Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Metadata Games

Metadata Games is an online game system for gathering useful data on photo, audio, and moving image artifacts, enticing those who might not visit archives to explore humanities content while contributing to vital records. Furthermore, the suite enables archivists to gather and analyze information for image archives in novel and possibly unexpected ways. Check out […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Big Data Needs Thick Data

Big Data can have enormous appeal. Who wants to be thought of as a small thinker when there is an opportunity to go BIG? The positivistic bias in favor of Big Data (a term often used to describe the quantitative data that is produced through analysis of enormous datasets) as an objective way to understand our […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Does This Post Make Me a Tool?

My response to OPEN THREAD: THE DIGITAL HUMANITIES AS A HISTORICAL “REFUGE” FROM RACE/CLASS/GENDER/SEXUALITY/DISABILITY?, http://dhpoco.org/2013/05/10/open-thread-the-digital-humanities-as-a-historical-refuge-from-raceclassgendersexualitydisability/#comment-1907: This is a rich and multifaceted discussion. I just want to add one observations that it has made me ponder. The discussion has made me think about the metaphor of “tools” in digital humanities work. This makes sense, because the word […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Open Thread: The Digital Humanities as a Historical “Refuge” from Race/Class/Gender/Sexuality/Disability?

Read David Golumbia’s post on the “Dark Side of the Digital” conference yesterday? Consider this: In 2007, Martha Nell Smith observed: When I first started attending humanities computing conferences in the mid-1990s, I was struck by how many of the presentations remarked, either explicitly or implicitly, that concerns that had taken over so much academic work in literature—of gender, race, […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Saving Face

Museums and the Web 2013 wrapped up a couple weeks ago. The Cooper-Hewitt won an award for the work we’ve done on the collections website this year, which was nice. I was also part of a panel about Humour as an Institutional Voice. I asked Heather Champ to join me to talk about the subject […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: What’s Next for Digital Memory Banks?

As I watched the news on April 15 and thought about another April tragedy, at Virginia Tech, I wondered if it made sense to create an online collecting site. I have some experience building and managing online collecting sites/digital memory banks, now referred to as crowdsourced collections, at RRCHNM including the April 16 Archive. A […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Tate Digital Strategy 2013–15: Digital as a Dimension of Everything

Through the development of a holistic digital proposition there is an opportunity to use the digital to deliver Tate’s mission to promote public understanding and enjoyment of British, modern and contemporary art. To achieve this, digital will need to become a dimension of everything that Tate does. 1. Vision Through embracing digital activity and skills across the […]

Editors' Choice

Editors’ Choice: Visualization Across Disciplines

In recent years, visualization has become an all-purpose technique for communicating and exploring data within the humanities.  There are a wide availability of tools offering different points of entry from IBM’s Many Eyes to Gephi to Tapor 2.0.  Projects like the Visual Thesaurus,  Mapping the Republic of Letters, and Hypercities, among countless others, all engage with visualization as an integral part of their […]