Hi Peter
  Thanks for doing that.  I will have something to report also this month; I 
wangled an invitation for our MAPS chapter, the Golden State Phonograph 
Society, to visit UCSB Library's Special Collections Department and hear a 
program on the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project.  I think most of 
you are familiar with it, but it is a progam where, using an Archeophone, they 
record and digitize cylinder records. To date they have over 6,000 digitized.  
About ten of us are going and will get a presentation, a tour of the cylinder 
collection and will view the actual recording and digitization process. I will 
report on it afterwards.
  John Robles

Peter Fraser <[email protected]> wrote:
  Hi -

well, i was able to attend and it was quite fascinating. afterwards, 
Dr. Haber invited me to his lab, where i viewed some of the 
equipment. if you're interested, go to his site and review the 
materials housed there:

http://www-cdf.lbl.gov/~av/

Rene Rondeau has provided him with some recorded tinfoil, but he 
hasn't had time to work up a jig to read it.

-- peter



On May 26, 2006, at 7:41 AM, Peter Fraser wrote:

>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
>> Interdisciplinary Instrumentation Colloquium
>>
>> Using Optical Metrology to Reconstruct Mechanical Sound Recordings
>>
>> Speaker: Carl Haber
>> Physics Division, LBNL
>>
>> Date: Wednesday, May 31, 2006
>> Time: 4:00 PM sharp
>> Place: LBNL, Building 50 Auditorium
>> (directions at http://InstrumentationColloquium.LBL.gov)
>> Prior to 1950 nearly all sound
>> recordings were made on mechanical media such as wax, foil,
>> shellac, lacquer, and plastic. Some of these older recordings
>> contain material of great historical value or interest, but are
>> damaged, decaying, or now considered too delicate to play.
>> Archives seek to preserve and also create broad access to their
>> collections.
>>
>> An ongoing effort at Berkeley Lab has applied methods of optical
>> metrology and image processing to reconstruct sound stored on these
>> mechanical carriers. Of note is the IRENE project which will
>> provide an optical scanning system to the Library of Congress.
>> This talk will focus on technical aspects of optical sound
>> reconstruction as practiced at the Lab.
>
> -- Peter
> [email protected]
>
>
>
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