Originally posted by Aragarthiel
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Originally posted by Jetfire View PostAs for getting the archives of local papers, maybe check the local libraries? Most of them should be doing newspaper archiving of their own, even if the paper itself isn't doing it for some reason.
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I know the few stores and doctor's offices and such in the little town nearby where the paper is printed will have older copies, but they usually only keep two or three different papers on hand at a time and I'm not running around town walking into every single business to read their papers on the off chance I find the one I need. It's just not worth it to prove to a bunch of idiots that the coroner is also an idiot.
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Originally posted by s_stabeler View Postor they have to get microfilm equipment- which I really doubt is cheap to either buy or operate. If the paper has a small circulation to begin with...
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No. Scans just aren't that large any more.
An entire paper likely wouldn't take up 25mb. A straight scan to pdf of a larger format book with text and images sharing nearly every page with over 300 pages only comes out to 125mb. Each article would end up significantly smaller than 1mb and an entire paper would be likely to be significantly less than your 25mb/article guess.
Plus, Google has several data centers for redundancy and and speed. And, you know, indexing the entirety of the Internet.
The real cost would be the tagging of each article so that it could be searched. But even that would be a bonus and not a requirement.Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden
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There's been an update to this case. The coroner in question plead guilty to breaking his oath of office and has been sentenced to ten years of probation. He was forced to withdraw his candidacy in the upcoming election for coroner as well, though why he was allowed to run in the first place is beyond me.
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