About ArchiveInABox
SmallTownPapers Unveils Turn-key Archive Management for Newspaper Publishers
SEATTLE, WA - August 17, 2005 - SmallTownPapers, Inc. is pleased to introduce ArchiveInABox, turn-key archive management for newspapers. ArchiveInABox is a complete system, created by SmallTownPapers, that allows newspaper publishers to transform their bound volume newspaper archives into a high-quality, completely searchable digital format that is made online accessible.
"Newspaper publishers across the country expressed interest in the simple yet powerful SmallTownPapers system created for moving printed archives from small town newspapers to digital format," said Paul Jeffko, president and founder of SmallTownPapers. "With ArchiveInABox, we are able to offer that system to a new group of customers who are searching for an easy and cost-effective way to digitize, access, search, distribute and market their collection of bound book archives."
With ArchiveInABox, a newspaper publisher simply places their bound book archives in a provided military grade shipping box. SmallTownPapers handles everything for the publisher including shipping, logistics, scanning, post-processing, distribution and marketing. The archive books are scanned intact and safely returned to the publisher. Once the scanning process has been completed, post-processing software including optical character recognition (OCR) is used to create fully-searchable digital images of the newspaper pages that are uploaded to internet servers. The online newspaper pages appear exactly as they were printed and a search will locate keywords appearing in articles, photographs and even advertisements.
"This is an absolutely necessary extension of our newspaper," said Tim Robinson of Robinson Newspapers in Seattle -- a company in the process of working with SmallTownPapers to digitize a portion of its archives dating back more than 80 years. "We embraced this concept because it serves a wide audience of interest."
For Robinson Newspapers, the digitizing project means piece of mind knowing the bound archives can remain in storage - safe and intact. The publishers know that now there are few reasons anyone will ever need to thumb through the delicate, aging pages of the bound books. Instead, newspaper reporters, researchers, genealogists and others needing information about their community's history have immediate access to a high-quality, easy-to-search, online version of the newspaper.
Publishers, including Robinson Newspapers, appreciate the careful handling of their bound volume archives. For the scanning of the delicate books, SmallTownPapers contracts with Maryland-based Crowley Micrographics because it is known for its experience, expertise and high quality standards in the "non-destructive" scanning of old and fragile bound book volumes and large format materials such as newspapers. The company uses specialized, high-resolution, overhead scanners created by Zeutschel, a global leader in high performance scan systems.
Currently, SmallTownPapers features more than 150,000 pages of newspaper archives dating back to the 1800s.
|
|
ArchiveInABox
|
|
Put your bound book archive in a box... and we'll do the rest.
Scanning
We do high resolution scanning of your archives.
Post Processing
97% Optical Character Recognition catpure means every world is indexed and searched for, digitally!
Distribution
Premium Content Service through multiple portal media aggregation, search engines.
|
|