The QR Code was produced by an organization in english history calls, the
details may be found at http://www.tarihsesleniyor.com/index_EN.html
Fatih KUCUKPETEK
Address ? :? BYDS Bilgi Y?netim ve Destek Sistemleri
? ? ???Gazi Teknoplaza AZ05 Golbasi 06830 Ankara Turkey
Tel?
Hi Danielle,
Have you considered swapping the periods for underscores? Then you would have
something that looks like this:
# 42.3.11 = VAG-42_3_11.jpg
It may not be ideal, but it's easier to interpret than zeroes.
Megan
Megan McGovern
Digital Asset Specialist
Corning Museum of Glass
Hello Danielle,
Our Digitization Standards guide might have some useful tips. It's
available through the CHIN site if you're interested.
Regards,
Genevieve
-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
Images
Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010
Apologies, I forget to clarify that we're (the Canadian War Museum) is
with the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. Our standards
guidelines are posted on the CHIN site.
- Genevieve
-Original Message-
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:mcn-l-boun...@mcn.edu] On Behalf Of
We stumbled across this problem while starting up a digitization project a
few years ago, and settled on using underscores. 1999_30_4.jpg
It's been working fine, and we've continued to use it for anything that
comes along, maps, manuscripts, etc.
For objects that have several different views,
Hi Danielle,
At the YCBA we are no longer using an accession-number based filename
convention, but when we were using accession numbers as the basis for our
filenames, we replaced all periods with dashes instead. I've also seen
underscores used in the same fashion. Both the dash and
We recently needed to come up with a naming convention for the images of
permanent collection objects going up on our website. Working with our
website developer, we found that for *our* purposes, it was best to use
dashes in place of the decimals. The program that culls information
from our