Posted in Books Archive, Education Archive
Posted: Sat Jul 12, 2025 6:00 am
Books will be available for borrowing by one person at a time at archive.org, and will also be available for scholars to request via interlibrary loan. With your help, we can ensure that Ukrainian scholars and people studying Ukraine have access to authoritative, factual information about Ukrainian history and culture.
Thank you for making a difference by buying books from Better World Books and helping Ukrainian students and scholars with your donation.
| Tagged Books, donations |
Library as Laboratory Recap: Opening Television News for Deep Analysis and New Forms of Interactive Search
Watching a single episode of the evening news can be informative. Tracking trends in broadcasts over time can be fascinating.
The Internet Archive has preserved nearly 3 million phone number database hours of U.S. local and national TV news shows and made the material open to researchers for exploration and non-consumptive computational analysis. At a webinar April 13, TV News Archive experts shared how they’ve curated the massive collection and leveraged technology so scholars, journalists and the general public can make use of the vast repository.
Roger Macdonald, founder of the TV News Archive, and Kalev Leetaru, collaborating data scientist and GDELT Project founder, spoke at the session. Chris Freeland, director of Open Libraries, served as moderator and Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle offered opening remarks.
Watch video
“Growing up in the television age, [television] is such an influential, important medium—persuasive, yet not something you can really quote,” Kahle said. “We wanted to make it so that you could quote, compare and contrast.
Thank you for making a difference by buying books from Better World Books and helping Ukrainian students and scholars with your donation.
| Tagged Books, donations |
Library as Laboratory Recap: Opening Television News for Deep Analysis and New Forms of Interactive Search
Watching a single episode of the evening news can be informative. Tracking trends in broadcasts over time can be fascinating.
The Internet Archive has preserved nearly 3 million phone number database hours of U.S. local and national TV news shows and made the material open to researchers for exploration and non-consumptive computational analysis. At a webinar April 13, TV News Archive experts shared how they’ve curated the massive collection and leveraged technology so scholars, journalists and the general public can make use of the vast repository.
Roger Macdonald, founder of the TV News Archive, and Kalev Leetaru, collaborating data scientist and GDELT Project founder, spoke at the session. Chris Freeland, director of Open Libraries, served as moderator and Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle offered opening remarks.
Watch video
“Growing up in the television age, [television] is such an influential, important medium—persuasive, yet not something you can really quote,” Kahle said. “We wanted to make it so that you could quote, compare and contrast.