You can see our system doing it - shoving in the PDFs and then generating the derivatives, previews, readables, etc. I'll be going through and fixing metadata after they're rendered, and soon we'll have a real lovely Tom Lehrer collection well past "December 31, 2024".
Speaking of Master Lehrer, in 1967, he gave a performance at the height of his skills and stage presence to an adoring and respectful audience, with excellent audio and video, and the tape resurfaced on Youtube and should not be missed:
Lehrer was once asked about why he stopped performing, didn't he enjoy it, and he reportedly said "I enjoyed High School too, but don't feel I need to stay there all my life."
He taught classes in music and math as his primary vocation and career.
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OK, we're working on the next generation of MAME emulation at Internet Archive. I have an "Arcade Repair Shop" and these things may or may not work soon. (If there's no screenshot, don't bother, it doesn't work yet).
Right now there's about 500 of them in the repair shop. Getting things up and running in the IA system is a little intense. Mostly, I have to rip the driver and resolution data from a great site called ARCADE DATABASE, a wonderful hack that scrapes MAME source code to give info.
The site is at adb.arcadeitalia.net/default.php and it's really lovely. Tells you everything you need to know. I write rippers that pull out driver, resolution, screenshots, etc. Right now it's just doing driver checks. (There are 73 unique drivers I'm adding).
I got a chance to attend the TED Conference one year, because moot was speaking and he could bring one guest for very cheap (for TED prices) and as he said "You're the only person I know who'd want to go and would spend that money". So I went. I annoyed a lot of celebrities.
I am no fan of Sarah Silverman and she was going to do her act, and so I just left the theater to go hang in the lobby and see other things out there, until she was done. The lobby was almost completely empty except a few bored staff members. And a guy sitting in a corner.
So there I am with James Randi, and we talk for about 15-20 minutes about Stuff. The Stuff was mostly about history, capturing facts, etc. He mentioned how he'd passed some dates of his European tour to a researcher and the researcher had proved he'd not been in Europe that year.
In 2011, after doing documentaries on Bulletin Board Systems and Text Adventures, I had a kickstarter for doing an Arcade Documentary. (And two others). Due primarily to getting the dream job of a lifetime and seeing the potential of what I could do with it, I cancelled them.
I was going for a very warm/emotional aspect of "what are these places, these dark boxes we create to play with machines". I had music lined up and I shot a bunch of footage for it before realizing I couldn't quite do it right.
Now, I went ahead and created The Internet Arcade at the Internet Archive, at archive.org/details/intern… and hundreds of arcade machines became part of the conversation again, as well as making sure we had copies of hundreds of arcade manuals, and other artifacts.
Bob Mahoney! Bob and his second in command EACH had a requirement for me to interview them - I could not interview one while the other was in the room. Ultimately, I did not get a chance to interview Bob although he sent me lovely bizarre e-mails for years afterwards.
Millionaires are hard to get a hold of. I found Bob by noticing many pictures had him next to a sport car and I found the nearest club to where he lived for that sports car and passed my message to give to him.
He called the next day going "NIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICE".
Bob is sitting on a Cray X-MP, by the way. Either you know about those things or you don't. If you don't, this was a supercomputer that was one of the most powerful machines at the time AND looked like something from space.
Two things. First, these were sent to me directly from China based on the packaging, and it's quite obvious these should be warn for the aesthetic ヒ院な and not because, say, you want to go hiking in them or wear them as daily drivers. I'll take it.
Second, and this is top-notch comedy: I was notified these got delivered on Friday, but they weren't downstairs, and today they showed up at my door, with the packaging ripped open on one side. We get a ton of packages here, it's obvious that a neighbor grabbed it by mistake.