12 Million Historic Photos Scanned to Web 148
Snosty writes "The Globe and Mail is reporting that British Pathe, a cinema news service dating to the 19th century, has scanned one image for every second of their 3500 hours of 35mm film. That makes for 12 million images covering everything from the Boer War to the Beatles available on their web site!"
Uhh, not quite... (Score:4, Informative)
Give them a few days to realise that their press releases were a bit more effective than they originally anticipated and I'm sure that the site will be alright.
Re:Uhh, not quite... (Score:2)
quite nifty.. certainly useful if you're doing some school presentation or whatever.
.
Will we feel the wrath when... (Score:2, Informative)
According to the article, "Peter Fydler, archive marketing director at..." which implies they WILL sell it, probably commercially to news organizations or whatever (think History Channel)seems balanced by "By using the newsreel archive to create a huge collection of still images, people can have access free of charge to printable pictures, which will add to their enjoyment of history," he said.
So it seems that this archive will be freely av
Baldrick! (Score:1)
Re:Baldrick! (Score:1)
Re:Baldrick! (Score:1)
Hi-Res? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes (Score:3, Informative)
I saw the site yesterday. Nice resource.
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:1)
"You can also license higher resolution copies of the same items for PowerPoint Presentations and Web Publishing, or simply buy a still from the item for private use."
Honestly, did you even read it????
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:3, Insightful)
1) One would think they want to profit from licensing the hi-res images for commercial use. I don't really know if it's okay to release important images from important early films that geeks of my kind value and cherish for commercial iconographic use just per se. I understand BP's need to be financially compensated for their trouble, but at least do it
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:2)
Why is this? It seems to me that by not updating the medium, you run the risk of not being able to play your preserved media because all of the players h
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:2)
It's possible that in the future that there will be some way of recovering information from the original medium that will not be possible after the content has been copied to another medium.
So I agree with perserving the original media.
But it's fantastic that they are converting all this content into digital form. Digital content has several large advantages of analog media content:
-It can be reproduced and copied quickly.
-It can be stored in a smaller space than the original analog medi
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:1)
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:1)
The problem with copying to newer types of media (and I am speaking specifically of the case of film here) is that the newer media is often less stable and less likely to be accessible in the future. Film as we know it has been around for over a century and films from the late 1800's can still be projected. Compare that with the difficulty you would have accessing digital media like magnetic tapes or large floppy disks from not too long ago. As much as I love DVDs, I would never, ever want them considere
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:2)
Re:Hi-Res? (Score:1)
It's a very vague term which changes definition by the day. Today's high resolution is tomorrow's mobile phone screen...
Better to keep film originals (with a resolution which can be measured in molecules, I guess) in archive than rely on any scanned version, since anything less than the original entails a loss of quality and 'resolution'
Yes, I know this is a fairly redundant comment...
holy crap! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:holy crap! (Score:2)
Re:holy crap! (Score:1)
Quick thinking (Score:2)
"That makes for 12 million images covering everything from the Boer War to the Beatles available on their web site!"
... the website which is not available anymore thanks to /.
Re:Quick thinking (Score:2, Informative)
HH
Perfect job for interns! (Score:3, Funny)
The job of scanning 1 image of every second of 3500 hours worth of footage seems like the perfect intership.
Starts out interesting...
Quickly becomes boring...
After a while you want to throw up each time you make a scan...
Half way through you actually throw up every time you scan a second...
When you're done, all that is left is an insensible blow of twitching flesh!
Re:Perfect job for interns! (Score:1)
please see, for example, British Pathe Selects Optibase for Archive Management System [optibase.com]
Licences? (Score:1)
Re:Licences? (Score:1)
Even I couldn't use all 12 million images, but would be interested if there were a subset available for public use.
Re:Licences? (Score:2)
For private use only, but you can purchase additional rights, I don't know what the terms would be. Follow a link to a particular image and see shopping basket buttons and an email address archive.sales@itn.co.uk
Re:If you can't spell license (Score:1)
Re:If you can't spell license (Score:1)
Re:If you can't spell license (Score:1)
Re:If you can't spell license (Score:1)
Wow (Score:1)
That makes for there server dying under the Slasdhot effect!
Next, Churchill to the Clash (Score:1)
Why'd the skip the A's?
Re:Wow (Score:1)
Historical benefit (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
I found a box of about 200 photo's from her father, collecting dust, from when he was in the Wermacht during WW2.
By trade, he was an architect and a fairly good one, and after the war he primarily worked on re-constructing and building new churches, so you can imagine what his b&w photo's of t
Re:Historical benefit (Score:2)
Re:Historical benefit (Score:2)
Great idea. Unfortunately, I suspect that as soon as such a project got off the ground there would be a backlash from privacy advocates claiming that it was an invasion of their privacy by the CIA/FBI/KGB/Home Land Security/Microsoft/USENET Cabal/etc.
I've clearly been in /.too long.
Stephen
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
Re:Historical benefit (Score:2)
True. There's a whole lot of revisionism goes on; somtimes with a pen, sometimes with a sword and sometimes with a broken bottle or fist.
I'm sure that documentaries and history books in Iraq told a very different story of Western influences in Middle Eastern events and politics to those in the US and Europe. Actually, something I'm tempted to do someday is get a history book that's used in UK schools to teach the American Revolution and a book used in US schools to teach the same period to compare them.
Re:Historical benefit (Score:2)
Here's a simple example:
Is the cup half empty or half full?
My answer to this is that it depends on what you want to emphasize. If I was thirsty, I'd say it was half empty. If I wasn't, I would probably say half full. Two historical points of view can say the same thing, but in a completely different way. You have to read between
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
-What did a fire hydrant look like 100 years ago? I don't mean a fuzzy distant image, but what was the surface like? Was their writing on it? How many close-ups of fire hydrants as they were installed 100 years ago exist?
-What was a typical telephone pole like 100 years ago? Usually they have boxes and other things sprouting all over. These might have been dif
Re:Historical benefit (Score:2, Funny)
I don't think there's going to be a shortage of mundane photographs anytime soon - especially with the fact that you can't even buy a mobile phone now without it having a camera embedded in it.
> Was their writing on it?
It probably was their writing, yes.
>How many close-ups of fire hydrants as they were >installed 100 years ago exist?
>What was a
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
But just because you can't imagine being interested in these types of photographs does not mean that there are not others who would be.
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
But just because you can't imagine being interested in these types of photographs does not mean that there are not others who would be."
I have to admit - your logic is impeccable.
Re:Historical benefit (Score:1)
Re:Historical benefit -- Make Yours Available (Score:2)
I hope you will make these photos available too. These days of Internet and ever falling storage make the cost (to you) minor, while the benefit to the world, large.
It's never been this great before.
Re:OSS (Score:1)
Re:Read the fine print (Score:2)
Are they not? Some of the older ones might be. Just because companies who have been scanning in photos/stills that have passed into the public domain have been calling their digital forms copyrightable, it doesn't mean that it will hold up.
Archives of historic/public-domain images? (Score:2)
Someone suggested Deviantart, but it appeared to be only recent artwork.
Re:Archives of historic/public-domain images? (Score:3, Informative)
If your tastes are as morbid as mine (NSFW) (Score:1)
"Criminals are made, not born." Andrew Kehoe
Re: (Score:1)
Wow is there server gonna die (Score:1)
...and it runs Linux! (Score:1)
I wonder what is the database used though.
Re:...and it runs Linux! (Score:1)
Photo Coverage (Score:2, Funny)
no, I mean REALLY covered it!
Do they have pictures? (Score:2)
Great... (Score:1)
Article submission: (Score:2)
-Adam
Just the B's? (Score:3, Funny)
How many images will there be once they finish the rest of the alphabet?
Well, let's see... (Score:2, Insightful)
At one picture per second, that comes out to 12.6 million pictures for the whole alphabet. My guess is that the 3500 hr estimate was a bit hight which would bring the actually number closed to 12 mil even for the whole thing.
Oh, you were kidding!...nevermind
Mirror? (Score:1, Funny)
From the site: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:From the site: (Score:2)
"Above all we would like users to enjoy discovering the past through our wonderful archive, and would hope that in return the images downloaded are not misused in any way."
Really specif
Re:From the site: (Score:2)
Why would we want to see more of companies arbitrarily shutting down web sites they don't like?
Having a formal policy is a good thing, because then you know
Re:From the site: (Score:1)
History (Score:2)
rus
Not the same (Score:2)
of course... (Score:2)
One image for every second (Score:1)
I'm going to sue slashdot for misinformation (Score:1)
They should refer them as 12 Mebi pictures then
God could not be reached for comment. (Score:1)
javascript? (Score:1)
Then it played its cheesy flash intro and stopped.
I'd love to see the pictures, but they have to get rid of the M$ bloatware.
Re:javascript? (Score:1)
Wait for the page to load, maybe? Before the whole page loads, the script doesn't execute. The site is under heavy load, so you have to be patient.
Then it played its cheesy flash intro and stopped.
I'd love to see the pictures, but they have to get rid of the M$ bloatware.
Uhm, dude, Microsoft-bashing is fun, but neither javascript nor Flash are Microsoft technologies. Yo
Re:javascript? (Score:1)
Hey, you're right. Thanks for the tip.
I called it micro$oft bloatware because many sites today are designed for IE only. Typically when a site tells me I don't have something I know I have, then I assume they're not checking for the right things. I've seen it before and I'll see it again, I'm sure.
And I'm very well aware that neither javascript nor Flash
Free stuff on archive.org (Score:3, Interesting)
The Prelinger archive there is a wonderful treasury of historical material. And the free license means you can cut n paste any of it into your own video projects.
wow, (Score:1)
That is ofcourse the pictures are cached to it.
Anyone care to mirror this site? (Score:2)
Hehe. Hehehehehehehe.
So what's wrong with MPEG? (Score:2)
GG, Photoshop Phriday (Score:2)
How much of this is uncopyrighted? (Score:2)
If Lessig ever gets his "bulk copyright clearance" operation off the ground, this is something for them to work on.
Re:How much of this is uncopyrighted? (Score:2)
Re:How much of this is uncopyrighted? (Score:2)
Re:How much of this is uncopyrighted? (Score:2)
Well, there's the EULA approach, which has been held to work in cases where the underlying material is not copyrightable (ProCD vs. Zeidenberg). That doesn't bind third parties. If someone licenses content uncopyrighted content and an unrelated third party with lawful access to it copies it (as from a web site), the EULA doesn't apply to the third party.
Then there's the Corbis approach. Corbis adds digital rights management information t
Excuse my ignorance, but someone has to ask... (Score:2)
Re:Excuse my ignorance, but someone has to ask... (Score:1)
Path ey
Path -> (PATHalogical)
ey -> (hEY)
(if you understand LaTeX accents and how to pronounce French words its basically path\'e)
Re:Excuse my ignorance, but someone has to ask... (Score:2)
I'm not sure, but I assume that this word has an english pronounciation on the first syllable and the last vowel retains the original French pronounciation:
'pah-thay'
Or, more precisely, an unvoiced bilabial plosive schwa followed by a dental fricative diphthongal.
Of course, since I'm never actually heard the word pronounced, I'm possibly wrong.
Re:Excuse my ignorance, but someone has to ask... (Score:2)
but with a lisp.
How long before the entire movies? (Score:2)
At 2GB/hour for DVD quality, that's only 7TB. That's not as much as it sounds like. Seriously. Your desktop today can have near 1TB for less than $1000 [slashdot.org].
It's hard to keep up with the current reality of amazingly cheap storage by even recent historical standards.
Did they scan the best pic of the 24? (Score:2)
The value would be greater if they displayed 24 thumbnails on the screen and had someone click on the best one. Even some bad choices would likely not be any worse than just every 24th one.
History on the Web... (Score:1)
any Doctor Who stuff? (Score:2)
Right now, checking anything and everything that is British car related, although very slowly.
How did they Scan that much Film? (Score:1)
From the article: rescanning every inch of the archive's 3,500 hours of 35mm film
not sure how many inches of 35mm film makes one hour but I'm sure that's a lot of inches to scan.
Leads me to wonder what scanning equipment they chose to do the job.
down still (Score:1)
Re:already? (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted !! (Score:1)