llama.cpp/tools/mtmd/tests/test-1-extracted.md

3.6 KiB

<|ref|>title<|/ref|><|det|>61, 255, 907, 533<|/det|>

MEN WALK ON MOON

ASTRONAUTS LAND ON PLAIN; COLLECT ROCKS, PLANT FLAG

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>56, 559, 268, 629<|/det|> Voice From Moon: Eagle Has Landed'

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 645, 262, 675<|/det|> EAGLE (the lunar surface, Houston, Truesquily) Base here, The Eagle has landed.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 675, 262, 720<|/det|> BOOTHROOM: Lounge, Truesquily, we enjoy you on the ground. You've got a bunch of guys about to toss bikes. We're breaking again. Thanks a lot.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 720, 262, 750<|/det|> TRAVELLING MADE: Time you. BOOTHROOM: You're looking good here.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 750, 262, 780<|/det|> TRAVELLING MADE: A very smooth touchdown. BEDROOM: Eagle, you are very far. I'll. (The first sign in the lunar appearance) (Over.)

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 780, 262, 810<|/det|> TRAVELLING MADE: Eagle, stay for I'll. BOOTHROOM: Bumper and we are you waiting the cue.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 810, 262, 830<|/det|> TRAVELLING MADE: Eagle, and service mobility.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 830, 262, 850<|/det|> How do you read me?

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 850, 262, 880<|/det|> TRAVELLING COLUMBIA, he has landed Truesquily. Base, Eagle is at Truesquily. I read you first by. Over.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 880, 262, 900<|/det|> COLUMBIA: Yes, I heard the whole thing.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 900, 262, 920<|/det|> BOOTHROOM: Well, it's a good show.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 920, 262, 940<|/det|> COLUMBIA: Fantastic.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 940, 262, 960<|/det|> TRAVELLING MADE: I'll read that.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 960, 262, 980<|/det|> APOLLO CONTROL: The most major sky to sky will be for the 23 event, that is at 21 minutes 26 sec-

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>74, 980, 262, 990<|/det|> tion of lunar descent.

<|ref|>image<|/ref|><|det|>270, 545, 697, 990<|/det|>

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 559, 911, 629<|/det|> A Powdery Surface Is Closely Explored

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>733, 645, 851, 665<|/det|> BY JOHN NOBLE WILFORD

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 669, 911, 700<|/det|> HOUSTON, Monday, July 21—New hires landed and walked on the moon.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 700, 911, 750<|/det|> Two Americans, astronauts of Apollo 11, steered their Eagle-shaped lunar module safely and smoothly to the lunar landing yesterday at 4:17:40 P.M., Eastern day-light time.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 750, 911, 780<|/det|> Neil A. Armstrong, the 38-year-old civilian commander, radioed to earth and the landing team here.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 780, 911, 830<|/det|> "Boom, Truesquily! Base here. The Eagle has landed," the first man to reach the moon—Neil Armstrong and his engineer, Capt. Charles E. Alder, of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the space agency's rocket and space program manager.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 830, 911, 880<|/det|> About six and a half hours later, Mr. Armstrong opened the landing craft's hatch, stepped slowly down the ladder and descended as he pointed his first landing footguard on the lunar crater.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 880, 911, 920<|/det|> "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>715, 920, 911, 960<|/det|> His first step on the moon came on 10:56:29 P.M., as a television camera recorded the craft's transmitted his every word to an aerial and excited audiences of hundreds of millions of people on earth.

<|ref|>text<|/ref|><|det|>749, 960, 861, 974<|/det|> Testable Slope Test Soil