Voyant Tools is a web-based text reading and analysis environment. It is a scholarly project that is designed to facilitate reading and interpretive practices for digital humanities students and scholars as well as for the general public.
Reverse Shot is a publication of the Museum of the Moving Image. The magazine was first formed in 2003 and was run independently by editors Michael Koresky and Jeff Reichert until September 2014, when they partnered with the Museum.
The OAPEN Library contains freely accessible academic books, mainly in the area of humanities and social sciences. OAPEN works with publishers to build a quality controlled collection of open access books, and provides services for publishers, libraries and research funders in the areas of deposit, quality assurance, dissemination, and digital preservation.
The ISFDB is a community effort to catalog works of science fiction, fantasy, and horror. It links together various types of bibliographic data: author bibliographies, publication bibliographies, award listings, magazine content listings, anthology and collection content listings, and forthcoming books.
The Legislative Research Special Interest Section of the Law Librarians' Society of Washington, D.C. Nearly all the sources and research tools available, both free and commercial
nearly all the sources and research tools available, both free and commercial. From the The Legislative Research Special Interest Section of the Law Librarians' Society of Washington, D.C.
The Berkman Center for Internet & Society. free, publicly available, searchable database of different sources of data about the Internet. broadband, cybersecurity, freedom of expression, etc. Records in the directory include the name of the data source, a short description of the available data, and a link. The vast majority of datasets within the directory are themselves open and publicly available. The Net Data Directory currently contains over 150 data source records
The Academic Preservation Trust (APTrust) is committed to the creation and management of a sustainable environment for digital preservation. APTrust’s aggregated repository will help solve one of the greatest challenges facing research libraries and their parent institutions – preventing the permanent loss of scholarship and cultural records being produced today.
The Internet History Sourcebooks Project is a collection of public domain and copy-permitted historical texts presented cleanly (without advertising or excessive layout) for educational use. includes Ancient, Medieval, and modern Sourcebooks, also: African History, East Asian History, Global History, Indian History, Islamic History, Jewish History, History of Science, Women's History, and An Online Guide to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans History.
Our release includes all the code needed to train new SyntaxNet models on your own data, as well as Parsey McParseface, an English parser that we have trained for you and that you can use to analyze English text.
based on the PLOS library. a large-scale system of open, interactive and interlinked knowledge maps spanning all fields of research. Around these maps, we will develop a space for collective knowledge organisation and exploration
From the developers of The Quotations Page. Its primary purpose is to make public-domain classic literature easier to read online. Most of the books are from Project Gutenberg. Michael Moncur. currently includes 243 works from 89 authors. new titles added regularly.
Early Women Masters East & West, Ancient to Early Modern, includes Art History, Music, Poetry, Greek Myth & Poetry, Women Zen Masters, Extensive Catalogue of Historical Quilt Designs, Ancient Chinese Taoist Poetry & Spirituality (Tao is the Great Mother)
The Cyber Vault project will monitor and illuminate key aspects of U.S. national security activities as a means of enhancing public understanding and government accountability. National Security Archive, George Washington University.
The EDUCAUSE Library is the preeminent clearing house for information about timely topics and research supporting the use and management of technology in higher education. It aggregates over 19,000 resources submitted by EDUCAUSE, EDUCAUSE Center for Analysis Research (ECAR), EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI), Higher Education Information Security Council (HEISC), Grant programs and our members.
Privacy International is committed to fighting for the right to privacy across the world. investigate the secret world of government surveillance and expose the companies enabling it.
botlab.io is a research foundation focused on researching ad fraud, user rights violations and other malicious practices in the advertising technology supply-chain. It is the only internet user focused public advocacy group started by ex adtech industry insiders.
Keshif is ready to load your structured data, whether it be digital collections, books that you have read, contact lists, public data sources, movies, etc. It can automatically import data from Google SpreadSheets and CSV/TEXT files. You can write your own importers in Javascript for JSON, XML, even HTML or BibTeX for publication databases.
BabyBlue—a free, Creative Commons-licensed implementation of the Bluebook’s Uniform System of Citation. BabyBlue was compiled by a team of students at the New York University School of Law, working under the direction of Professor Christopher Jon Sprigman.
The Open Syllabus Project (OSP). Syllabus Explorer leverages a collection of over 1 million syllabi collected from university and departmental websites.
ALEXANDRIA Internet Archive Search Prototype. provides entity based search and exploration functionalities into the Web Archive of the Internet Archive allowing you to use (most of) the 1.9 million concepts of the German Wikipedia or (most of) the 5 million concepts of the English Wikipedia as search terms. For these search terms, the current version provides the most important results from the Internet Archive, ranking resources based on Bing search, with more sophisticated re-ranking in future releases, as well as related entity suggestions for most of the queries.
Supported by Google Ideas, the GDELT Project monitors the world's broadcast, print, and web news from nearly every corner of every country in over 100 languages and identifies the people, locations, organizations, counts, themes, sources, emotions, counts, quotes and events driving our global society every second of every day, creating a free open platform for computing on the entire world.
Dedicated to the preservation of information for the musical compositions known as Jazz Standards. The information at this site has been assembled from hundreds of reference books and historical documents with additional commentary by jazz performers, historians, and musicologists.
Censys is a search engine that allows computer scientists to ask questions about the devices and networks that compose the Internet. Driven by Internet-wide scanning, Censys lets researchers find specific hosts and create aggregate reports on how devices, websites, and certificates are configured and deployed.
IssueLab helps those who don't have access to giant university databases. A service of the Foundation Center. the Lab "works to more effectively gather, index, and share the collective intelligence of the social sector." over 18,000 resources related to the world's most pressing social quandaries. compendium of case studies, evaluations, white papers, and issue briefs
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number of organizations/volunteers have built http://legislink.org/us,
provides all statutes at large, public law cites, and US code cites from 1787 to present. It also allows for the instantaneous comparison of any two roll call votes since ~1990.
figuring out whether state documents are copyrighted is a tricky question, and we've created this website to help identify the relevant laws in each state.
His Life His Writings biographies, literary criticism, bibliographies, periodicals, and online articles; movies, games, music, and art based on Lovecraft’s works,
Mirador is a tool for visual exploration of complex datasets. It enables users to discover correlation patterns and derive new hypotheses from the data.
Groups and institutions -- including the Smithsonian’s Natural Museum of American History, NYU’s Tamiment Library and the New York Historical Society -- are working to enshrine the movement in the form of an archive. But who, in the end, will get to tell the definitive story? OWS preserving its own history herel.
Hanzo Archives was founded by an experienced group of software entrepreneurs and web archivists to commercialize advanced web archiving technology that allows enterprises to capture, preserve, and make discoverable their web-based electronically stored information (ESI) in native format.
Full web stack. No browser required. PhantomJS is a headless WebKit scriptable with a JavaScript API. It has fast and native support for various web standards: DOM handling, CSS selector, JSON, Canvas, and SVG.
MALLET is a Java-based package for statistical natural language processing, document classification, clustering, topic modeling, information extraction, and other machine learning applications to text.
writings on the enlightenment by James Schmidt, Professor of History, Philosophy, and Political Science. Boston University. includes Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, Michel Foucault, Jürgen Habermas, and the Oxford English Dictionary.
Breaking Smart is a site devoted to in-depth explorations of the emerging digital economy, resulting patterns of societal transformation, and technological serendipity. Our goal is to produce a binge-worthy collection of essays on a single big theme, along with workshop material, approximately once a year. Season 1 is based on Marc Andreessen’s observation that “software is eating the world.”
F1000Research is an Open Science publishing platform offering immediate publication of posters, slides and articles with no editorial bias. All articles benefit from transparent peer review and the inclusion of all source data.
The POWRR Tool Grid v2 provides a set of interactive views designed to help practitioners identify and select tools that they need to solve digital preservation challenges. more detail on the COPTR wiki.
Just find the YouTube, Vimeo, TedTalk, or other video that you would like to sample and paste the link into TubeChop. Then use the end bars to choose the exact second when your clip will begin and end, select "chop it," and copy or embed the generated link.
ACLS Humanities E-Book (HEB) is an online collection of approximately 4,300 books of high quality in the humanities, accessible through institutional and individual subscription. HEB is available to entire campus communities. Using any web browser, faculty, students, staff and library patrons of subscribing institutions can view and search the HEB collection from campus offices, libraries, dorms and remotely when off-campus. An institutional subscription to HEB includes unlimited, simultaneous multi-user access from any Internet-connected location.
Easel.ly is a simple web tool that empowers anyone to create and share powerful visuals (infographics, posters)... no design experience needed! We provide the canvas, you provide the creativity.
The Buddhist Geeks Podcast first hit the airwaves in 2007. Since then, the series has become a huge hit among tech-savvy Buddhists with well over 350 podcasts in the archives, and even more added every week. Topics run the gamut from virtual reality to mediation to the overlaps and conflicts between Eastern religion and science, but all the episodes orbit the founders' fascination with the interface between Buddhist practice and the ever-expanding connective technologies that define the 21st century.
More than 80 out-of-print SAA publications. all public. The oldest item is August Sueflow’s A Preliminary Guide to Church Record Repositories (1969). Highlights among the released publications include the Basic Manual Series, the original Archival Fundamentals Series, important SAA planning reports (e.g., Planning for the Archival Profession, 1986; Image of Archivists, 1984; and Evaluation of Archival Institutions 1982), Steve Hensen’s Archives, Personal Papers, and Manuscripts (1989), three glossaries of archival terms spanning a 30-year-period (Evans 1973; Bellardo 1992; Pearce-Moses 2005), and the 1996 reprint of T. R. Schellenberg’s archival classic Modern Archives: Principles and Techniques. Beyond books, also included is a full run of the SAA Newsletter/Archival Outlook from 1979 to 1998 and Volumes 1 through 62 (1938 to 1999) of American Archivist, plus a two-volume compilation index for the first 30 volumes of the journal.
The Next Layer. book about wireless community network projects such as Guifi.net and Freifunk, Berlin, interspersed with philosophical reflections on the relationship between technology, art, politics and history.
N. Gray, T. Carozzi, и G. Woan. (2012)cite arxiv:1207.3923 Comment: Project final report, 45 pages: see http://purl.org/nxg/projects/mrd-gw for project details, and http://purl.org/nxg/projects/mrd-gw/report for other document versions.