---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Alexander Rose <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Dec 20, 2008 at 10:26 PM
Subject: [SALT] Four Dimensional Cities
To: [email protected]


Cities are designed and built in three dimensions.  Watching
Prelinger's historic footage of San Francisco Friday night (to a more
than overflowing crowd) reminds us however that one of the most
compelling dimensions to a city is it's fourth dimension - time.

*Note that Counter Pulse will be hosting an encore show for those who
missed this one on February 11th at 7:30pm.

The crowd gasped at an incomplete 280 freeway, and watched in
amazement as horse an buggies dodged in and out of cable car traffic
on Market Street in 01905. We sat silent watching the homeless of the
forties, and cheered to see Playland by the Beach and Laughing Sal.
Rick reminded us, "The past is not passe, it is prologue."

Most archives and libraries put up access barriers in response to
copyright laws. In contrast Rick has attacked the vast amount of work
that is either out of copyright, or left in the ambiguous gray zones,
like home movies.  We have always been told that there is no economic
case for archives, the Prelinger Archive and Library not only upends
that notion but proves that access is the key, not protection.

Rick started out in 01982 as an amateur collector of the un-collected.
 He began by collecting film out-takes, esoteric commercial films, and
all the other ephemera that is usually discarded by archives and
libraries.  Today he is a professional archivist who funds his
collections by selling commercial access, AND giving it away.  Rick
pointed out that his archival sales go up the more he provides free
access.  The film student who uses a clip in film school, often
becomes a professional who buys the content later.

Most interesting in seeing this historic content, was the contrast
that it draws to our modern sense of place, and the dramatic increase
in documentation now going on.   Today's Google Maps Street View shot
is tomorrow's "Lost Landscape".

--
Alexander Rose
The Long Now Foundation (executive director)




-- 
anselm 415 215 4856 http://hook.org http://makerlab.com http://meedan.net

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