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From:
"Barbara Vines Little, CG" <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Thu, 3 Apr 2008 08:51:13 -0400
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What the library is doing is duplicating material already microfilmed at 
a cost of less than $50 a reel- scanning that same microfilm and putting 
it on the Web involves scanning, tagging, purchasing and maintaining 
storage media and increasing bandwidth for access and maintaining and 
upgrading the storage media. The money just isn't there. At least this 
way we have access somewhere beside the courthouse and the limited hours 
they maintain. And with interlibrary loan everyone has access although 
not as conveniently as we would like.

Barbara Vines Little, CG
Dominion Research Services
PO Box 1273
Orange, VA 22960

540-832-3473 
[log in to unmask]

CG, Certified Genealogist, is a service mark of the Board for Certification of Genealogists, used under
license by board certified genealogists after periodic evaluation, and the board name is registered in the
US Patent & Trademark Office. 



Randy Cabell wrote:
> I think that is the right word about the commitment of the Library of Virginia to boldly march into the past and continue to embrace microfilm for historical records.  Oh, I know the debates about longevity of media, and particularly problems of making and preserving DVDs that will last.  But come on guys.....  one beauty of digital media is that with a periodic test program, it can diagnose problems and trigger alerts to copy the deteriorating bits to a new home.
>
> I am reminded of that classic line from "Finians Rainbow", uttered by Senator ---  I forget his name.  He draws his sword and lunges offstage with the cry "FORWARD!!!!!!   FORWARD TO THE STATUS QUO."
>
> I call you attention to alternatives like the "Dark Archive" being developed by a consotium of institutions -- Georgia Tech, Emory U, Virginia Tech come to mind -- which not only preserve records in digital form, but spread them around in a huge distributed duplicated network.
>
> On a personal basis, my wife and I are going full-bore to preserve family records in digital form.  Specifically Adobe PDF format plus some selected audio files.  This includes:
>
> - My father's military records from 1918 to his retirement in 1954
> - "Songs We Grew Up With" - the songs our kids sang as we drove along (Shades of those Chevy Chase VACATION movies.:-))
> - a 120-page (it started as about 10) "What I remember about growing up in WWII"
> - The Cabells and Their Kin in The Civil War
> - 50 years of newsletters of The Cabell Foundation
> - etc.
>
> Note that a tremendous advantage of the digitizing process itself if you shoot for PDF files is not only the ability to widely share (we have 5 children and 15 grandchildren), but that the data bases are searchable for words and phrases, without having to create indexes.
>
> If anybody out in VA-HIST land is considering going digital, get in touch with me and I'll share my experiences -- the successes and the frustrations.
>
> Randy 
>
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