Re: [CODE4LIB] Software used in Panama Papers Analysis

2016-04-07 Thread Gregory Markus
Hey Sebastian,

They go into a lot of detail in this article

https://ijnet.org/en/blog/how-icij-pulled-large-scale-cross-border-investigative-collaboration

Indeed this is pretty interesting stuff and a good shout out for Blacklight
and other OS tools!

-greg

On Thu, Apr 7, 2016 at 4:21 PM, Sebastian Karcher <
karc...@u.northwestern.edu> wrote:

> Hi everyone,
>
> from one of the New York Times stories on the Panama Papers:
> "The ICIJ made a number of powerful research tools available to the
> consortium that the group had developed for previous leak investigations.
> Those included a secure, Facebook-type forum where reporters could post the
> fruits of their research, as well as database search program called
> “Blacklight” that allowed the teams to hunt for specific names, countries
> or sources."
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/06/business/media/how-a-cryptic-message-interested-in-data-led-to-the-panama-papers.html
>
> I assume this is http://projectblacklight.org/, which is pretty cool to
> see
> used that way. Does anyone know or have read anything about the other tools
> they used? What did they use for OCR? Did they use qualitative data
> analysis software? Some type of annotation tools? It seems like there's a
> lot to learn from this effort.
>
> Thanks,
>
> --
> Sebastian Karcher, PhD
> Qualitative Data Repository, Syracuse University
> qdr.syr.edu
>



-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
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Re: [CODE4LIB] ISO: State of the art in video annotation

2016-03-19 Thread Gregory Markus
Hi Stuart,

A colleague of mine has just recently recommended Clipper (
http://blog.clippertube.com/index.php/clipper-prototype-3/) they're
currently experimenting with it in the EUscreenXL project.

Might be worth checking out for you as well.

Curious as to what others will suggest as well.

Cheers,

greg

On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 11:11 PM, Andrew Gordon <drew.s.gor...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Thanks for sending out that document, Erwin.
>
> This is a really interesting topic and I feel like video annotation on the
> web should be more of a thing.
>
> On top of what Erwin already provided (OVA looks particularly like A
> project that might be good to look at for your needs) there are also:
>
> http://mith.us/OACVideoAnnotator/ - which is a proof of concept using the
> open annotation specification (http://www.openannotation.org/). The
> specification is format agnostic, intending annotatation of objects with
> text, media, web resources etc. - the genius.com folks seem to be
> involved.
>
> http://cowlog.org/ - pretty basic, but appears to get the job done and is
> web based.
>
> There are scads of proprietary and open source desktop video
> coding/annotating software that I will spare you the burden of going
> through. Full disclosure, I work on a project whose sibling project is a
> desktop video coding tool for psychology researchers.
>
> From my vantage point, video annotation software generally seems to be
> developed around a specific set of user needs (a type of researcher and
> research subject, for example). More specific target audience gets a more
> robust set of tools targeted at those needs.
>
> The biggest issues come down to diversity of encoding for video and the
> ability for operating systems to support the playback of them. This said,
> the web has even more limitations around what video formats it will
> support, but if you control the source of the video, this might not be such
> a big deal.
>
> It would really be great to see video annotation for specifically DH
> projects warm up.
>
> Have a look at all the resources and determine whether you think it might
> be useful just to roll your own annotator using HTML5, some sophisticated
> JS libraries for handling media, and hopefully wrapping in a standard like
> the Open Annotation Data model (linked above).
>
> Would love to hear what others think/may have experienced.
>
> Drew
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 5:04 PM, Erwin Verbruggen <
> everbrug...@beeldengeluid.nl> wrote:
>
> > Dear Stuart,
> >
> > A few years ago we started an overview of video annotation projects and
> > tools for the EUscreen network. We haven't been able to turn it into a
> > state of the art document as of yet, but I'm hoping it would be useful
> for
> > such an endeavour:
> >
> >
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1t6CIL8oQjkAtUe2LGInrUgxpNzj5k9s17Mihz6UotIM/edit?usp=sharing
> >
> > Kind regards,
> > Erwin
> >
> > Erwin Verbruggen
> > Project lead R
> >
> > Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision
> > Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
> > Hilversum | beeldengeluid.nl
> >
> >
> > On Tue, Mar 15, 2016 at 9:38 PM, Stuart Snydman <snyd...@stanford.edu>
> > wrote:
> >
> > > I am doing some discovery for a DH project that, at its center, needs
> to
> > > annotate digital video (locally produced videos that will be hosted and
> > > streamed on the web in our local environment).  We are still gathering
> > > requirements, but it needs to:
> > >
> > >
> > >   *   have a user friendly interface for creating annotations, better
> on
> > > the web but not an absolute requirement
> > >   *   create annotations at specific timestamps, or across spans of
> time,
> > > and have those annotations associated with regions of the video image.
> > >   *   annotations could include, text, audio, video, image, URL, etc.
> > >
> > > We’d prefer open source solutions that can be integrated into a web
> app,
> > > but aren’t fully closed to alternatives.  We’d strongly prefer a
> solution
> > > that supports open standards for annotation or is at least capable of
> > > supporting open standards.
> > >
> > > I know there are many, many video annotation projects.  What is the
> > > current state of the art in web-based video annotation making and
> > viewing?
> > >
> > > Many thanks,
> > >
> > > Stu
> > >
> > >
> >
>



-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
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*T* 0612350556

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[CODE4LIB] EuropeanaTech FLOSS Inventory Task Force Report

2016-02-16 Thread Gregory Markus
Dear Code4Lib list,

On behalf of EuropeanaTech
<http://pro.europeana.eu/get-involved/europeana-tech>, the R branch of
the Europeana Network I would like to share the Task Force Report
<http://pro.europeana.eu/blogpost/refreshing-the-europeanatech-floss-inventory>
on the EuropeanaTech FLOSS Inventory <http://bgweb.nl/floss/>.

The Task Force had three clear goals

   - Assessment, enrichment and improvement
   - Gathering new software and tools
   - Improvement of FLOSS taxonomy

The FLOSS Inventory has been a staple of EuropeanaTech for several years,
with community engagement becoming more intensive in the past 6 months.
Similar to projects like the DiRT Directory does for digital humanities,
the FLOSS Inventory contains over 200 tools relevant for the digital
cultural heritage sector.

EuropeanaTech is putting efforts, along with the Netherlands Institute for
Sound and Vision towards improving the development, implementation and
sustainability of OS tools in Europe and improving developer collaboration.

The FLOSS Inventory is a stepping stone towards understanding what exists
in the ecosystem, what has fallen by the wayside and where are the areas
for improvement.

We would greatly appreciate any feedback or views on the standing of DH and
DCH OS developer communities around the globe as we move forward with our
research. We're always up for a discussion and we're nice!

With warm regards and a special thanks to all the Task Force participants,

Gregory


-- 

*Gregory Markus*

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

Project Assistant

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
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[CODE4LIB] Interview with Mark Matienzo and DPLA Open Source Usage

2015-09-28 Thread Gregory Markus
Dear all,

Some of you may have seen and some of you have even graciously contributed
to the EuropeanaTech <http://pro.europeana.eu/structure/europeana-tech>
developers spotlight column called "Who's Using What
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog?tag=floss>?". We are pleased to announce
over the next few weeks we have the privilege to feature interviews with
the dev teams from Europeana <http://www.europeana.eu>, DigitalNZ
<http://www.digitalnz.org/> and DPLA <http://dp.la/>.

You can read the third feature from Mark Matienzo and the DPLA here
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog/who-s-using-what-dpla>.

"Who's Using What" provides cultural heritage and digital humanities
coders, hackers, and developers the platform to talk about their work,
share their favorite OS tools to utilize as well as the ones they're
developing themselves for us all to play around with. Of course we also
want to peek and see what the future holds for these dev teams and what
they'd like to see more of within the sector.

Interested in contributing? Drop me a line! We'd love to hear what you're
working on.

Interested in OS software in cultural heritage, libraries and digital
humanities? Check out our past interviews here
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog?tag=floss>!

Enjoy and cheers!

-greg

-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* <http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/>
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


[CODE4LIB] Open Source for digital aggregators Europeana Developer Spotlight

2015-09-08 Thread Gregory Markus
Dear Code4Libbers,

Some of you may have seen and some of you have even graciously contributed
to the EuropeanaTech <http://pro.europeana.eu/structure/europeana-tech>
developers spotlight column called "Who's Using What
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog?tag=floss>?". We are pleased to announce
over the next few weeks we have the privilege to feature interviews with
the dev teams from Europeana <http://www.europeana.eu>, DigitalNZ
<http://www.digitalnz.org/> and DPLA <http://dp.la/> plus a few other
possible surprises.

You can read the second feature with Bram Lohman from Europeana here
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog/who-s-using-what-bram-lohman-and-the-europeana-development-team-profile>.


"Who's Using What" provides cultural heritage and digital humanities
coders, hackers, and developers the platform to talk about their work,
share their favorite OS tools to utilize as well as the ones they're
developing themselves for us all to play around with. Of course we also
want to peek and see what the future holds for these dev teams and what
they'd like to see more of within the sector.

Interested in contributing? Drop me a line! We'd love to hear what you're
working on.

Interested in OS software in cultural heritage, libraries and digital
humanities? Check out our past interviews here
<http://labs.europeana.eu/blog?tag=floss>!

Enjoy and cheers!

-greg

-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* <http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/>
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


[CODE4LIB] EuropeanaTech launches online publication

2015-05-01 Thread Gregory Markus
Dear all,

On behalf of EuropeanaTech I would like to draw your attention to our new
online publication, EuropeanaTech Insight
http://pro.europeana.eu/get-involved/europeana-tech/europeanatech-insight.

Insight straddles the line between abstract and full-blown paper; thereby
making RD developments more accessible to the Europeana Network and
greater DCH world.
The publication also, finally provide a place where RD work within the
EuropeanaTech community (over 300 strong) can be presented to the world.

We are very pleased to share with you all our first issue on multilingualism
http://pro.europeana.eu/get-involved/europeana-tech/europeanatech-insight/insight-issue1-multilinguality
which is a major challenge for Europeana.

This issue contains papers from:
Juliane Stiller:
*Berlin School of Library and Information Science at Humboldt-University*Daniel
Vila-Suero and Asunción Gómez-Pérez, *Universidad Politécnica de Madrid,
Spain*
Spyridon Pilos, Head of language applications, *Directorate-General for
Translation*
Jussi Karlgren, *Gavagai and KTH, Stockholm*
Jānis Ziediņš, *Culture Information Systems Centre*  Rihards Kalniņš,
*Tilde*

We certainly hope you find this issue interesting, but if multilingualism
is not your main area of interest have no fear, over the next two months we
will be publishing several issues covering a broad range of topics!

If you have any questions, interest in contributing, or general feedback
please do not hesitate to get in touch.

Warm regards,

greg
-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


Re: [CODE4LIB] CMS selection

2015-04-07 Thread Gregory Markus
I had a conversation with the developers from Oslo Public Library who have
chosen Koha for their new CMS. Not sure if it can handle your needs but you
can read their blog about the process here
http://digital.deichman.no/blog/2015/01/12/working-with-koha-at-oslo-public-library/
and a little interview with one of their developers here
http://labs.europeana.eu/blog/whos-using-what-benjamin-rokseth/.

Curious to hear what you all decide to go with!

-greg

On Mon, Apr 6, 2015 at 12:58 PM, Ben Wallberg wallb...@umd.edu wrote:

 We use Hippo at the University of Maryland Libraries, please see my blog
 post ³Why Hippo CMS² [1] on why it was selected.  That post is now a year
 old and I would say that despite some challenges we are still satisfied
 with our selection.  I¹m happy to talk with anyone who would like more
 information.


 [1] https://dssumd.wordpress.com/2014/01/27/why-hippo-cms/

 Ben

 --
 Ben Wallberg, Manager
 Software Systems Development and Research
 Digital Systems and Stewardship
 University of Maryland Libraries
 wallb...@umd.edu
 301-314-6010
 http://lib.umd.edu/dss


 On 4/2/15, 11:03 AM, Sanchez, Edward L. edward.sanc...@marquette.edu
 wrote:

 Colleagues,
 I am on a campus-wide team charged with evaluating and selecting a new
 CMS system to replace our centralized Apache/PHP/Includes-based web
 server infrastructure.
 
 Our Libraries and University Archives have relied on the existing
 centralized system and would like to contribute to the selection of a new
 CMS-based platform that will position our library well into the future.
 
 Currently the list is down to four vendors:
 
 Hippo
 OmniUpdate
 Terminal 4
 Jahia
 
 If any of you have experience with any of these systems you wouldn't mind
 sharing please contact me off list.
 
 Your feedback would be appreciated.
 
 Best regards,
 
 Ed
 
 Edward Sanchez
 Head, Library Information Technology
 Marquette University
 1355 West Wisconsin Avenue
 Milwaukee, WI 53201
 edward.sanc...@mu.edu
 W: 414-288-6043
 M: 414-839-9569




-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


[CODE4LIB] Moving to Koha. EuropeanaTech Who's Using What Developer Profile with Oslo Public Library

2015-04-01 Thread Gregory Markus
Hi all,

As part of EuropeanaTech we have a column with which we like to spotlight
developers in the digital humanities sector and give them a chance to talk
about their current and past work, give shout outs to their favorite OS
tools and ask them what their dreams for the future are.

This week's developer, Benjamin Rokseth from Oslo Public Library, talks
about how their team is moving the whole catalog to Koha and improvide
their linked data. The Digital Development Team there are documenting the
whole process on their blog http://digital.deichman.no/ and is definitely
worth checking out for anyone looking to make the move to Koha.

http://labs.europeana.eu/blog/whos-using-what-benjamin-rokseth/

Enjoy the quick little interview and feel free to get in touch if you'd
like to contribute as well!

Warm regards,

greg

-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


[CODE4LIB] Real time video annotation tools

2015-03-04 Thread Gregory Markus
Hi all,

This might not be the best forum to look for answers but can anyone suggest
some OS real-time video annotation tools?

Basically being able to embedded a video and draw over it, whether or not
the drawings or annotations would be savable or retrievable isn't necessary
but would be a positive.

Any tips or questions appreciated!

Regards,

greg


-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


Re: [CODE4LIB] Real time video annotation tools

2015-03-04 Thread Gregory Markus
Thanks a lot Erwin! this is already a great list!




On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 10:54 AM, Erwin Verbruggen 
everbrug...@beeldengeluid.nl wrote:

 Hi Greg,

 With the EUscreenXL project http://blog.euscreen.eu we made an overview
 of annotation tools for video - not sure you can *draw* on them as much as
 you like, but at least leave some time-coded comments:


- Mediathread - for video essays:
http://mediathread.info/content/about-mediathread
- Open Video Annotation Project:
http://openvideoannotation.org/explore.php
- YouTube does some smart and simple annotation too (see Manage Video)
- http://videoannotation.codeplex.com/ is a simple tool to add tags and
annotations to video, similar to the YouTube video annotation
- free application facilitates the embedding, editing and customization
of Youtube videos: http://www.embedplus.com/
- ANVIL (http://www.anvil-software.org) is a free software tool
(development stalled) mainly for research purposes (not for
 republication)
- Vertov (
https://www.zotero.org/blog/annotate-video-with-vertov-in-your-zotero/)
allows you to annotate and manipulate video files stored in Zotero
(development stalled)
- Some lecture capture systems or services offer annotation tools:
Entwine (Switch), Kaltura, PanOpto mainly for teachers or students
- http://dotsub.com/
- Crowdsourced Video Translation: upload and subtitle videos, also
collaborative translation: http://www.viki.com/
- Viddler (http://www.viddler.com) is a commercial application to add
interactivity to video
- Capable Bits’ Annotate videos is an app (iOS), many others exist in
both iOS and Android


 Happy to learn about / hear from others!
 Erwin

 *Erwin Verbruggen*
 Project lead RD

 *Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
 *Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
 Hilversum | *
 *beeldengeluid.nl* http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/

 ᐧ
 On Wed, Mar 4, 2015 at 11:28 AM, Gregory Markus gmar...@beeldengeluid.nl
 wrote:

  Hi all,
 
  This might not be the best forum to look for answers but can anyone
 suggest
  some OS real-time video annotation tools?
 
  Basically being able to embedded a video and draw over it, whether or not
  the drawings or annotations would be savable or retrievable isn't
 necessary
  but would be a positive.
 
  Any tips or questions appreciated!
 
  Regards,
 
  greg
 
 
  --
 
  *Gregory Markus*
 
  Project Assistant
 
  EuropeanaTech Community Manager
 
  *T* 0612350556
 
  *Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr
 




-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision*
*Media Parkboulevard 1, 1217 WE  Hilversum | Postbus 1060, 1200 BB
Hilversum | *
*beeldengeluid.nl* http://www.beeldengeluid.nl/
*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


Re: [CODE4LIB] Inventory of Free, Libre, Open Source Software

2015-02-24 Thread Gregory Markus
Hi Tom and Peter,

thank you for your suggestions. I envy these platforms for having an actual
CMS. I am currently lobbying for funding so that we can build something for
our FLOSS Inventory and I think the positive messages i've received on here
will certainly help.

I would say the main difference between the FLOSS Inventory and these other
lists is that our list applies to larger aspects of digital heritage
including aspects like storytelling, visualization, annotation, and
geo-mapping, etc. This is a big part of Europeana's mission; re-use.

However, the inventory may slant more towards the back-end because a lot of
software I source comes from this list.

@peter I like that you mentioned the idea between application and toolkit.
This is something that I also would like to see for our Inventory. Also it
would be great to make all relevant plug-ins, say for Omeka, visible on the
Omeka landing page. One-stop-shopping if you will.

We would also like to have more reviews but the project that they were done
under has ended thus funding is gone.

I also serve on the DiRT Directory http://dirtdirectory.org/ Editorial
Board. Has anyone had a look at that list? It's pretty well organized and
enriched. the only problem is that it features payed software as well and
you can't filter just OS.

The folks over at Berkley are working on automatic tool submissions via
Twitter using #dhtools...not sure where this is at so a good reminder to
check-in on that status!

Thanks everyone for the nice discussion! nice to know there are others
working on similar projects and we can share some knowledge.

Regards,

greg

On Mon, Feb 23, 2015 at 11:52 PM, Tom Cramer tcra...@stanford.edu wrote:

 Greg,

 Thanks for the invitation to give input to the inventory. Can you compare
 and contrast the EuropeanaTech FLOSS inventory with https://foss4lib.org/?
 (And/or perhaps someone from Lyrasis might also chime in?) Just wondering
 if they are two different approaches with the same objective, or two
 somewhat different approaches with some overlapping names / software titles.

 For the record, I'm not necessarily suggesting trying to consolidate, but
 rather understand any differences and overlaps between them. It seems like
 there is plenty of room for more than a single tools registry. I.e., there
 are at least three overlapping, current digital preservation tool lists:

 - COPTR, the Community Owned digital Preservation Tool Registry:
 http://coptr.digipres.org/Main_Page
 - POWRR's tool grid for digital preservation software:
 http://digitalpowrr.niu.edu/tool-grid/
 - the IIPC's Web Archiving Tools  Software tools list:
 http://netpreserve.org/web-archiving/tools-and-software

 each of which seems to have its niche (and more importantly, maintainers!)

 Thanks,

 - Tom


 On Feb 23, 2015, at 1:29 AM, Gregory Markus wrote:

  Hello all,
 
  Last week there were a few posts about finding a list of open source
  projects. I would like to point everyone towards the EuropeanaTech FLOSS
  Inventory
  
 https://docs.google.com/a/beeldengeluid.nl/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ag_7rVJwt0CpdFRJOEJxdEk4ZEMxQ01jaDgxQXFSTkE#gid=0
 .
 
 
  The list features almost 300 OS tools that are relevant for the digital
  cultural heritage/digital humanities sector.
 
  Currently I am the only one actively managing the list. As you could
  imagine, staying up-to-date with new releases and new additions is quite
  difficult.
 
  So feel free to browse around the inventory, if you see some of your own
  work on there and it needs updating feel free to tell me! If some of your
  favorite tools aren't on the list feel free to send me links to their
  github and I will add them.
 
  Thanks everyone and I look forward to your contributions.
 
  Regards,
 
  greg
 
  --
 
  *Gregory Markus*
 
  Project Assistant
 
  EuropeanaTech Community Manager
 
  *T* 0612350556
 
  *Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr




-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


[CODE4LIB] Inventory of Free, Libre, Open Source Software

2015-02-23 Thread Gregory Markus
Hello all,

Last week there were a few posts about finding a list of open source
projects. I would like to point everyone towards the EuropeanaTech FLOSS
Inventory
https://docs.google.com/a/beeldengeluid.nl/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ag_7rVJwt0CpdFRJOEJxdEk4ZEMxQ01jaDgxQXFSTkE#gid=0.


The list features almost 300 OS tools that are relevant for the digital
cultural heritage/digital humanities sector.

Currently I am the only one actively managing the list. As you could
imagine, staying up-to-date with new releases and new additions is quite
difficult.

So feel free to browse around the inventory, if you see some of your own
work on there and it needs updating feel free to tell me! If some of your
favorite tools aren't on the list feel free to send me links to their
github and I will add them.

Thanks everyone and I look forward to your contributions.

Regards,

greg

-- 

*Gregory Markus*

Project Assistant

EuropeanaTech Community Manager

*T* 0612350556

*Aanwezig:* - ma, di, wo, do, vr


Re: [CODE4LIB] Master list of open source projects of interest to libraries?

2015-02-20 Thread Gregory Markus
Hi Brad,

To echo my colleague Erwin's point above, I manage the FLOSS Inventory so
if you have any questions about it feel free to ask me.

I am currently starting a task force as part of the EuropeanaTech Community
to enrich the list, expand upon it, and possibly build a nice CMS for it as
well.

Perhaps you would be interested in collaborating on this as well?

Warm regards,

greg

On Fri, Feb 20, 2015 at 9:30 AM, Erwin Verbruggen 
everbrug...@beeldengeluid.nl wrote:

 Hello,

 to add another list to the list of lists: In the framework of Europeana
 Tech we’ve been maintaining this Inventory of FLOSS in the Cultural
 Heritage Domain:
 https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ag_7rVJwt0CpdFRJOEJxdEk4ZEMxQ01jaDgxQXFSTkEusp=sharing
  -
 fee lfree to add / pick what piques your interest.

 Kind regards,
 Erwin


 Erwin Verbruggen
 Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision

 On 19 februari 2015 at 21:45:47, Joseph Montibello (
 joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edu) wrote:

 Hi,

 Maybe this is along the right line?

 https://foss4lib.org/

 Joe Montibello, MLIS
 Library Systems Manager
 Dartmouth College
 603.646.9394
 joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edumailto:joseph.montibe...@dartmouth.edu



 On Feb 19, 2015, at 3:36 PM, Eric Phetteplace phett...@gmail.commailto:
 phett...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi Brad,

 Not quite what you're asking for but related, there's a list of libraries'
 public git repos on the Code4Lib wiki:
 http://wiki.code4lib.org/Libraries_Sharing_Code

 Best,
 Eric

 On Thu, Feb 19, 2015 at 12:30 PM, Brad Coffield 
 bcoffield.libr...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 I assume this doesn't exist but...?

 In lieu of that are there any open source library projects that people know
 of that are under active development that they would like to plug?

 I've done some searching and found some cool things but I feel like there
 has to be way more - even just bits n whatnots that may work with
 particular library systems. (It can be hard to search github for this
 because of the IT use of the term library/libraries)

 I ask because:

 a. There might be something out there that I don't know about that might
 be great for us to implement (like, Guide on the Side which looks
 awesome)

 b. I'd like to try and help out some such project if my skills fit its
 needs.

 Thanks all.

 --
 Brad Coffield, MLIS
 Assistant Information and Web Services Librarian
 Saint Francis University
 814-472-3315
 bcoffi...@francis.edu




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