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John Salem

More Hackety Hack, Less Yackety Yack: Ruby for Humanists - 0 views

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    This article seeks to address the problem of digital humanities being code heavy by nature, but being populated a field not traditionally associated with programming. It introduces two tutorials intended to help new people break into the field of programming: Hackety Hack and "The Rubyist Historian." Hackety Hack is a free program containing a series of interactive lessons for learning to code in the Ruby language, and "The Rubyist Historian" is a blog by graduate student Jason Heppler intended to be an "accessible introduction to Ruby."
Andrea Verner

Wikimania 2012: Using the Wikipedia Global Education Program to Co-Create meaning - 0 views

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    A professor at Georgetown University is collaborating with students to further develop the Wikipedia Arabic program that has very few data covering materials in this language. Students will work with people who speak Arabic, mostly those that live in Egypt, to create and translate Arabic articles. This professor plans to show others her students research so that they can influence other scholars research and further develop research in translating media information around the world.
Angela Moultry

Digitial Humanities implementation Grants - 3 views

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    This program is designed to fund the implementation of innovative digital-humanities projects that have successfully completed a start-up phase and demonstrated their value to the field. These projects help us better understand the central problems in the humanities, and they also raise new questions in the humanities which help develop new digital applications and approaches for the use in the humanities. The digital humanities Implementation Grants programs seeks to identify projects that have successfully completed their startup phase and are well positioned to have a major impact. These grants involve, Implementation of computationally bases methods or techniques for humanities research; implantation of new digital tools for use in humanities research; implementation of new digital tools for use in humanities research, public programming, or educational settings; efforts to ensure the completion and long-term sustainability of existing digital resources; studies that examine the philosophical or practical implications of the use of emerging technologies in specific fields or disciplines of the humanties, or in interdisciplinary collaborations involving several fields or disciplines; or implementation of new digital modes of scholarly communication that facilitate peer review, collaboration, or the dissemination of humanities scholarship for various audiences.
aearhart

ACH and DHCommons Offer Mentor Program - 1 views

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    ProfHacker in The Chronicle of Higher Education put a notice out that people new to digital humanities can receive a mentor through DHCommons to help guide them. It also notes that those who have experience in DH can apply to be a mentor. Although ACH has had a mentor program, it seems to have been more unofficial and the technical sign-up was confusing (and funny!). The partnership with ACH and DH Commons allows greater access, and less confusion, for people to sign up.
Andrea Verner

XML/TEI in the First-Year Writing Classroom - 2 views

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    This blog is over a first year teachers proposal to teach a writing course that is digitally based. By teaching this way allows for students to focus more on analyzing, archiving, and transforming into a more modern method. Instead of composing through a word documents, students will use the XML program which does not tell any computer what to do with the information. This program requires students to describe what they are doing as they do it. It also allows students to see all of their editing work and has other advantages that Word does not.
Michelle Calhoun

How to Program Intelligence - 2 views

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    Are intelligence and pattern recognition the same thing? Do they go hand in hand? Or are the two completely unrelated? This article discusses the possibility of programs to either be intelligent or simply able to recognize a pattern.
John Salem

Big Announcements at Digital Humanities 2011 - 0 views

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    This article about the 2011 Digital Humanities meeting highlights three big project announcements from that meeting. The first of these was a then new grant program: Digital Humanities Implementation Grants, a follow up to the Digital Humanities Start-Up Grant program. The second of these was a collection of alternative academic careers for humanities scholars titled #alt-academy. The last of these was the introduction of Press Forward, an initiative aiming to fuse traditional scholarly review with open-web filters.
aearhart

Essay on opportunities for humanities programs in digital era | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

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    This article, titled Humanities in the Digital Age by Alan Liu and William G. Thomas III, addresses the hard times that have fallen upon higher education. One solution and innovative way to combat these financial cuts, the writers claim, is to make a movement into the digital humanities in higher education. The article continues on to highlight the best parts of digital humanities and how it can be a huge help to struggling universities both public and private.
aearhart

Digital Humanities and Pedagogy | HASTAC - 0 views

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    In this short blog post, Beth Corzo-Duchardt introduces a project she is working on in the Gender Studies Program. She has decided to "ditch" Blackboard, because it does not a smooth functioning user-friendly program for students and her. Instead, she is using Wordpress and is hoping it will work better for her classrooms.
aearhart

Center - 0 views

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    This website is the main website for UCLA's Digital Humanities department and area of study. Here you can navigate between the programs the school offers, research projects, and many other aspects of the digital humanities through the school. The website is well thought out and very organized, which makes their program look streamlined and well done.
aearhart

Tiffany Crawford: Humanities and Technology Unite - 2 views

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    This article discusses digital humanities through the works of Todd Carter and his Tagasauris data-curation platform. This program allows people to tag their pictures and other forms of media by the use of crowdsourcing and digital intelligence. He divides Tagasauris into three categories: Findability, Linkability, and Discoverability. With his creation, people such as Valerie Matteau have been able to digitize an art collection, which reveals eighty years of american history such as Correta Scott King's funeral.
Megan Lightsey

Digital Keys for Unlocking the Humanities' Riches - 2 views

Digital humanists are arguing that it is time to set our focus on how technology is changing liberal arts. Civil War battlefields are being mapped. Animation, charts and primary documents are being...

mlightsey surprise map NEH NSF

Michelle Calhoun

Can Machines be Programmed to Feel? - 0 views

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    Can emotions be replicated by a machine? Yann LeCun, a computer scientist at NYU, discusses the importance of emotions being prevelent in intelligent machines.
Michelle Calhoun

Can Intelligence Be Programmed? - 0 views

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    This post attempts to discuss and explor the possibility of the "thinking machine." Could computers become so smart as to function on a human level: think, feel, act, etc. as if it were really human? A panel discusses these phenominons and the reality behind the questions.
Michelle Calhoun

Robot & Frank: The Future of Computerized Companions - 0 views

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    This article is about a movie showing that will pioneer a discussion concerning roboticists and exploring the future of computerized companions and caretakers. The program supports Alfred B. Sloan Foundation in asisting understanding of science and technology.
Andrea Verner

Announcing the Digital Humanities Winter Institute - 0 views

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    This event is a week long opportunity that discusses different topics about digital humanities. Each participant will get extensive material about their topic that pertains to their knowledge about digital humanities. A beginning course would show how project development and humanitites programming which no experience is required.
John Salem

DH Answers by the Numbers - 0 views

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    According to the article, DH Answers represents a chance for digital humanists to communicate with fellow digital humanists through a free and community driven Q&A board. Anyone may post and answer freely, and community members are encouraged to tag their posts so as to facilitate the creation of new categories. Questions range from improving the site itself to introducing undergraduate students to the digital humanities. Forums users may also make requests for information, such as "a list of all graduate programs that study DH."
Esther Ok

Modernist Cuisine, Part 2-Modernist Cuisine at Home! - 0 views

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    This blog article tied to the Special Collections of Virginia Tech's Culinary program discusses a two volume set book they have posted online for readers to share. The books are called "Modernist Cuisine at Home" and contains 456 pages for cooks to examine how food can be examined differently and broken down into separate chemical reactions. The blog poster explains to readers that this addition to their collections is immensely helpful for readers, even when it at first seems intimidating to read.
John Salem

Digital Agency - 1 views

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    The article by Rob Blades analyzes the role and value of computers from the perspective of a historian, particularly in relation to the shifting notion of agency and history. Much like movements in the field of History pertaining to the reintegration of marginalized groups, such as women or the working class, Blades argues that computers should be seen as having some measure of agency in our handling of them in research. He points to the number of programs coming close to matching Humans in the Turing Test, a test for determining "humanness," and delivers a counter argument to the claim that computers "dumb down" the population in general, and in particular historians who rely on them.
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