*Web Services Specialist*
*Towson University *
The Albert S. Cook Library seeks a highly skilled and innovative Web
Services Specialist to participate in all stages of the application
development life cycle. Under the direction of the Information Technology
Librarian, this position provides
Web Services Specialist
Towson University
Towson, MD
Web Services Specialist
Towson University
The Albert S. Cook Library seeks a highly skilled and innovative Web Services
Specialist to participate in all stages of the application development life
cycle. Under the direction of the
Does anyone have a good solution to recommend for display of very large images
on the web? I'm thinking of something that supports pan and scan, as well as
loading only certain tiles for the current view to avoid loading an entire
giant image.
A URL to more info to learn about things would be
Geologists have been using gigapan (gigapan.com). See, for example,
http://blogs.agu.org/mountainbeltway/2014/06/03/recent-gigapannery-team-m-g-c-geode/
Christina
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@listserv.nd.edu] On Behalf Of
Jonathan Rochkind
Sent: Friday,
Check out the IIIF (International Image Interoperability Framework)
Image API: http://iiif.io/ You can use an image server that supports
IIIF natively (e.g., Loris https://github.com/pulibrary/loris ) or a
translation shim (e..g, with Djatoka).There's client-side support in
Our digital repository uses IIP Image Server
(http://iipimage.sourceforge.net/documentation/server/) on the backend
with pyramidal tiffs and OpenSeaDragon on the front-end
(http://openseadragon.github.io/). We¹ve been very happy with it. You can
see it here:
Hi Jonathan,
We’ve been using OpenSeadragon recently. We’ve implemented this in Spotlight
as well as have been using it in redesign of SearchWorks.
You can get more info on OSD at http://openseadragon.github.io/ and the
ruby-gem that we’ve been using at
Jonathan,
We use Scripto with Omeka to have volunteers transcribe manuscripts which are
high resolution images. It has the option of using OpenLayers (which is the
setting we use) or Zoom.it for image display.
OpenLayers: http://openlayers.org/
Zoomit: http://zoom.it/
I have no idea the level
Jonathan,
If you're using Rails, I wrote RIIIF, which is a Rails engine that serves
IIIF API requests. There's a rails gem:
https://github.com/IIIF/openseadragon-rails that has openseadragon all
vendored with a few view helpers
-Justin
On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 10:49 AM, Terrell, Trey
Jonathan,
We use an image server I wrote, Loris, plus OpenSeadragon. Here's an
example:
http://libimages.princeton.edu/osd-demo/?feedme=pudl0123%2F8172070%2F01%2F0001.jp2
That image is 152500 x 4000 px:
While you're probably referring to archival/dc images where the resources
already suggested probably make more sense, for general web images--which can
also be big--it's time to start using the picture HTML element and the
picturefill polyfill for unsupported browsers.
Support tl;dr: The
There's still time to sign up for and attend the Code4Lib Bay Area Meetup
on Monday, July 28th (only days away!) from 10am-3pm. Continental breakfast
starting at 9am.
It will be held at 777 Mariners Island Blvd., San Mateo, conveniently
located near the intersection of 92 (the San Mateo Bridge)
Access Management and Political Collections Archivist
Arkansas State University
Jonesboro
Arkansas State University (Astate) is recruiting applicants for the position
of Access Management and Political Collections Archivist in the Dean B. Ellis
Library. Astate, a federal contractor, is an Equal
Associate Dean for Technology, Discovery, and Digital Services
Pennsylvania State University
State College
Welcome to an exciting time at Penn State! With new University leadership
imparting fresh vision and strategic direction, the University Libraries are
launching a new strategic plan focused
Apologies for the cross postings . . . . .
LAC Group seeks a dynamic and experience Law Librarian (Cataloging Technical
Services) for our client, a prestigious international law firm, Downtown Los
Angeles office. The Supervisor of Technical Services supervises the staff and
Senior Developer
Center for Open Science
Charlottesville
Background
Develop exclusively free, open source software to support open
science. The Center for Open Science (COS) is a funded non-
profit startup looking for OSS senior developers, with 10+ years of
professional software development
Academic Technology/Systems Librarian
Christian Theological Seminary
Indianapolis
QUALIFICATIONS (REQUIRED): Masters in LIS, Computer Science, or other relevant
technology field from ALA-accredited institution;
Demonstrated knowledge of systems and IT; experience with IMS platforms,
including
Librarian Archivist
Pueblo City-County Library District
Pueblo
Pueblo City County Library District has created a new opportunity for a
Librarian Archivist to manage its archival collections in a way that creates
optimal value for the library and its customers. The
position is responsible for
Hi Jonathan, hi all,
we also use Openlayerzoom in Omeka but not bundled with scripto, there's
an autonomous plugin that does it for omeka, maybe you can have a look
at the source code : https://github.com/Daniel-KM/OpenLayersZoom
When installed, it works fine without a bunch of tools on the
We previously used the Zoomify Flash applet, but now use Leaflet.js with the
Zoomify tileset plugin:
https://github.com/turban/Leaflet.Zoomify
One thing I like about this approach is that it minimizes the amount of
Javascript code the clients have to load, since we use Leaflet.js for our maps
Software Engineer for Digital Video Project
Harvard University
Cambridge
Come work with us here at Harvard Library! This position is funded for one
year with the possibility of renewal. You would be enhancing our repository
software so that we can preserve and provide access to digital video.
Looking to implement a iiif compatible server, primarily for jp2s in fcrepo3.
Just read the 'very large image display?' thread and looking at the
http://iiif.io/technical-details.html, it appears options include:
loris: https://github.com/pulibrary/loris
IIP:
I can't comment on the other options, but I've used IIP[1] for a while now
on Apache 2 and I've been quite pleased with it. I use mogrify from
ImageMagick to create the JP2s from the JPGs on the server and it serves
them up nicely. I'm also able to have the photographer's name, copyright
date, and
Eric,
FWIW, an HTTP resolver that could be used with Fedora has been a big topic for
Loris recently, and a few of us are trying to spec out what that would look
like.
The discussion/proposal is here: https://github.com/pulibrary/loris/issues/98
and spreads to a few other linked issues. I'd be
Thanks for all the recommendations!
I've been reading and understanding the problem space better. Here's my
summary of what I've figured out.
For this project, there is really only a handful of big images, and simplicity
of server-side is a priority -- so I think it's actually okay to
Thanks Christina, can you tell me more about Scripto, or provide a URL? I'm
not sure what that refers to, and my googling is not finding the right one. Is
Scripto an Omeka plugin?
From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] on behalf of George,
Jon,
In case you're interested, here's my implementation of a HTTP file
resolver:
https://github.com/curationexperts/riiif/blob/master/lib/riiif/http_file_resolver.rb
It can take a block for resolving ids to URLs:
I'm fairly certain that Stanford is using Annotorious, OpenSeadragon and
OpenLayers on Mirador: https://github.com/IIIF/mirador. You might want to
get in touch with Christopher Jesudurai about that work.
-Justin
On Fri, Jul 25, 2014 at 10:18 PM, Jonathan Rochkind rochk...@jhu.edu
wrote:
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