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Mirador: A Cross-Repository Image Comparison and Annotation Tool
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Drew Winget, Stanford University Libraries
Rashmi Singhal, Harvard
Transcrição
1.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository
Image Comparison and
Annotation Tool
Drew Winget & Rashmi Singhal
Stanford University Libraries, Harvard
December, 2015
2.
Self Portrait, 1659 Portrait of a Young Man, 1646
Portrait of a Young Woman, 1667
3.
Mirador use cases
Comparison
Annotation
Transcription
Instruction
Reunification
4.
Open source
Javascript
Interoperable
Community driven
Extensible
IIIF compatible
OpenAnnotation Compatible
5.
Interoperability and
comparison
• My research concerns the content; I do not
want to be burdened by institutional barriers.
• I want to view objects from multiple
institutions side by side, without significant
friction.
• I want to collect annotations about several
objects in one place.
• I want to be able to refer others to exactly the
thing I am discussing or researching.
6.
“get pixels” via a
simple, RESTful,
web service
Just enough metadata to
drive a remote viewing
experience
Image API Presentation API
IIIF: Two APIs
7.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
8.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
9.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
10.
Advanced Applications
• Embed a specific view in another context.
• Tie into internal events to take advantage of
some features while providing a custom
interface to others.
• Seamlessly reconstruct fragmented documents from
dozens of separate sources.
11.
Open source
Javascript
Interoperable
Community driven
Extensible
IIIF compatible
OpenAnnotation Compatible
12.
“Open Source” No, really.
2013-~2014
• Yale and Stanford obtain grant to create Mirador 1
• Chris Jesudeuai and Drew Winget at Stanford, open on github
2014-2015
• Dedicated joint effort by Harvard and Stanford
• Rashmi Singhal joining as a primary developer
• Mirador 2.0 released
• Integration with HarvardX and Harvard Libraries
• Contributions from broader community including Princeton and Biblissima.
2016
NGA + ConservationSpace, EPFL, Yale
Mirador 2.1 - full IIIF feature support (“Shared Canvas”)
13.
Roadmap
Unfinished Business
• Detail images embedded on virtual canvas
• Multiple alternate images overlaid on virtual canvas
• Viewing direction updates
• 2.0 ranges
• Support for IIIF collection browsing
• More robust metadata fields display
• Per-canvas metadata
• Per-resource annotation and metadata display
• Support for blank canvases
14.
http://projectmirador.org
http://github.com/iiif/mirador
http://gitter.im/IIIF/mirador
mirador-tech@googlegroups.com
Get involved
Join us Online in 2016
Notas do Editor
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.
A presentation given at the International Image Interoperability Framework event held at Ghent University, Belgium on December 8, 2015.
Drew Winget, Stanford University Libraries
Rashmi Singhal, Harvard
Transcrição
1.
Mirador: A Cross-Repository
Image Comparison and
Annotation Tool
Drew Winget & Rashmi Singhal
Stanford University Libraries, Harvard
December, 2015
2.
Self Portrait, 1659 Portrait of a Young Man, 1646
Portrait of a Young Woman, 1667
3.
Mirador use cases
Comparison
Annotation
Transcription
Instruction
Reunification
4.
Open source
Javascript
Interoperable
Community driven
Extensible
IIIF compatible
OpenAnnotation Compatible
5.
Interoperability and
comparison
• My research concerns the content; I do not
want to be burdened by institutional barriers.
• I want to view objects from multiple
institutions side by side, without significant
friction.
• I want to collect annotations about several
objects in one place.
• I want to be able to refer others to exactly the
thing I am discussing or researching.
6.
“get pixels” via a
simple, RESTful,
web service
Just enough metadata to
drive a remote viewing
experience
Image API Presentation API
IIIF: Two APIs
7.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
8.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
9.
Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
10.
Advanced Applications
• Embed a specific view in another context.
• Tie into internal events to take advantage of
some features while providing a custom
interface to others.
• Seamlessly reconstruct fragmented documents from
dozens of separate sources.
11.
Open source
Javascript
Interoperable
Community driven
Extensible
IIIF compatible
OpenAnnotation Compatible
12.
“Open Source” No, really.
2013-~2014
• Yale and Stanford obtain grant to create Mirador 1
• Chris Jesudeuai and Drew Winget at Stanford, open on github
2014-2015
• Dedicated joint effort by Harvard and Stanford
• Rashmi Singhal joining as a primary developer
• Mirador 2.0 released
• Integration with HarvardX and Harvard Libraries
• Contributions from broader community including Princeton and Biblissima.
2016
NGA + ConservationSpace, EPFL, Yale
Mirador 2.1 - full IIIF feature support (“Shared Canvas”)
13.
Roadmap
Unfinished Business
• Detail images embedded on virtual canvas
• Multiple alternate images overlaid on virtual canvas
• Viewing direction updates
• 2.0 ranges
• Support for IIIF collection browsing
• More robust metadata fields display
• Per-canvas metadata
• Per-resource annotation and metadata display
• Support for blank canvases
14.
http://projectmirador.org
http://github.com/iiif/mirador
http://gitter.im/IIIF/mirador
mirador-tech@googlegroups.com
Get involved
Join us Online in 2016
Notas do Editor
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.
Not one system, but a shared low level architecture that supports interoperability.