Read the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) newsletter 
online at http://iiif.io/news/2017/11/13/newsletter/

IIIF Community Newsletter, Volume 2 Issue 1
Date: 13 Nov 2017
________________________________
Community Snapshot
·         IIIF-Discuss<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/iiif-discuss> = 
772 members
·         IIIF Slack<http://bit.ly/iiif-slack> = 573 members
·         IIIF images online = 350+ million
·         IIIF Consortium<http://iiif.io/community/consortium/> = 47 founding 
institutions. Welcome to OCLC<http://www.oclc.org/en/home.html>, our latest 
institutional member. The IIIF Consortium (IIIF-C) continues to welcome 
founding members through December 2017 (please email 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> or see the IIIF-C 
FAQ<http://iiif.io/community/consortium/faq> for more information).

Announcements and Actions
Farewell and Thank You
As of November 17, Sheila Rabun will be stepping away from her 
position<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/iiif-discuss/itQqmxvKvdg> as 
the IIIF Community and Communications Officer. A search is underway to fill the 
position; see position description<https://www.clir.org/about/positions/iiif>. 
In the meantime, please direct any emails to 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.
Save the Date - 2018 IIIF Conference
The 2018 IIIF Conference will be held in Washington, DC, May 21-25, 2018, 
co-hosted by the Library of Congress<https://www.loc.gov/>, the Smithsonian 
Institution<https://www.si.edu/>, and the Folger Shakespeare 
Library<http://www.folger.edu/>. Please mark your calendars and stay tuned for 
more details!
IIIF Consulting: American Art Collaborative
A recent consulting collaboration with Sara Brumfield and Ben Brumfield of 
Brumfield Labs<http://www.brumfieldlabs.com/>, and Jason 
Ronallo<http://ronallo.com/>, head of Digital Library Initiatives at NCSU 
Libraries, to provide IIIF technical consulting for eight institutions from the 
American Art Collaborative (AAC), has yielded improved documentation for 
technical implementers<http://iiif.io/news/2017/11/01/aac-collaboration/>, as 
well as a framework for continued implementation consulting for future 
prospective adopters. Read 
more<http://iiif.io/news/2017/11/01/aac-collaboration/>.
JPEG2000 & OpenJPEG Survey
The first phase of work to improve OpenJPEG, an open source JPEG2000 codec, has 
drawn to a close, resulting in the latest release of OpenJPEG, version 
2.3.0<https://github.com/uclouvain/openjpeg/releases/latest>. Please see the 
call for feedback<http://iiif.io/news/2017/10/06/openjpeg-survey/> on the 
latest release, and complete the JPEG2000 & OpenJPEG 
survey<https://goo.gl/forms/491bK2sv9Fj0Y0Cf2>.
IIIF Code of Conduct Team
Thank you to the 2017-2018 IIIF Code of Conduct<http://iiif.io/event/conduct/> 
Team volunteers:
·         Glen Robson (IIIF Technical Coordinator)
·         Ruth Bowler (The Walters Art Museum)
·         Karen Estlund (Pennsylvania State University)
·         Yong Liu (Hebei Academy of Social Sciences)
·         Katherine Lynch (University of Pennsylvania)
·         Sarah Lorenzon Ferreira (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil)
·         Julien A. Raemy (HES-SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts, 
Haute école de gestion de Genève)
·         Jack Reed (Stanford University Libraries)
·         Emma Stanford (Bodleian Libraries)

Newsletter Submissions
The IIIF Community Newsletter is published quarterly to provide an at-a-glance 
update on the current activities and trends in the IIIF community. Anyone may 
submit an item for publication as long as it relates to IIIF. Please use the 
IIIF Community Newsletter submission 
form<https://goo.gl/forms/nw54cBpowzzTPRbp2> to submit an item to the 
newsletter.
IIIF Software Developers Survey
Are you a software developer working with IIIF, or preparing to work with IIIF? 
Please complete the IIIF Software Developers 
Survey<https://goo.gl/forms/ejJUIUP9gqOXnvPI2> to help the IIIF Software 
Developers Community Group improve documentation and prioritize topics for 
discussion.
Potential for IIIF 3D Community Group
Discussions about 3D and IIIF have continued across multiple venues over the 
last several months. If you are working with 3D and/or are interested in 
participating in such as group, please complete the IIIF 3D Community Group 
Expression of Interest<https://goo.gl/2s1fU7>.
IIIF Adopters Survey
Are you researching, experimenting with, or fully supporting IIIF at your 
institution? Please help us scope the IIIF Universe and levels of adoption 
across the community by completing our 5 minute “Basic IIIF Adopters 
Survey<https://goo.gl/forms/47OmXfgXMUNMBVI93>”.
Community Events and Outreach
IIIF Translations
In an effort to reach a broader and more international audience, IIIF community 
volunteers have been working on translating information about IIIF, such as the 
IIIF Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs). Over the past few months, the general 
IIIF FAQ<http://iiif.io/community/faq/> has been translated into Spanish by 
Pedro Urra, Professor at Havana University, with the help of some team members 
of the Cuban National Library. In addition, both the general FAQ and the IIIF 
Consortium FAQ<http://iiif.io/community/consortium/faq> have also been 
translated into French by Régis Robineau, Biblissima Portal Coordinator, and 
Julien A. Raemy, Research Assistant at the HES-SO University of Applied 
Sciences in Geneva. The 
translations<https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0B8biwZuDijgeT1I5bG9BTHJySk0>
 are still work in progress and their authors are seeking help from the 
community to review them.
Europeana IIIF Task Force Report
The EuropeanaTech community IIIF Task Force has worked to better determine how 
Europeana and the Europeana Network as a whole should be involved with the IIIF 
community, and what kind of IIIF-related developments should be undertaken. 
After a final round of review, the task force has released their final report 
and recommendations at 
https://pro.europeana.eu/project/preparing-europeana-for-iiif-involvement
IIIF Showcase and Workshop at the V&A in London, November 2017
The Victoria & Albert Museum hosted a successful IIIF Showcase and Workshop on 
November 2, 2017, with over 90 participants. See 
summary<http://www.vam.ac.uk/blog/digital-media/iiif-digital-collections-in-dialogue>
 of events.
IIIF Tour of Japan, October 2017
A series of IIIF events in Japan the week of October 16-20, 2017 provided 
forums for sharing and learning about IIIF and related activities at multiple 
Japanese cultural heritage institutions in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Fukuoka. Read 
more<http://iiif.io/news/2017/11/10/iiif-japan-tour/>.
IIIF Working Meeting in Toronto, October 2017
The IIIF community convened in person at the University of Toronto for the 
annual IIIF Working Meeting. Participants made progress on technical 
specifications, documentation and training, and community roadmapping - see 
notes and 
slides<https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B8biwZuDijgeVHdPc2hFcEpvWDA>, as well 
as a 
summary<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1RKrEHgDArGkD5yyTm9jd5rew5fWaPlCD05wMVJYf3zs/edit?usp=sharing>
 from the meeting.
IIIF Workshop at the National Library of Poland, September 2017
An Innovative Libraries workshop, part of the Digital Cultures Conference 
organised by the Adam Mickiewicz Institute, featured speakers from across the 
IIIF community. See the Conference website<http://digitalcultures.pl/en> 
preliminary 
programme<http://bn.org.pl/aktualnosci/1405-miedzynarodowe-warsztaty-na-temat-nowych-technologii-w-bibliotekach.html>
 (scroll down for the agenda in English)
IIIF New England meet-up at Harvard, September 2017
The IIIF team at Harvard hosted a regional IIIF meet-up on Friday, September 29 
to connect with other institutions who have adopted or are adopting IIIF, to 
share interests, and to look for areas of potential collaboration. See 
notes<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lRYQ5Y76a5hFsx3AcfofyGovJc1o9JOC07BgYPyspN8/edit>
 from the event.
IIIF Presence at Conferences and Meetings
Active community participants are encouraged to represent IIIF at conferences, 
workshops and events around the world. Those planning to present on IIIF at a 
conference or meeting, please fill out the “IIIF Representation at Conferences 
and 
Meetings”<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScDBfjLTLsC4trMGVXETeEiU1oqNQZd3H9cDApO1jx2M18BBw/viewform?c=0&w=>
 Survey. Recent and upcoming IIIF appearances include:
·         IIIF and Mirador workshop at XXe Colloque international de 
paléographie latine at the Yale Beinecke Library, September 2017
·         International Conference on Theory and Practice of Digital 
Libraries<http://www.tpdl.eu/tpdl2017/>, September 2017
·         IIIF Panel at CIDOC<http://www.cidoc2017.com/436605949>, Tbilisi 
Georgia, September 2017
·         4Science IIIF training session in 
Italy<https://www.4science.it/en/2017/09/06/iiif-per-la-gestione-del-patrimonio-culturale-digitale/>,
 September 2017
·         Digital Library Federation (DLF) Forum, October 2017
·         BIREDIAL-ISTEC International 
Conference<http://congresos.unlp.edu.ar/index.php/biredial-istec/2017>, October 
2017
·         HEAnet National Conference, November 2017
·         Museum Computer Group (MCG) Conference, November 2017
·         Museum Computer Network (MCN) 
Conference<http://conference.mcn.edu/2017/conference_schedule.cfm>, November 
2017
·         BELSPO-funded INSIGHT project (Intelligent Neural Systems as 
Integrated Heritage Tools) launch event, November 2017
·         DAM LA, November 2017
·         Coalition for Networked Information (CNI), December 2017

Technical Work
Transition from HTTP to HTTPS
Several institutions in the IIIF community, including University of Heidelberg, 
Oxford Digital Bodleian<https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/>, Harvard Art 
Museums<https://iiif.harvardartmuseums.org/collections/top>, the University of 
Edinburgh<https://images.is.ed.ac.uk/>, and the Vatican 
Library<https://digi.vatlib.it./>, among others, have switched from HTTP to 
HTTPS for their IIIF collections. Read the compelling case for serving your 
IIIF content over 
HTTPS<https://www.jack-reed.com/2017/05/23/the-case-for-serving-your-iiif-content-over-https.html>
 by Jack Reed (Stanford).
IIIF Presentation 3.0 and A/V Technical Specification
As part of the ongoing “Save Our Sounds” project at the British Library, with a 
grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, representatives from the IIIF A/V 
Technical Specification Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/av/> and IIIF 
Editors met in late September at the Getty Center in Los Angeles to review 
proof of concept work on A/V implementations, discuss open issues related to 
the Presentation 3.0 spec, and prepare for the IIIF Working Meeting. The IIIF 
A/V Technical Specification Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/av/> then met 
in October at the IIIF Working Meeting in Toronto to ratify several issues for 
moving forward - see 
notes<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1zYv4se9c5O2JJ4PV6DEHNoUUK6yboOxhtpBNvcUk3EM/edit?usp=sharing>
 from the meeting. Version 3.0 of the IIIF Presentation API will incorporate 
support for A/V interoperability.
Discovery of IIIF Resources
The IIIF Discovery Technical Specification 
Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/discovery/> met in October at the IIIF 
Working Meeting in Toronto and decided to pursue Activity Streams as the best 
prospective approach for crawling and harvesting IIIF manifests - see 
notes<https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PVYzT1jRTE2jtwzOwyhOcg6Rf8CCdrJ-kP6sYOpV_j0/edit?usp=sharing>
 from the meeting.
IIIF Text Granularity Technical Specification Group
The IIIF Text Granularity Technical Specification 
Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/text-granularity/>, chaired by Peter 
Binkley (University of Alberta) and Michael Appleby (Yale Center for British 
Art) met in person at the IIIF Working Meeting in 
Toronto<http://iiif.io/event/2017/toronto/>. The group considered various 
levels of granularity and the difficulties of applying them to manuscript 
material or to some non-Western languages. The discussion has moved tentatively 
in the direction of considering text granularity as a specific example of the 
general problem of providing information about annotation lists so that users 
can decide what to do with them. There was also a call for additional use cases 
from the community; please feel free to submit additional text granularity use 
cases via Github<https://github.com/IIIF/iiif-stories/labels/text-granularity> 
or raise them for discussion on the biweekly call.
Specifications Timeline
The following is the sequence and anticipated timeline for IIIF technical 
specifications agreed at the Toronto Working Meeting. Progress toward new 
specifications is contingent upon available community input, review, and the 
development of implementations demonstrating new features per the Community 
Process<http://iiif.io/api/annex/notes/editors/#community-process>.
·         Presentation API 3.0 and Image API 3.0 – Significant changes in the 
Presentation API to support A/V and also to change from Open Annotation to the 
now-standardized W3C Web Annotation model. The Image API will be updated at the 
same time because of parallel changes.
o   Feature freeze end-2017
o   Draft specifications May 2018 (in time for discussion at DC meeting)
o   Ratify and release Fall 2018
o   Community effort to create cookbook recipes and migration documentation
·         Search API 2.0
o   Updates required to match Presentation API 3.0, especially related to the 
change from Open Annotation to the W3C Web Annotation model.
o   Start work after release of Presentation API 3.0 with anticipated release 
in 2019
·         Auth API 1.1
o   Update with non-breaking improvements in 2019

Community Groups:
IIIF Community groups are designed to provide a forum for general discussion, 
brainstorming, sharing of use cases and demos, and working to produce tutorials 
and presentations based on existing IIIF APIs. The process for forming 
Community Groups can be found at http://iiif.io/community/groups/framework/. 
Please see the IIIF Community Groups page<http://iiif.io/community/groups/> for 
a calendar of group and community calls, as well as links to more information 
about each group.
Manuscripts Community Group
Continuing with discussions from the recent in-person meeting in Toronto, the 
IIIF Manuscripts Community Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/manuscripts/> 
has been working to identify best practices for manuscript metadata fields in 
order to provide a consistent user experience for manuscripts researchers.
Museums Community Group
The IIIF Museums Community Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/museums/> 
continues to share IIIF use cases, new implementations have been released at 
the Art Institute of Chicago, the Clyfford Still Museum, and the National 
Gallery of Art, and the Victoria & Albert Museum recently hosted a IIIF event 
in conjunction with the Museum Computer Group (MCG) conference in the UK, and 
the Museum Computer Network (MCN) conference in the US featured many 
IIIF-related activities and discussion.
Newspapers Community Group
The IIIF Newspapers Community 
Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/newspapers/> is now meeting once a 
quarter and focusing on demos and answering questions for implementers. The 
IIIF newspaper guide is near final stages and will be online soon. (A draft is 
available on github.) Stay tuned to the IIIF Discuss email 
list<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/iiif-discuss> for call scheduling 
announcements and drafts. If you’re willing to give a demo, please suggest on 
the #newspaper slack channel or ping Karen Estlund or Glen Robson.
Software Developers Community Group
The IIIF Software Developers Community 
Group<http://iiif.io/community/groups/software/> has created a IIIF tag in 
StackOverflow<https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/iiif> and encourages 
questions in that forum to spread knowledge about IIIF. The group is still 
conducting a survey<https://goo.gl/forms/ejJUIUP9gqOXnvPI2> to gauge the 
current interests and status of the IIIF developer community.
Implementations and Adoption
Feature: IIIF Content and Technology at the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek 
(Bavarian State Library) aka BSB
BSB CONTENT:
·         BSB IIIF Bookshelf<https://iiif.digitale-sammlungen.de/>
·         NEW: Most famous German encyclopedia of the 18th century, Zedler‘s 
“Universal-Lexicon“<https://app.digitale-sammlungen.de/bookshelf/search?query=universal+lexicon&submit=>,
 and some 50 other contemporary dictionaries
·         List of other IIIF-providers around the 
world<https://app.digitale-sammlungen.de/bookshelf/iiif-worldwide>
·         Introduction to IIIF and 
Mirador<https://app.digitale-sammlungen.de/bookshelf/help?language=en> (with 
videos)
BSB TECHNOLOGY:
·         Mirador-Plugins<https://github.com/dbmdz/mirador-plugins>, in action 
in the BSB IIIF Bookshelf<https://iiif.digitale-sammlungen.de/>:
·         NEW: Plugin “PiwikTracking” for statistically tracking of Mirador 
events (e.g. page turning of book pages in Mirador)
·         NEW: Plugin “ImageCropper”: Adds an overlay to the canvas for 
retrieving and customizing the image url for the selected area.
·         NEW: Plugin “Link to the current canvas”: Adds an extra button to 
every window that displays a link to the currently shown canvas
·         Hymir IIIF Server<https://github.com/dbmdz/iiif-server-hymir>: 
Migration from WAR + Tomcat setup to single file application execution (Spring 
Boot)
·         Java domain models for IIIF APIs<https://github.com/dbmdz/iiif-apis>: 
Contains model classes for all currently available IIIF API entities, namely 
for the Presentation, Image, Content Search and Authentication APIs, as well as 
the additional services defined in the Service Annex (GeoJSON, Physical 
Dimensions)
New Releases
·         The British Library’s Endangered Archives Program<http://eap.bl.uk/> 
(EAP), funded by Arcadia Fund has released 6 million images via IIIF Image API 
with Presentation manifests<http://eap.bl.uk/archive-file/EAP071-1-1> displayed 
via Universal 
Viewer<http://eap.bl.uk/archive-file/EAP264-1-3-4#?cv=31&c=0&m=0&s=0&xywh=306%2C89%2C1051%2C817>.
 See Cogapp case 
study<https://www.cogapp.com/work#/endangered-archives-programme/> for more 
details.
·         The Clyfford Still 
Museum<https://collection.clyffordstillmuseum.org/listing> has implemented the 
IIIF Image API using Cogapp’s “slow looking” functionality for their online art 
collections - view demo<https://youtu.be/R2c3LBs3umE>, see blog 
post<https://blog.cogapp.com/deeper-more-meaningful-art-experiences-with-digital-8afd7bdeb35b>,
 and read the case 
study<https://www.cogapp.com/work/#/clyfford-still-museum-online-collection/> 
from Cogapp that explains the underlying technology (Luna).
·         TIFY viewer<https://github.com/subugoe/tify>, see 
demo<http://tify.sub.uni-goettingen.de/demo.html?manifestUrl=https://gdzstaging.sub.uni-goettingen.de/iiif/presentation/PPN857449303/manifest>
·         Art Institute of Chicago went live with support for the IIIF Image 
API v. 2.0, using the Cantaloupe image server, JP2 access files, and a custom 
content shim which fetches and caches the JP2 from Fedora, if not already on 
local disk, and provides the local JP2’s location to Cantaloupe for serving.
·         OCLC’s CONTENTdm latest release supports IIIF Image and IIIF 
Presentation, see 
details<http://www.oclc.org/en/news/releases/2017/201726dublin.html>
·         Rosetta (ExLibris) support for 
IIIF<https://knowledge.exlibrisgroup.com/Rosetta/Training/What's_New_Videos/Rosetta_5-3/IIIF_Image_Viewing>
·         National Gallery of Art is now dynamically generating images using 
IIIF and IIPImage server, see 
example<https://www.nga.gov/Collection/paintings/paintings-grid.html>, and has 
also released a IIIF compare tool, see 
example<https://www.nga.gov/collection-search-result.html?artobj_imagesonly=Images_online&artobj_classification=painting&artobj_oscicatologue=American%20Paintings%2C%201900%E2%80%931945&pageNumber=1&lastFacet=artobj_oscicatologue>
·         Kyoto University Library Network released Kyoto University Rare 
Materials Digital Archive<https://rmda.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en> (test version) 
using IIIF. For more details, please see the news 
release<https://rmda.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en/news/2017-09-07>.
·         A brand new Biblissima 
demo<http://demos.biblissima-condorcet.fr/ovide-moralise/> showcasing an 
experiment around Mirador and IIIF annotations: “The Ovid’s Metamorphoses in 
images: gods, crimes and loves with IIIF” (in French)
·         Beyond Words: Illuminating Manuscripts in Boston 
Collections<http://beyondwords2016.org/> multi-institutional collaboration 
using annotated IIIF manifests and Mirador (see 
example<http://beyondwords2016.org/objects/leaves-from-an-antiphonal-and-a-gradual>)

Innovations & Ongoing Work from Across the IIIF Community
·         Demo from Yale Center for British Art<https://youtu.be/5NsKTbfky80> 
showing conservation images overlaid on a single canvas/view in Mirador
·         LDN with IIIF data sharing draft 
specification<https://centerfordigitalhumanities.github.io/inbox-docs/#!/specifications>
·         Rerum Inbox for Linked Data 
Notifications<https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/iiif-discuss/rerum$20inbox%7Csort:relevance/iiif-discuss/cSlclBwpPgQ/SvjKTy2MAAAJ>
·         Mirador Linked Data Notifications (LDN) 
demo<https://youtu.be/TxoPTWY3ZVI>
·         Leaflet annotation 
example<https://gist.github.com/mejackreed/2724146adfe91233c74120b9056fba06>
·         UCD video on how to use 
Mirador<https://vimeo.com/229253706?ref=tw-share>
·         STEM applications<https://github.com/imoutsatsos/osdUseCaseHCS> of 
IIIF
·         IIIF A/V proof of concept demo video<https://youtu.be/9iyN6QHZ-Z8>

Recommended Reading
·         “Storytelling with IIIF” materials from Cogapp:
·         Blog post<https://blog.cogapp.com/iiif-for-storytelling-1e36ce277f48> 
with embedded videos
·         Screen 
recording<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nWGCGNPl6I&feature=youtu.be> of an 
abridged version of the talk that I gave during a community call
·         PDF of the 
presentation<https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B2-uB9tnE8Npem5TMUNnWWRCS00/view>
·         Site with some interactive demos<http://storiiies.cogapp.com/>
·         Intro to IIIF workshop 
materials<https://github.com/sdellis/intro-to-iiif/blob/master/README.md> from 
EdUi 2017, by Shaun Ellis
·         Presentation on Discovery work at Europeana with IIIF: “Metadata 
Aggregation: Assessing the Application of IIIF and Sitemaps within Cultural 
Heritage”<https://www.slideshare.net/NunoFreire2/metadata-aggregation-assessing-the-application-of-iiif-and-sitemaps-within-cultural-heritage>
 by Nuno Freire, Glen Robson, John B. Howard, Hugo Manguinhas, Antoine Isaac.
·         Article about 
Mirador<http://digitalnagasaki.hatenablog.com/entry/2017/09/18/015104> by 
Kiyonori Nagasaki
·         Zegami blog post that goes into some detail on how we use pre-trained 
machine learning models for feature 
extraction<https://tech.zegami.com/comparing-pre-trained-deep-learning-models-for-feature-extraction-c617da54641>,
 see code<https://github.com/zegami/image-similarity-clustering>.

Edited by:
Sheila Rabun, IIIF Community and Communications Officer
With contributions from:
o    Benjamin Albritton (Stanford)
o    Michael Appleby (Yale Center for British Art)
o    David Beaudet (National Gallery of Art)
o    Peter Binkley (University of Alberta)
o    Andrea Bolini (4Science)
o    Ben Brumfield (Brumfield Labs)
o    Sara Brumfield (Brumfield Labs)
o    Tom Cramer (Stanford)
o    Tom Crane (Digirati)
o    Peter Clarke (University College Dublin)
o    Patrick Cuba (Saint Louis University)
o    Lisa Fagin Davis (Medieval Academy of America)
o    Emmanuelle Delmas-Glass (Yale Center for British Art)
o    Kevin Ford (Art Institute of Chicago)
o    Nuno Freire (Europeana)
o    Shane Huddleston (OCLC)
o    Andy Irving (The British Library)
o    Antoine Isaac (Europeana)
o    Opher Kutner (ExLibris)
o    Sebastian Mangold (Bayerische Staatsbibliothek (BSB))
o    Mark Matienzo (Stanford University)
o    Kiyonori Nagasaki (University of Tokyo)
o    Roger Noble (Zegami)
o    Richard Palmer (Victoria & Albert Museum)
o    Julien A. Raemy (HES-SO University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Haute 
école de gestion de Genève)
o    Jack Reed (Stanford University)
o    Régis Robineau (Biblissima)
o    Glen Robson (IIIF)
o    Tristan Roddis (Cogapp)
o    Jason Ronallo (NCSU)
o    Emma Stanford (Oxford Digital Bodleian)
o    Randy Stern (Harvard University)
o    Jeffrey Steward (Harvard Art Museums)
o    Tatsuji Tomioka (Kyoto University Library Network)
o    Dieter Van Hassel (Royal Museum for Central Africa)
o    Simeon Warner (Cornell University)
o    Jeffrey Witt (Loyola University Maryland)
o    Sonia Wronkowska (National Library of Poland)
o    Roxanne Wyns (KULeuven)
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