Infographic: Quantifying Digital Humanities (by UCLDH)
Melissa Terras' Blog: Digitisation Studio Setup
Essential reference!
London Design Festival’11
Are we ready for life without books? The seminar will pool contributions from book publishers, designers and multimedia storytellers. Ffrom 17th-25th September 2011 at University College London.
“Ordinary life is pretty complex stuff” « The Frivolous Now/ Podcasts
Yikes, uncanny how nothing escapes the grasp of the web… #comicsedu
Transcribe Bentham: A Participatory Initiative
It’s alive! #UCLDH #crowdsourcing
Melissa Terras' Blog: DH2010 Plenary: Present, Not Voting: Digital Humanities in the Panopticon
Read it. Now. #DH2010 #UCLDH
I-CHORA 5: Fifth International Conference on the History of Records and Archives, University College London, 1-3 July 2010
Starts tomorrow! See you there?
indicommons - indico: to proclaim, make publicly known commons: flickr.com/commons
I did not know about this. Mentioned by Fiona Romero, Head of Digital Media at the National Maritime Museum, UK during the Seeing is Believing event at UCL.
Search the Collections - Victoria and Albert Museum Crowdsourcing
.@melissaterras mentioned this crowdsourcing initiative.
"Yesterday's Objects: The Death and Afterlife of Everyday Things" -Autopsies Research Group Study Day
It’s on Friday, 4 June 2010, UCL (University College London). The draft programme is now up.
UCL Centre for Digital Humanities
All Systems Go!
Today’s the official launch of the Centre for Digital Humanities at University College London:
Digital Humanities research takes place at the intersection of digital technologies and computational techniques with humanities and cultural heritage. It aims to produce computational applications and models which make possible new kinds of research both in humanities disciplines and in computer science and its allied technologies. It also studies the impact of these new techniques on cultural heritage, memory institutions, libraries, archives and digital culture.
The launch of this centre is an incredibly relevant achievement. Congratulations to everyone involved!
Seeing is Believing: New Technologies for Cultural Heritage, 9 June 2010 - ISKO UK - UCL
With the participation of David Arnold, Professor of Computing Science at the University of Brighton, Dr Andrew Hudson-Smith, Senior Research Fellow and Research Manager at CASA, Dr Melissa Terras , Senior Lecturer in the Department of Information Studies at UCL and deputy director of the newly formed Centre for Digital Humanities and Fiona Romeo, Head of Digital Media at the National Maritime Museum and Royal Observatory, Greenwich. Free for students and ISKO UK members. Looks awesome.
UCL Digital Humanities Blog » Blog Archive » UCLDH Posters!
The power of visual communication… in academia! #UCLDH
Conference Programme « Exploring the Archive in the Digital Age « London
The official programme is now up. I’m presenting on Friday 7 May at 3.30PM. Looking forward to it! Metadata ahoy!
DHQ: Digital Humanities Quarterly: Fall 2009
Not to be missed. Includes an article by Dr Melissa Terras from UCLDH.
