This article explores three tools that synchronize sound and text for online oral history collections: the Oral History Metadata Synchronizer (OHMS), the Text Encoding Initiative (TEI), and YouTube. A detailed description and examples are given for each. Integrating audio/video recordings and transcripts enables searching and browsing, making oral histories more accessible and approachable
Imagine a world where every leisure activity is tracked, recorded, and then analyzed as market resea...
This essay is a review of Edna Ullmann-Margalit’s pathbreaking 1978 book, The Emergence of Norms. It...
A basic understanding of the Internet’s physical and operational structure is one element of informa...
This article explores three tools that synchronize sound and text for online oral history collection...
One of the fastest-growing professional social networks is GitHub, an online space to share code. Gi...
Reviews two documentary films about the aftermath and reconciliation of the Sierra Leone Civil War 1...
These pieces explore the financial, emotional, and physical toll that women in New York with loved o...
Students will locate each historical event\u27s location through US History from 1400 to 1865 and tr...
William Scoresby threw his harpoon into the whale and the arrow-‐shaped tip landed deep within its ...
In this article I briefly trace the complex and incremental but significant ways that social media p...
A review of Cecilia Ming Si Chen, Janine MacLeod and Astrida Neimanis (eds), Thinking with Water (M...
On the first day, students learn how to pick locks. Instructions on day two include how to covertly ...
Is Feminism Still Relevant? visually displays crucial issues in women\u27s studies to showcase why ...
Firing the Canon is written in conjunction with is namesake exhibition, prepared as a culmination of...
Both horrifying and fascinating, 4chan.org (http://www.4chan.org/) is a wildly popular message board...
Imagine a world where every leisure activity is tracked, recorded, and then analyzed as market resea...
This essay is a review of Edna Ullmann-Margalit’s pathbreaking 1978 book, The Emergence of Norms. It...
A basic understanding of the Internet’s physical and operational structure is one element of informa...
This article explores three tools that synchronize sound and text for online oral history collection...
One of the fastest-growing professional social networks is GitHub, an online space to share code. Gi...
Reviews two documentary films about the aftermath and reconciliation of the Sierra Leone Civil War 1...
These pieces explore the financial, emotional, and physical toll that women in New York with loved o...
Students will locate each historical event\u27s location through US History from 1400 to 1865 and tr...
William Scoresby threw his harpoon into the whale and the arrow-‐shaped tip landed deep within its ...
In this article I briefly trace the complex and incremental but significant ways that social media p...
A review of Cecilia Ming Si Chen, Janine MacLeod and Astrida Neimanis (eds), Thinking with Water (M...
On the first day, students learn how to pick locks. Instructions on day two include how to covertly ...
Is Feminism Still Relevant? visually displays crucial issues in women\u27s studies to showcase why ...
Firing the Canon is written in conjunction with is namesake exhibition, prepared as a culmination of...
Both horrifying and fascinating, 4chan.org (http://www.4chan.org/) is a wildly popular message board...
Imagine a world where every leisure activity is tracked, recorded, and then analyzed as market resea...
This essay is a review of Edna Ullmann-Margalit’s pathbreaking 1978 book, The Emergence of Norms. It...
A basic understanding of the Internet’s physical and operational structure is one element of informa...