Open Access – THATCamp British Library Labs http://britishlibrarylabs2015.thatcamp.org 13 February 2015, British Library Conference Centre Fri, 13 Feb 2015 07:20:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 BL Labs Competition – Tips, Advice and Looking at BL Data http://britishlibrarylabs2015.thatcamp.org/2015/02/13/bl-labs-competition-tips-and-advice-and-looking-at-bl-data/ Fri, 13 Feb 2015 07:14:54 +0000 http://britishlibrarylabs2015.thatcamp.org/?p=237 Continue reading ]]>

The new British Library Labs competition for 2015 is live and closes on 29 April 2015. The competition encourages anyone to come up with an idea of what you might do with British Library digital content. We will choose 2 ideas by May 29th 2015  and you will work from June to October 2015  as ‘researcher in residence’ at the British Library (expenses paid up to £3600) and showcase your work on November 2, 2015 where you can win a first prize of £3000.

Previous winners have included:

  • how to make statistically representative samples from our book collections (Pieter Francois’s Sample Generator)
  • applying the intuitions of a DJ to working with digital collections (Dan Norton’s Mixing the Library, Information Interaction and the DJ)
  • linking digitised handwritten manuscripts to transcribed texts in visually appealing way (Desmond Schmidt and Anna Gerber’s Text to Image Linking Tool)
  • finding Victorian jokes in our digital archives, creating a database of Victorian humour and attempting to make Victorian jokes funny again over social media (Bob Nicholson’s Victorian Meme Machine)

This workshop will include an overview of the competition, give advice and tips on the application process with a question, answer and discussion ‘clinic’.

This will then be followed by a look at some of our digital data we have available to either shape your ideas or inspire you to come up with a new exciting one whether or not you want to enter our competition. What we have learned more than anything is that people’s idea’s change once they see the digital content we have.

So if this session is chosen, we will give you wireless access to our shiny new, mini Network Area Storage device with around 8TB of data on it. We will give you a walk through of what’s on there and then you will have a chance to explore and investgate it and more importantly grab what you want! Our NAS box contains:

  • 3 million catlogue records from the British and Irish national library catalogues
  • 107,000 Digitised playbills from 1602 – 1902
  • 1 million images from our Flickr release, including metdata, user generated tags for around 70,000 images, over 3000 georeferenced maps, OCR text from all the books (22 million pages)
  • Metadata from Image, Sound, Media, Electronic journals collections.
Look to see what's on our shiny new mini-nas

Look to see what’s on our shiny new mini-nas!

Don’t miss this opportunity, so make sure you vote to have this session!

 

 

 

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Big Data for Musicology http://britishlibrarylabs2015.thatcamp.org/2015/02/09/big-data-for-musicology/ Mon, 09 Feb 2015 12:47:36 +0000 http://britishlibrarylabs2015.thatcamp.org/?p=197 Continue reading ]]>

Digital music libraries and collections are growing quickly and are increasingly made available for research. We feel that the use of large data collections need will enable a better understanding of music performance and music in general, which will benefit areas such as music search and recommendation, music archiving and indexing, music production and education. However, to achieve these goals it is necessary to develop new musicological research methods and in addition to create and adapt the necessary technological infrastructure, to find way of working with legal limitations and to collect large scale data. Most of the necessary basic technologies exist, but they need to be brought together and applied to musicology.

We would like to talk about challenges from a digital humanities perspective and  discuss methods and solutions that can enrich music research and make good use of existing and new data collections.

In that context we would like to present for discussion our ongoing work in our AHRC projects with the British Library (Digital Music Lab with data visualisations and ASyMMus) and the Spot the Odd Song Out game.

 

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