The first time Auguste Leclerc heard the chimes, he was debugging a 1998 GeoCities page about forgotten Parisian catacombs. It was midnight in the 11th arrondissement. The bell from the old Saint-Marguerite church, silent since the renovation of 2019, tolled twelve deep, resonant notes through his open window.
But Clémence’s expression grew grave. “There’s a corruption event,” she said. “Someone is deleting memories at the source. Not web pages—actual human recollections of Paris between the wars. If they succeed, the city will forget its own Jazz Age. No Hemingway at Shakespeare & Co. No Josephine Baker at the Folies Bergère. Just a blank space.”
The next day, he raced to the library. In the sub-basement, a locked room labeled (Project Dust) hummed with servers. Inside, a junior curator named Bénédicte was feeding original 1925 diaries into a scanner. On her screen, an AI was rewriting them—changing names, erasing streets, flattening slang into sterile modern French.
In pencil.
“Stop,” Auguste said. “You’re not preserving. You’re erasing.”
Auguste held up the brass key. To his shock, it fit a small panel on the scanner. He turned it. The machine shuddered. From its vent poured a stream of golden, paper-like butterflies—each one a restored memory. A lost tango melody. The scent of rain on a 1926 cobblestone. A whispered je t’aime from a soldier who never came home.
The archivist here was a woman named Clémence, who wore a 1920s flapper dress and carried a tablet from 2041. “Welcome to the Midnight Snapshot,” she said. “Every midnight in Paris, the veil between the digital and the real thins. We are the Internet Archive of the lost hour—the hour that never was.”
So it could never be erased.
Import songs from a variety of sources, tag verse types, set ordering of verses, add formatting, manage authors, search through songs and even add backing tracks to songs for when your band is on holiday.
Integration with VLC means that you can display almost any video file and play almost any audio file in OpenLP. Using VLC means that a wide variety of formats are supported.
Import Bibles from a number of formats, or even download a few verses you need from a Bible site, display verses in varying formats, easily search verses by scripture reference (e.g. Luke 12:10-17) or by phrase. midnight in paris internet archive
Store your liturgy, announcements, or other custom slides in OpenLP. Just like a song, but with less structure, custom slides can also contain formatting and can be set to loop.
Integration with PowerPoint, PowerPoint Viewer and LibreOffice Impress on Windows and LibreOffice Impress on Linux/FreeBSD means that you can import your presentations into OpenLP and control them via OpenLP. The first time Auguste Leclerc heard the chimes,
Control OpenLP remotely using any tablet or phone using our remote apps in the Google Play Store and Apple App Store. Search, go live, control slides, and more. Also accessible via any phone's web browser.
Import pictures into OpenLP and organise them into folders. Create slide-shows by simply selecting multiple songs and drag-and-dropping the selection into the service, with auto-forwarding. But Clémence’s expression grew grave
Built-in stage view accessible from any device with a web browser. Use any device on the local network as your stage monitor, meaning unlimited stage monitors without any extra hardware constraints.
The first time Auguste Leclerc heard the chimes, he was debugging a 1998 GeoCities page about forgotten Parisian catacombs. It was midnight in the 11th arrondissement. The bell from the old Saint-Marguerite church, silent since the renovation of 2019, tolled twelve deep, resonant notes through his open window.
But Clémence’s expression grew grave. “There’s a corruption event,” she said. “Someone is deleting memories at the source. Not web pages—actual human recollections of Paris between the wars. If they succeed, the city will forget its own Jazz Age. No Hemingway at Shakespeare & Co. No Josephine Baker at the Folies Bergère. Just a blank space.”
The next day, he raced to the library. In the sub-basement, a locked room labeled (Project Dust) hummed with servers. Inside, a junior curator named Bénédicte was feeding original 1925 diaries into a scanner. On her screen, an AI was rewriting them—changing names, erasing streets, flattening slang into sterile modern French.
In pencil.
“Stop,” Auguste said. “You’re not preserving. You’re erasing.”
Auguste held up the brass key. To his shock, it fit a small panel on the scanner. He turned it. The machine shuddered. From its vent poured a stream of golden, paper-like butterflies—each one a restored memory. A lost tango melody. The scent of rain on a 1926 cobblestone. A whispered je t’aime from a soldier who never came home.
The archivist here was a woman named Clémence, who wore a 1920s flapper dress and carried a tablet from 2041. “Welcome to the Midnight Snapshot,” she said. “Every midnight in Paris, the veil between the digital and the real thins. We are the Internet Archive of the lost hour—the hour that never was.”
So it could never be erased.
At our Bible college, we decided to switch to OpenLP because it was free. We found it to be feature-rich and easy to use. It's also constantly improving.
Hello, I love your software! Praise the Lord. The fact that you all are willing to provide this for free is amazing.
OpenLP has made a tremendous positive impact on our services. The singing has increased tenfold as even those with poor eyesight can clearly see the onscreen lyrics.
I have been using OpenLP for a couple of years and I found it very easy to navigate and despite never having used this type of software before was able to get a service up and running in a couple of minutes once I had installed the program.
Just wanted to drop you a line to say thank you for a great product. I'm traveling around to small churches helping them upgrade their media environments. With little or no budgets, OpenLP has been a great help. I wish I could capture the look on a pastor's face when I tell him it's a free software.
Sunday morning I set the up projector, gave a 10 minute lesson to the young lady who does our overheads. Everything went smoothly. She was so excited, the congregation thought it was great, our priest was ecstatic.