From the Higgs Boson Particle to Leadbelly
Roland Piquepaille writes "Physicists from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory are using the same methods to search for the elusive Higgs Boson particle and to digitally restore audio recordings from the past. Berkeley Lab signed an agreement with the Library of Congress to digitize the many thousands of early blues or jazz recordings it has in its archives. And the results are spectacular. Compare for example, these two versions of "Good Bye Irene", before and after being optically reconstructed (WAV format, 18 and 19 seconds). This news release describes the method used by the physicists. This overview contains other details and extra references about this project." We also covered finding Higgs Boson recently as well.
I can't wait to place this new digitally restored version next to my old Good Bye Irene CD, and right under my Good Bye Irene poster.
clifgriffin > blog
DRMed quarks will be just around the corner?
Haven't these maniacs ever watched Lexx?! Detecting the Higgs Boson particle will shrink the world to an ultradense particle, about the size of a pea!
TV doesn't lie to me!
Slashdotted a .gov! Soon we'll be able to hold the world's governments for ransome!
Before the song is "Good Bye Irene".
After the song is "Good By Webserver".
The sound of this new song is unusually pure and quiet. My congratulations to the Berkeley team.
Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
By colliding two audio recordings together at near-lightspeed in an underground tunnel, physicists hope to uncover the much anticipated Higgs boson, or at the very least produce a half-decent Britney album.
You use that word.
Are you sure it means what you think it means?
The cracks and the spikes in a song can give it a certain charm.
You can always put them back, if you really want to.
The second one sounds just like the first one, except with Puff Daddy going "Unhhh, Unhhh" over top of it.
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball(TM)