Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage and Learning

edmuse

EdMuse project – Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage for science learning is a two-year Strategic Partnership (2015-2017) funded by the EU Programme Erasmus+, Key Action 2 Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices.

The project works for the promotion of initiatives, starting from primary school, for using ICT, open educational and digital resources of cultural heritage for the improvement of science learning. The EdMuseaim is to promote new ways of learning and teaching through innovative methods, using technologies and open digital resources that can be non-formal content for designing the curricula. It also proposes a new approach for the cooperation between schools and museums.

The Sapienza University, coordinator in the Erasmus+ Edmuse project, in cooperation with the Michael Culture Association, organizes an International Conference to disseminate the results of the initiative and to provide a place of discussion on the importance of cultural heritage in learning environment.

DATE AND TIME
Mon, Jun 26, 2017, 8:00 AM – Tue, Jun 27, 2017, 8:00 AM CEST

LOCATION
Sapienza University of Rome
5 Piazzale Aldo Moro 00185 Roma

REGISTRATION

CONFERENCE PROGRAM Available soon!

For any enquiries, please contact edmuse2015 @ gmail.com.

We look forward to seeing you at the conference “Education and Museum: Cultural Heritage and Learning”.

Website: http://www.edmuse.eu


PREFORMA presented at OPATL in Girona

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Sònia Oliveras i Artau from Girona City Council, one of the memory institutions participating as procurers in PREFORMA, presented the PREFORMA project to the Permanent Observatory of Archives and Local Televisions (OPATL) in Girona.

 

Permanent Observatory of Archives and Local Televisions (OPATL) is a collaboration project started in 2008 with its main aim to preserve the local television heritage at the regions of Catalonia and Andorra.

 

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The annual plenary meeting of OPATL took place in Girona the 27th March. In this plenary meeting there were 35 professionals attendees of 18 institutions who manage local audiovisual heritage.

The professionals focused their questions on the presentation of the conformance checker results and on the file format selected.


VaporScape – interactive soundscape installation that reacts with body data

VaporScape is an interactive soundscape installation collaborated with NikeLab’s The Vision-Airs project, globally launched for celebrating the new VaporMax technology.
The idea behind is about detecting the humidity of the room, temperature on audience’s skin and translate the vaporization rate into the sound modulation. It emphasis the biomechanics process of human body and embodied the generative soundscape self-containing in a vaporized atmosphere.

Vaporization is about the changing of state, thus turning liquid to vapor where it occurs in our body. We breath; we sweat; heartbeats hit and blood flows. That’s how the internal circulation work and regular the body temperature. The heat evaporates through sweating hence for the result. Our body work like an orchestra, the micro sounds are amazing.

VaporScape is an interactive ambience sound installation that contains 4 layers of sound. The sensors react with the humidity of the room, temperature on audience’s skin and translate the vaporization rate into the sound modulation. It emphasis the biomechanics process of human body and embodied the generative soundscape self-containing in a vaporized atmosphere.

Project link: h0nh1m.com/vaporscape/


MuPop, the Pop-Up Museum exhibition tool created within E-Space goes to Ohio!

mw17

The conference MW17: Museums and the Web (this year taking place in Cleveland, Ohio, April 19-22) will feature advanced research and exemplary applications of digital practice for cultural, natural and scientific heritage.

During the conference, a 1-hour demonstration by Brigitte Jansen from the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, will showcase the exhibition tool developed by E-Space project: the Pop-Up Museum (MuPop).

MuPop is a tool that brings digitized cultural objects back into the physical museum space. It lets curators easily build an (interactive) storyline for a local installation in a museum setting, or at other locations.

MuPopStationsBerlin

The idea is that people walk into a room and use their own mobile phone to interact with an exhibition that is displayed on big screens inside the room. The interaction includes (1) content selection (what do you want to see), (2) navigation with a chosen theme/subject, (3) interaction with a specific art-work (4) answering more education / triggering questions in relation to the art-work.

The goal is to engage user participation with cultural collections, by transferring a casual passerby into a museum visitor with our pop-up museum which is interjected into an existing space.

More about MW17: http://mw17.mwconf.org/

More about MuPop: http://www.europeana-space.eu/pop-up-museum/


DPF Manager v3.2 released and available to download

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DPF Manager has been updated to version 3.2.

This new version includes several new features, improvements and some bug fixes.

 

New Features and improvements

  • Built installers for 32 and 64 bit architectures in both Windows and Linux
  • Save running task total time in report
  • New policy check: long edge check
  • Improved reports section, showing PDF reports stats, and browse report folder
  • Copiable text in report tooltips
  • More complete PDF reports
  • Clarified policies texts

 

Fixes

  • Filenames with non-standard characters
  • TIFF file structure IFD index bug
  • Wrong character encoding in metadata containers
  • Report not generated in some TIFF cases

 

Many of these new features and bug fixes have been reported in the Github issue tracker. Don’t hesitate to use it for any comment and suggestions!


Seminar Linked Data in Research and Cultural Heritage

DANS seminar on May 1, 12.00-17.30h. Meet people at the forefront of new developments in creating, keeping, and using Linked Data.

Hear more about nanopublications, self-publishing of scholarly papers, image interoperability and FAIR principles. See how Linked Data can be kept decentrally, and be subjected to distributed search.

This seminar is intended for people who are already familiar with the core concepts of linked data and associated technologies. If you are involved in current or upcoming projects that produce or consume linked data, this is a good opportunity to zoom in.

dansdata

Preliminary program

12:00-12:10 Welcome – Peter Doorn

12:10-14:00 Session 1

  • Ruben Verborgh, Universiteit Gent: Decentralizing queries at Web scale
  • Tobias Kuhn, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam: Nanopublications and Decentralized Publishing
  • Sarven Capadisli, University Bonn: Linked Research
  • Michel Dumontier, Universiteit Maastricht: FAIR principles and metrics for evaluation

14:00-14:25 Discussion, moderated by Martijn Kleppe

14:25-14:45 Break

14:45-16:30 Session 2

  • Herbert Van de Sompel, Los Alamos National Laboratory & DANS: A Linked Data Archive approach
  • Valentine Charles and Nuno Freire, Europeana: New approaches for data acquisition at Europeana: IIIF, Sitemaps and Schema.org
  • Enno Meijers, KB: A distributed network of digital heritage information
  • Albert Meroño Peñuela, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam: Repeatable Semantic Queries for the Linked Data Agnostic

16:30-17:00 Discussion, moderated by Martijn Kleppe

17:00-17:30 Drinks

More information and registration: https://dans.knaw.nl/nl/actueel/agenda/seminar-linked-data-in-research-and-cultural-heritage

 


E-Space is “Excellent”!

Dear followers of E-Space project,

I am very pleased to tell you that the final project review went very well and we have been awarded an ‘excellent’ for the project. Moreover, the reviewers described the project as ‘exceeding expectations’. This is a wonderful outcome and reflects the very hard work that all of you have contributed to the project. So this is by way of saying a warm ‘thank you’ to you all who followed and participated to the success of this project. 

Although the funding period is over and the project is now at an end, there are expectations that we will continue to fly the flag for E-Space with additional work on the E-Space Portal, MuPoP and other activities, including the MOOC, that can continue to demonstrate the success and future impact of E-Space, so this is not really an end and I am certain that we will be connecting again.

 

Sarah Whatley, Coventry University, project coordinator

EXCELLENT

 

FOLLOW E-SPACE AND JOIN OUR BPN:

The E-Space Portal: http://espaceportal.eu/

The project website, giving access to all the knowledge produced by E-Space and to the tools developed by the Pilots: http://www.europeana-space.eu/

The E-Space for Education miniportal: http://www.europeana-space.eu/education/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/EuropeanaSpace


PREFORMA Hands-on Sessions

Now that the PREFORMA prototypes are complete and functionally stable, the PREFORMA project is organising a series of hands-on session and training seminars to explain to the participants what does conformance checking mean, why is file format validation so important in long-term digital preservation, how to create their own policy profiles and how to download, install, configure and use the conformance checker to analyse their files.

IMG_0224These workshops/seminars invite archivists/conservators/librarians to bring their files and analyse them with the PREFORMA tools. At the end of the workshop, they should be able to understand which are the main issues related to digital preservation and file formats validation at many memory institutions, check whether their files conform to the specifications of the standards, and learn how to create a policy profile that allows them to check if their files are compliant with the acceptance criteria for their digital repository.

20170310_091411The first of such events has been organised on 10 March 2017 in Padua (Italy) in combination with the Innovation Workshop. The event was very successful and brought together more that 20 librarians with technical knowledge and IT staff dealing with long-term preservation from the universities of Padua, Venice Ca’ Foscari and IUAV.

Other sessions are being organised between April and October 2017 in several European countries:

  • Barcelona (Spain), 10 May 2017 (for librarians) and June 2017 (for archivists), focusing on TIFF
  • Stockholm (Sweden), 29 May 2017, focusing on PDF/A
  • Quedlinburg (Germany), 29 May 2017, focusing on TIFF
  • Amsterdam (The Netherlands), 30 May 2017 in the framework of The Reel Thing XL, focusing on AV
  • Brussels (Belgium), September 2017, focusing on PDF/A and TIFF
  • Ghent (Belgium), September 2017, focusing on AV
  • Tallinn (Estonia), 11-12 October 2017 in the framework of the PREFORMA Final Conference, focusing on all media types

veraPDF policy checking

veraPDF-logo-600-300x149The veraPDF software is capable of more than just PDF/A validation. veraPDF also provides a policy checker capable of carrying out custom PDF document checks beyond the scope of PDF/A validation. Examples of custom checks include highlighting the use of particular fonts or image formats, enforcing population of metadata fields or limiting the number of pages in a document. In this webinar we’ll be:

  • Giving a demonstration of the policy checker.
  • Providing a brief, non-technical overview of the supporting technologies: XML Schematron, XPath and XQuery.
  • Helping you to get started with the policy checker, showing how to report issues and get help.

Finally, we will be outlining our future development plans for the policy checker, and we’ll wrap up with a question and answer session.

To read more about veraPDF policy checking, see the documentation page: http://docs.verapdf.org/policy/.

 

Session Leads:

  • Carl Wilson, Open Preservation Foundation
  • Boris Doubrov, Dual Lab

 

Recording and slides:

View here the veraPDF policy checking recording (MP4).

Download here the veraPDF policy checking slides (PDF).

 

About veraPDF:

The veraPDF consortium (http://verapdf.org/) is funded by the PREFORMA project (http://www.preforma-project.eu/). PREFORMA (PREservation FORMAts for culture information/e-archives) is a Pre-Commercial Procurement (PCP) project co-funded by the European Commission under its FP7-ICT Programme. The project’s main aim is to address the challenge of implementing standardised file formats for preserving digital objects in the long term, giving memory institutions full control over the acceptance and management of preservation files into digital repositories.


D8.8R2 – Monitoring of the Open Source Project implementation

Deliverable D8.8 reports on monitoring of the Open Source Project implementations. Based on development efforts for each supplier, this updated deliverable (version 2.1) provides feedback on their use of: an open work practice for development; frequent open releases; and promotion activities aiming towards a sustainable community. In particular, it focuses on establishing sustainable communities, together with an assessment of how this is succeeded. The deliverable presents an evaluation of how each open source project implementation adheres to requirements expressed in deliverable D4.3 and how projects and suppliers have acted upon feedback and recommendations from PREFORMA. In so doing, the deliverable provides an evaluation of the extent to which best practices from community driven open source projects have been adopted with adherence to full transparency for all digital assets. Specifically, the evaluation considers software and associated digital assets provided via links to developed and provided resources (including source code, executables, and test files) and tools (including software configuration management system, mailing lists, and build environment) used in each open source project. An important outcome from this evaluation is a report on adherence to requirements (as specified in D4.3 and clarified in feedback from PREFORMA) and an assessment of how contracted organisations have managed to provide open source software and establish thriving and long-term sustainable open source communities of relevance for memory institutions and other stakeholder groups. Based on these outcomes, recommendations are given for further actions by the suppliers, the PREFORMA Consortium, and any potential adopter of software from the Open Source Portal provided by the PREFORMA Consortium.