Presentation given to the American Art Collaborative on November 13, 2014.
Introduction to IIIF, with a focus on linked data and the Presentation API. Particularly targeted at Museums, but also other Cultural Heritage institutions.
IIIF, or the International Image Interoperability Framework, is an emerging Linked Open Data standard for image interoperability. It defines metadata standards for dealing with high-resolution images, providing a consistent API for accessing both images, the metadata that surrounds them, and how to present and associate images together. It is being used at the Internet Archive as well as major museums and national libraries around the world.
By employing this emerging digital standard to host image metadata, it allows image resources to be easily shared, incorporated, and recontextualized without loss of authority or human intervention.
While the standard is comprehensive and extremetly useful, often the infrastructure requirements to deploy IIIF appear to be out of the scope of smaller projects and institutions. As part of the new archival website at the Carnegie Museum of Art, we have identified techniques and developed open source tools that allow institutions and projects to implement the base profile of IIIF on a shoestring budget, using Amazon S3, spreadsheets, and other simple tools.
I propose a short presentation providing an overview of IIIF, a demonstration of its use at other institutions, a review of how CMOA is using this tool to facilitate sharing of images, and an brief explanation of how other institutions can use our tools to facilitate sharing their images using IIIF.
Presented at Keystone DH 2016.
http://keystonedh.network/2016/abstracts/#submission-9
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
Presentation given to the American Art Collaborative on November 13, 2014.
Introduction to IIIF, with a focus on linked data and the Presentation API. Particularly targeted at Museums, but also other Cultural Heritage institutions.
IIIF, or the International Image Interoperability Framework, is an emerging Linked Open Data standard for image interoperability. It defines metadata standards for dealing with high-resolution images, providing a consistent API for accessing both images, the metadata that surrounds them, and how to present and associate images together. It is being used at the Internet Archive as well as major museums and national libraries around the world.
By employing this emerging digital standard to host image metadata, it allows image resources to be easily shared, incorporated, and recontextualized without loss of authority or human intervention.
While the standard is comprehensive and extremetly useful, often the infrastructure requirements to deploy IIIF appear to be out of the scope of smaller projects and institutions. As part of the new archival website at the Carnegie Museum of Art, we have identified techniques and developed open source tools that allow institutions and projects to implement the base profile of IIIF on a shoestring budget, using Amazon S3, spreadsheets, and other simple tools.
I propose a short presentation providing an overview of IIIF, a demonstration of its use at other institutions, a review of how CMOA is using this tool to facilitate sharing of images, and an brief explanation of how other institutions can use our tools to facilitate sharing their images using IIIF.
Presented at Keystone DH 2016.
http://keystonedh.network/2016/abstracts/#submission-9
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
Everything you ever wanted to know about IIIF but were too afraid to askCogapp
Workshop session to introduce the International Image Interoperability Framework, presented at DPLAFest 2016. Slides from Tristan Roddis (Cogapp), Tom Cramer (Stanford University Library), Esmé Cowles (Princeton University Library), Antoine Isaac (Europeana), Mark Matienzo (DPLA)
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Drew Winget, Stanford University Libraries
Rashmi Singhal, Harvard
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Michael Appleby and Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
David Haskiya
Europeana
Europeana & IIIF - what we have been doing with IIIF and whyDavid Haskiya
Slides supporting my presentation at the IIIF Outreach event at the Rijksmuseum, October 18 2016. The presentation covered why we at Europeana have chose to join the IIIF community and adopt the protocol in our own stack. It includes examples of what we have developed and also what we have in the development pipeline.
Lean Branding-Rapid brand development for UX teams-Bill Beard-UXScotland2016Bill Beard
With the adoption of Agile and Lean practices, UX teams today are moving faster than ever. We're also focused on slices of the product, and are under pressure from executives to meet (unrealistic?) deadlines. Because of this, we often forget about the big picture, or we don't have time to think about something critical to long-term business success: Our brand.
Based on lean startup and lean UX methodologies, lean branding helps you develop and test your brand quickly and efficiently so you can find a brand that works for you without a massive investment.
We apply the build-measure-learn cycle to the branding process to create, test and continuously improve a radically stripped-down version of traditional brand guidelines. This gives teams the opportunity to constantly improve the status quo and approach new situations creatively. It ensures that your brand is always in line with the customer's needs and never becomes stale. In a nutshell: it empowers the team while engaging the customer.
This workshop will focus on the 'build' portion of the cycle. Designed for anyone working with or on a UX team, it will provide teams with basic, easy, fun exercises they can do collaboratively to help define their brands rapidly. This allows teams to move forward and create experiences that incorporate these powerful, emotional brands and build loyal customers.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Rob Sanderson
Stanford University Libraries
Includes 3 presentations from the #musesocial session at the MCN 2014 Conference in Dallas.
1. Dana Allen-Greil, Meagan Estep, Margaret Collerd: "Education + Marketing = #musesocial?"
2. Alli Burness: "Body Critical: What Do MuseumSelfies Mean?"
3. Lori Phillips and Ryan Dodge: "Organizing The World's Museum Social Media Managers"
Open Data: Trends and Practice within Cultural Heritage. AKA, the good, the b...Mia
Talk notes: http://www.openobjects.org.uk/2015/07/the-good-the-bad-and-the-unstructured-open-data-in-cultural-heritage/
Slides for a presentation on Open Data: Trends and Practice within Cultural Heritage. (AKA, the good, the bad, and the unstructured) at the Linked Pasts event at Kings College London on July 20-21, 2015. Event: http://pelagios-project.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/linked-pasts.html
Pixels at an Exhibition: Creating A Museum In Second LifeKUNGDESIGN
"Pixels at an Exhibition: Creating a Museum in Second Life". Poster Session at 'The Future is Now: Libraries and Museums in Virtual Worlds' (March 5 and 6, 2010)\
Making and the Commons, for Europeana's "European Cultural Commons" conferenc...Michael Edson
Keynote given at Europeana's European Cultural Commons conference in Warsaw Poland, October 12, 2011.
A video of this talk from Warsaw is at http://youtu.be/RSaLnHlN4gQ
A full text version of the talk (with footnotes and hyperlinks) is at http://www.slideshare.net/edsonm/museums-and-the-commons-helping-makers-get-stuff-done-6779050
Rich Cherry, co-chair of MuseWeb, David London, Chief Experience Officer, The Peale, and Hiroko Kusano, conference organizer from MuseWeb talk about what is virtual tours for museums, how to create a meaningful virtual tours for your institution, and challenges.
How can you get your dream project off the ground? On Nov 24, 2009 at the New Zealand National Digital Forum, Nina Simon of Museum 2.0 presented six tips to making risky, innovative technology projects possible in galleries, libraries, archives, and museums.
In March 2016, I was invited to be a guest lecturer at Unitec in Auckland, New Zealand.
The lecture was divided in four areas: (1) background in exponential technologies, (2) technology convergence, (3) generative design, (4) design intent and community
How can design help us communicate data easily to users? Where does this stem from? What methods of design are easy for users to engage with? What should we be trying to achieve with these designs?
The cultural sector is a big adopter of open data and semantic web technologies. They have embraced the ideas and are weaving them into everything they do. So, who is doing what? What data sets are there available? And how have these been presented to the public.
Using case studies from the cultural sector, we will explore the practical challenges associated with complex UI designs. Looking at work-in-progress through to finished products we will discuss best practice, finding innovation, and the challenges of working with data sets.
Presented at the Research Support Community day 2018 by Sharron Stapleton (Research Data Librarian, QUT) and Matthias Liffers (Library Manager, Science, University of Western Australia)
Library Carpentry is software and data skills training aimed at the needs and requirements of library professionals. Library Carpentry is made by librarians, for librarians to help:
• automate repetitive, boring, error-prone tasks
• create, maintain and analyse sustainable and reusable data
• work effectively with IT and systems colleagues
• better understand the use of software in research (Library Carpentry, 2017)
This session introduced the Carpentries’ community learning model and present case studies where learning some basic computational skills has saved considerable time and effort in the work of librarians.
Everything you ever wanted to know about IIIF but were too afraid to askCogapp
Workshop session to introduce the International Image Interoperability Framework, presented at DPLAFest 2016. Slides from Tristan Roddis (Cogapp), Tom Cramer (Stanford University Library), Esmé Cowles (Princeton University Library), Antoine Isaac (Europeana), Mark Matienzo (DPLA)
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Drew Winget, Stanford University Libraries
Rashmi Singhal, Harvard
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Michael Appleby and Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
David Haskiya
Europeana
Europeana & IIIF - what we have been doing with IIIF and whyDavid Haskiya
Slides supporting my presentation at the IIIF Outreach event at the Rijksmuseum, October 18 2016. The presentation covered why we at Europeana have chose to join the IIIF community and adopt the protocol in our own stack. It includes examples of what we have developed and also what we have in the development pipeline.
Lean Branding-Rapid brand development for UX teams-Bill Beard-UXScotland2016Bill Beard
With the adoption of Agile and Lean practices, UX teams today are moving faster than ever. We're also focused on slices of the product, and are under pressure from executives to meet (unrealistic?) deadlines. Because of this, we often forget about the big picture, or we don't have time to think about something critical to long-term business success: Our brand.
Based on lean startup and lean UX methodologies, lean branding helps you develop and test your brand quickly and efficiently so you can find a brand that works for you without a massive investment.
We apply the build-measure-learn cycle to the branding process to create, test and continuously improve a radically stripped-down version of traditional brand guidelines. This gives teams the opportunity to constantly improve the status quo and approach new situations creatively. It ensures that your brand is always in line with the customer's needs and never becomes stale. In a nutshell: it empowers the team while engaging the customer.
This workshop will focus on the 'build' portion of the cycle. Designed for anyone working with or on a UX team, it will provide teams with basic, easy, fun exercises they can do collaboratively to help define their brands rapidly. This allows teams to move forward and create experiences that incorporate these powerful, emotional brands and build loyal customers.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Rob Sanderson
Stanford University Libraries
Includes 3 presentations from the #musesocial session at the MCN 2014 Conference in Dallas.
1. Dana Allen-Greil, Meagan Estep, Margaret Collerd: "Education + Marketing = #musesocial?"
2. Alli Burness: "Body Critical: What Do MuseumSelfies Mean?"
3. Lori Phillips and Ryan Dodge: "Organizing The World's Museum Social Media Managers"
Open Data: Trends and Practice within Cultural Heritage. AKA, the good, the b...Mia
Talk notes: http://www.openobjects.org.uk/2015/07/the-good-the-bad-and-the-unstructured-open-data-in-cultural-heritage/
Slides for a presentation on Open Data: Trends and Practice within Cultural Heritage. (AKA, the good, the bad, and the unstructured) at the Linked Pasts event at Kings College London on July 20-21, 2015. Event: http://pelagios-project.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/linked-pasts.html
Pixels at an Exhibition: Creating A Museum In Second LifeKUNGDESIGN
"Pixels at an Exhibition: Creating a Museum in Second Life". Poster Session at 'The Future is Now: Libraries and Museums in Virtual Worlds' (March 5 and 6, 2010)\
Making and the Commons, for Europeana's "European Cultural Commons" conferenc...Michael Edson
Keynote given at Europeana's European Cultural Commons conference in Warsaw Poland, October 12, 2011.
A video of this talk from Warsaw is at http://youtu.be/RSaLnHlN4gQ
A full text version of the talk (with footnotes and hyperlinks) is at http://www.slideshare.net/edsonm/museums-and-the-commons-helping-makers-get-stuff-done-6779050
Rich Cherry, co-chair of MuseWeb, David London, Chief Experience Officer, The Peale, and Hiroko Kusano, conference organizer from MuseWeb talk about what is virtual tours for museums, how to create a meaningful virtual tours for your institution, and challenges.
How can you get your dream project off the ground? On Nov 24, 2009 at the New Zealand National Digital Forum, Nina Simon of Museum 2.0 presented six tips to making risky, innovative technology projects possible in galleries, libraries, archives, and museums.
In March 2016, I was invited to be a guest lecturer at Unitec in Auckland, New Zealand.
The lecture was divided in four areas: (1) background in exponential technologies, (2) technology convergence, (3) generative design, (4) design intent and community
How can design help us communicate data easily to users? Where does this stem from? What methods of design are easy for users to engage with? What should we be trying to achieve with these designs?
The cultural sector is a big adopter of open data and semantic web technologies. They have embraced the ideas and are weaving them into everything they do. So, who is doing what? What data sets are there available? And how have these been presented to the public.
Using case studies from the cultural sector, we will explore the practical challenges associated with complex UI designs. Looking at work-in-progress through to finished products we will discuss best practice, finding innovation, and the challenges of working with data sets.
Presented at the Research Support Community day 2018 by Sharron Stapleton (Research Data Librarian, QUT) and Matthias Liffers (Library Manager, Science, University of Western Australia)
Library Carpentry is software and data skills training aimed at the needs and requirements of library professionals. Library Carpentry is made by librarians, for librarians to help:
• automate repetitive, boring, error-prone tasks
• create, maintain and analyse sustainable and reusable data
• work effectively with IT and systems colleagues
• better understand the use of software in research (Library Carpentry, 2017)
This session introduced the Carpentries’ community learning model and present case studies where learning some basic computational skills has saved considerable time and effort in the work of librarians.
A walk through of the Linked Art data model, API and community processes. Presented originally at the Rijksmuseum for the 5th Linked Art face to face meeting. Linked Art is a linked open usable data specification created by the community to describe artwork, museum objects, and related bibliographic and archival content.
LUX - Cross Collections Cultural Heritage at YaleRobert Sanderson
A brief presentation based on the CNI talk for the Linked Data for Libraries Discovery affinity group about LUX, Linked Open Usable Data and our discovery processes based on graphs rather than documents.
An introduction to Linked Open Usable Data (LOUD) through the lens of a zooming paradigm, and thoughts on how such a paradigm can help to address some grand challenges of LOUD, including search granularity, trust and reconciliation. Presented to the IDLab / Knowledge at Web Scale department of the University of Ghent in Feb '23
Data is our Product: Thoughts on LOD SustainabilityRobert Sanderson
Invited keynote presentation for the LINCS Project, June 23rd 2022 at the University of Guelph, Canada. It describes thoughts on a framework for sustainability of linked open usable data products in the cultural heritage domain.
A Perspective on Wikidata: Ecosystems, Trust, and UsabilityRobert Sanderson
Brief and skeptical presentation about wikidata and its potential for use and abuse in the cultural heritage data ecosystem, presented at the PCC/LDAC forum on wikidata, November 12th, 2021.
Linked Art: Sustainable Cultural Knowledge through Linked Open Usable DataRobert Sanderson
An introduction to Linked Art - why we need it, what it is, and how it works. A great starting point if you're interested in linked open usable data in cultural heritage, especially art museums.
Illusions of Grandeur: Trust and Belief in Cultural Heritage Linked Open DataRobert Sanderson
What is the notion of trust, when it comes to publishing linked open data in the cultural heritage sector? This presentation discusses some aspects with relation to three primary questions: How do we trust what was said, trust that the institution said it, and trust what it means?
Invited seminar for UIUC's IS 575 class on metadata in theory and practice, about structural metadata practice in RDF/LOD. Touches on OAI-ORE, PCDM, Annotation, IIIF and Linked Art. Challenges explored are graph boundaries, APIs and context specific metadata.
Sanderson CNI 2020 Keynote - Cultural Heritage Research Data EcosystemRobert Sanderson
There have been, and continue to be, many initiatives to address the social, technological, financial and policy-based challenges that throw up roadblocks towards achieving this vision. However, it is hard to tell whether we are making progress, or whether we are eternally waiting for the hyperloop that will never come. If we are to ever be able to answer research questions that require a broad, international corpus of cultural data, then we need an ecosystem that can be characterized with 5 “C”s: Collaborative, Consistent, Connected, Correct and Contextualized. Each of these has implications for the sustainability, innovation, usability, timeliness and ethical considerations that must be addressed in a coherent and holistic manner. As with autonomous vehicles, technology (and perhaps even machine “intelligence”) is a necessary but insufficient component.
In this presentation, I will frame and motivate this grand challenge and propose where we can build connections between the academy, the cultural heritage sector, and industry. The discussion will explore the issues, and highlight some of the successful endeavors and more approachable opportunities where, together, progress can be made.
Tiers of Abstraction and Audience in Cultural Heritage Data ModelingRobert Sanderson
A walk through of a framework based around the distinctions between Abstraction, Implementation and Audience for considering the value and utility of data modeling patterns and paradigms in cultural heritage information systems. In particular, a focus on CIDOC-CRM, BibFrame, RiC-CM/RiC-O, EDM, and IIIF, with the intent to demonstrate best practices and anti-patterns in modeling.
Presentation about usability of linked data, following LODLAM 2020 at the Getty. Discusses JSON-LD 1.1, IIIF, Linked Art, in the context of the design principles for building usable APIs on top of semantically accurate models, and domain specific vocabularies.
In particular a focus on the different abstraction layers between conceptual model, ontology, vocabulary, and application profile and the various uses of the data.
Standards and Communities: Connected People, Consistent Data, Usable Applicat...Robert Sanderson
Keynote presentation at JCDL 2019 at UIUC, on the interaction between standards (development and usage) and communities. Looking at Linked Open Data, digital library protocols, and evaluation of standards practices.
Euromed2018 Keynote: Usability over Completeness, Community over CommitteeRobert Sanderson
Discussion of cultural heritage issues around usability and prioritization with completeness, and focus on bringing together communities rather than small and transient committees. Focus on Linked Open Usable Data, Annotations, JSON-LD, IIIF and Linked.Art.
Background for linked open data at the J Paul Getty Trust, followed by a summary of Linked Open Usable Data, and an initial walkthrough of the https://linked.art/ model.
Linked Open Data is great for recommendations about publishing data, but we need five more stars for the consumer -- How can it be both complete and usable? Design principles for Linked Open Usable Data.
1. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Introduc7on
to
the
Presenta7on
API
Rob
Sanderson
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
2. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Images
are
Fundamental
Disseminators
of
Cultural
Heritage
3. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
More
than
one
image
is
needed
per
object
4. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
How
do
I
know...
...
which
images
to
use?
...
in
which
order?
...
what
they
depict?
...
how
they
can
be
reused?
...
who
should
be
aCributed?
...
which
other
resources
to
display?
...
which
other
objects
are
related?
5. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Actually,
How
do
I
...
...
provide
a
rewarding
user
experience?
6. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
IIIF
Presenta7on
API
2.0
hCp://iiif.io/api/presenta7on/2.0/
Scope:
Provide
only
the
informa7on
necessary
for
an
applica7on
to
present
the
object
to
the
user
Uses
the
Shared
Canvas
model
7. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
Abstract
space
used
for
building
a
view
of
the
object
8. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
Abstract
space
used
for
building
a
view
of
the
object
Think:
Powerpoint
Slide
9. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
10. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
11. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
12. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Shared Canvas
13. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Why?
14. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
One Canvas, Multiple Images
Archimedes
Palimpsest
Mul2-‐Spectral
Images
h7p://www.archimedespalimpsest.org/
15. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
One Canvas, Multiple Images
Archimedes
Palimpsest
Mul2-‐Spectral
Images
h7p://www.archimedespalimpsest.org/
16. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
One Canvas, Multiple Images
Archimedes
Palimpsest
Mul2-‐Spectral
Images
h7p://www.archimedespalimpsest.org/
17. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
One Image, Multiple Canvases
h7p://www.e-‐codices.unifr.ch/en/csg/1394/140a
h7p://www.e-‐codices.unifr.ch/en/csg/1394/063abcder
18. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Not Just Images
h7p://purl.stanford.edu/cv176gb0028#image/545/thumb/
19. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
20. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
21. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
22. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
23. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
24. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Structure
25. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Properties
Descriptive
label
Name of the resource
description
Textual summary
thumbnail
Image summary
metadata
Pairs of Label and Value
Metadata Example:
label:"Created", value:"1300"!
26. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Properties
Rights
license
Link to license description
attribution
Text required to be displayed
logo
Image required to be displayed
Linking
service
Additional service endpoint
seeAlso
Semantic metadata resource
related
Resource to display to the user
27. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
How?
28. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
JSON:
Ease
of
Development
Linked
Data:
Plays
Nice
with
Others
29. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
{!
"@context":"http://iiif.io/api/presentation/2/context.json",!
"@id":"http://www.example.org/iiif/book1/canvas/p1.json",!
"@type":"sc:Canvas”,!
"label":"p. 1”,!
"height":1000,!
"width":750,!
"images": [!
{"@type":"oa:Annotation”,!
// annotation linking image to canvas …!
}],!
"otherContent": [!
{"@type":"sc:AnnotationList",!
// reference to list of non-image annotations …!
}]!
} !
{}s are the new <>s
30. Sharing
Images
of
Global
Culture,
Na7onal
Gallery
of
Art,
May
5th
2015
@azaroth42
#iiif
hCp://iiif.io/
Summary
Presenta7on
Data
not
Metadata
Shared
Canvas
Model
JSON
based
Linked
Data
http://iiif.io/api/presentation/2.0/