Post on 26-Jun-2015
description
DIGITAL MEDIEVAL COMMONSDigital Library Infrastructure,
Interoperability,
and Medieval Studies
Benjamin Albritton
Digital Medieval Program Manager
blalbrit@stanford.edu
@bla222
Web Application – Institution A
Image 2 Institution
B
Image 3Institution
C
Web App – Institution A
Image 1Institution
A
Image 5 Institution
A
Image 6Institution
D
Image 4 Institution
D
“Virtual” Collection of Distributed Resources, e.g., • Teaching Collection• Cross-Repository Search• Personal Research
Resources Collected from the Web
DescMD & Deep Link for
Resource 6 via IIIF MD API
Imagine A Viewer…
Web Application – Institution A
Web App – Institution A
MS Image 2 Institution B
MS Image 1 Institution D
Book Reader Software - Tool Maker X Deep Zoom Client -- Tool Maker Y
Image 1 tution D
+_
… that does what users need
Web Application – Institution A
Web App – Institution A
Map Image 1 Institution D
MultiUp Comparison Viewer - Tool Maker X
Map Image 2 Institution E
Map Image 3 Institution B
Map Image 4 Institution D
Annotation Tool
Xcription Tool
Georeferencing Tool
Image Analytics Tools
… no matter where the content “lives”
Medieval Manuscripts: The Complex Use-Case
CCC 26 f. iiiR Fold A Open Fold A and B Open f. iiiV
Medieval Manuscripts: The Complex Use-Case
Medieval Manuscripts: The Complex Use-Case
Lambeth Palace Maidstone Museum
Medieval Manuscripts: The Complex Use-Case
This page intentionally,but unfortunately,
left blank
Countless manuscripts, all around the world!
How do we do it?
1. Separate data from delivery
2. Deliver the data via common API (IIIF)
3. Represent the physical object in a common data model (SharedCanvas)
Separate Data from Delivery
Image Data (Canonical)
Image Viewer
Discovery
Annotation
Metadata (Canonical)
Transcription
Image Viewer
Image Analysi
s
Discovery
Tool X?
Deliver via API: IIIF
http://library.stanford.edu/iiif/image-api
Data Model: SharedCanvas
http://www.shared-canvas.org
CHMTL text + Parker image in T-PEN
Examples of other resources attached to the facsimile
• Audio performances of notated music
• Overlaid text transcription
• User-generated comments (public and private)
• Also:• Data sets• Mark-up• Base
image choicesFor working examples, see www.shared-canvas.org
Resource Interoperability: Viewers
Independently control and compare pages from different parts of a manuscript… from different manuscripts… from different repositories
What’s next?• Expose your content
• You don’t have to give it away if you don’t want to or can’t – just expose it
• Share your requirements:• User annotations?• Geo-fun?• Crowd-sourced cataloging?
• Join the conversation at dmscommons@lists.stanford.edu