Jump to content

Domesday Project reborn online after 25 years


Craig
 Share

Recommended Posts

A good idea, combined with the right technology, can change the world.

 

Facebook, Wikipedia and the wheel have all shown this to be true.

 

25 years ago, the BBC dreamt up a similarly inspired scheme.

 

However, in the case of the Domesday Project, it was the tech that doomed it.

 

The premise was straightforward enough - create a 20th century version of William the Conqueror's 900-year-old page-turner, the Domesday Book.

 

Instead of land rights and livestock, it would chronicle life in 1980s Britain, based on photographs and written accounts submitted by ordinary people.

 

It was an incredibly ambitious undertaking and, in many ways, the Domesday Project was a success.

 

The BBC received more than a million contributions and the electronic version was released commercially.

 

There was even a TV gameshow called Domesday Detectives, hosted by the doyen of 80's TV quizzes, Paul Coia.

 

But the system's designers were limited by the technology of the day.

 

Domesday was released on two Laserdiscs - the cutting edge of video storage in a pre-CD, pre-DVD world.

 

Users needed a BBC Master computer running special software to access the Domesday interface.

 

The whole setup cost around £5,000 putting it out of the reach of ordinary people, as well as most schools and libraries.

 

Only 1,000 Domesday systems were sold nationwide.

 

In the proceeding quarter century, the technology became obsolete, making the content on the discs inaccessible to all but a few enthusiasts.

 

Now, after a year of extracting, copying and indexing, the BBC is making the contents of the "community disc" - which details everyday life in Britain - available on the internet.

 

The team behind the project believe that they have finally been able to put right one of Domesday's great contradictions, namely that the fruits of this exercise in democracy were only available to a handful of people.

 

Domesday Reloaded producer Alex Mansfield explained that transferring the data from Laserdisc to the web was problematic because none of the data was stored in recognisable file formats.

 

"It was pre-digital photography, so all those pictures are analogue, even though they are on a Laserdisc. There is no compression," said Mr Mansfield.

 

Each individual photograph, satellite image or map page was stored as a single frame of video on the disc.

 

While the system appears to function like a modern-day website, with pictures loading when they are clicked on, the playback head is constantly jumping between 50,000 video stills.

 

Each of these images had to be digitised from the original one inch video tape.

 

Domesday's many written articles proved easier to recover because they were created in a digital format.

 

Although, with no data storage capability, the thousands of pages of text had to be encoded and stored on one of the Laserdisc's spare audio tracks.

 

n addition to making the entire community disc available online, the Reloaded project aims to continue Domesday's original mission.

 

21st century users are being encouraged to update the archive by adding their own photographs and written insights.

 

Through the website, contributors can upload new text entries and digital images.

 

Getting involved with Domesday in 2011 is much simpler than it was in the 1980s, according to Alex Mansfield.

 

"Everybody entered their data on floppy discs on a BBC micro in the classroom or library.

 

"They then took the disc out, put it in an envelope, put a stamp on it and sent it to the BBC," he said.

 

The revised Domesday archive will finally be closed to new contributions in November, at which time it will be handed over to The National Archives.

 

Future generations will be able to access this unique snapshot of life in Britain online for as long as the internet keeps working.

 

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-13367398

 

Our school was one of the few that had this on laser disc. Remember there being a virtual walkaround Bath which amounted to a load of photos someone had taken around the streets of Bath - a 1986 rudimentary version of Google Street view.

 

There's a photo of my school and a bunch of kids who were in the year below me. It's weird searching around the place and seeing how some things have changed and others haven't.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The local newspaper is the Shields

Gazette and Shipping Telegraph. The

cost of 17p is comparable with other

evening newspapers. Main stories on

June 11th 1985 included the sale of

Frankie's Cafe on the sea-shore, a

favourite haunt of tourists for many

yerars.

Other stories cover the

jailing of a Jarrow rapist and the

death of a man outside a local

nightclub. There are tales of drunken

brawls,cases involving drug-taking and

many examples of petty and more

serious theft.

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/domesday/dblo...-564000/page/19

 

Broken Britain

Edited by Happy Face
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The quiz programme used the intro from A Forest by The Cure as its signature and main music effect - and I think the prize was a copy of the laserdiscs.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The local newspaper is the Shields

Gazette and Shipping Telegraph. The

cost of 17p is comparable with other

evening newspapers. Main stories on

June 11th 1985 included the sale of

Frankie's Cafe on the sea-shore, a

favourite haunt of tourists for many

yerars.

Other stories cover the

jailing of a Jarrow rapist and the

death of a man outside a local

nightclub. There are tales of drunken

brawls,cases involving drug-taking and

many examples of petty and more

serious theft.

 

http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/domesday/dblo...-564000/page/19

 

Broken Britain

 

The sale/closure of Frankies is a huge story in ST history - akin to the fall of the Berlin wall.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Instead of land rights and livestock, it would chronicle life in 1980s Britain, based on photographs and written accounts submitted by ordinary people.

 

Or as we call it these days, Flickr.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The quiz programme used the intro from A Forest by The Cure as its signature and main music effect - and I think the prize was a copy of the laserdiscs.

 

They are doing two shows at the Sydney Opera House at the end of the month, the first 3 albums in entirety with the original members, yes even Tolhurst.

So Three Imaginery boys is a 3 piece, 17 Seconds as a quartet and Faith as a quintet.

Anyway I'm on the online ordering system at 9am this morning, I've got two tickets 4th row and centre, I'm almost there, last window all I have to do is press next to pay for them and it drops out - no doubt their system is having a fit with everyone trying to buy tickets.

Cunts I can't get back in and I've got nothing.

Domesday project - fuck'em, I'll have another whiskey, water no ice please!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.