What I would say is that oral historians have spent 40 years thinking about how to interview people--focusing on the interview, to do it right and so on--but we haven't thought about after the interview. Again, that's why we have these tens and tens of thousands of interviews sitting unheard.
Historica is doing some great work now with World War II veterans where they're doing digital stories online. Again, we're now thinking seriously about what happens after and how we make sure that these stories continue to tell long after whoever the interviewer was or the project that created these things--that recorded these interviews--is long gone.
Again, this explosion of creativity is messy, but things are being recorded that would never have been recorded 20 years ago. It's amazing what's going on out there. I'm thinking of the west coast with--