Looks like most government projects. ... Too bad actually as using volunteer collectors and interest parties would have produced a product of lasting value.

On 12/07/2013 03:34 AM, DanKj wrote:
  Not to complain or to look a gift horse in the mouth, but :  Some of
the scans are so poorly done & then highly compressed as to be
illegible.  Some of the original scanning was sloppy in the extreme -
not square in the frame, bad focus carried through entire volumes,
etc.   I've downloaded either the jp2 versions or the "original" scanned
images in some cases, and those are sometimes easier to see. This is the
case with much of the archive dot org files, not just this batch.

The original, uncropped & unadjusted scans often show just how crude was
their setup - books were laid out on a piece of cardboard with a few
frame marks on it, with apparently no means of holding the pages in
bound volumes down FLAT so the whole page could be in focus.  Grease
marks and crumbs showed that the scanning person was eating on the job,
and his dirty fingers and nails appear here and there.  Almost looks as
if they hired bums off the street, quite frankly. Too bad they (the
Library of Congress, I assume) aren't using volunteer collectors to do
the scanning - at least they'd have enough interest to try doing a good
job.


----- Original Message ----- From: srsel...@aol.com
To: Phono-l@oldcrank.org
Sent: Wednesday, December 04, 2013 11:01 PM
Subject: [Phono-L] Fwd: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful new web resources


All I can say is WOW! Not only all the EPMs but look at what else. Below is
a posting from Sam Brylawski from the ARSCList - which I'm sure many of
you  PHONO collectors are not on.

Steve Ramm





I don't recall reading an announcement of this here. If I'm  mistaken I
hope
you'll agree that it's well worth a new mention.

The  great Media History Project that scans media serials for the  Internet
Archive, and provides a handy front end for them, has added runs  of
Talking
Machine World; the 1896 Phonoscope; and the Edison Phonograph  Monthly to
its already rich  holdings.

http://mediahistoryproject.org/broadcasting/

Congrats  and thanks to David Pierce (author of the important and
just-published  survey of extant silent films) and his team, and the staff
of the LC  Recorded Sound Reference Center.

Have fun. My apologies to your  families.

Sam Brylawski
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