Honoring and Remembering 9/11 Victims

Started by jbroadglide, September 10, 2009, 11:30:19 AM

subro

This is from GoogleBlog. They are collecting photos and stories from 9/11 and are superimposing them over the actual locations via Google Maps Street View. Some of the before and after photos are very disturbing.

http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2009/09/make-history-with-national-september.html

The website is:

www.911history.org


Make History with the National September 11th Memorial & Museum
9/10/2009 08:00:00 AM

The anniversary of September 11th evokes difficult memories here in New York and all over the world. The events of the day left an indelible mark on many New Yorkers, including me. The offices of my startup were at 30 West Broadway, right next door to 7 World Trade Center, so I was downtown that morning. I saw the planes hit and then watched, shocked, from the West Side Highway as the towers fell. It was a terrible day for all who were there, an impossible day for those who lost friends and loved ones and a shared experience of loss and grief for New York and the world.

Today I'm proud that Google is part of the launch of Make History, a website created by the National September 11th Memorial & Museum in partnership with design firm Local Projects. Make History is a participatory archive that invites people to share their experiences of 9/11 and its aftermath in an effort to preserve the memories of that time. The Museum has created a collaborative storytelling tool that makes innovative use of Street View through the Google Maps API. The Make History site allows people to place and then share their photos and videos in geographical context, collectively piecing together the history that was witnessed, one photo and video at a time.

To participate, simply go to the site and click "Add Your Story." You'll be asked to write about your experience of 9/11 and share your photos and videos, and then to place them at the spot where they were captured.
To power the Make History website, the Museum is using App Engine and leveraging the power of cloud computing. By taking advantage of the scalability of Google's infrastructure, the Museum can focus on building great applications and telling important stories â€" not on how many servers they will need.

The developer community that uses our tools and APIs is a source of inspiration for all of us at Google who work on platforms, partnerships and developer outreach â€" and Make History is a powerful example of why we all do what we do. This September 11th, as we sit with our memories of the day, we're honored to have been able to help enable the creation of such a significant and deeply moving archive.

Posted by Jill Szuchmacher, New Business Development


Lunican

The History Channel has 9 first hand accounts of people in NYC that were filming that day.

http://www.history.com/content/9-11/102-minutes#/home/

BridgeTroll

I saw that the other day... eye opening.
In a boat at sea one of the men began to bore a hole in the bottom of the boat. On being remonstrating with, he answered, "I am only boring under my own seat." "Yes," said his companions, "but when the sea rushes in we shall all be drowned with you."

jbroadglide

I have not had a chance to post the results of our 1st annual 9/11 Remembrance Ride until now. But we had 36 bikes and 42 riders, more than double what I had expected for the first time. It was really great to see those big American flags flying behind the bikes. And we did get plenty of waves and thumbs up from motorists as we made our way around Orange Park. A reporter from MyClay Sun was there and I hope to see a story on their website pretty soon. Just wanted to let everyone know how much I appreciated everyones well wishes here on MJ and its gonna be bigger and better next year.
Draco Dormiens Nunquam Titillandus (Never Tickle a Sleeping Dragon)

cdb

I went to St. Francis Xavier High School in Manhattan. I am a born and raised New Yorker (Bay Ridge, Brooklyn). Moved to Jax in October 2001. I grew up in a very Irish and Italian neighborhood that was hit particularly hard by the 9/11 attacks. 16 men from my High School died that day. I knew 3 of them personally. One was my older brothers best friend and the other 2 were really good friends with him as well. All our families knew each other. I pray for them and their families every day since it happened. It was a terrible day and the weeks after were even worse. You couldn't go to a bar or restaurant in my neighborhood without being surrounded by a group of people that were coming from a 9/11 funeral or wake. Every year they remember them with memorials in NYC. There names were Sean Lugano, Matthew Burke and Jimmy Riches, and they will never be forgotten.