British Library Starts Email Archive
sushi writes "Australian IT is reporting
that 'The British Library is creating an archive to store the emails of the nation's top authors and scientists, as the written word is replaced by electronic messages.' A spokeswoman says it welcomes emails from prominent people in all walks of life.
"We want people with a canon of work behind them," she says. The article also talks of the need to read data from (now) obsolete computing platforms..."
As the first post, I welcome my mail to be submitted to this archive...
ok, who let that one through? :)
Iran has endorsed
I could send them my punch card reader. I still keep some of my best pr0n on those cards.
One good thing about digital archieve is the possibility to use text-to-speech software to read those emails to people with sight problems.
Rock that crushes, Paper & Scissors that don't matter.
A British author with a "canon of work" behind him? This guy better be on the list.
Dear Tony
It doesn't matter. we're not going into Eyeraq
for the Weapons. We're after the oil....
George
>Dear George
>
>Do we really have the evidence to go to war in
>the middle east? I only ask becuase our
>intelligence people aren't really sure enough.
>
>Could it be that we're making a mistake?
>
>RSVP
>
>Tony
I think you'll be OK. They did say TOP scientists. ;) :P
>>>Light is a wave! I can prove it.
>> No its not, light is a particle! I can prove it
> You ninny!
Neil is that you? Yeah yeah, it's me... Neil...
Then I thought of the Salmon of Doubt, the book of the scraps of electronic data found on Douglas Adams HDD. But his emails?
Yes letters can be well penned, but is every author going to vainly CC: their emails to a library?
Should they be digitally signed? Oh lawks, Micheal Jackson just emailed me and asked if he could use my toilet [goonies]
Seems dumb to me. Email is such a throw-away medium.
If Shakespeares SMS's were saved, would be citing:
2 b r !2b tat s da qsn, wthr ts noblr n da mnd to sffr da slngs n arws f owtragos frtne,r 2 tk rms agnst a c f trbls n bi opresing, nd dem.
Email is for email. Anyone know any good librarian pr0n sites?
#hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
I was visiting a special collections recently and they had letters from Kipling, T.E Lawrence and Einstein. There is nothing quite like the feeling of touching such documents (with white gloves of course). Reading an email of someone, like Feynman, would not be as interesting as a letter. Nevertheless, I am glad that they are doing this, it is better then not having such information. But something is lost when its not on paper.
Write a letter to mom.
For researchers in style or computational linguistics, the prospect of getting the hands on more people's INBOXes is mind-boggling. Eventually, I hope this will improve the horrible present-day interfaces to email.
--
Try Nuggets , our mobile search engine. Search for answers to your questions via SMS, across the UK.
I'm sure this is something that laywers have wet dreams over.
To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
--E.C. Stanton
I think this could be quite valuable indeed. Another thing that I would love to see is to have an index for scientific papers such as the excellent Citeseer http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/ coupled with a moderated discussion forum like the one here at slashdot for discussion of the strong/weak points of each scientific paper. If well done, I think this would be a huge benefit to the research community.
The problem is more general, it is not only limited to emails.
As digital storage becomes more popular, someday we will lose valuable historical data and information because we will be unable to read the digital code of some device.
If a very big asteroid hits Earth and civilisation returns to its 19th century state, for example, and after some time the future archaelogists try to discover the pre-asteroid history of civilisation, they will have no idea what these chips and CDs and memories are! they will be unable to even think that these things contain information written by humans.
There is a period in human history called "dark ages" (before the middle ages) because the historians know very little about it and we have found nearly no writings from that era. see: http://www.wikinfo.org/wiki.php?title=Dark_Ages
I'm sure the NSA already has copies of all emails ever written, so the British Library just needs to ask them nicely....