The Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media at George Mason
University is pleased to announce the public beta release of Omeka S (1.0)
( http://omeka.org/s/ ), the next-generation, open source web-publishing
platform that is fully integrated into the scholarly communications
ecosystem and designed to serve the needs of medium to large institutional
users who wish to launch, monitor, and upgrade many sites from a single
installation.

Though Omeka S is a completely new software package, it shares the same
goals and principles of Omeka Classic that users have come to love: a
commitment to cost-effective deployment and design, an intuitive user
interface, open access to data and resources, and interoperability through
standardized data.

Created with funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and the Institute
of Museum and Library Services, Omeka S is engineered to ease the burdens
of administrators who want to make it possible for their end-user
communities to easily build their own sites that showcase digital cultural
heritage materials.


   - Colleges and universities that want to encourage their faculty and
   students to develop online publications that make use of special
   collections and digitized materials will find Omeka S ideal.
   - Museums and historical societies that would like to create a digital
   exhibit to accompany the many physical exhibits and installations at their
   institutions can turn to Omeka S as way to efficiently administer that
   digital work and reuse digitized collections.
   - Individual researchers interested in publishing linked open data will
   find Omeka S a reliable solution for creating and maintaining research
   collections, and for publishing new scholarship.


While the Items remain the core of Omeka S, the new software is designed to
capitalize on linked data standards for item description. Omeka S uses
JavaScript Object Notation-Linked Data (JSON-LD) as its native data format
and ships with popular RDF vocabularies, which make it possible to enmesh
Omeka S in the semantic web and to connect to aggregators like the Digital
Public Library of America.

After users create and describe their items or import materials from a
range of external repositories for access in a shared pool of items, Omeka
S allows them to create and publish individual sites. Sites are built by
creating pages, selecting from a range of layout blocks for those pages,
and attaching items or media from the pool of resources selected for use
with the site. As Modules extend Omeka S functionality, they can also add
page layout blocks, such as a map or a collecting form. Site Themes can be
customized in a number of ways, including with the addition of a logo and
the selection of colors for styling elements.

Developers will appreciate that Omeka S’s Read/Write REST API enables all
of the major software actions, such as the creation of users, items, item
sets, and sites.  This infrastructure makes it possible to easily create
modules that extend Omeka S’s core capacities
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