I've only just read about this and I'm so insanely excited about it that I can hardly get my thoughts in order. I'm sure new things will keep coming all the time but for the moment here are some thoughts...
The first and most selfish, I get to see all those old programs again. I can see
Kenny Everett again and again and again. All those
Royal Institute Christmas Lectures that each year I religiously miss, I get to see them. Every single interview with
Douglas Adams I can find. To be able to go and look through all the old episodes of
Tomorrow's World and recap on all the things that were supposed to be around in the year 2000, are we Post Future yet? That was the first me-me-me thought that went through my head.
Next, I'm planning on homeschooling, my daughter is only 16 months so that gives the BBC plenty of time to sort things out. Now Encarta is all well and good but if we suddenly decide to do a project about Whales it'd be really nice if we just popped to the BBC website a pulled up a list of every program they've ever made about Whales. I really hope they have some good metadate going on, something like the
Dublin Core would be great so we can actually find stuff!
For education and schools it'd be an amazing resource. You want to do an A-Level (17-18 yr olds) project about the miners strike, don't worry about text books, go right to the on-the-spot news reports. Pop Media Studies:-
The Old Grey Whistle Test, need I say more? Social Studies looking back at the 50s, 60s, 70s etc. easy. University is going to be really easy now!
Finially from the left
B3ta side of my brain. The chance to "remix" and reinvent old TV programs. It'll be like the computer games mod scene. Sure there'll be some very basic tweeks of old
Dr Who episodes but I'm sure some teams will come up with totally redubbed versions with new monsters rendered in over the top. Fanfiction can go to a whole new level, Dr Who meets
Blakes 7 crossover stories?... yes.
I am willing to bet here and now that the following happens...
Stage 1. Some people start to badly re-engineer Dr Who.
Stage 2. The good people get together.
Stage 3. Good "new" episodes of Dr Who start to hit the internet.
Stage 4. Other programs get redubbed and remix.
Stage 5. The BBC start to show these new versions in a new series called "BBC Redux".
Stage 6. These remixes become more popular than new programs.
Stage 7. The teams of "remixers" become paid professionals.
Stage 8. The old "professionals" throw up thier hands in confusion as they just don't get it.
Stage 9. Advertising and Marketing scramble to package this new rebellion and sell it back to us.
Stage 10. TV eats itself.