Open Source Digital Archives Displays
Ellen Paul
ellen.a.paul at GMAIL.COM
Mon Nov 28 13:51:43 EST 2011
Omeka was as easy as can be. I made a very simple digital library with
this free, open source, online software. No prior experience necessary and
the results come out looking great. The standard features are free and
they give you a lot of good options. However, if you're looking for
something with a bit more options, you can pay a subscription fee and get a
bit more storage, plugins and themes. Greenstone, on the otherhand, I've
known a lot of people who have had trouble working the system. I think, if
you're looking for something simple, you can get great results with little
hassle with Omeka.
Obviously, the other option is to create a digital library right from a
simple website, you just have to create all the metadata yourself rather
than using a program.
Hope this helps,
Ellen
On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 1:41 PM, Yiwei Wang <yiweiwang88 at gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm using Greenstone for my class project too. It's highly recommended by
> our instructor. The installation shouldn't be very hard. May give it a try.
>
> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:40 PM, Wilhelmina Randtke <randtke at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> I used Greenstone for a simple photo sharing project with classmates
>> during library school. It takes some technical skill to install - you need
>> to know a little unix to install Greenstone. Once it is installed, the
>> interface is more graphical. The look and feel can be customized through a
>> series of forms, accounts can be made for people to upload photos and enter
>> metadata. It automatically includes Dublin Core fields, and you can create
>> custom metadata fields. You can also get plug-ins to ingest metadata in
>> XML, MARC, CDS/ISIS, ProCite, BibTex, Refer, OAI, DSpace, METS forms.
>>
>> In Greenstone, straight uploading photos, entering metadata, and tweaking
>> the color scheme and graphics in the interface was simple. Installing the
>> initial set-up was a little complicated. I'm fairly technical (from the
>> library side, not the IT side), had access to someone who had worked with
>> Greenstone before, and could do the install OK.
>>
>> University of Florida digital libraries uses Greenstone, with in-house
>> modifications: http://digital.uflib.ufl.edu/
>>
>> From talking to people who have used both, Greenstone and Omeka are
>> comparable.
>>
>> -Wilhelmina Randtke
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 9:02 AM, Slavinski, Kate <
>> slavinskik1 at owls.southernct.edu> wrote:
>>
>>> I am in the process of creating a digital display of old photographs
>>> for the archives where I work, and I was wondering if anyone can share some
>>> good experiences with open source software for digital photograph displays.
>>>
>>> Thank you for your help,
>>>
>>> Kate Slavinski
>>>
>>> MLS Student
>>>
>>> Southern Connecticut State University
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>
>
> --
> Yiwei Wang
> MSI 2012
> School of Information - Library and Information Science
> University of Michigan
>
>
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--
Ellen Paul
860.428.9040
ellen.a.paul at gmail.com
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2011-11-28
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