Europe today lacks a publicly funded cloud infrastructure for exploitation of research data. Data research infrastructures and e-Infrastructures should coordinate themselves to realize the International Data Commons.
Europe today lacks a publicly funded cloud infrastructure for exploitation of research data. Data research infrastructures and e-Infrastructures should coordinate themselves to realize the International Data Commons.
National data services lightening talk at the RDAJisc RDM
Our slides for the lightening talk at the annual RDA in Tokyo. All about the national shared services to support research data infrastructure. March 2016.
An overview of using the Jisc multimedia service at EDINA. Presented at two e-Resources breakout sessions being held at the West College Scotland Information Technology Symposium, at Erskine Bridge Hotel, on Wednesday 12th August 2015.
EUDAT 3rd Conference: What's on the Horizon? - Kimmo Koski, Managing Director...EUDAT
| www.eudat.eu | EUDAT 3rd Conference Opening Session: What's on the Horizon? - Kimmo Koski, Managing Director CSC - IT Center for Science, Finland & EUDAT Co-ordinator - Wednesday 24th September 2014, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
20180705 challanges for researchers in digital humanities liber 2018 lille(rw)LIBIS
Presentation of Roxanne Wyns (LIBIS - KU Leuven Bibliotheken) at LIBER 2018 Challenges for Researchers in the Digital Humanities: custom development vs. sustainable research infrastructures.
Open Data & Local Authorities, Paul Maltby-Director of Open Data and Government Innovation.
Presented on the 27th of November 2014 to the "Why is open data important for Cambridgeshire" workshop.
Alma update - LIBISnet gebruikersdag van 6 juni 2019LIBIS
Tijdens het plenaire gedeelte op de LIBISnet gebruikersdag van 6 juni werd door Gijs Noels een update rond Alma gegeven. Inhoud: Wat hebben we gerealiseerd het voorbije jaar, maar vooral, waar zijn we mee bezig en hoe ziet de roadmap eruit voor Alma?
Harvesting Repositories: DPLA, Europeana, & Other Case Studieseohallor
Join this discussion on the benefits and process of harvesting to aggregators such as DPLA, Europeana and other aggregators. Through case studies we'll outline three stages of the process, including 1) mapping, migrating, and normalizing data in open source digital repositories, 2) making use of the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI - PMH), and 3) reaping the benefits of increased exposure. Presenters welcome lively discussion and questions from participants of all technical backgrounds and skill levels.
Nikola Ikonomov, Boyan Simeonov, Jana Parvanova and Vladimir Alexiev. In Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage (DiPP 2013), Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Sep 2013.
National data services lightening talk at the RDAJisc RDM
Our slides for the lightening talk at the annual RDA in Tokyo. All about the national shared services to support research data infrastructure. March 2016.
An overview of using the Jisc multimedia service at EDINA. Presented at two e-Resources breakout sessions being held at the West College Scotland Information Technology Symposium, at Erskine Bridge Hotel, on Wednesday 12th August 2015.
EUDAT 3rd Conference: What's on the Horizon? - Kimmo Koski, Managing Director...EUDAT
| www.eudat.eu | EUDAT 3rd Conference Opening Session: What's on the Horizon? - Kimmo Koski, Managing Director CSC - IT Center for Science, Finland & EUDAT Co-ordinator - Wednesday 24th September 2014, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
20180705 challanges for researchers in digital humanities liber 2018 lille(rw)LIBIS
Presentation of Roxanne Wyns (LIBIS - KU Leuven Bibliotheken) at LIBER 2018 Challenges for Researchers in the Digital Humanities: custom development vs. sustainable research infrastructures.
Open Data & Local Authorities, Paul Maltby-Director of Open Data and Government Innovation.
Presented on the 27th of November 2014 to the "Why is open data important for Cambridgeshire" workshop.
Alma update - LIBISnet gebruikersdag van 6 juni 2019LIBIS
Tijdens het plenaire gedeelte op de LIBISnet gebruikersdag van 6 juni werd door Gijs Noels een update rond Alma gegeven. Inhoud: Wat hebben we gerealiseerd het voorbije jaar, maar vooral, waar zijn we mee bezig en hoe ziet de roadmap eruit voor Alma?
Harvesting Repositories: DPLA, Europeana, & Other Case Studieseohallor
Join this discussion on the benefits and process of harvesting to aggregators such as DPLA, Europeana and other aggregators. Through case studies we'll outline three stages of the process, including 1) mapping, migrating, and normalizing data in open source digital repositories, 2) making use of the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting (OAI - PMH), and 3) reaping the benefits of increased exposure. Presenters welcome lively discussion and questions from participants of all technical backgrounds and skill levels.
Nikola Ikonomov, Boyan Simeonov, Jana Parvanova and Vladimir Alexiev. In Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage (DiPP 2013), Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria, Sep 2013.
New approaches for data acquisition at europeana iiif, sitemaps and schema.o...Nuno Freire
Presentation on experiments at Europeana regarding new methods of aggregating metadata.
Presented at the Seminar Linked Data in Research and Cultural Heritage, on 1st of May 2017.
This presentation describes linked open data pilot run in Springer. During the pilot the data about conferences in computer science will be made publicly available as Linked Open Data (LOD)
Evaluation of Schema.org for Aggregation of Cultural Heritage MetadataNuno Freire
In the World Wide Web, a very large number of resources is made available through digital libraries. The existence of many individual digital libraries, maintained by different organiza-tions, brings challenges to the discoverability, sharing and reuse of the resources. A widely-used approach is metadata aggregation, where centralized efforts like Europeana facilitate the discoverability and use of the resources by collecting their associated metadata. The cultural heritage domain embraced the aggregation approach while, at the same time, the technological landscape kept evolving. Nowadays, cultural heritage institutions are increas-ingly applying technologies designed for the wider interoperability on the Web. In this con-text, we have identified the Schema.org vocabulary as a potential technology for innovating metadata aggregation. We conducted two case studies that analysed Schema.org metadata from collections from cultural heritage institutions. We used the requirements of the Euro-peana Network as evaluation criteria. These include the recommendations of the Europeana Data Model, which is a collaborative effort from all the domains represented in Europeana: libraries, museums, archives, and galleries. We concluded that Schema.org poses no obstacle that cannot be overcome to allow data providers to deliver metadata in full compliance with Europeana requirements and with the desired semantic quality. However, Schema.org’s cross-domain applicability raises the need for accompanying its adoption by recommenda-tions and/or specifications regarding how data providers should create their Schema.org metadata, so that they can meet the specific requirements of Europeana or other cultural aggregation networks.
CLARIAH Toogdag 2018: A distributed network of digital heritage informationEnno Meijers
Slides of my keynote at the CLARIAH Toogdag 2018 on 9 March at the National Library of the Netherlands. The main topics were the development of the distributed digital heritage network and the alignment to and cooperation with the CLARIAH infrastructure and data. It also points at some of the current limitations of the semantic web technology.
Why are e-Infrastructures useful from a small business perspective?Nikos Manouselis
Slides of talk at seminar for the EuroRIs network (http://www.euroris-net.eu) of National Contact Points (NCPs) for EU funding programmes on Research Infrastructures.
OA Network: Heading for Joint Standards and Enhancing Cooperation: Value‐Adde...Stefan Buddenbohm
OA‐Network collaborates with other associated German Open Access‐related projects and pursues the overarching aim to increase the visibility and the ease of use of the German research output. For this end a technical infrastructure is established to offer value‐added services based on a shared information space across all participating repositories. In addition to this OA‐Network promotes the DINI‐certificate for Open Access repositories (standardization) and a regularly communication exchange in the German repository landscape.
A workshop at the Repository Fringe 2014 in Edinburgh looks at the new Jisc Publications Router service, how it works and what it offers suppliers and consumers.
Similar to Aggregation going forward. Presentation at the Europeana Aggregator Forum 2015 (20)
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
At this online web conference, the Europeana Aggregators’ Forum will open their virtual doors to cultural heritage professionals and anyone with an interest in high quality, open cultural heritage content.
Slides 2 - 39:Europeana Network Association General Assembly by Marco de Niet, Georgia Angelaki, Erwin Verbruggen, Fred Truyen and Sara Di Giorgio
Slide 40: Keynote Frédéric Kaplan
Slide 41: State Secretary Angela Ferreira
Slide 42: Wrap up day one by Marco de Niet
Slide 45: Welcome by Marco de Niet
Slide 46: Welcome by Maria Ines Cordeiro
Slide 47: Europeana Strategy 2020+ by Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak
Slides 48 - 142: Developments at Europeana by Harry Verwayen
Slides 143 - 147: Welcome & Introduction to the conference programme by Marco de Niet
Slides 149 - 191: The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Ina Blümel, Johan Oomen, Sara Di Giorgio, Lorna Hughes, Pedro Santos and Andy Neale
Slides 193 - 194: Introduction of the afternoon programme by Fred Truyen
Slides 195 - 231: We transform the world with culture by Harry Verwayen, Elisabeth Niggemann, Rehana Schwinninger-Ladak, Katherine Heid and Merete Sanderhoff
Slides 232 - : The Europeana Innovation Agenda highlights by Gregory Markus, Chris Dijkshoorn, Maarten Dammers and Harald Sack
Slide 285: Pitch your project (See pitch your project presentation slides)
Slides 286 - 290: Unsung Heroes by Marco de Niet
Slides 291 - 292: Wrap up and closure of day two by Sara Di Giorgio
Slides 2 - 6: Introduction to the programme by Georgia Angelaki
Slides 7 - 9: Keynote Michael Edson
Slides 10 - 40: Europeana Aggregators Forum by Marco Rendina
Slides 42 - 75: Promoting Cultural Heritage with digital invasion by Altheo Valentini-Egina and Marianna Marcucci
Slides 77 - 97: Opportunities for digital cultural heritage and the public domain, under the EU Copyright Rules by Paul Keller, Steven Stegers, Jurga Gradauskaite, Antje Schmidt, Sebastiaan ter Burg and Harry Verwayen
Slides 98 - 101: Climate Call for Action: Outcomes by Barbara Fischer
Slides 102 - 114: Wrap up and closure by Marco de Niet
Europeana 2019 - Connect Communities - Pitch your projectEuropeana
Slides 3 - 10: The GIFT Box: Helping museums make richer digital experiences for their visitors by Anders Sundnes Lovlie
Slides 11 - 18: Between people and things - Transfer of knowledge at SHMH by Elisabeth Böhm
Slides 19 - 30: Automated recognition of historical image content by Tino Mager
Slides 31 - 51: 50s in Europe: Kaleidoscope by Sofie Taes
Slides 52 - 63: CrowdHeritage: Crowdsourcing Platform for Enriching Europeana Metadata by Vassilis Tzouvaras
Slides 64 - 73: One by One: developing digital literacy in museums by Anra Kennedy
Slides 74 - 85: HeritageMaps.ie - Ireland's One-Stop Heritage Portal by Patrick Reid
Slides 86 - 90: Open GLAM now! - Sharing knowledge openly online by Larissa Borck
Slides 91 - 103: Endangered Archives Programme the world's most diverse online archive by Tristan Roddis
Slides 104 - 109: We transform the world with culture - Our impact on climate change by Barbara Fischer, Killian Downing and Peter Soemers
Slide 2 - 66: Shaping innovatin in education with cultural heritage by Fred Truyen, Steven Stegers, Evita Tasiopoulou and Marco Neves
Slides 67 - 152: Multilingual access and machine translation by Andy Neale, Antoine Isaac, Pavel Kats, Alex Raginsky and Sergiu Gordea
Slides 155 - 164: How to implement the FAIR principles in digital culture by Sara Di Giorgio, Saskia Scheltjens and Makx Dekkers, Seamus Ross, Franco Niccolucci and Erzsébet Tóth-Czifra
Slide 166: EuropeanaTech Unconference by Clemens Neudecker
Slides 2 - 35: Introduction to Impact Workshop by Dafydd Tudur, Maja Drabczyk, Julia Fallon and Simon Tanner
Slides 36 - 68: Music to my ears: Making rights understandable by Juozas Markauskas and Jurga Gradauskaite
Slides 70 - 92: Achieving inclusivity & diversity in the Europeana Network by Killian Downing, Larissa Borck and Tola Dabiri
Slides 94 - 123: Communicating the value of digital culture to stakeholders by Susan Hazan, Eleanor Kenny and Katherine Heid
Introduction to AI for Nonprofits with Tapp NetworkTechSoup
Dive into the world of AI! Experts Jon Hill and Tareq Monaur will guide you through AI's role in enhancing nonprofit websites and basic marketing strategies, making it easy to understand and apply.
Macroeconomics- Movie Location
This will be used as part of your Personal Professional Portfolio once graded.
Objective:
Prepare a presentation or a paper using research, basic comparative analysis, data organization and application of economic information. You will make an informed assessment of an economic climate outside of the United States to accomplish an entertainment industry objective.
Acetabularia Information For Class 9 .docxvaibhavrinwa19
Acetabularia acetabulum is a single-celled green alga that in its vegetative state is morphologically differentiated into a basal rhizoid and an axially elongated stalk, which bears whorls of branching hairs. The single diploid nucleus resides in the rhizoid.
Francesca Gottschalk - How can education support child empowerment.pptxEduSkills OECD
Francesca Gottschalk from the OECD’s Centre for Educational Research and Innovation presents at the Ask an Expert Webinar: How can education support child empowerment?
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
Synthetic Fiber Construction in lab .pptxPavel ( NSTU)
Synthetic fiber production is a fascinating and complex field that blends chemistry, engineering, and environmental science. By understanding these aspects, students can gain a comprehensive view of synthetic fiber production, its impact on society and the environment, and the potential for future innovations. Synthetic fibers play a crucial role in modern society, impacting various aspects of daily life, industry, and the environment. ynthetic fibers are integral to modern life, offering a range of benefits from cost-effectiveness and versatility to innovative applications and performance characteristics. While they pose environmental challenges, ongoing research and development aim to create more sustainable and eco-friendly alternatives. Understanding the importance of synthetic fibers helps in appreciating their role in the economy, industry, and daily life, while also emphasizing the need for sustainable practices and innovation.
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
6. How does Europeana get its content?
As of Dec 2014, Europeana represents >3,300 organisations
Data provider information in different and several metadata fields
• edm:provider and edm:dataProvider
• dc:source, dcterms:provenance or dc:rights
Organisation names are not normalised and duplicate entries exist
Organisation name changes
7. How does Europeana get its content?
Through its aggregation structure, Europeana represents 2,300
organisations across Europe
From 150 Aggregators
As of Dec 2014, Europeana collaborates with 113 direct & unique
providers
8. How does Europeana get its content?
As of Dec 2014, Europeana collaborates with 113 direct & unique
providers
Out of these 113 providers, 76 are aggregators
38 national aggregators from 30 countries, 34 provide directly
18. CulturaItalia and the aggregation system
CULTURAITALIA
National cross-
domain
aggregator
INTERNET CULTURALE
Thematic aggregator for
Libraries
SAN
Thematic aggregator
for Archives
MUSEID-ITALIA
Thematic aggregator
for Museums
Regional
aggregators
Private
archives Universities
19. Digital Public Library of America
DPLA content hub
• One-to-one relationship with DPLA
• >200,000 unique metadata records
DPLA service hubs
• Professional development (knowledge share)
• Digitisation
• Metadata creation
• Metadata enhancement
• Data hosting
• Metadata aggregation
• Community outreach
• Single data feed into DPLA
incl metadata records maintenance & enhancement
• Multiple institutions per hub
• State / regional coverage
20. Europeana DSI: Task 1.1 – Innovate the
data and aggregation infrastructure
Devise business requirements for the new aggregation
infrastructure
Investigate and develop the concept of expert hubs
Together with aggregators – 4 meetings, consultations
D1.1 Work and implementation plan to innovate the
aggregation infrastructure – Jan 2016