Dear All,

As part of the Balisage Symposium on Cultural Heritage Markup, we want to have 
an "inverted" paper session where the talks are short and there is lots of time 
for discussion and debate after each talk. I think this is going to be perhaps 
the most interesting session of the day, so please join in! 

Full text and submission details at 
http://balisage.net/CulturalHeritage/Short-Talks-call.html 

Cultural Heritage data tend to be complex and heterogeneous; they resist 
generic solutions and often push tools and standards to the edges of their 
capabilities. Complex problems would seem to demand complex solutions, but as 
Gall's Law points out: "A complex system that works is invariably found to have 
evolved from a simple system that worked." 

The Balisage Symposium on Cultural Heritage Markup invites proposals for short 
presentations that aim to provoke discussion of how to design for and cope with 
the complexity of Cultural Heritage materials. Do you have a markup problem 
with no solution? Data too messy for your tools to handle? An ingenious 
solution to a hard problem involving Cultural Heritage materials? A heretical 
point of view about existing standards and practices? We want to hear from you! 

Presentations will be 10 minutes (or less) in length, followed by open 
discussion, brainstorming, support, sympathy, and advice from our audience of 
markup experts.

To propose a short presentation for the Symposium on Cultural Heritage Markup 
send email to [email protected]. Proposals must be received by June 19, 2015. 
Selection decisions will be announced by June 23, 2015.


/**
 *  Hugh A. Cayless, Ph.D
 *  Chair, TEI Technical Council 
 *  Duke Collaboratory for Classics Computing (DC3)
 *  [email protected]
 *  http://blogs.library.duke.edu/dcthree/
**/

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