Questia Media, Inc. in 1998 after completing Harvard
Law School.  He formulated the vision, enrolled others, built a prototype
of the service and secured venture funding - much of this from a small
Houston apartment furnished with nothing but a folding table, a PC, and a
five-dollar plastic chair.
>
>Experienced business leaders on the management team include: Tim
Harris, former vice president for Compaq (NYSE: CPQ), as VP of finance,
chief financial officer and chief operating officer; Linda Raglan
Cunningham, former senior vice president for HarperCollins Publishers,
as VP of publishing; Randy Dragon, former vice president of technical
operations for Disney Online (NYSE: DIS), as VP and chief technology
officer; Todd Papke, former vice president of Internet technology for
ShopAtHome.com, as VP of engineering; Kathleen Harrington Clark,
former director of advertising for Compaq, as VP of marketing; David
Cabello, former senior vice president, general counsel and secretary for
Compaq, as VP, general counsel and secretary; Mary Ryder, former vice
president of operations for First Data Corporation/TeleCheck (NYSE;
FDC), as VP of customer support; and Charles Winder, former vice
president of operations for Compaq, as VP of operations.  A roster of
brilliant young Internet visionaries with diverse backgrounds and
experiences rounds out the senior management team.

>Compelling benefits to students
>
>The Questia service will be live at www.questia.com in early 2001
(near start of the second semester of the 2000-2001 academic year)
with at least 50,000 of the most valued volumes in the liberal arts from
the 20th and 21st centuries (not including textbooks).  This initial online
collection will offer access to a range of titles that are today -- for all
practical purposes -- out of reach of many students.  With a monthly
subscription fee and an existing Internet connection, students will be
able to search the online collection, research related references, view
the actual pages of individual titles, and compose and save their papers
online.  For college students doing research papers, the Questia service
will become the indispensable tool for researching and writing. "Today, it
is unthinkable for a student to compose a paper on a typewriter; the
PC-based word processor is the tool of choice.  Very soon, it will be
unthinkable for a student to research and write a paper without using the
Questia service," Williams declared.
>
>Compelling benefits to publishers
>
>For publishers, Questia represents a tremendous opportunity to
increase revenues.
>
>Questia has developed a way for publishers to receive revenue each
time a student accesses even a single page of a title.  This has never
been possible before. Thus, older titles and out-of-print books that have
been read and studied thousands of times over the years in libraries (yet
have not generated new income) will now produce new revenues and
become more valuable assets to publishers.  Moreover, current industry
trends show that traditional individual copy sales of titles benefit from
exposure on the web because consumers are more inclined to buy
books they can browse online.  Questia will make it easier and more
convenient for subscribers to locate, search, and browse an entire
library of books, vastly increasing awareness of previously hard-to-find
titles.
>
>In sum, Questia offers publishers a new opportunity to revitalize older
titles and to broaden the audience and gain exposure for newer titles.
Through this, they can gain additional revenues for all titles that would
otherwise have been unrealized.
>
>Compelling benefits to librarians and professors
>
>For librarians and professors, Questia offers a new valuable tool that
facilitates their goal of helping students to find the right information
effectively and efficiently.  The Questia search function alone - to be
offered to all at no charge - allows librarians or professors to find the
exact volumes and pages that can answer a student's question.
Because the research process is more efficient and less cumbersome, it
will mean fewer dead-end trips to the stacks, thus allowing for more time
for the mentoring and thoughtful interaction that actually foster a love of
discovery and learning.
>
>About Questia
>
>Founded in 1998, Questia Media, Inc. is building the first online service
to provide unlimited access to the full text of hundreds of thousands of
books, journals and periodicals, as well as tools to easily use this
information.  For millions of college students and researchers, the
Questia service will enable them to efficiently research and compose
papers at any time, from every connected corner of the world.  Based in
Houston, TX with over 200 employees, Questia is delivering on the true
promise of the Internet by providing access to the wealth of human
knowledge.  Information can be found at www.questia.com.
>
># # #
>Questia is a service mark of Questia Media, Inc.
>
>Contacts:
>Media:
>John Sweney
>Brookwoods Media Group
>713-934-0529
>[log in to unmask]
>
>Investors:
>Tim Harris
>Questia Media, Inc.
>713-358-2642
>[log in to unmask]

==========================================================David Green
[log in to unmask]                     202-872-0886  fax
<http://www.ninch.org>
==========================================================

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