BBC Domesday Project at Practical Experiences in Digital Preservation, 2nd - 4th April 2003, Public Record Office, Kew, UK 2nd April 2003 18:45 - Andy Finney The History of the BBC Domesday Project 19:00 - Adrian Pearce The New BBC Domesday Community Interface Presentations as part of our informal evening session. This begins with an opportunity to view our museum and Elizabeth I exhibition, followed by drinks and canapés. BBC Domesday was a national project carried out in 1986 to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the Domesday Book. School children and researchers from all over the country collected huge amounts of information about the communities in which they lived. This information, in the form of text and photographs, was recorded onto 2 special videodiscs that could be played using a BBC Master computer and an LV-ROM player. In 1986 a full BBC Domesday system was presented to the Keeper of the Public Records. In 2003, however, this system is one of the few working examples of BBC Domesday in existence. After 16 years of use, most of the LV-ROM players produced have reached the end of their working lives. As a storage technology, LV-ROM has been superseded by CD-ROM and DVD, leaving the BBC Domesday disks perilously close to being unreadable. Working with the BBC and others we have preserved the content of the BBC Domesday project in a digital storage medium, using the original analogue videotapes. We are now working to make this resource available to generations of future users. Website: http://www.pro.gov.uk/events/conferences/ica_programme.htm Bookings: We are now almost at full capacity for this event. Please contact: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> to check availability. Further information: [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]> This e-mail message (and attachments) may contain information that is confidential to The Public Record Office. If you are not the intended recipient you cannot use, distribute or copy the message or attachments. In such a case, please notify the sender by return e-mail immediately and erase all copies of the message and attachments. Opinions, conclusions and other information in this message and attachments that do not relate to the official business of the Public Record Office are neither given nor endorsed by it.