Tech options for making oral history recordings accessible V1. January 30 2023 Hannah James Louwerse, Archives at NCBS Making oral history recordings accessible to people has been infamously difficult, with the oral historian Michael Frisch referring to the issue as
OHD_WHB_0228 OHT dissection
OHD_BLG_0034 21st Century Ghost
Have you ever heard of the twenty-first century ghost? You have definitely seen it and heard it. It hides in many places, but its favourite spot is in the pocket of your trousers, next to you on the table or
OHD_GRP_0178 The maintenance infrastructure of oral history
OHD_WRT_0172 Chpt. 01 History of oral history tech
Chpt. 01 – The History of Oral History Technology “The history of progress is littered with experimental failures.” – Victor Papanek, Design for the Real World Let is take a moment to contemplate the MiniDisc. Developed by Sony in 1992,
OHD_MDM_0021 The Digital Attitude (Harvesting) mind map
OHD_WRT_0135 The Journey of Oral History Technologies
[META DATA] [Contextual information] Archival item use in… In Back to the Future Part Two, Marty McFly travels to 2015. There are flying cars, holograms, hoverboards, and many many fax machines, but no sign of the internet or smart phones.
OHD_BLG_0042 What do you mean not digital?
Whenever I mention my ideas for analogue archiving solutions to anyone the reaction I get is a blank stare shifty follow by a change in subject. When I was venting about this recurring experience to my mother, she did not
OHD_BLG_0075 Texts, Images and Sounds Seminars Summary
What follows is a summary of the various seminars that I took presented by Ian Biddle from Newcastle University. Overall I enjoyed these seminars mostly because I had covered many of the topics during my time at Goldsmiths but now
OHD_BLG_0080 The Virtual Rooms
I have just found out about the Baader-Meinhof Phenomenon. Actually that is incorrect I have just googled the “phenomenon where you hear something for the first time and then again” and found out that it is referred to as the