-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 5
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Discussion of readings for session 4: Digital collections #21
Comments
The Clark article was an interesting read because it explained the web archives of museums. These collections of UK publications are also used as a safety mechanism, against the risk of disappearance, which is extremely important and useful not to use such valuable works. The online versions also provide accessibility for a wider audience around the world. This was specifically described through the 'Emerging Formats Project', as mentioned in the article. "While large scale collection of such works is unlikely due to their labour-intensive nature, it is possible that in the future further crowd-sourcing activities may be possible, an approach recommended for archiving complex resources in the Digital Curation Centre’s State of the Art report." The Interactive Narratives Collection contains 200 websites and exhibition interaction patterns. It is evident from this article that the world is changing as we know it and it is adapting to the ever evolving media landscape. |
The Münster article addresses the similarities and differences between digital heritage and digital humanities. Digital heritage focuses on preservation, education & research, whereas digital humanities focuses on application of digital technologies to support research. The article looks at how research is carried out in these disciplines, what the applications of this research are and problems which can arise in both fields. Since there is no standardised process or methodology for digitising cultural heritage, there can arise issues with carrying out large-scale research across different data sets, especially when using algorithm methods. |
I was thinking about accessibility, of course it is amazing how the digitalisation of artefacts allows information to transgress global boundaries. However on the flip side does anyone have any thoughts on the digital era potentially leading to the death of authentic experiences? The space in which something is viewed has a strong impact on personal reception for example seeing a display of original artefacts at a museum or at the original site encourages us to consider the context in which objects existed and were used. The online visual sphere on the other hand is a an impersonal form of reception appealing to the masses in an easily accessible easily understood form. Thus I wonder does the digital era have the possibility to discourage travel to museums and or other countries? |
I found the Clark article extremely interesting. Through living so much of our lives through the internet and digital appliances we often forget just /how/ vulnerable content created digitally is. Learning that there are these projects set up in order to capture these pieces of work that would otherwise dissapear is extremely pleasant. The fact that the Collection contains 200 websites is also extremely interesting and proves the large extent of this preservation work. The Muenster article was interesting and I found the distinctions between digital heritage and digital humanities helpful. |
Clark’s paper answered a key question that I had about the British Library’s Interactive Narratives collection - namely what happens to archived works if/when the programmes used to develop or host them become obsolete. I knew that we are able to visit ‘old’ versions of websites etc as they appeared at certain points in the past, but had no idea that some software could also emulate the use of now defunct programmes within older browsers such as Flash etc. I do wonder if such programmes are able to replicate all defunct browsers/programmes or if they can only replicate specific ones. My knowledge of this topic is fairly weak! |
I think that Clark's article added to my understanding about digital heritage and the potential ways it could impact on the viewer/audience. I feel like the future of art offers the fascination of both media and new modes of access to old arts. Especially contemporary artists would appear to be at the forefront as we explore and expand our awareness, whether of radical social reforms or the rich heritage of the past. |
I totally agree with this, Molly. Technology is advancing at such a rapid pace that by the time you finish something, a new and probably better version is available! I always love looking back at older versions of websites to see how much they have changed, but also how quickly everyone gets used to new versions, despite all the complaining right after updates! Something that I've noticed is a recurring theme in many of the topics is the lack of conformity in the collection and display of digital data, and the Munster article really highlighted how unsustainable this approach is. I think it is important that there be a set of regulations (spoiler alert for the next set readings - like the London Charter) and that people actually adhere to them so as to facilitate the dissemination and shared use of findings. |
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: