Enlaces a Bibliotecas virtuales
Los enlaces siguientes conducen a otros sitios web.
1. Open Library. Enlace a la biblioteca de Internet Archive con la opción de acceder a millones de libros, en diferentes idiomas, en la modalidad de lectura y/o audición online, descarga en diversos formatos, y préstamo controlado.
2. Proyecto Gutenberg. El proyecto Gutenberg fue liderado por el estadounidense Michael Hart en 1971 e iniciado en el laboratorio de la Universidad de Illinois. El resultado fue una base de datos con más de cinco mil obras literarias, en su mayoría de autores clásicos, de libre disposición tanto en formato HTML como ASCII (texto plano). Casi todas las obras están en inglés aunque podemos encontrar en castellano dos joyas inmortales: El Quijote y La Celestina.
3. Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. Obras de autores en castellano, catalán, gallego, etcétera. Hemeroteca, archivos, estudios, etcétera. Vínculos a otras bibliotecas.
4. The Internet Public Library. Online Texts Collection. The IPL Online Texts Collection contains over 18,000 titles that can be browsed by author, by title, or by Dewey Decimal Classification.
5. The Internet Classics Archive. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Select from a list of 441 works of classical literature by 59 different authors, including user-driven commentary and "reader's choice" Web sites. Mainly Greco-Roman works (some Chinese and Persian), all in English translation.
6. Internet Archive is a non-profit library of millions of free books, movies, software, music, websites, and more.
7. The Online Library of Liberty is a project of Liberty Fund, Inc., a private, non-profit educational foundation based in Indianapolis, Indiana. The aim of the OLL is to provide thousands of titles about individual liberty, limited constitutional government, and the free market, free of charge to the public, for educational purposes.
8. Perseus Digital Library. Perseus is an evolving digital library, engineering interactions through time, space, and language. Our primary goal is to bring a wide range of source materials to as large an audience as possible. We anticipate that greater accessibility to the sources for the study of the humanities will strengthen the quality of questions, lead to new avenues of research, and connect more people through the connection of ideas.
9. Adelaide University Library. eBooks@Adelaide has now officially closed (Posted on Jan-7-2020) We are very grateful to you all for your patronage and support over the years. The University of Adelaide Library is proud to have contributed to the early movement of free eBooks and to have witnessed their popularity as they grew to become a regular fixture in study, research, and leisure. There are a number of reputable alternatives for free access to material within the public domain.