Gregory B. Newby
Gregory B. Newby | |
|---|---|
Newby in 2018 | |
| Born | Gregory Barton Newby February 9, 1965 Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
| Died | October 21, 2025 (aged 60) Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada |
| Known for | Project Gutenberg |
| Website | petascale |
Gregory B. Newby (February 9, 1965 – October 21, 2025) was an American and Canadian information scientist who worked on supercomputing projects and increasing access to information using the Internet. He was the volunteer CEO of the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the organization supporting the Project Gutenberg library of digitized ebooks, and was a longtime volunteer for the conference Hackers on Planet Earth (HOPE). In the 1990s and 2000s, he taught in the library and information science departments at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Early life and education
Newby was born in Montreal in February 1965.[1] He received a BA in Communication and Psychology and MA in Communication from the State University of New York at Albany.[2][3] He completed a PhD at Syracuse University in information transfer.[2][4] While studying, he was interested in BITNET and the early Internet.[2] He also had an MBA in Sustainable Systems from the Bainbridge Graduate Institute of Pinchot University.[1]
Career
Newby was a faculty member at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science from 1991 to 1997.[2] During his work there, he co-founded Prairienet, an early community internet network, in 1993.[5] Prairienet was a free-net that provided Illinois residents free access to online services including email, the World Wide Web, Gopher, and FTP.[6] It was part of community informatics work at the university, a goal of empowering communities through access to computer resources and networked information.[5] Starting in 2001, Newby served as Standards Editor for the Open Grid Forum (formerly the Global Grid Forum).[7]
Newby wrote an early guide to navigating the Internet, including information about web directories, titled Directory of Directories on the Internet: A Guide to Information Sources (Meckler, 1994).[8][9] A reviewer, James R. Rettig, said the book was helpful for overcoming the "vast dark stretches between the wondrous bright information sources one can find out there in cyberspace".[9] Newby also co-edited a book of essays about publishing academic work online in 1996, Scholarly Publishing: The Electronic Frontier.[10]
Newby was an assistant professor at UNC School of Information and Library Science from 1997 to 2003.[11] While at UNC, he included an unofficial DVD player for Linux, DeCSS, in one of his syllabuses, and he received pressure from the Motion Picture Association and the university to take it down.[12]
In 2003, Newby became a staff member at the Arctic Region Supercomputing Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.[11] He became the director of the center in 2005.[13][2] He oversaw supercomputing work including weather forecasting for Alaska.[14][15][16] He managed King Abdullah University of Science and Technology's Supercomputing Laboratory in Saudi Arabia.[17] He joined Compute Canada (now the Digital Research Alliance of Canada) as its chief technology officer in 2014.[13][18] In 2020, he started working in IT for the government of Yukon, Canada.[4][7] Newby's work was cited by the Yukon Government's Deputy Minister Award for Group Service Excellence and the Yukon Government's Premier's Award of Excellence and Innovation.[19]
He coauthored papers on information retrieval, high-performance computing, computer-supported cooperative work, and other topics.[20][21][22]
Volunteer roles
Newby got involved with Project Gutenberg in 1991 or 1992, became friends with founder Michael S. Hart, and was "undoubtedly the most consequential volunteer", according to a scholar writing about the history of the project.[11][23] In 2000 or 2001, Newby formed the associated nonprofit organization, the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, and became its director and CEO.[11][24][2] He also worked to integrate Distributed Proofreaders into the project.[23] He was a founding trustee of the Distributed Proofreaders Foundation at its formation in July 2006.[25][26] He led improvements to the technology platform underlying Project Gutenberg[27] and navigated challenges related to the copyright status of books in different countries.[28] He published an ebook about the project, Forty-Five Years of Digitizing Ebooks: Project Gutenberg's Practices, in 2019.[29] In 2023, the Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection was named as one of "The Best Inventions of 2023" by TIME magazine, after the organization collaborated with Microsoft and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to employ text-to-speech technology to transform 5,000 books into artificial intelligence-narrated audiobooks.[30]
Newby served as a co-organizer for the conference Hackers on Planet Earth (HOPE) for many years.[31][32] He presented about hacker ethics in 2000[33][34] and "hacker" as a positive term in 2002.[35] At HOPE XV in 2024, he spoke about opportunities to mitigate climate change.[4]
Personal life and death
Newby lived in Whitehorse, Canada.[36] He completed several ultramarathons.[37][36] He also participated in dog sled races[38] and ran a recreational sled dog kennel with his wife Ilana Kingsley.[39]
On October 21, 2025, Project Gutenberg and 2600 Magazine (which sponsors the HOPE conference) announced that Newby had died from pancreatic cancer. He was 60.[40][41][42]
References
- ^ a b "Launching a New General Purpose Supercomputer". CANHEIT - TECC 2018. 2018. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b c d e f "Gregory B. Newby - Alaska Library Association Annual Conference". Alaska Library Association. 2006. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Newby, Gregory Barton, M.A. (December 1988). "A self-concept based approach to artificial intelligence, with a case study of the Galileo Computer System". Retrieved 24 October 2025.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c Kazmer, Rick (2024-06-16). "Tech expert thinks hackers can help develop more sustainable future: 'They are trying to improve situations by exceeding limitations of design'". The Cool Down. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b van der Graaff, Sally (2015-01-01). "From Prairienet to the CDI: Writing the History". Masters Theses: 38–45.
- ^ "Prairienet: Information superhighway opens to the people of Illinois". Southtown Star. 1994-07-28. p. 78. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b Newby, Gregory (August 2024). "Curriculum Vitae". Petascale.org. Retrieved 2025-10-04.
- ^ "Surfing to the Global Classroom: an Exploration of Educational Enrichment on the INTERNET - 60th IFLA General Conference". IFLA. 1994. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b Rettig, James R. (May 1994). "Directory of directories on the Internet (Book Review)". Wilson Library Bulletin. 68 (72). Retrieved 2025-09-27 – via EBSCO.
- ^ Harter, Stephen P. (1997). "Scholarly Publishing: The Electronic Frontier. Robin P. Peek , Gregory B. Newby". The Library Quarterly. 67 (3): 293–294. doi:10.1086/629954. ISSN 0024-2519.
- ^ a b c d "Gregory B. Newby". Open Source Research People. ibiblio. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "Local professor runs afoul of Hollywood's lawyers". The Chapel Hill News. 2000-04-28. p. 6. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b "Programmable Silicon! Don't be afraid, don't be very afraid!". CANHEIT-HPCS 2016. 2016. Archived from the original on 14 February 2022. Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ "Put Alaska on the weather map". The Peninsula Clarion. 2007-03-16. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Mölders, Nicole; Morton, Don; Newby, Greg; Stevens, Eric; Stuefer, Martin (2008). "Nowcasting and Forecasting Alaskan Weather". Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. 89 (4): 515–519. Bibcode:2008BAMS...89..515M. doi:10.1175/BAMS-89-4-515. ISSN 0003-0007. JSTOR 26216803.
- ^ Dunham, Mike (April 24, 2012). "UAF purchases supercomputer believed to be state's largest". Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Weche, Meres (2015-04-16). "Shaheen-Cray XC40 supercomputer arrives at KAUST". King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. Retrieved 2025-09-13.
- ^ "Compute Canada Announces New CTO to Lead Upgrades to National Advanced Research Platform". WestGrid. 16 December 2014. Archived from the original on 13 February 2022. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "Gregory B Newby". profiles. Retrieved 23 October 2025.
- ^ "Gregory B Newby". Author profiles. Association for Computing Machinery Digital Library. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "Author: Gregory B. Newby". The Interaction Design Foundation. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ "Gregory B. Newby, University of Alaska System". ResearchGate. Retrieved 13 February 2022.
- ^ a b Rowberry, Simon (2023-06-15). "The Early Development of Project Gutenberg c.1970–2000". Elements in Publishing and Book Culture. doi:10.1017/9781108785778.
- ^ "Greg Newby". Wired Next Fest 2021 Milano (in Italian). Retrieved 26 September 2025.
- ^ "Distributed Proofreaders Foundation Certificate of Incorporation" (PDF). Retrieved 2025-10-20.
- ^ "Distributed Proofreaders Foundation History (DPWiki)". Retrieved 2025-10-20.
- ^ Hane, Paula (May 2004). "Project Gutenberg Progresses". Information Today. 21 (5). Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Dotti, Gianluca (2021-10-03). "Greg Newby al Wired Next Fest: Project Gutenberg torna disponibile in Germania". Wired Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Newby, Gregory B. (18 October 2019). Forty-Five Years of Digitizing Ebooks: Project Gutenberg's Practices. Project Gutenberg.
- ^ Stokel-Walker, Chris (24 October 2023). "Project Gutenberg Open Audiobook Collection: The 200 Best Inventions of 2023". Time. Retrieved 22 September 2025.
- ^ Newitz, Annalee (July 24, 2006). "Hackers Fight Authority in NYC". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Cox, Joseph (2025-05-22). "Hacker Conference HOPE Says U.S. Immigration Crackdown Caused Massive Crash in Ticket Sales". 404 Media. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Koerner, Brendan I. (2000-07-20). "To heck with hactivism". Salon.com. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ Koerner, Brendan I. (2000-07-25). "Krispy Kremes and Ancient Ethics". The Village Voice. Archived from the original on October 23, 2025. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ "For UNC-CH professor, 'hacker' is a positive word". The News and Observer. 2002-08-02. p. 32. Retrieved 2025-09-27.
- ^ a b "Yukoner Greg Newby finishes fourth in Montane Yukon Arctic Ultra". Whitehorse Star. 11 February 2024. Retrieved 11 September 2025.
- ^ Prokop, Morris (August 7, 2023). "Whitehorse runner tackles the Denali 135 ultra marathon". Whitehorse Daily Star. Retrieved September 27, 2025.
- ^ Plonka, Gabrielle (February 7, 2021). "Sleds, skis and fatbikes race at the Copper Haul dog mushing league". Yukon News. Retrieved September 27, 2025.
- ^ "About StinkyPup". StinkyPup Kennel. October 21, 2025. Retrieved October 22, 2025.
- ^ "Homepage". Project Gutenberg. October 21, 2025. Retrieved October 22, 2025.
The Project Gutenberg community mourns the passing of our CEO, Dr. Greg Newby. Without his years of leadership, Project Gutenberg wouldn't be what it is today.
- ^ "Sad news". 2600. October 21, 2025. Retrieved October 22, 2025.
Our dear friend and one of the main organizers of the HOPE conferences, Greg Newby, has passed away
- ^ "Obituaries". Globe and Mail. October 31, 2025. Retrieved November 4, 2025.
Project Gutenberg CEO Greg Newby helped put a trove of literature online
External links
- Official website
- "About Greg Newby". Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 12 December 2025.