
That said, planning to use a researcher's pass to "set these treasures free" and blaming Amazon for not having generated more revenue from these films makes it sound like the OP thinks he knows better than the staff of the National Archives how to best care for these assets and that he knows better than the folks at Amazon how to turn a profit. I completely understand the frustration if this is indeed the above set of films and it's been over eleven years since the digitization agreement and files have not yet been made freely available to the public.

My guess is they're the films described in the CustomFlix partnership announced here:įor all the helpful advice offered both here and on Reddit about how to do this, I wish there had been more time asking if this was something the OP should be doing in the first place. It’s time to set these national treasures free. I was looking at many of these titles yesterday.


I am doing research there and I have have a research pass. The flipside of the catch is that the DVDs can be viewed and even copied for $0 on site by researchers. (In part because amazon hasn’t even had them all available to sell. It’s been years now and for a variety of reasons - many of which are Amazon’s fault - there still exist a solid number of discs that Amazon hasn’t sold even one of. Years ago in partnership with the National Archives digitized a tremendous amount of film for the National Archives, with the catch that the material cannot be freely disseminated online by the National Archives until Amazon breaks even on their digitization investment. Washington DC, specifically College Park, even more specifically The National Archives at College Park. convert DVD/Blu-ray into files that could be uploaded onto YouTube, blog or other video-sharing sites, etc.> Maybe you should disclose your city or at least state/general location Leawo Blu-ray Ripper allows users to apply converted files to many aspects, including: rip and convert DVD/Blu-ray into files compatible with various portable devices such as iPhone, iPad, Samsung/Sony/HTC/Nokia phones, PS3, Apple TV, etc. The supported 3D formats include: 3D MP4, 3D WMV, 3D AVI, 3D MKV, etc. Also 4K MP4, MKV video output and video output with 3D effects are supported. Praised for its high conversion speed, Leawo Blu-ray Ripper assists users in decrypting, ripping and converting common and multi-angle Blu-ray/DVD files to video and audio in various popular formats, like HD MP4, HD AVI, HD MOV, HD TS, HD TRP, HD VOB, SD MP4, WMV, SD MOV, SD MKV, SD FLV, MP3, etc.

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