Posted on 08/14/2021 7:20:25 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
I love stuff like this!
“Be sure to drink your Ovaltine.”
Your taxes are...any nonpayment of said taxes will result in
bookmark
golf clap - well played
Heh … Galen approves of this message!
Very cool.
THE
DUCK
FLIES
AT
MIDNIGHT
Epstinius didn’t kill himself
Yet the phrase, “The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed” is still indecipherable.
Interesting article, Sunken Civ. The true usefulness of this technique remains to be seen.
What is undeniable is that the Ancient Abby Library of St. Gallen is stunning. The architecture and the number of ancient documents they have preserved for over a thousand years is simply breathtaking. I last visited this world famous site several years ago. The Irish influence in medieval Switzerland is a strange historical fact.
Thanks for posting this.
Oldplayer
Sigh!
Regards,
“There are thousands of old American newspapers and magazines (including military base newsletters, church bulletins, school newspapers, etc.) that are moldering away in libraries and archives or in people’s attics.”
A case in point was a trunk that a widow had that had belonged her husband, who had been on the staff of General George Patton.
Long after her husband died a Patton biographer came to see her looking for information. She had her granddaughter take the man into the attic to “poke through the trunk” to see if he found anything interesting.
On top were the usual things; medals, awards, letters, etc.
Underneath were some soldiers souvenirs like Lugar pistols, nice German binoculars, Nazi flags and so on.
Under THAT was the treasure!
Some notes in a diary book the officer had written during the war.
And THEN...
A complete copy of the Orders of Movement for Third Army. From the day Patton took command until the day he was relieved. The biographer was over the moon! Those Orders would fill in quite a number of holes.
Another note...
When Sgt Bill Guarnere of Easy Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, in the 101st Airborne Division
died in 2014 his family cleaned out his house in preparation of selling it.
When the new owners took possession they noticed a ratty old trunk in the attic.
In it were Sgt Guarnere’s letters from home during the war, souviners from the war, his separation and disability papers and letters he exchanged with men still fighting in Europe.
Fortunately the new owners got in contact with the family and turned the trunk and contents over to them.
How many times has something like that ratty old trunk been thrown away with valuable memorabilia inside.
More times than I like to think about.
I once supported a DOD project that began in 1986. By 1994, there were more than a million pages of documents, all highly technical and classified. The customer decided that the history of the project, which invented and developed a lot of cutting edge technology, had to be preserved.
A group of 12 senior people were assigned the task of scanning all those documents, making sense of the primitive OCR translations of the time. Four teams of three people, 8 hour shifts, 2 shifts per day, 7 days per week.. It took them nearly six months.
With AI assistance and todays document scanning technology, they would have been finished in one month.
Of course, in 1995 the Russian military put so much material on the open market, in a desperate bid for foreign capital, that we simply bought what we wanted on the open market and dropped half the project.
I always wondered if there was some way to scan/translate all those cuneiform tablets that are gathering dust in the museums. Perhaps this method could be applied there.
There are thousands of old American newspapers and magazines
—
‘Old’ here means anything in print before 1980.
HA!
‘Old’ here means anything in print before 1980.
Are you claiming that everything printed after 1980 is available online?
Including Eureka Junior College's student newspaper's Feb. 1981 "blockbuster" issue?
Online?
Really?
Regards,
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