CERN Looking For Help Filling In the Gaps In Photo Archive 28
rHBa writes According to the BBC scientists at the European nuclear research center CERN have uncovered an archive of images from its first 50 years and are asking for help in deciphering what is going on in them. Dr Sue Black, who was a key figure in the campaign to save Bletchley Park, said "we believe that much of this information could be crowd-sourced from the CERN community."
"Croudsourced." (Score:2)
Or, to put it more succintly, "we're too lazy and cheap to do the work ourselves, have at it Internet!"
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Go to Media but not CERN people? (Score:3)
How many of them (from the early days) have email addresses that CERN could contact them on
Well I have a CERN email address and I still regularly visit CERN to work on an experiment there and this is the first I've heard about it. It seems strange that they went to the media before emailing those of us who were around during some of that period and are still working at CERN!
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More likely its "this work doesn't need to be done, won't affect anything if its not done, lets spend actual resources and money on something more important - but hey, if you want to chip in feel free!"
No ones going to bitch about timescales and missed deadlines when this isn't done in 10 years...
Missing a comma (Score:2)
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I'd rather do Galaxy Mergers (Score:1)
http://mergers.galaxyzoo.org
Facial recognition (Score:1)
As a first rough pass at identifying the people in 250,000 images, they could use facial recognition against the ID photos of all past employees (assuming they saved them). That way, interested past employees would only have to look at much smaller samples to confirm and describe the images.
Oh, and I'm sure the NSA could be of assistance.
My guesses (Score:5, Funny)
My guesses as follows:
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
The Robo-tometrist. The first mechanical optometrist device. While every test subject did get a perfect eyeglass fitting, few after the fitting had eyes left to enjoy them with. And a couple even lost fingers.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
An experimental magnetic bong. No more bong water smell! Unfortunately researchers lost it along with their keys and can't remember how to build another one.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
A female scientist in the 80s? Clearly this was a Halloween party!
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
Mecanical penises sound like a good idea until you actually see one in person.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
Come on, we all knew Carl Segans vacuum cleaner would have to look something like this.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
And his Latte machine and barista would look like this.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
Some jerk coughed into the magnetic bong. We thought it was bad getting water on your weed, but gamma rays? Now we're starting to remember why we lost that thing.
http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media... [bbcimg.co.uk]
CERN employees require a lot of coffee to get started in the mornings.
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Feh, easy:
Porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn porn work porn porn porn porn porn work work porn porn porn porn porn...
(This is another paragraph that does not use repetition to make its point because Slashdot's lameness filter is rearing its ugly head again.)
Research and Development! (Score:1)
...deciphering what is going on in them
Research and Development... putting in the man hours to study the science of what you need. Last week we put liquid paper on a bee... and it died
My guess (Score:4, Insightful)
More seriously, I think this crowdsourcing effort is likely to be overwhelmed with clever jokes or well-intentioned guesses.
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Then really, you don't have much experience with this type of thing. Certainly some of that archive will be posed PR type shots. But if you look at TFA, you also find what I'd also expect to find in such an archive - documentary shots showing pieces of equipment and scientists working with such equipment.
Aren't we supposed to be dead already? (Score:2)
Growing up in the 1970s, there were many books by reputable scientists who were absolutely sure that the Earth will have mega-famines and enter an Ice Age by the year 2000. They were absolutely certain that no economic growth will ever occur in China or India, the Cold War will last a thousand years, and air pollution will require everyone to wear oxygen masks at all times.
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Growing up in the 1970s, there were many books by reputable scientists who were absolutely sure that the Earth will have mega-famines and enter an Ice Age by the year 2000. They were absolutely certain that no economic growth will ever occur in China or India, the Cold War will last a thousand years, and air pollution will require everyone to wear oxygen masks at all times.
That IS the reality. That reminds me, do you want the red pill, or the blue pill? I forget what they're for, and they may have fuzz on them from the length of time they've been in my pocket.
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There were books by "futurists" to that effect and some science fiction stories, but reputable scientists? Hardly. If you think back, which "scientist" was it that claimed we were about to enter a new Ice Age? None, it was a reporter at Time Magazine who had (probably accidentally) learned about Milancovitch Cycles, actual climatologists (there were a few then) already knew we were getting warmer and together with astronomers put together the first climate models to explain the gross temperature ranges o
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