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British Film Institute To Digitize 100,000 Old TV Shows Before They Disappear (bbc.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from BBC: Thousands of British TV programs are to be digitized before they are lost forever, the British Film Institute says. Anarchic children's show Tiswas and The Basil Brush Show are among the programs in line for preservation. The initiative was announced as part of the BFI's five-year strategy for 2017-2022. "Material from the 70s and early 80s is at risk," said Heather Stewart, the BFI's creative director. "It has a five or six-year shelf life and if we don't do something about it will just go, no matter how great the environment is we keep it in. "Our job is make sure that things are there in 200 years' time." The BFI has budgeted $14.3 million of Lottery funding towards its goal of making the UK's entire screen heritage digitally accessible. This includes an estimated 100,000 of the "most at-risk" British TV episodes and clips held on obsolete video formats. The list includes "early children's programming, little-seen dramas, regional programs and the beginnings of breakfast television." The issue for the BFI, Ms Stewart added, was also to do with freeing up storage space. "We have a whole vault which is wall-to-wall video. If we digitized it, it would be in a robot about the size of a wardrobe," she said.

2 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. Anarchic children's show Tiswas... by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Informative

    The whole point behind Tiswas was that it actually wasn't a kids show.

  2. Re:Robot? by dbIII · · Score: 3, Informative

    Is she perhaps talking about a device that can access stored digital tape media with a mechanical arm or something

    Yes. People call LTO6 tape autoloaders with a storage library "robots".

    Going back to old TV, the opening sequence of each episode of the show "The Prisoner" depicts the idea of that sort of "robot" being used for paper card storage instead of a few dozen tapes.