We also did an intern project -- Tom's intern who
became my intern after
Tom left (Arjen De Vries) where we did:
1. Converted the caption stream into an sgml document indexed by time --
so the caption stream came down in dribs and drabs of the form "turn
background yellow, foreground white, place this text"... that turned
into the SGML document, with each element tagged with time.
2. We then indexed that collection of SGML documents -- the content
stream was Tom's ring-buffer of the CNN live feed (6 hours was what we
stored from memory)
3. We then built a simple-minded search engine over the SGML documents,
used the CRL reco engine for getting user queries -- you could also just
type the query at a search box; did the search over the
caption-doc-index, found the time-stamp and played the video.
Arjen may have published some of this as his final year Masters project
out of the University Of Twente -- likely summer 1995.
--
Id: kg:/m/0285kf1
“Radio and Television Information Filtering through Speech Recognition”
which in turn cites his Master’s thesis from 1995.
On 2019, Jan 31, at 2:34 PM, Lawrence Stewart
<stewart(a)serissa.com> wrote:
I was at CRL from 1989 to 1994. I sent an inquiry to our informal mailing list.
We had written an audio server along the lines of the X server
(
http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/Compaq-DEC/CRL-93-8.pdf
<http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/Compaq-DEC/CRL-93-8.pdf>) and Tom Levergood wrote
an application called Store24 to keep a rolling 24 history of WBUR (local NPR station).
We thought about using speech recognition to build a searchable index for it.
The next idea was to do the same thing for Video, perhaps using the closed captioning
feed to develop the index. Dave Wecker (now at Microsoft Research) reports working on
extracting data from NPR news streams and it would find the appropriate audio or video
clip. He’s not sure he published that.
Jim Gettys cites
http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/Compaq-DEC/CRL-99-2.pdf
<http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/Compaq-DEC/CRL-99-2.pdf> (Indexing Multimedia for
the Internet) and notes that all the DEC techreports are hidden away at
http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/ <http://www.hpl.hp.com/techreports/>. Choose
“Browse by year” and select Compaq/DEC
-Larry
On 2019, Jan 31, at 9:42 AM, Clem Cole
<clemc(a)ccc.com <mailto:clemc@ccc.com>> wrote:
I'm not sure if the old DEC CRL tech reports are still around. At one time before
the Compaq-tion, some folks at CRL and the folks at Boston Public Library and WGBH were
working with video and trying to extract all sorts of text from it. I do not remember
how successful they were, but there might be some hints in their tech reports. I'll
ask around and see if I can turn anything up. Part of the problem I have is I that
don't remember who was doing that work, but some of my friends might.
Clem
ᐧ
On Thu, Jan 31, 2019 at 2:16 AM Alec Muffett <alec.muffett(a)gmail.com
<mailto:alec.muffett@gmail.com>> wrote:
Has anyone ever attempted to OCR a video, perhaps by breaking into frames and then
aggregating the results, using multiple frames to correct each other?
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019, 19:51 Richard Salz <rich.salz(a)gmail.com
<mailto:rich.salz@gmail.com> wrote:
Some folks are trying to figure out how to get AberMud source online and working; see
https://twitter.com/larsbrinkhoff/status/1056823314272960512
<https://twitter.com/larsbrinkhoff/status/1056823314272960512>
Sample code at
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/larsbrinkhoff/abermud/master/abermud1/tex…
<https://raw.githubusercontent.com/larsbrinkhoff/abermud/master/abermud1/text/timelock.b>