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.
Given by Christy Henshaw of the Wellcome Library
Challenges Displaying Complex Image Data: New Tech & Old InstitutionsIIIF_io
This document discusses the use of the IIIF standard to provide access to cultural heritage materials through digital images in several contexts:
- Manuscripts that have been disbound and are held in different institutions, allowing the leaves to be reassembled digitally.
- Historical documents like diaries that have undergone multiple digitization campaigns as imaging technology advanced, presenting different versions to users.
- Scholarly editions incorporating multi-spectral images of manuscript pages taken for text reconstruction.
- Representing pages that are known to exist but are lost or too fragile to digitize directly.
Almost Christmas | Introductory Remarks at Access to the World's ImagesIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Sylvia Van Peteghem
Ghent University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Glen Robson
National Library of Wales
Introduction to the International Image Interoperability FrameworkIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
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.
Stuart Snydman
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
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.
Given by Christy Henshaw of the Wellcome Library
Challenges Displaying Complex Image Data: New Tech & Old InstitutionsIIIF_io
This document discusses the use of the IIIF standard to provide access to cultural heritage materials through digital images in several contexts:
- Manuscripts that have been disbound and are held in different institutions, allowing the leaves to be reassembled digitally.
- Historical documents like diaries that have undergone multiple digitization campaigns as imaging technology advanced, presenting different versions to users.
- Scholarly editions incorporating multi-spectral images of manuscript pages taken for text reconstruction.
- Representing pages that are known to exist but are lost or too fragile to digitize directly.
Almost Christmas | Introductory Remarks at Access to the World's ImagesIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Sylvia Van Peteghem
Ghent University
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Glen Robson
National Library of Wales
Introduction to the International Image Interoperability FrameworkIIIF_io
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Tom Cramer
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass
Yale Center for British Art
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.
Stuart Snydman
Stanford University Libraries
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
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.
Rob Sanderson, Getty
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.
Presentation given by Tom Crane of Digirati
A presentation given as part of the Open Access panel at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Merete Sanderhoff
National Gallery of Denmark
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
Field evaluation of EdiTouch – the first tablet for SEN/SDL students (2014)Marco Iannacone
Digitally Different is an italian startup that produces EdiTouch the first software suite for simplified learning that leverage the capabilities of modern tablets to support young students with SEN /SLD
Here we are presenting the results of two years long scientific trial (2012-2014) with 400+ students who used our tablets at school and home for every studying activities.
It is one of the widest research in Europe to scientifically verify the effectiveness of digital solutions to support dyslexic child.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Karen Estlund
Penn State University
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.
Mark Matienzo, Digital Public Library of America
Anna Naruta-Moya, Indigenous Digital Archive
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
SharedCanvas: Collaborative Digital Facsimiles of Medieval ManuscriptsRobert Sanderson
The document presents SharedCanvas, a model for creating collaborative digital facsimiles of medieval manuscripts. It describes challenges in digitizing manuscripts, such as fragments, missing pages, and different page orders over time. The model represents each page as a "canvas" that can be painted with annotations linking to images, text, and other resources. Annotations are distributed across repositories using a publish-subscribe approach to enable customized views. The SharedCanvas model provides a coherent solution for collaboratively representing manuscript layouts and contents in a distributed way.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
Mirador is an open-source, JavaScript-based tool for comparing and annotating images from multiple repositories. It allows users to view objects side by side without institutional barriers and collect annotations about several objects in one place. Mirador is compatible with the IIIF image and presentation APIs and various IIIF-compliant software. It has been developed since 2013 in a collaborative effort between several universities and is available on GitHub under an open source license.
This document summarizes Rob Sanderson's presentation on the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Presentation API. The Presentation API provides a standard way to present digital objects by defining a shared canvas model and properties to describe images, structure, and metadata. It allows multiple images and formats to be displayed together on a single canvas for a richer user experience when viewing cultural heritage collections.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Michael Appleby
Yale University
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.
Rob Sanderson, Getty
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.
Presentation given by Tom Crane of Digirati
A presentation given as part of the Open Access panel at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City on May 10, 2016.
Merete Sanderhoff
National Gallery of Denmark
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at the New York Academy of Medicine in New York City on May 11, 2016.
Rob Sanderson
The Getty
Field evaluation of EdiTouch – the first tablet for SEN/SDL students (2014)Marco Iannacone
Digitally Different is an italian startup that produces EdiTouch the first software suite for simplified learning that leverage the capabilities of modern tablets to support young students with SEN /SLD
Here we are presenting the results of two years long scientific trial (2012-2014) with 400+ students who used our tablets at school and home for every studying activities.
It is one of the widest research in Europe to scientifically verify the effectiveness of digital solutions to support dyslexic child.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Karen Estlund
Penn State University
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.
Mark Matienzo, Digital Public Library of America
Anna Naruta-Moya, Indigenous Digital Archive
Intervention de Stefanie Gehrke au Workshop "TEI and Neighbouring Standards" à la DiXiT Convention Week 2015 (Huygens ING, La Haye, 15 septembre 2015).
SharedCanvas: Collaborative Digital Facsimiles of Medieval ManuscriptsRobert Sanderson
The document presents SharedCanvas, a model for creating collaborative digital facsimiles of medieval manuscripts. It describes challenges in digitizing manuscripts, such as fragments, missing pages, and different page orders over time. The model represents each page as a "canvas" that can be painted with annotations linking to images, text, and other resources. Annotations are distributed across repositories using a publish-subscribe approach to enable customized views. The SharedCanvas model provides a coherent solution for collaboratively representing manuscript layouts and contents in a distributed way.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation ToolIIIF_io
Mirador is an open-source, JavaScript-based tool for comparing and annotating images from multiple repositories. It allows users to view objects side by side without institutional barriers and collect annotations about several objects in one place. Mirador is compatible with the IIIF image and presentation APIs and various IIIF-compliant software. It has been developed since 2013 in a collaborative effort between several universities and is available on GitHub under an open source license.
This document summarizes Rob Sanderson's presentation on the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) Presentation API. The Presentation API provides a standard way to present digital objects by defining a shared canvas model and properties to describe images, structure, and metadata. It allows multiple images and formats to be displayed together on a single canvas for a richer user experience when viewing cultural heritage collections.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Michael Appleby
Yale University