3D reconstructions for story telling and understandingCARARE
This slidedeck was prepared for a webinar exploring some of the ways that 3D reconstructions are being used for story telling and to aid understanding. Following an introduction to the webinar Daniel Pletinckx of Visual Dimension bvma gave a presentation on 'Interactive storytelling in virtual worlds' which is followed by a presentation by Catherine Cassidy of the Open Virtual Worlds group at the University of St Andrews on 'Dissemination Methods for 3D Historical Virtual Environments'.
Exploiting vocabularies and Linked Data: in practiceCARARE
Presentation by Kate Fernie about how controlled vocabularies and linked data can be used in systems and services, with demonstrations of the Share3D metadata capture tool tool, the Europeana Archaeology Vocabulary service and how the data looks in Europeana's EDM format and on the Europeana Collections portal.
Franco Niccolucci, 'The integration and management of archaeological datasets...3D ICONS Project
Franco Niccolucci, 'The integration and management of archaeological datasets: the Europeana projects CARARE and 3D ICONS', a position paper given at the World Archaeology Congress, Jordan, January 2013
Sorin Hermon, 'Towards an integrated repository for research and management o...3D ICONS Project
Sorin Hermon, 'Towards an integrated repository for research and management of archaeological 3D assets', presentation given at the World Archaeology Congress, Jordan, January 2013.
3D reconstructions for story telling and understandingCARARE
This slidedeck was prepared for a webinar exploring some of the ways that 3D reconstructions are being used for story telling and to aid understanding. Following an introduction to the webinar Daniel Pletinckx of Visual Dimension bvma gave a presentation on 'Interactive storytelling in virtual worlds' which is followed by a presentation by Catherine Cassidy of the Open Virtual Worlds group at the University of St Andrews on 'Dissemination Methods for 3D Historical Virtual Environments'.
Exploiting vocabularies and Linked Data: in practiceCARARE
Presentation by Kate Fernie about how controlled vocabularies and linked data can be used in systems and services, with demonstrations of the Share3D metadata capture tool tool, the Europeana Archaeology Vocabulary service and how the data looks in Europeana's EDM format and on the Europeana Collections portal.
Franco Niccolucci, 'The integration and management of archaeological datasets...3D ICONS Project
Franco Niccolucci, 'The integration and management of archaeological datasets: the Europeana projects CARARE and 3D ICONS', a position paper given at the World Archaeology Congress, Jordan, January 2013
Sorin Hermon, 'Towards an integrated repository for research and management o...3D ICONS Project
Sorin Hermon, 'Towards an integrated repository for research and management of archaeological 3D assets', presentation given at the World Archaeology Congress, Jordan, January 2013.
CARARE is a non-profit association whose main objective is advancing professional practice and fostering appreciation of the digital archaeological and architectural heritage.
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud CY Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture.
Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Cyprus
5 March 2014
The last mile of 3DIcons: making available 3D contents and their metadata thr...3D ICONS Project
'The last mile of 3D ICONS: making available 3D contents and their metadata through Europeana' presentation given by Sara Gonizzi at the 3D ICONS workshop at the ISPRS Technical Commission V Symposium, which was held in Riva del Garda, Italy on 23-25 June 2014.
The presentation describes the process of digitising artefacts held at the Archaeological Museum of Milan in 3D, and then capturing the metadata and paradata for the content.
Connecting archaeology and architecture dataCARARE
Presentation by Kate Fernie, Dimitris Gavrilis and Anthony Corns given at the European Association of Archaeologists conference 2018.
CARARE, a membership association established in Ireland, defined a metadata schema to enable the harvesting and aggregation of collections of digital archaeological and heritage content from 20+ providers across Europe. The schema was based on CIDOC core standards, MIDAS heritage, LIDO and the Europeana Data model. The data model differentiates between heritage assets (ranging from monuments and buildings to objects, photographs, drawings and 3D models) and their digital representations available online, related events and contextual information about collections, actors etc.
The standards on which the CARARE schema was based were developed when monument inventories and museum catelogues were recorded on cards, and this legacy of analogue recording practices is evident. Today we can describe a digital heritage landscape - a wealth of digital information (both born digital and digitised) is available. Archaeological monuments and historic buildings are complex and dynamic objects. Recent events in Brazil show the vulnerability of historic buildings to fire. Most buildings and monuments have associations with various events and people. A wealth of digital information is becoming available for both the tangible and intangible aspects of these heritage assets.
In developing version 3 of the CARARE metadata schema, our aim has been both to increase the support for RDF and Linked Data resources and to make the schema more "developer-friendly". One of the main challenges for CARARE in aggregating metadata from institutions across Europe is increasing the support for multilingualism, which we're addressing by encouraging the use of AAT and mapping vocabularies to AAT. We are currently pilot testing the schema against a set of use cases, in an implementation of semantic Omeka and in the future will look at the implementation of CARARE 3 in HBIM.
Creating Virtual Reality for Cultural Heritage. 3D Icons Project in Romania3D ICONS Project
E. Oberländer-Târnoveanu, Corina Nicolae, Mihai Bozgan, Marius Amarie and Tudor Martin, 'Creating Virtual Reality for Cultural Heritage. 3D Icons Project in Romania ', presentation given at the Congress 3D-Documentation in Archaeology & Monument Preservation, held at LWL Industrial Museum, Dortmund (Germany), 16th-18th October 2013
Achieving interoperability between the CARARE schema for monuments and sites ...CARARE
Presentation by:
Valentine Charles, kate Fernie, Antoine Isaac, Dimitris Gavrillis, Stavros Angelis and Costis Dallas
EuropeansTech Conference
February 2015
Developing and applying the CARARE metadata schema for 3D documentation, pres...3D ICONS Project
Developing and applying the CARARE metadata schema for 3D documentation, presented by Andrea D’Andrea, Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale, Italy during the 3D ICONS workshop at Digital Heritage 2013.
Putting Medical Officer of Health Reports on the map - Natalie Pollecutt, Wel...JISC GECO
Presentation given at the Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present & Future event in London on 7th March 2012. The event was organised as part of the JISC GECO project.
Presentation on new EC programmes related to the cultural heritage given by Marcel Watelet, European Commission
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
CARARE is a non-profit association whose main objective is advancing professional practice and fostering appreciation of the digital archaeological and architectural heritage.
Digital Cultural Heritage and the new EU Framework Programmelocloud
2nd LoCloud CY Awareness Event at the Ministry of Education and Culture.
Presentation delivered by Marinos Ioannides, Cyprus University of Technology
Cyprus
5 March 2014
The last mile of 3DIcons: making available 3D contents and their metadata thr...3D ICONS Project
'The last mile of 3D ICONS: making available 3D contents and their metadata through Europeana' presentation given by Sara Gonizzi at the 3D ICONS workshop at the ISPRS Technical Commission V Symposium, which was held in Riva del Garda, Italy on 23-25 June 2014.
The presentation describes the process of digitising artefacts held at the Archaeological Museum of Milan in 3D, and then capturing the metadata and paradata for the content.
Connecting archaeology and architecture dataCARARE
Presentation by Kate Fernie, Dimitris Gavrilis and Anthony Corns given at the European Association of Archaeologists conference 2018.
CARARE, a membership association established in Ireland, defined a metadata schema to enable the harvesting and aggregation of collections of digital archaeological and heritage content from 20+ providers across Europe. The schema was based on CIDOC core standards, MIDAS heritage, LIDO and the Europeana Data model. The data model differentiates between heritage assets (ranging from monuments and buildings to objects, photographs, drawings and 3D models) and their digital representations available online, related events and contextual information about collections, actors etc.
The standards on which the CARARE schema was based were developed when monument inventories and museum catelogues were recorded on cards, and this legacy of analogue recording practices is evident. Today we can describe a digital heritage landscape - a wealth of digital information (both born digital and digitised) is available. Archaeological monuments and historic buildings are complex and dynamic objects. Recent events in Brazil show the vulnerability of historic buildings to fire. Most buildings and monuments have associations with various events and people. A wealth of digital information is becoming available for both the tangible and intangible aspects of these heritage assets.
In developing version 3 of the CARARE metadata schema, our aim has been both to increase the support for RDF and Linked Data resources and to make the schema more "developer-friendly". One of the main challenges for CARARE in aggregating metadata from institutions across Europe is increasing the support for multilingualism, which we're addressing by encouraging the use of AAT and mapping vocabularies to AAT. We are currently pilot testing the schema against a set of use cases, in an implementation of semantic Omeka and in the future will look at the implementation of CARARE 3 in HBIM.
Creating Virtual Reality for Cultural Heritage. 3D Icons Project in Romania3D ICONS Project
E. Oberländer-Târnoveanu, Corina Nicolae, Mihai Bozgan, Marius Amarie and Tudor Martin, 'Creating Virtual Reality for Cultural Heritage. 3D Icons Project in Romania ', presentation given at the Congress 3D-Documentation in Archaeology & Monument Preservation, held at LWL Industrial Museum, Dortmund (Germany), 16th-18th October 2013
Achieving interoperability between the CARARE schema for monuments and sites ...CARARE
Presentation by:
Valentine Charles, kate Fernie, Antoine Isaac, Dimitris Gavrillis, Stavros Angelis and Costis Dallas
EuropeansTech Conference
February 2015
Developing and applying the CARARE metadata schema for 3D documentation, pres...3D ICONS Project
Developing and applying the CARARE metadata schema for 3D documentation, presented by Andrea D’Andrea, Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale, Italy during the 3D ICONS workshop at Digital Heritage 2013.
Putting Medical Officer of Health Reports on the map - Natalie Pollecutt, Wel...JISC GECO
Presentation given at the Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present & Future event in London on 7th March 2012. The event was organised as part of the JISC GECO project.
Presentation on new EC programmes related to the cultural heritage given by Marcel Watelet, European Commission
LoCloud Conference
Sharing local cultural heritage online with LoCloud services
Amersfoort, Netherlands
5 February 2016
Presentation by Saskia Scheltjens (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam) on October 31st 2016 at the workshop Two Birds, One Stone: Bridging cultural heritage collections with crowds and niches.
Keynote presentation in Belgrade on December 15th, 2016 about museums and the challenges of open access and how the Rijksmuseum dealt with this during the last decade.
CartoHeritage 2011: Georeferencer & MapRank SearchPetr Pridal
Presentation from the workshop: Digital Approaches in Cartographic Heritage 2011: 6th International Workshop, The Hague, 7-8 April 2011.
http://xeee.web.auth.gr/ICA-Heritage/Commission/6th_Workshop/TheHague/
Presentations:
P. Pridal, Georeferencer: Collaborative online georeferencing tool for scanned maps.
P. Pridal, MapRank Search: Intuitive geographical searching in map collections and metadata catalogs.
Process, not product Experiences from developing a digital interface of arch...Åsa Larsson
Presented at "Towards a Spatial Data Infrastructure for Archaeology" organised by Historic Environment Scotland and TheRoyal Society of Edinburgh at Stirling, UK 2019-12-12
The Portable Antiquities of the Netherlands (PAN) portal and the data model behind the description of the findings are discussed in detail, and how this approach leads to publishing data that is FAIR .
Visualising Urban Geographies - Stuart NicholJISC GECO
Presentation given at the Geospatial in the Cultural Heritage Domain - Past, Present & Future event in London on 7th March 2012. The event was organised as part of the JISC GECO project.
Data management and the online e-depot for Dutch Archaeology at DANSariadnenetwork
Presentation by Hella Hollander, Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
Ariadne Workshop held prior to EAA 2013.
Pilsen, Czech Republic
4 September 2013
Linking local people and scientists through metal detector finds, Nina Gerrit...CARARE
DANS is an institute of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences which promotes sustained access to digital research data. It takes part in projects, provides training and archiving services amongst other activities. The Portable Antiquities of the Netherlands is a partnership project which aims to document and publish metal detector finds from private collections. Metal-detecting in topsoil has been legal in the Netherlands since 2016, with an obligation on metal detector users to report finds with historical or archaeological value. PAN brings together finds experts and metal detector users to enable reporting of finds.
Integrating archaeological data: The ARIADNE Infrastructure, Achille Felicett...ariadnenetwork
This presentation by Achille Felicetti of PIN (Università degli Studi di Firenze, Prato) on the work by the ARIADNE infrastructure to integrating archaeological data was given as part of a workshop organised by Digital Humanities Austria. The workshop focussed on the pressing question of long-term preservation of digital data from various angles, central being user needs specific to the different fields of the Humanities. Felicetti introduced the ARIADNE research infrastructure, which has been funded by the EC's FP7 programme, to integrate archaeological research datasets from across Europe and support their uses by researchers.
APNIC Foundation, presented by Ellisha Heppner at the PNG DNS Forum 2024APNIC
Ellisha Heppner, Grant Management Lead, presented an update on APNIC Foundation to the PNG DNS Forum held from 6 to 10 May, 2024 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
1.Wireless Communication System_Wireless communication is a broad term that i...JeyaPerumal1
Wireless communication involves the transmission of information over a distance without the help of wires, cables or any other forms of electrical conductors.
Wireless communication is a broad term that incorporates all procedures and forms of connecting and communicating between two or more devices using a wireless signal through wireless communication technologies and devices.
Features of Wireless Communication
The evolution of wireless technology has brought many advancements with its effective features.
The transmitted distance can be anywhere between a few meters (for example, a television's remote control) and thousands of kilometers (for example, radio communication).
Wireless communication can be used for cellular telephony, wireless access to the internet, wireless home networking, and so on.
2.Cellular Networks_The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting...JeyaPerumal1
A cellular network, frequently referred to as a mobile network, is a type of communication system that enables wireless communication between mobile devices. The final stage of connectivity is achieved by segmenting the comprehensive service area into several compact zones, each called a cell.
Instagram has become one of the most popular social media platforms, allowing people to share photos, videos, and stories with their followers. Sometimes, though, you might want to view someone's story without them knowing.
Gen Z and the marketplaces - let's translate their needsLaura Szabó
The product workshop focused on exploring the requirements of Generation Z in relation to marketplace dynamics. We delved into their specific needs, examined the specifics in their shopping preferences, and analyzed their preferred methods for accessing information and making purchases within a marketplace. Through the study of real-life cases , we tried to gain valuable insights into enhancing the marketplace experience for Generation Z.
The workshop was held on the DMA Conference in Vienna June 2024.
Understanding User Behavior with Google Analytics.pdfSEO Article Boost
Unlocking the full potential of Google Analytics is crucial for understanding and optimizing your website’s performance. This guide dives deep into the essential aspects of Google Analytics, from analyzing traffic sources to understanding user demographics and tracking user engagement.
Traffic Sources Analysis:
Discover where your website traffic originates. By examining the Acquisition section, you can identify whether visitors come from organic search, paid campaigns, direct visits, social media, or referral links. This knowledge helps in refining marketing strategies and optimizing resource allocation.
User Demographics Insights:
Gain a comprehensive view of your audience by exploring demographic data in the Audience section. Understand age, gender, and interests to tailor your marketing strategies effectively. Leverage this information to create personalized content and improve user engagement and conversion rates.
Tracking User Engagement:
Learn how to measure user interaction with your site through key metrics like bounce rate, average session duration, and pages per session. Enhance user experience by analyzing engagement metrics and implementing strategies to keep visitors engaged.
Conversion Rate Optimization:
Understand the importance of conversion rates and how to track them using Google Analytics. Set up Goals, analyze conversion funnels, segment your audience, and employ A/B testing to optimize your website for higher conversions. Utilize ecommerce tracking and multi-channel funnels for a detailed view of your sales performance and marketing channel contributions.
Custom Reports and Dashboards:
Create custom reports and dashboards to visualize and interpret data relevant to your business goals. Use advanced filters, segments, and visualization options to gain deeper insights. Incorporate custom dimensions and metrics for tailored data analysis. Integrate external data sources to enrich your analytics and make well-informed decisions.
This guide is designed to help you harness the power of Google Analytics for making data-driven decisions that enhance website performance and achieve your digital marketing objectives. Whether you are looking to improve SEO, refine your social media strategy, or boost conversion rates, understanding and utilizing Google Analytics is essential for your success.
Meet up Milano 14 _ Axpo Italia_ Migration from Mule3 (On-prem) to.pdfFlorence Consulting
Quattordicesimo Meetup di Milano, tenutosi a Milano il 23 Maggio 2024 dalle ore 17:00 alle ore 18:30 in presenza e da remoto.
Abbiamo parlato di come Axpo Italia S.p.A. ha ridotto il technical debt migrando le proprie APIs da Mule 3.9 a Mule 4.4 passando anche da on-premises a CloudHub 1.0.
2. Heritage & Location
• Project by Digital Heritage Netherlands
& many (heritage) institutions: RCE, SBNL, Waag, etc.
• Semantics
• Spatial
• Temporal
• Thematic
• Tools for visualization, crowdsourcing
• Open source, open data (where possible)
• Sustainable business model
4. Why is this important to us?
• Simple spatial filter
Municipality:Amsterdam OWL:sameAs
http://sws.geonames.org/2759793/: 1 current place
• Spatial join
http://www.gemeentegeschiedenis.nl/gemeentenaam/Amsterdam
or use translated version: 8 contours (multipolygon)
Heritage & Location must be able to include (join) results from all previous
‘versions’ of a place
5. Limited results
Store H&L uSeekM PiLOD Virtuoso Test repo Strabon
Implementation Not optimised Not optimised Optimised?
Simple spatial
filter
Good Reasonable Not so good
‘Point in Polygon’
spatial join
Not so good Work in progress Good (how is this
possible???)
Disclaimer: there is no general validity for these results whatsoever!
Consult a proper spatial benchmark for reliable results.
6. Time
Consider dates before Christ (BC/ Before Common Era - BCE)
● W3 Time Ontology: “temporal content of Web pages and the temporal
properties of Web services”
● CIDOC-CRM ontology: E50_Date datatype XSD:string "1900"; "4-4-1959";
"19-MAR-1922"; "19640604" is hard to implement
● Timeline ontology: atDate^^XSD:date →
“Turns out almost no C library handles ISO 8601 dates before 1900.”
● Is Strabon or any other LD store able to handle:
“Time:A Time:within Time:B” - a temporal join?
Erm, help?