I found a response form on the google books site. It is meant to be for people 
who want their books published I am afrais, but this was not all to clear. 
Anyway, it accepted my Google account and I submitted this problem
 
Peter
 
Drs. P.J.C. van Boheemen
Hoofd Applicatieontwikkeling en beheer - Bibliotheek Wageningen UR
Head of Application Development and Management - Wageningen University and 
Research Library
tel. +31 317 48 25 17                                                           
                         http://library.wur.nl <http://library.wur.nl/> 
P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail

________________________________

Van: Code for Libraries namens Jonathan Rochkind
Verzonden: ma 17-3-2008 21:05
Aan: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Onderwerp: Re: [CODE4LIB] Free covers from Google



Interesting that these problems arise even when using the API as Google
intends on the client side.

I would encourage people to tell Google about this. If only we knew a
way to tell Google about it. If you can find a public email address
anywhere or comment form, let us know. And if you are having problems in
production even when using the API client side as intended, let Google
know. Maybe there will be a miracle and they'll care. Chances are higher
here, because it seems like they created this feature in large part for
libraries. If libraries are finding it does not work in production...

Jonathan

Boheemen, Peter van wrote:
> Godmar,
> It did not shut down during development, yesterday, when I developed it from 
> home. It broke down today, when people started to use it. All university 
> desktop computer have got dynamic 10.*.*.* adresses. The gateway does NAT so 
> they are exposed to google with about three possible IP adresses. Or, if they 
> use SFX, the IP adress of the Open URL resolver, or in the case of citrix, 
> the IP adress of that machine. Anyway, all these approaches suffer from the 
> same problem with Google's policy.
> Besides all that, I prefer a clean XML interface like Amazon provides above 
> the JSON approach of Google.
> And I do prefer server side handling, since I got control over what the user 
> is presented and I do not have problems with javascript support of the 
> specific browser that the user is equiped with.
>
> Peter
>
>
> Drs. P.J.C. van Boheemen
> Hoofd Applicatieontwikkeling en beheer - Bibliotheek Wageningen UR
> Head of Application Development and Management - Wageningen University and 
> Research Library
> tel. +31 317 48 25 17                                                         
>                            http://library.wur.nl <http://library.wur.nl/>  
> <http://library.wur.nl/>
> P Please consider the environment before printing this e-mail
>
> ________________________________
>
> Van: Code for Libraries namens Godmar Back
> Verzonden: ma 17-3-2008 16:21
> Aan: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
> Onderwerp: Re: [CODE4LIB] Free covers from Google
>
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 17, 2008 at 11:13 AM, Tim Spalding <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>>  limits. I don't think it's a strict hits-per-day, I think it's heuristic
>>>
>>  >  software meant to stop exactly what we'd be trying to do, server-side
>>  >  machine-based access.
>>
>>  Aren't we still talking about covers? I see *no* reason to go
>>  server-side on that. Browser-side gets you what you want-covers from
>>  Google-without the risk they'll shut you down over overuse.
>>
>>
>
> But Peter's experience says otherwise, no?
> His computer was shut down during development - I don't see how Google
> would tell his use from the use of someone doing research using a
> library catalog. Especially if NAT is used with a substantial number
> of users as in Giles's use case.
>
>  - Godmar
>
>

--
Jonathan Rochkind
Digital Services Software Engineer
The Sheridan Libraries
Johns Hopkins University
410.516.8886
rochkind (at) jhu.edu

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