Handwritten annotations in books are an important key to understand how historical readers used their books. ABO aims to bring these books together. It is a digital library that reveals the variety of traces that readers left in their books. These examples were previously dispersed over many different libraries in the world. Yet it is also a digital laboratory, where visitors can work together: ABO has tools to enrich the early modern annotations with transcriptions and translations. ABO seeks to encourage collaboration.
seems like it must be viewed with a webkit browser like epiphany or chrome
bla1
bla2
bla3
bla4
bla5
bla6
bla7
bla8
bla9
bla10
bla11
bla12
bla13
bla14
bla15
bla16
bla17
help support a visual editing paradigm that provides computational support for editing cultural heritage documents while requiring minimal formalization early in the research process. Kiernan (2007) is careful to distinguish between image-based scholarly editions and ‘plain old facsimiles’
SALT represents an authoring and annotation framework helping the authors to enrich their scientific publications with semantic annotations. The framework is composed by two parts:
* The ontological foundation - is represented by a federation of three ontologies having its roots in the Rhetorical Structure Theory (RST)
* The annotation mechanism - which relies on the textual environment for which SALT was created, i.e. LaTeX
Using the usual LaTeX and a series of new ones (although respecting the usual format), one can easily trasform a normal document in a semantic document. In practice, the annotation process is interleaved with the authoring process. Thus, after compiling the LaTeX document, the resulted PDF document will contain the annotations embedded while writing. For detailed information on the ontology schema and on how to use SALT, please consult the documentation provided on the site.
traditional values and and customs are meeting more modern behaviors within one generation as members of the african palestinian community make new ties to africa and to other africans in israel and palestine.
the african quarter abuts the great wall of the haram al sharif. seventy or eighty families live in apartments on both sides of a major access street that leads to the dome of the rock and the al aqsa mosque. These apartments are made in and around a four