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The Domesday Project 1986 (1985 , VHS) 

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Historian Michael Wood and the BBC's Sarah Greene presented a programme in 1985 about the Domesday Project, due to be completed in 1986...
From Wikipedia:
"The BBC Domesday Project was a partnership between Acorn Computers, Philips, Logica and the BBC (with some funding from the European Commission's ESPRIT programme) to mark the 900th anniversary of the original Domesday Book, an 11th-century census of England. It has been cited as an example of digital obsolescence on account of the physical medium used for data storage.
This new multimedia edition of Domesday was compiled between 1984 and 1986 and published in 1986. It included a new "survey" of the United Kingdom, in which people, mostly school children, wrote about geography, history or social issues in their local area or just about their daily lives. Children from over 9,000 schools were involved. This was linked with maps, and many colour photos, statistical data, video and "virtual walks". Over 1 million people participated in the project. The project also incorporated professionally prepared video footage, virtual reality tours of major landmarks and other prepared datasets such as the 1981 census."

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21 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 33   
@pauloliver6813
@pauloliver6813 7 лет назад
I remember heading out and doing my bit for the Doomsday Project. More importantly for me, personally, this video (played to me on VHS in my History Lesson), fixed in my mind for certain that History was my passion...I definitely thank Michael Wood, such a gifted historical storyteller, for that.
@Everywhere2
@Everywhere2 7 лет назад
17:20: "And using *this* device - called a 'mouse' - it makes it even easier than tapping it into the keyboard . . . "
@Frankowillo
@Frankowillo 6 лет назад
LOL. And don't forget the cutting edge technology...... LASERDISC!
@gbhxu
@gbhxu Год назад
My school had it. Our system had a trackerball rather than a mouse
@Watcher3223
@Watcher3223 3 года назад
The one fatal flaw with the Domesday Project is that it didn't appear to take technological obsolescence into account. Such a thing would negatively affect people's ability to access information stored within LaserVision (a.k.a LaserDisc) media, especially when the required infrastructure to support it is replaced with newer technologies in the future with hardly any consideration paid toward migrating recorded information over to such technologies. The information would be available for as long as the technology exists. But the day that the required technology is no longer operable and with no means to restore functionality, the information in question may as well no longer exist. There is also the fact that the quality of the information stored is limited by the resolution of the format and the video system it worked with. And there's also concerns with media longevity; while LaserVision is a fairly hardy media _when made properly,_ "laser rot" is a real problem with improperly manufactured media, especially as there is no error correction as the video in the LaserVision system is in the analog domain. If I recall, the Domesday discs were made by Philips DuPont Optical in Blackburn, England. While they weren't the worst in the world, their discs weren't exactly the pinnacle of quality, either. An undertaking like the Domesday Project would have been better suited for today with 8k video and digital technology, but there would still remain the issue of technological obsolescence. Therefore, open and universal standards to ensure preservation, accessibility, and portability of recorded information ... including protocols for migrating this information to newer technologies with minimum possible impact to quality should it become absolutely necessary ... must be agreed upon and adhered to.
@dorianphilotheates3769
@dorianphilotheates3769 3 года назад
5:10 - “...that deep strand of historical continuity again touched the place.” - Beautiful.
@sambrown9494
@sambrown9494 7 лет назад
How wonderful to see again after all these years. The BBC really was something back then. And who knows, maybe some day it will be again. Only now is the value of the Domesday Project being felt.
@edgeeffect
@edgeeffect 7 лет назад
Aaaaaagh! the teletext flash character.... the 1980's answer to the tag... my eyes, my eyes!
@louisetrott5532
@louisetrott5532 7 месяцев назад
Fascinating!
@HusbandofLois
@HusbandofLois 5 лет назад
Kenilworth has changed a lot, I'm so familiar with so many of the places they went to and I have never seen them like this
@zzydny
@zzydny 5 лет назад
I read recently that much of the Domesday information collected n 1986 is now almost undecipherable due to changes in technology.
@prosequence2536
@prosequence2536 5 лет назад
technological changes and region changes. if you find the right magnetic floppy disks holding 8-10 bits each, we'll fire up the teletex to communicate with the analog computers which once all compiled on a punch card driven finite state machine can be read off by one secretary while the assistant jots down notes in clean and efficient short hand we'll see how many sussex home owners had canaries. buy the full video version on super beta max. its at blockbuster video
@yanikkunitsin1466
@yanikkunitsin1466 3 года назад
No. All been recaptured numerous times.
@fuferito
@fuferito 3 года назад
Wow. I did read Michael Wood's books about the _Domesday_ book, but I didn't know there was a program about it.
@vibratehigher2441
@vibratehigher2441 Год назад
Thanks
@damianjones7554
@damianjones7554 4 года назад
That was lovely. Just goes to illustrate how far technology and everyday life has moved on since the 1980's. It will be interesting to see how technology and life changes between now and the next 65 years that mark 1000 years since the doomsday book?
@OUigot
@OUigot 5 лет назад
My, how things have changed, and i don't mean the technology, that's a given. Look at the people, see anyone overweight? Obesity started in the 90's when they started poisoning our food.
@Treebeard9
@Treebeard9 6 месяцев назад
Obesity didn’t start in the 90s
@fuferito
@fuferito 3 года назад
19:28 Ah, the good old days when kids went to school on their own without needing to be chauffeured by their parents.
@darklegionnaire8304
@darklegionnaire8304 2 года назад
this is saving anime
@harley909
@harley909 4 года назад
17:55 hey kids I got the whole trip mapped out on the ole computer. Don’t eat the car Russ...Russ don’t eat the car
@samd35
@samd35 3 года назад
Well I never! A Video Disc and Player, what ever possessed them?!!
@gbhxu
@gbhxu Год назад
And a souped-up BBC Master computer.
@duncanward1718
@duncanward1718 4 года назад
And now no one can access the information as it's all on video disk. Good luck finding a working machine.
@ljo642
@ljo642 3 года назад
Build one.
@yanikkunitsin1466
@yanikkunitsin1466 3 года назад
BS. Plethora of working systems, no to mention that everything was re-captured numerous times by different projects including original video masters.
@properjob2311
@properjob2311 11 месяцев назад
Ah the 1980's when England was English
@alanr2609
@alanr2609 4 года назад
The start of the BBC PC era
@charlesmiddleton9952
@charlesmiddleton9952 5 лет назад
Domesday spelled doomsday,typical english.
@urdude67
@urdude67 2 года назад
Hahaha the tech! Information more available after you purchase all the equipment. Which will be obsolete in less than ten years. But your encyclopedia will still be basically correct forty years from now, just deemed as racist.
@JNYC-gb1pp
@JNYC-gb1pp 4 года назад
Pre-divesty and wokeness. Who knew what a third world shithole it would slowly become; terrorism, stabbings, grooming gangs. What a mess.
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