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The International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF) 2017 Conference in The Vatican is intended for a wide range of participants and interested parties, including digital image repository managers, content curators, software developers, scholars, and administrators at libraries, museums, cultural heritage institutions, software firms, and other organizations working with digital images and audio/visual materials. The conference will consist of two events with separate registration:

All proceedings will be in English. 

Wifi information:
  • SSID: eventi
  • Password: enEtlc?9
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Wednesday, June 7
 

4:00pm CEST

Demo Session: Creating a Knowledge Graph using IIIF (Room 1)
Very few people read a book cover-to-cover. And very seldom is every bit of information we care about contained within a single book. What we want is the ability to jump around, to highlight important bits of knowledge, and create links between them. The world wide web does this through hypertext links. This demo will show how IIIF annotations may be used to create "hyperimage links" which allow us to seamlessly summon and navigate between multiple IIIF manifests. Several experimental APIs and code snippets will be shared so others can participate.

Speakers
avatar for Mek

Mek

Internet Archive
(@mekarpeles on GitHub) is a software engineer and citizen of the world dedicated to curating a living map of the universe's knowledge. His philosophies on open access and semantic knowledge systems can be explored at https://michaelkarpeles.com.  


Wednesday June 7, 2017 4:00pm - 5:00pm CEST
Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum - Room 1 Via Paolo VI, 25 - 00193 Roma

4:00pm CEST

Demo Session: Polyanno - IIIF and Crowdsourcing Annotations (Room 1)
The University of Edinburgh has created a project to investigate crowdsourcing transcriptions and translations of its more miscellaneous collections such as those of David Laing, that can have content ranging from Samaritan to Scottish, the ancient worlds to revolutionary France, and so can be notoriously difficult to with. The project is not only developing a website to help us untangle the variety in the Edinburgh collections, but we're also creating an open source package, Polyanno, to help others do the same! We've been working on an accessible, responsive, modular web design to transcribe and translate images, with support for input across a huge array of possible languages and formats. This demo will give a quick overview of the project and our use of IIIF APIs through LUNA and LeafletJS, and annotations compliant with the Open Annotation Model framework.


Wednesday June 7, 2017 4:00pm - 5:00pm CEST
Institutum Patristicum Augustinianum - Room 1 Via Paolo VI, 25 - 00193 Roma
 
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