
اغنية الرسم بالكلمات
اغنية المحكمة
اغنية نمت وحلمت
اغنية مو طبيعي
اغنية اسكت
اغنية حبيبتي
اغنية الجريدة
اغنية 600 بوسة
eny thing original
The single most comprehensive online public resource for original source material related to Jonestown is Alternative Considerations of Jonestown and Peoples Temple, a website sponsored by San Diego State University's Department of Religious Studies. The site includes scanned documents, photographs, first-person testimonies and reflections, and a periodic email newsletter with updates on research, and the whereabouts of those who survived.
The section I've spent the most time in is the Audiotape Project Index, which includes copies of original recordings made by People's Temple members in California and Guyana.
Some of the cassette recordings at the SDSU website were retrieved from Jonestown by the FBI; others are in the possession of the FCC, which monitored radio transmissions from the compound. I'm not clear on the specifics, but it seems many of the original recordings in government possession are lost, missing, or still classified and unavailable to the public. Some ham radio operators once maintained a website documenting their battle to get the FCC to release more shortwave radio recordings from Jonestown, but the website is now offline.
Here is a list of recording transcripts and summaries at the SDSU Jonestown Project website. They include:
* Peoples Temple audiotapes collected by FBIThree examples of the recordings in this collection:
* Tapes of Peoples Temple radio conversations collected by FCC
* The Miscellaneous Audiotapes link includes tapes donated from private individuals and collections.
* FBI #Q 042, "The Death Tape", made in Jonestown on 18 November 1978, during the mass deaths. Warning: the audio is very disturbing. You can hear children dying. Here is the audio at archive.org.The Jonestown Institute website is maintained by Elizabeth Parker, and archivist-historians Fielding McGehee III, and Dr. Rebecca Moore, an SDSU professor of religious studies. Together, they have played an instrumental role in preserving and digitally archiving many important historical documents related to People's Temple at SDSU, and with the California Historical Society. The SDSU site introduction expresses hope that visitors "will come away with an understanding that the story of Jonestown did not start or end on 18 November 1978. Dr. Moore has a personal connection to the tragedy: her two sisters died there. Annie Moore was Jim Jones' nurse, and Carolyn Moore Layton was his lover and lieutenant.
* FBI #Q594: In this tape recorded 5 days before the mass deaths, Jones and followers fantasize how they will torture and kill People's Temple defectors.
* FBI #Q174: music and entertainment performed by Peoples Temple members in October, 1978. An announcer speaks: "And now, ladies and gentlemen. We’re glad to have you here in Jonestown, Guyana. Sit back and enjoy yourself. We have a brief program. Presenting to you, the Jonestown Express."
Posted by Randy Krum at 7:26 AM 0 thoughts Links to this post
Labels: interface, internet, live, map, real time, software, web
Note the Nile River delta, the Siberian Express railway route, the Australian coastal cities, and Africa, literally "the dark continent".From Princeton's International Networks Archive, the old project of Jonathan Harris.
Posted by Randy Krum at 10:50 PM 0 thoughts Links to this post
Labels: design, history, interface, internet, poster, software, timeline, web
"The map, based on data from the American, British and Iraqi governments and from news reports, shows the dates, locations and circumstances of deaths."The number has doubled since they did this for January 2006 which had around 800 deaths. Each figure represents an individual of the American forces, coalition forces, Iraqi forces, police officers or civilian death. The larger figures have numbers showing how many people they represent (which I think diminishes the visual impact). A smaller icon shows the cause of death. All the figures are connected to a location in the country.
Charts and graphs can communicate data; Infographics turn data into information
Posted by Randy Krum at 11:56 PM 0 thoughts Links to this post
Labels: charts, design, food, poster, table, timeline, world
Jimmy Lin is an associate professor at the University of Maryland.
Google and I.B.M. are offering help to universities to get students to cope with vast amounts of data.
The cellphone provider said that a glitch in its computer systems would probably result in some customers losing their personal information.
Online stores are getting smarter about getting people to buy the things they toss in the shopping cart, but later abandon.
A study of two years of anonymous data from Facebook attempts to say something profound based on the reports of daily life that social networkers share with their friends.
Three years after unplugging its inflight Internet service because of insufficient demand, Lufthansa said that it would reintroduce a high-speed service on most long-haul flights.
Jay Feely, the Jets’ kicker, updates his Twitter page several times a day, shaping an online manifesto and challenging his teammates to think about life outside the lines.
A familiar workhorse of Internet advertising is the display, or graphical, ad. Roughly a third of all online ad spending goes to such ads, yet Internet users are increasingly reluctant to click on them.
October 12, 2009 1:27 PM ET
Arthur D. Levinson has left Google's board amid an investigation by federal regulators into the ties between the boards of Google and Apple.
October 11, 2009 6:18 PM ET
"Paranormal Activity" will be the first major studio film to be released nationwide as the result of online requests from the public.
October 10, 2009
An invitation to a New York event suggests Barnes & Noble may introduce its e-reading device on Oct. 20 with a feature other devices don't have.
October 9, 2009
After requests from AT&T and from some lawmakers, the F.C.C. asks Google why it blocks customers of Google Voice from calling certain numbers.
|
|
|
|