I looked at two archives online (note: It seemed that The University of Maryland site’s videos were not accessible to people outside of the University of Maryland).
The first site I looked at was the Internet Archive (
archive.org), which has a lot of interesting films to watch. I had been on this site before. Anyone can upload videos here. Collections are subdivided into subject categories, or people can just use a keyword search. I first looked in the “Cultural and Academic Films” category, and found the University of Pennsylvania’s Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology collection, which includes a collection of digitized 16mm films made by Watson Kintner, during his travels around the world from 1933 to 1969. I watched “1967 #12 Tunisia.”
It is available in downloadable MPEG 1, MPEG 2, MPEG 4 and Streaming formats. Like most films on the Internet Archive site, the work is not formally cataloged, just tagged with a few words. It also includes a shot list though, and reel numbers. This must have all been compiled originally at the University of Pennsylvania and uploaded by them.
When “full screen” it looks bad, there is lots of blocky data. When it is not blown up, it doesn’t look so bad. It’s silent and in color. The color looks beautiful to me, though maybe it is a little faded.
1 comment:
I can't say that this is what happens with those open source videos, but sometimes people license materials and allow others to remix them. We teach this in our undergrad course. But the point is that the students have to find licensed materials so the doubt is whether these are licensed in the first place.
Post a Comment