Jim,

the yearly Digital Humanities Summer School in Oxford has a technical and hands-on focus on matters of XML-based text encoding and -transformation. They also have a dedicated Linked Data workshop this year (July)—although nothing specifically targeted at xQuery, so apologies if off-topic:

http://digital.humanities.ox.ac.uk/dhoxss/2013/workshops.html#humdata

Markus

On 5/20/13 10:08 AM, David Sewell wrote:
Jim,

The best two websites for general information on DH organizations/events are probably:

http://adho.org/
http://dh2013.unl.edu/

Also, the people within the DH community who are most interested in XML from a theoretical perspective can usually be found at the Balisage meetings: http://www.balisage.net/.

David

On Mon, 20 May 2013, James Fuller wrote:

Hello David,

On Mon, May 20, 2013 at 3:46 PM, David Sewell <[email protected]> wrote:
...
the oXygen editor/IDE). Even if the community of users is small by
comparison with Javascript or Perl or whatever, the impact of projects that
rely on XQuery is, I suspect, much greater than people realize.

Great to confirm Uche's reliable instincts.

Wondering what are the top venues (conferences, training, etc) where
digital humanities folk 'live' ?

I would also be interested in hearing what kind of problems these
folks are trying to solve.

thx, Jim




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Markus Flatscher, Editorial and Technical Specialist
ROTUNDA, The University of Virginia Press
PO Box 400314, Charlottesville VA 22904, USA
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