Updated 68 Days ago
Check this page out. I think it really makes a lot of since with all the crazy stuff that is going on in the America today.
http://famguardian.org/Subjects/FamilyIssues/Articles/DirtRoads/DirtRoads.htm
I think we need to get back to basics in America. Really if you think of almost every situation we are in right now .There is a simple right way and wrong but it seems our society says oh just do whatever feels good at the time. It also seems that we are in blame the other person first society. But just as in your regular day to day life sometimes what is easy and what feels good at that time is not the way to do things. Most time’s the best way is the hard way and it is still best to take the dirt road!
Your mom here and I am so proud that you published that article, everyone needs to click on there and read what Paul Harvey wrote, that is the way kids should be raised today, growing up in the south, alot of what he says really hits home. Thanks again, I will definately save that article! (by the way my grandparents did live on a red dirt road just like in the picture)! Lots of red dirt in southern GA.
What is reCAPTCHA?
reCAPTCHA is a free CAPTCHA service that helps to digitize books.A CAPTCHA is a program that can tell whether its user is a human or a computer. You've probably seen them Ñ colorful images with distorted text at the bottom of Web registration forms. CAPTCHAs are used by many websites to prevent abuse from "bots," or automated programs usually written to generate spam. No computer program can read distorted text as well as humans can, so bots cannot navigate sites protected by CAPTCHAs.
About 60 million CAPTCHAs are solved by humans around the world every day. In each case, roughly ten seconds of human time are being spent. Individually, that's not a lot of time, but in aggregate these little puzzles consume more than 150,000 hours of work each day. What if we could make positive use of this human effort? reCAPTCHA does exactly that by channeling the effort spent solving CAPTCHAs online into "reading" books.
To archive human knowledge and to make information more accessible to the world, multiple projects are currently digitizing physical books that were written before the computer age. The book pages are being photographically scanned, and then transformed into text using "Optical Character Recognition" (OCR). The transformation into text is useful because scanning a book produces images, which are difficult to store on small devices, expensive to download, and cannot be searched. The problem is that OCR is not perfect.
reCAPTCHA improves the process of digitizing books by sending words that cannot be read by computers to the Web in the form of CAPTCHAs for humans to decipher. More specifically, each word that cannot be read correctly by OCR is placed on an image and used as a CAPTCHA. This is possible because most OCR programs alert you when a word cannot be read correctly.
But if a computer can't read such a CAPTCHA, how does the system know the correct answer to the puzzle? Here's how: Each new word that cannot be read correctly by OCR is given to a user in conjunction with another word for which the answer is already known. The user is then asked to read both words. If they solve the one for which the answer is known, the system assumes their answer is correct for the new one. The system then gives the new image to a number of other people to determine, with higher confidence, whether the original answer was correct.
Currently, we are helping to digitize books from the Internet Archive and old editions of the New York Times.