Stephen-

Thanks. Bryan Haberberger from Saint Louis University forked Mirador and has 
been working on enhancements that include rotation and sliders for color 
adjustments such as brightness, contrast, convert to greyscale and color 
inversion (https://github.com/thehabes/m2).  Its great work and we expect to 
merge it into the master branch of the project soon.  Good point that we should 
add this to the roadmap.  I will do so now.

Cheers,

-Stu

On Apr 14, 2015, at 8:27 PM, Davison, Stephen wrote:

> Very impressive Stu!
> 
> I thought I had seen rotation on the list of possible functionality... but 
> I'm not seeing that on the roadmap. Is this in the plan somewhere?
> 
> 
> Stephen Davison
> Head, UCLA Digital Library Program
> 390 Powell Library Building
> Box 957201
> Los Angeles, CA 90095
> (310) 267-5135
> [email protected]
> ________________________________________
> From: Code for Libraries <[email protected]> on behalf of Stuart 
> Snydman <[email protected]>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 14, 2015 9:50 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [CODE4LIB] Announcing Mirador 2.0 and projectmirador.org
> 
> We are excited to (officially) announce the release of Mirador version 2.0.  
> Please visit our new project website at http://projectmirador.org. Here you 
> will find a live demo, a four minute screencast demonstrating Mirador 2.0's 
> features, and links to the code repository and documentation 
> (https://github.com/IIIF/mirador/).
> 
> The 2.0 release of Mirador builds and improves upon the first release with 
> major user interface improvements and a rich feature set. These include:
> Deep zoom and pan using OpenSeadragon
> Multiple viewing modes, including single image, two-page, horizontal scroll 
> and thumbnail gallery
> Synchronized navigation of multi-image objects by filmstrip or table of 
> contents (when available)
> Metadata view
> Comparison of multiple images in a fully configurable workspace
> State saving and bookmarking for sharing a workspace
> Embeddable in blogs and third-party web apps
> Annotation
> Notably, Mirador now supports viewing and creation of annotations on regions 
> of images. The annotation functionality is fully compatible with the 
> OpenAnnotation specification (http://www.openannotation.org/), and of course 
> Mirador 2.0 is fully compliant with the IIIF Image and Presentation API's 
> (http://iiif.io).
> 
> A variety of features are in the backlog for the next version, and you can 
> view the updated roadmap at 
> https://github.com/IIIF/mirador/wiki/Mirador-2.1-Roadmap.
> 
> Mirador 2.0 is the result of a gratifying global collaboration. Many thanks 
> and congratulations to the lead development team, which consists of Drew 
> Winget from Stanford University and Rashmi Singhal from Harvard University. 
> Mirador 2.0 would not have been possible without contributions of code, 
> advice, testing and support by many others at Harvard, Stanford and the IIIF 
> community. See a full list of acknowledgements on the project website.
> 
> As we look forward to subsequent releases, improvements and extensions to 
> Mirador, we invite contributions of issues, bug fixes, and new features by 
> others. If you are interested, please sign up for the 
> [email protected] list, and head to Github to read the 
> contributor guidelines and get started.
> 
> -Stu Snydman
> 
> ****************************************
> Stuart Snydman
> Associate Director for Digital Strategy
> Stanford University Libraries
> 
> ps - pardon the cross-posts!

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