A search on Cosmos 96 turns up an article which is quite emphatic that this object has no relation to the K-incident, however you spell it.
www.freedomofinfo.org...
In addition, to me, having these articles and papers is nice but since they are in a graphic format, there is no ability to search or index or catalog
these.
Though it would be a lot of work, istm that the most important papers from the collection should be considered for OCR scanning, or hand re-writing,
enabling the search feature.
Again, to me, assigning 120 people to look over these and comment in a widely variable manner doesn't add much. If you have several thousand or maybe
several hundred people who are willing to work on them, why not take advantage of this and have each person transcribe their bundles?
In fact the ones I've seen doing the examining aren't even summarizing, so I have to wonder just what the 'instructions' are.
In addition it's also not clear to me what we hope to gain by going through them, again, with highly variable styles of 'analysis' or
'commentary', or in some cases, not much at all.
Maybe someone could explain?
I've transcribed some truly massive works, one being a set of 20 loose leaf manuals with several hundred pages each. It took me about 9 months to do,
working 8 hours per day (I was being paid), yet that's not a long time, and I've done it twice (two different projects).
ISTM it would be a snap if you have several thousand members. (I forget how big the collection is, but not every document requires nor is legible
enough to permit OCR.
Obviously the original docs have signatures and formats and stamps and pictures, but again, it's not clear if any transcription or search enabling is
being considered, thus my question.