Brian Doherty | April 17, 2007
Fascinating headline, slightly less fascinating story, though it still will probably be pretty neat:
BBC, Geldof to catalogue all human existence
Irish rocker and Live Aid founder Bob Geldof is to team up with the British Broadcasting Corporation on a project to digitally catalogue all known human existence....
The London-based public service broadcaster, its commercial arm BBC Worldwide and Geldof's Ten Alps media group are to collaborate on the "Dictionary of Man".In a statement, the BBC said the scale and ambition of the anthropological project, which will have an accompanying television series "The Human Planet", was "unprecedented".
It would use every available medium to create the "largest ever living record" of films, photographs, anthropological histories, philosophies, theologies, economies, language, art as well as people's personal stories.
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If Geldof is going to lead the Foundation, then who is leading the Second Foundation? Al Gore?
Sounds interesting, but there's a point where something like this can get just so huge that their "compiled" information has little difference from the "non-compiled" world around us. In other words, if the ir project ends up being a whole library, why not just go to the library (or, as has been pointed out, the internet). Very curious to see what sort of format this will take.
Google is already on this.
(Preview function indicates possible problem with above link. If
necessary, please cut paste:
http://www.theonion.com/content/node/40076 )
You can create the world's greatest digital library, but if
nobody can access it (due to copyright law), what good is it?
What's needed is compulsary licensing for books and other media.
You would give up a little pricing flexibility, but gain
tremendously by eliminating the friction of transaction costs.
I'm still waiting for Project Xanadu to ship. Should be any day
now...
http://xanadu.com/
Actually, it sounds pretty cool, if totally indigestible. Wikipedia has a policy against original research, so this would complement it to some degree. It also sounds much larger than Wikipedia, which I could fit on one partition of my hard drive.
Anything to keep him busy so he doesn't produce any more We Are The World albums...
With the BBC behind it the biases will be easy to spot. Still it is amazing to see the one-hit wonder that is Bob Geldof continue his level of notoriety.
Man, this guy has ambition. He makes his name as part of a grade-C British pop outfit producing a kinda-memorable early 80's song, and ends up trying to end world hunger and catalog all human knowledge. What's next? - 'Bob Geldof Defeats Death'?
The London-based public service broadcaster, its commercial
arm BBC Worldwide and Geldof's Ten Alps media group are to
collaborate on the "Dictionary of Man".
Just you wait: at the last moment, the real name of the project
will be announced as To Serve Man.
Dee-dee-dee-dee,
dee-dee-dee-dee (spoiler alert).
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