Whatever happened to… the Domesday Discs?

Who remembers the BBC Domesday Project and the resulting Domesday Discs?

Well, I do at least. I’m not quite sure why, but the other day I started wondering what had happened to the project and the collected data.

Never heard of the project? Well, back in 1984 the BBC started a project with a number of companies to create a modern version of the Domesday book which was due to celebrate its 900th anniversary in 1986. School children were asked to write about their local area and send in photographs. All of this data was then collated onto two laser discs, along with statistics such as census data as well as maps, short videos and virtual walks around parts of the country. The texts that the children had written were saved as teletext pages and the whole thing required a specially adapted BBC micro computer to run.

I’m not quite sure if I ever wrote anything in school that got submitted to the project, but I do remember some years later when the discs were available that we didn’t have them at my school or in our local library, so when a set became available at another school it was arranged for me to spend an evening looking at them.

In the days before the World Wide Web and all the modern sources of information that are now available, this was a fascinating project of which I know no equal, and a few days ago I started wondering what had happened to all of that data and I was surprised to find an answer so quickly just by searching the internet.

Actually, what seemed like a revolution in terms of the amount of data back then is by comparison today quite small. Each of the laser discs could store 300MB on each side, meaning the combination of both sides stored less than a data CD today.

Recently, a project had been set up to recover the data and make it readable again. This included reverse engineering a set of discs to convert the data into modern formats. I read all about this at a fascinating website called Domesday Redux. Then I came across another site about the history of the project.

But the main surprise was this site: www.domesday1986.com – this is the result of that reverse engineering, an online version of the community disc (the one with the children’s texts and photos on).

I have been able to re-visit texts about places that I used to live and go to school in, and I have seen photos of those places as they were in 1984-1986, even one showing my school and the house that I used to live in!

Visiting that site is a real treat and I am so glad to have found it. Let’s hope that it remains on-line as long as possible so that future generations can learn about how we put together this amazing collection of information – without writing a single E-mail!

Einschreiben

If you need proof that you have sent a letter by post, then you send it “per Einschreiben”. In return for paying an additional fee to the normal postage you receive a receipt as proof of posting and can choose between different methods of delivery.

These methods are: the postman documents that he or she put the letter in the recipient’s postbox (Einwurf), the letter is handed over to someone at the recipient’s address who then signs of it (Übergabe), the letter is handed over only to the recipient in person (Eigenhändig), the letter is handed over and is signed for on a postcard which is returned to the sender (Rückschein) – similar to Recorded Delivery in the United Kingdom.

The Einschreiben method is often used when proof of sending and receipt are very important, eg. when cancelling contracts.

To hear a simple explanation and a short discussion in German, listen to the podcast:

(Press the “play” button to listen to the podcast)

Download a transcript

Download the MP3 file | Subscribe to the podcast

Lidl in the news

When I went shopping on Saturday I was very interested to see if my local Lidl would have the Stern magazine that appeared this week. Not because I wanted to buy it (I did that in my local newsagents), but being the main topic in this week’s edition, I was not so sure that they would.

As it turned out, they did have it in stock – and behind the tills was a statement printed on Lidl headed paper to answer the claims made in the magazine.

lidl_stern.jpg
This week’s Stern and the statement from Lidl

Over the years I’ve some interesting (and sometimes unpleasant) reasons to get involved in employees’ rights. What Stern are claiming certainly beats almost everything I’ve experienced.

They report that detectives were installing miniature cameras in Lidl stores in Germany and then reporting back to the headquarters about what they had learnt. Actually, I find nothing wrong with cameras watching the tills as this could be for staff safety, but the problem I find is that the staff on the tills need to know that they are being filmed!

In this case, however, Stern reports that the detectives were not just interested in catching employees with their hand in the tills, but they were making notes about their private lives as well.

These were details such as:

– who could not go shopping until they received their wages
– how much did employees have left on their pre-paid mobile phones
– how store managers talked to their employees
– what employees did in their breaks

There are some things in the article that I can understand a detective being interested in, eg. who was working even though they were sick or on holiday; who avoided helping when there was heaving lifting to be done. But in my opinion these are things that the store manager should be dealing with. They don’t need a detective’s report to know these things.

As I said, Lidl has issued a statement about the article. They state that only 8% of their stores in Germany used such detectives last year. More importantly, they say that the detectives were meant to sort out thefts in these stores – last year Lidl lost 80 million Euros worth of stock! They did not want the detectives to make these additional notes about employees’ private lives.

They promise not to use detectives in future and to only use cameras that are clearly visible.

Problem solved? Well, maybe. This promise is certainly good news for the employees, but why did it have to go this far in the first place? Did it have to take a report by a national magazine to stop these practises?

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