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Library of Congress YouTube channel

p2pnet news view Cool | Movies:- Would it give you pleasure to see a couple of cats hammering each other?

Or maybe a couple of guys dancing with each other while a third plays the violin as part of a very early ‘Dickson Experimental Sound Film’?

No problem. Thanks to the US Library of Congress.

It’s launched its very own YouTube channel with the punching pussies as a featured item.

YouTube, and Now We Do Too, it says.

The day that has been a long time in coming, says the site, going on »»»

The Library of Congress has been working for several months now so that we could “do YouTube right.” When you’re the stewards of the world’s largest collection of audiovisual materials (some 6 million films, broadcasts and sound recordings), nothing less would be expected of you, and our own YouTube channel has now gone public.

We are starting with more than 70 videos, arranged in the following playlists: 2008 National Book Festival author presentations, the Books and Beyond author series, Journeys and Crossings (a series of curator discussions), “Westinghouse” industrial films from 1904 (I defy you to watch some of them without thinking of the Carl Stalling song “Powerhouse”), scholar discussions from the John W. Kluge Center, and the earliest moviesever made (curiously enough, a sneeze by a man named Fred Ott). made by Thomas Edison, including the first moving image

But this is just the beginning. We have made a conscious decision that we’re not just going to upload a bunch of videos and then walk away. As with our popular Flickr pilot project, we intend to keep uploading additional content. We’re modifying some of our work-flows in modest ways to make our content more useful and delivered across platforms with built-in audiences of millions.

Not so incidentally, all of the videos we post on YouTube will also be available at LOC.gov (and many, many more, of course) on American Memory, many of which are newly digitized in much higher resolution by the fine Motion Picture, Broadcast and Recorded Sound conservators in Culpeper, Va.

And now for something completely different »»»


April, 2009


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2 Responses to “Library of Congress YouTube channel”

  1. Robert Chapin Says:

    The stewards of the world’s largest collection of audiovisual materials couldn’t figure out how to put videos on their own website?

  2. Gubatron Says:

    Putting the videos on your site is easy, the problem is serving to millions of users. That’s what the youtube people figured out

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