Microfilm Reader
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A microfilm reader is a device that uses a lens and source of light to magnify miniaturized text and accompanying images that have been printed on a roll of
16 mm film 16 mm film is a historically popular and economical Film gauge, gauge of Photographic film, film. 16 mm refers to the width of the film (about inch); other common film gauges include 8 mm film, 8 mm and 35mm movie film, 35 mm. It ...
(100 cm or 215 cm in length) or 35 mm film (100 cm in length), which is also known as microfilm or "roll film." Throughout the 20th century, many commercial organizations and government agencies used microfilm as the main medium to store large amounts of text from books, periodicals, and records until the advent of modern computers, which offered instant access to content and additional storage and cost-savings advantages over microfilm. The need and production of complementary microfilm readers therefore fell with the need for microfilm, but they are still used today to view stored content on microfilm that has yet to be converted into a digital format.


History


19th century

The development of the microfilm reader began when John Benjamin Dancer produced one of the first recorded microphotographs in 1839.Luther, F. "The Earliest Experiments in Microphotography." ''Isis'' 41.125–126 (1950): 277–281. Print. Dancer, an English optical instrument maker, was experimenting with the newly announced
Daguerreotype Daguerreotype was the first publicly available photography, photographic process, widely used during the 1840s and 1850s. "Daguerreotype" also refers to an image created through this process. Invented by Louis Daguerre and introduced worldwid ...
photography process when he placed a microscope lens in a camera, then produced a photograph with a 160:1 reduction ratio. Dancer continued experimenting with microphotography over the next decade, but it was not until 1853 that he captured text onto a microphotograph for the first time: 680 letters inscribed on a monument tablet, which he mounted onto 3 × 1 inch slides that could be read with his 100× microscopes, which became the first predecessor of the microfilm reader. During this period, many other inventors and practitioners in Europe experimented with capturing and producing photographs of text at reduced dimensions, such as Alfred Rosling's photograph of a page from the Illustrated London News, creating a new novelty industry. The Daguerreotype process, which produced photographs on a copper plate, was the dominant form of photography until the 1850s, when it was replaced by Henry Fox Talbot's " calotype" process that produced a negative image onto paper, which was in turn eventually replaced by
George Eastman George Eastman (July 12, 1854March 14, 1932) was an American entrepreneur who founded the Kodak, Eastman Kodak Company and helped to bring the photographic use of roll film into the mainstream. After a decade of experiments in photography, he ...
's
nitrocellulose Nitrocellulose (also known as cellulose nitrate, flash paper, flash cotton, guncotton, pyroxylin and flash string, depending on form) is a highly flammable compound formed by nitrating cellulose through exposure to a mixture of nitric acid and ...
film towards the end of the century. In the winter of 1870–71, during Prussia's siege of Paris, the French businessman and photographer René Dagron traveled to French-held territories behind enemy lines, where he was contracted to copy documents and personal messages from French officials onto microphotographs, which he dispatched to Paris using carrier pigeons; and if the messages were received, the microphotographs were projected by a "
magic lantern The magic lantern, also known by its Latin name , is an early type of image projector that uses pictures—paintings, prints, or photographs—on transparent plates (usually made of glass), one or more lens (optics), lenses, and a light source. ...
", another early form of the microfilm reader.Cady, Susan A. ''Machine Tool of Management: A History of Microfilm Technology'' (PDF). Doctor of Philosophy dissertation. Lehigh University, 1994. Available at: https://preserve.lehigh.edu/system/files/derivatives/coverpage/424827.pdf. Accessed 1 April 2025. The magic lantern is a type of projector that has been around since at least the 17th century, using candles, then oil as the source of light, and was used primarily for entertainment.


20th century

Throughout the first two decades of the twentieth century, roll film went through much development and improvement by making cellulose less flammable. Cameras became more affordable for consumers, such as the $1 Kodak BROWNIE Camera, which contributed to the growth of the motion picture industry. Despite the widespread use of film in the beginning of the century, it still was not used as a form of storage in a commercial setting until 1925, when New York banker George McCarthy invented the Checkograph. Designed as a way for banks to detect fraud and store records permanently, the Checkograph snapped photographs of several checks simultaneously then printed the micro images onto Kodak 16 mm film, which was viewed with a handheld magnifier or a Kodak projector such as the Kodascope, a new form of the microfilm reader. Books were also being transformed and converted to microfilm during this time, and unique readers were developed for this trend. In 1920, retired Navy Admiral Bradley Allen Fiske filed his first patent for a handheld reading machine that could magnify the microprint of manuscripts and books. Filing eleven patents from 1920-1935, Admiral Fiske's earlier designs resembled a two-eyepiece
lorgnette A lorgnette () is a pair of glasses, spectacles with a handle, used to hold them in place, rather than fitting over the ears or nose. The word ''lorgnette'' is derived from the French ''lorgner'', to take a sidelong look at, and Middle French, f ...
but were later built with a single-eye viewing scope. All of his designs included a roller that shifted the eyepiece along the reading material, which at first were printed on long sheets of paper, then later film. While Admiral Fiske's reading machine, the "Fiskeoscope," never became a commercial success, it did influence the designs of handheld film readers that were produced decades later. In 1930, the writer and impresario Robert Carlton Brown published an essay titled "The Readies" in the international journal transition, proposing an electric, portable reading machine that used a 4-5 inch magnifying glass to view microfilms of books. However, he adjusted the medium in his 1931 book, "Readies for Bob Brown's Machine," when he stated that books would be printed "on a ribbon of tough impressionable material," implying
ticker tape Ticker tape was the earliest electrical dedicated financial communications medium, transmitting stock price information over electrical telegraph, telegraph lines, in use from around 1870 to 1970. It consisted of a paper strip that ran through ...
, and that words would move in a single stream across the screen as opposed to viewing paragraphs or pages at one time, the speed of which could be controlled by the user with the press of a button. A prototype was built and featured in his book, but Brown was never able to acquire the capital to put his prototype into production. In 1949, Wesleyan University Librarian Fremont Rider produced the first microcard, which used a process that printed miniaturized pages from microfilm onto an opaque, 3" x 5" photographic paper that could hold approximately 15-100 pages on each side.Microcopy, Near-Print, and the New Film Composing Machines. Webb, Thompson The Library Quarterly; Jan 1, 1955; 25, 1; Periodicals Archive Online pg. 111 Microcards were designed to be used with a standard 3" x 5" card catalogue system, saving space for libraries and repositories by combining records and content of published works. Microcard readers were more difficult to develop than film readers since light had to be reflected back from opaque paper as opposed to being transmitted through a transparent medium, but a small and large-sized portable reader were released the following year. These readers were eventually embedded into microfilm readers, first with an external adapter that was developed by the Manchester College of Science and Technology in 1957, then built into film readers in the mid-1960s. During this decade,
NASA The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agencies of the United States government, independent agency of the federal government of the United States, US federal government responsible for the United States ...
began using microfiche (sheets of film with a standard size of 105 mm × 148 mm), to distribute and store technical reports, then the Department of Defense and Atomic Energy Commission soon followed, which marked the precedence of major organizations using film as the primary storage method and ending the demand for microcards. During this same period, the photocopying process used in commercially popular photocopiers was adjusted so that microfilm readers could copy and print images from microfilm, which came to be called the "reader-printer." The first prototype of a reader-printer was showcased by the Minnesota Mining & Manufacturing Company, also known as 3M, in 1957, then the organization produced the Model 23 Reader-Printer the following year. Microfilm was used in a new way when data from computer tape was printed onto roll film instead of paper, a process known as computer output microfilming (COM). First developed by the military in the 1940s, COM became widespread in the 1960s and led to the development of reader-printers, enlarger-printers, retrieval units. On the consumer side, readers became smaller and could be transported in a suitcase, sit on the lap, or held in the hand. Throughout the 1970s, many international producers entered the US reader market, offering higher quality and more affordable products, that by the end of the decade, Japanese manufacturers became dominant participants in the market.MICROFICHE AS A VEHICLE FOR TECHNICAL REPORTS - 1981 Government Report for Justice Department


21st century

Personal computers were introduced to consumers in the late 1970s, and over time replaced COM as the primary way to store and view data, and have become the primary way to view microfilm today, although the lens of a reader is still needed to magnify the content of roll film. Hardware and software has allowed microfilm readers to be compatible with Windows operating systems, but they must be redesigned when there are significant revisions to hardware and/or the operating system, such as in 2023 when the Firewire serial bus was replaced by USB 3.1 technology, and when Windows 10 was replaced by Windows 11.


Gallery

Image:2012 microfilm reader 6919567137.jpg Image:1968 microfilm reader 2854031461.jpg, 1968 Image:2004 microfilm reader 1117365851.jpg, 2004 Image:Mikrofilmsläsare.JPG, 2009 Image:2011 microfilm reader 5639135596.jpg, 2011


References


External links

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