Monthly Archives: April 2007

Working Papers on Computers in the Humanities

CH Working Papers (or Computing in the Humanities Working Papers) are an interdisciplinary series of refereed publications on computer-assisted research. They are a vehicle for an intermediary stage at which questions of computer methodology in relation to the corpus at hand are of interest to the scholar before the computer disappears into the background (link).

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Archive of pioneering British computer art

The CACHe Project is an archive of pioneering British computer art. At present it hosts the articles written by John Lansdown for the BCS magazine Computer Bulletin from 1974 to 1992. They present a unique record of the development of computer art and graphics throughout this formative period (link).

Posted in art, digital humanities, humanities computing | 1 Comment

collaborative software for decision making in i-labs

I-Labs are a collaborative space used for group meeting and video conferences. And these systems have come along way in recent years. The i Lab at essex uses deliberative software with its system.

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Scrap the internet, start over

This will never happen; but interesting story none the same (from the Melbourne Age) Although it has already taken nearly four decades to get this far in building the internet, some university researchers with the US federal government’s blessing want to scrap all that and start over. The idea may seem unthinkable, even absurd, but [...]

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It’s all about the links

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Democratisation and the Networked Public Sphere

* Panel Discussion with dana boyd, Trebor Scholz, and Ethan Zuckerman Friday, April 13, 2007, 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. The New School, Theresa Lang Community and Student Center 55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor New York City Admission: $8, free for all students, New School faculty, staff, and alumni with valid ID This evening at [...]

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What is the digital preservation coalition?

The Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) was established in 2001 to foster joint action to address the urgent challenges of securing the preservation of digital resources in the UK and to work with others internationally to secure our global digital memory and knowledge base (link).

Posted in digital humanities, history, humanities computing | Leave a comment
  • ...this blog is obsessively directed at profiling digital humanities developments in a cultural, social, and technical sense and in terms of books and applications...it is an aggregation or 'meta' style blog with the occasional commentary

    Hi, my name is Dr Craig Bellamy and I am a digital humanities analyst for the Victorian eResearch Strategic Initiative, a consortium based at the University of Melbourne, however, the views expressed in this blog are the responsibility of the author alone.

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