Sep
19

DH Forum / THATCamp Schedule

  • THURSDAY, 9/22, BOOTCAMP WORKSHOPS:
    a set of in-depth workshops on digital tools and other DH topics. (LOCATION: KANSAS UNION)
  • FRIDAY, 9/23, THATCamp:
    an “unconference” for technologists and humanists. (LOCATION: WATSON LIBRARY)
  • SATURDAY, 9/24, REPRESENTING KNOWLEDGE IN THE DIGITAL HUMANITIES:
    a one-day program of panels and poster sessions. (LOCATION: KANSAS UNION)


Full Schedule

Sep
29

Give us feedback

We welcome your feedback. Please take a few moments to fill out and return the feedback from. Side 1 is for the BootCamp Workshops, Side 2 for the THATCamp and Knowledge Representation conference. Feedback Form (PDF).

Alternatively, you can use the general THATCamp feedback form online at thatcamp.org/go/feedback/

Thank you!

Sep
29

URLs mentioned at THATCamp Kansas

Here is a spreadsheet where URLs mentioned at THATCamp KS can be entered.  It is not necessary to fill in every column for every link, but try to fill in info you know.  I will add to the sheet as I have time but I hope others will contribute, too.

docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ak4JEzOyiqM0dGZERnQ0RHVxMUpNa3pFdnpfbGZtOGc&hl=en_US

Sep
23

Notes for Finding Collaborators in Digital Humanities Session

Google Doc

Sep
23

Google Doc for Session on Teaching and Curriculum

Our Google doc for this session is at:

 

docs.google.com/document/d/1qwUAp1nC0ySmRH5aidbgKW8z1EYJw6gdERCjpqPd_9I/edit.

 

Sep
23

Google Doc for session 1: How do Humanities Scholars Make Use of Digitized Materials

Google Doc for session 1: How do Humanities Scholars Make Use of Digitized Materials goo.gl/JXXPs

Sep
23

THATCamp Kansas Welcome Session

About THATCamp
THATCamp.org

Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, George Mason University”

THATCamp “groundrules”
www.foundhistory.org/2010/05/24/thatcamp-groundrules/

KU Institute for Digital Research in the Humanities
idrh.ku.edu

THATCamp Kansas Blog
kansas2011.thatcamp.org

Twitter
#thatcampks
#thatcamp
@THATCampKS

Google Docs
…..?

Friday’s THATCamp
Schedule: goo.gl/dt70m

Michael Sperberg-McQueen talk and reception at Spencer Museum of Art: 4:30pm

Saturday’s Representing Knowledge in the DH conferene
Schedule: goo.gl/9B4he

Presentation Abstracts: kansas2011.thatcamp.org/category/representing-knowledge-conference/

Feedback sheets
On paper and online

KU Libraries planning team:

  • Marianne Reed, Digital Information Specialist, Center for Digital Scholarship
  • Elspeth Healey, Special Collections Librarian, Spencer Research Library
  • Kim Glover, Instructional Design Librarian
  • Scott Hanrath, Web Services Manager
  • Geoff Husic, Slavic and Eurasian Studies Librarian

THATCamp Kansas logo: Todd Pickrell, Library student assistant, Industrial Design

Sep
22

materials from “Creating Scholarly Editions Using the TEI”

Slides, handouts, exercises, and participant notes from Thursday’s bootcamp “Creating Scholarly Editions Using the TEI” are available online!

Sep
22

Grantwriting strategies for Digital Humanities Projects

Jennifer Serventi’s collaborative document for her “Grantwriting strategies for Digital Humanities Projects” session: is.gd/djiNay

Sep
22

Representing Knowledge Conference: Abstracts now online

We’ve now posted the abstracts for the the papers and posters for Saturday’s “Representing Knowledge” conference. See the links in the Categories sidebar or click here for the abstracts

….and here for the schedule of times and locations.

Sep
22

XML as a tool for domain-specific languages (Michael Sperberg-McQueen keynote talk on Friday afternoon)

A reminder that on Friday, after the THATCamp sessions, at 4:30pm, Michael Sperberg-McQueen of Black Mesa Technologies (www.blackmesatech.com) will give a plenary talk at the Spencer Museum of Art. He will also be giving a talk at the “Representing Knowledge” conference on Saturday.

Friday, September 23
4.30pm, Spencer Museum of Art
XML as a tool for domain-specific languages

Abstract: Computers are general-purpose machines for manipulation of symbols, which means they can be applied in almost any field whose problems can be expressed in terms of symbols. But the creators of computer systems and the potential users of those systems do not always think the same way and do not always find communication easy. Much of the history of information technology can be glossed as a series of attempts to bridge this communication gap. One current approach to this problem is to design ‘domain-specific languages’ (DSLs): formal languages suitable for computer processing, with vocabulary and semantics drawn from the intended application domain. In retrospect, the design of the Extensible Markup Language (XML) can be viewed as an attempt to encourage domain-specific languages and make them easier to specify. Like DSLs as conventionally conceived of, XML vocabularies allow concise descriptions of interesting states of affairs in a particular application area and tend to be more accessible to domain experts than conventional programming languages.

Unlike conventional DSLs, most XML vocabularies are specified as having declarative not imperative semantics; this is both a blessing (declarative information is almost always easier to verify and easier to apply in new and unexpected ways) and a curse (many conventional programmers find declarative semantics hard to come to terms with). Examples will be drawn largely from XML vocabularies for the encoding of culturally significant textual materials.

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