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Behind the repackaging and repurposing of these films is the Center for Home Movies, a nonprofit organization focused on the preservation of amateur motion pictures.3 As the primary coordinator of Home Movie Day, the Center for Home Movies has been a key contributor to the broader dissemination of home movie and amateur film materials since its establishment in 2005. In collaboration with the Orphan Film Symposium, the Center for Home Movies has taken part in preserving and promoting collections of home movies from various sources.4 Partnering with the Internet Archive, many films from the organization's collections appear online for free viewing alongside the home movies of individual collectors.5 The Living Room Cinema DVD is another means by which the Center for Home Movies is making these films more widely available as the efforts of the organization continue to expand. This video offers an introduction to the diverse world of home movies and amateur films for the interested enthusiast, preservationist, or scholar.
The vintage of the twenty-two movies included on the DVD ranges from as early as the 1920s to as recently as 1998. The majority of the films were shot in various locations across the United States, but a select few were produced in other countries, including Thailand, Cuba, Japan, and the United Kingdom. The film-to-video transfer is of high quality, with transfer services performed by preservation and telecine laboratory Colorlab. Although some of the source materials have the occasional defect (as may be expected), the final product of the transfer appears to capture crisply the grain of the various film stocks on display while minimizing signs of ghosting or interlacing in the transfer. The two hours of amateur footage that make up the bulk of the disc are encoded on a dual-layer DVD, offering a higher video bitrate and quality for the transfers. Included along with the films is an eight-minute video [End Page 171] showing scenes from several different Home Movie Day events, acting as an introduction for those who may not have attended one of the events before viewing the DVD. Apart from this vignette, the key special features that make this DVD especially valuable for viewing and repeat viewing are the audio options that complement the films.
All issues have been resolved. Some non-free images were removed and/or deleted, and the audio clips have been reduced in size/fidelity per Wikipedia:Music samples. Videmus Omnia Talk 02:22, 26 August 2007 (UTC)}}Reply[reply]
The article contains replaceable non-free images of the person performing in concert, album covers being used decoratively, and six audio clips of the musician. I think most of this needs to be purged per WP:NFCC#1, WP:NFCC#3, and WP:NFCC#8, but it's a featured article so if I even place {{non-free}} on the page it gets reverted. Appreciate any additional opinions. Videmus Omnia Talk 18:11, 19 August 2007 (UTC)Reply[reply]
I agree with Filll on the whole, and want to add the following. Quite frankly, I've about had it with Abu badali's repeated use of "borderline misrepresentations" in the course of his otherwise worthy efforts to remove the many unnecessary non-free images presently in Wikipedia. Indeed, we ought be able to admit that it is quite arguable that all of the images on WP are unnecessary! First off, these images were added to the intelligent design article, then removed by Abu badali and re-added by three separate editors. Without a word on the article talk page, he chose to use his three allotted reverts, which is what's widely understood to be "edit warring", trying to come in "just under the 3RR radar", so to speak, especially if it is repetitive behavior on the part of a particular user. Well, in this case it's three, so it did not come in under the 3RR radar, but instead resulted in a 3RR warning. And so what? It happens to the best sometimes and that's why the limit of 3RR was set, to put a limit on it. But whether this sort of testing of the local consensus is a repetitive behavior or not, it is, frankly, a slap in the face to people who've chosen to devote themselves to an article. In this case, on the part of at least several of this article's editors, it has involved hundreds of hours worth of personal time, research, thought and actual contribution to the article over the course of months or even years. Collectively this article has taken thousands of person-hours over the last several years, without a doubt. Over 4megabytes of talk, and some 180 footnotes chosen from among many more references found by the participants. Several of the editors of this article know this topic as well as virtually any reliable source in existence.
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