Immediately after switching the page, it will work with CSR.
Please reload your browser to see how it works.
So a couple of these guys were somewhere in rural Texas, at the side of the road after a visit to someone who'd reached out, when one of the guys sees what looks like a cassette tape on the side of the road. He picks it up, notices it's a little different than a music cassette tape, and decides to add it to the collected debris even though he has no idea it's Columbia-related.
Edit: Here's the transcript from the NOVA episode. William Harwood, a CBS reporter, is speaking:
During the search for wreckage, I interviewed a guy who one day was... they'd gone out, because people were calling in, you know, "There's debris here. There's debris there."
And these guys, they'd sent somebody out to check out everything. And these two guys went to this house, and it turns out whatever it was it was nothing or something. And they walk back to their truck, and they're on the side of a country road in Texas. And they're standing by the back of this pickup truck, and one of the guys looked down on the side of the road, between the asphalt, where there's a little gravel and then grass. He sees this cassette.
And it looked like a, like an audiocassette, you know? Like it's Texas—it'd be country and western music or something. But it was a little thicker than an audiotape. And he picked it up, and he said, "You know, that's interesting."
It didn't look like an audiotape. And he put it in the bag just for the heck of it, and they turned it in. And that was the tape from the flight crew's own video camera that Laurel Clark was using during re-entry to film the crew.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html