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We updated our audio/video (and TV) 3rd party JS-based player from v6.8 to v8.2 today.
This was updated with some code to have the same feature set as before, as well as new:
Here’s some before / after screenshots:
We now support .vtt files (Web Video Text Tracks) in addition to .srt (SubRip) (.srt we have supported for years) files for captioning your videos.
It’s as simple as uploading a “parallel filename” to your video file(s).
VTT with caption picker (and upcoming A/V player too!)
(We will have an updated A/V player with a better “picker” for so many language tracks in days, have no fear
Jason Scott, free-range archivist, reporting in as 2017 draws to a close.
As part of our end-of-year fundraising drive, I thought it might be fun to tweet highlighted parts of the vast stacks of content that the Internet Archive makes available for free to millions. A lot of folks know about our Wayback Machine and its 20+ years of website history, but there’s petabytes of media and works available to see throughout the site. I called it “30 Days of Stuff”, and for the last 30 days I’ve been pointing out great items at the Archive, once a day.
You won’t have to swim upstream through my tweets; here on the last day, I’ve compiled the highlighted items in this entry. Enjoy these jewels in the Archive’s collection, a small sample of the wide range of items we provide.
People often overuse a phrase like “Barely scratched the surface”, but I assure you there are millions of amazing items in the archive, and it’s been a pleasure to bring some to light. While the 30 Days of Stuff was a fun way to stretch out a month of fundraising with stuff to see every day, we’re here 24/7 to bring you all these items, and welcome you finding jewels, gems and clunkers throughout our hard drives whenever you want.
Every month, we look over the total download counts for all public items at archive.org. We sum item counts into their collections. At year end 2014, we found various source reliability issues, as well as overcounting for “top collections” and many other issues.
archive.org public items tracked over time
So we now treat tags like tags, in terms of counting, and unique all tags to avoid items w/ minor nonideal data tags and another kind of overcounting.
We graph the “difference” between absolute downloads counts for the current month minus the prior month, for each month we have data for. This gives us graphs that show downloads/month over time. However, values can easily go *negative* with various scenarios (which is *wickedly* confusing to our poor users!)
A collection has a really *hot* item one month, racking up downloads in a given collection. The next month, a DMCA takedown or otherwise removes the item from being available (and thus counted in the future). The downloads for that collection can plummet the next month’s run when the counts are summed over public items for that collection again. So that collection would have a negative (net) downloads count change for this next month!
Use the current month’s collection “item membership” list for current month *and* prior month. Sum counts for all those items for both months, and make the graphed difference be that difference. In just about every situation that remains, graphed monthly download counts will be monotonic (nonnegative and increasing or zero).
I find great stuff on the Internet Archive all the time, and now I can use a tool called CratePlayer to create playlists from archive.org movie and audio files. For example, I want to play a bunch of old Christmas movies at my holiday party this year so I found some cartoons and added them to a Crate. Now all I have to do is hook my computer up to the TV, press play, and poof! Instant entertainment!
CratePlayer is a curation tool that lets you gather audio and video content from online sources into collections that can be played and shared. When they approached us about incorporating Internet Archive items into their platform, we said “yes!” and gave them some pointers about accessing archive.org content. Off they went, and in short order they had it all working.
Try using their bookmarklet as you’re poking around among archive.org audio and video content. It’s easy to use and might help you keep track of all the great things you find.

When the American people find out how their government has secretly interpreted the Patriot Act, they are going to be stunned and they are going to be angry. Senator Ron Wyden May 26, 2011
Recent revelations of the extent of National Security Agency surveillance and weakening of our digital infrastructure give substance to the warnings of Senator Wyden and others. To assist journalists and other concerned citizens in reflecting on these issues, the Internet Archive has created a curated library of short television news clips presenting key statements and other representations.
The experimental, Chrome and Safari only, library launches today with more than 700 chronologically ordered television citations drawn from the Archive’s television news research service. The TV quotes can be browsed by rolling over clip thumbnails, queried via transcripts and sorted for specific speakers. Citation links, context, links to source broadcasters and options to borrow can be explored by following the More/Borrow links on each thumbnail.
We’ve updated the process and way we create our .mp4 files that are shown on video pages on archive.org
It’s a much cleaner/clearer process, namely:
Here is an example (you would tailor especially the “scale=640:480” depending on source aspect ratio and desired output size; change or drop altogether the “-r 20” option (the source was 20 fps, so we make the dest 20 fps); tailor the bitrate args to taste):
PS: here is the way we compile ffmpeg (we use ubuntu linux, but works on macosx, too).
Many of you have already noticed that since the New Year, we have migrated our new “beta” player to be the primary/default player, then to be the only player.
We are excited about this new player!
It features the very latest release of jwplayer from longtailvideo.com.
Here’s some new features/improvements worth mentioning:
For those of you interested in trying multiple qualities, here’s a sample video showing it:
To make that work, I made sure that my original/source file was:
When all of those are true, our system will automatically take:
that is our normal ~1000 kb/sec “derivative” video, as well as “filename.ogv”
The /details/ page will then see two playable mpeg-4 h.264 videos, and offer them both with the [HD] toggle button (seen once video is playing) allowing users to pick between the two quality levels.
If you wanted to offer a *third* quality, you could do that with another ending like above but with otherwise the same requirements. So you could upload:
and the toggle would show the three options: 1080P, 540P, 480P
You can update existing items if you like, and re-derive your items, to get multiple qualities present.
For those video oriented of you who inspect our _files.xml directly, or use a metadata API (JSON) for items, you’ll likely be pleased to know that for all new items, as well as items that update (eg: review posted, metadata changes, rederives), that:
we now detect and stamp into each video file fields for
width
height
length (duration in seconds)
here is an example file listing (in JSON results) demonstrating:
{“name”:”anamorphic.mov”,
“source”:”original”,
“format”:”h.264″,
“length”:”3.03″,
“height”:”720″,
“width”:”1280″,
“mtime”:”1355278126″,
“size”:”375646″,
“md5″:”94a0b479869ab7ee997b36b45d9edb7a”,
“crc32″:”0b8e4162”,
“sha1″:”c21b65ee8e9153f0812d7397fe89224d6f3f80fd”}
we will even attempt to “correct” the width in the case of “anamorphic” videos (eg: the pixels are “rectangular” and not “square”) to the scaled width in square pixel terms (like the one above)
A/V Geeks has done a lot of digitization of old film for The Internet Archive. They are trying to raise funds to digitize many more hours of footage to put up on archive.org which will be free to view and use by the public. If you would like to contribute here is some information:
WHAT? The A/V Geeks have over 24,000 old 16mm educational films that we’ve rescued from landfills, dumpsters, closets, school libraries. These films cover topics from Atomic Bombs to Zoo Babies and provide an entertaining yet insightful glimpse into our past. We’ve kept these materials from being thrown out and we want to continue our mission by giving them a new life and sharing them you!
Traditionally, this means that we would have to either travel to you or you would have to travel to us to watch a film on a projector. By digitizing these films we can give you and the world access to these materials! When a film from the A/V Geeks archive is digitized and uploaded to the internet, it can be easily accessed, watched, downloaded, researched and repurposed for music videos, class projects, documentaries and more.
Help us digitize 100 Miles of Film! Instead of traveling miles to give access to these films we’d rather digitize miles of 16mm film. Film length is generally measured in feet (in the US) to where 2100 feet of film roughly equals one hour of content. With your support we can digitize and make available 100 miles of film – over 240 hours of (around 1,000 individual titles) from the archive. So we envision this as sort of a road rally. We have to go 100 miles in a short period of time. We’ll have a small team to keep the machines humming along. We aren’t sure what we’ll find with some of the films – we haven’t seen them yet!
For every $500 we raise, we digitize one mile of film (nearly 2.5 hours of material)!

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