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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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A New Collection of 17,000+ Historical Maps and Images via @rmbyrne 

A New Collection of 17,000+ Historical Maps and Images via @rmbyrne  | information analyst | Scoop.it
Free Technology for Teachers

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
I value every idea's comment, November 20, 2020 2:02 AM
very nice http://sco.lt/51Zdiq
Rescooped by michel verstrepen from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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Miss your old typewriter - try OverType - The Over-The-Top Typewriter Simulator


Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from iGeneration - 21st Century Education (Pedagogy & Digital Innovation)
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7 Search Engines - Before Google Even Existed

7 Search Engines - Before Google Even Existed | information analyst | Scoop.it
Though the Web became publicly available in 1990, the first web search engine didn't arrive until 1993. Up until then, all websites were manually tracked and indexed by people. And while we now recognize Google as the king of web search, Google wasn't even in the game until 1998. During that five-year gap, twenty other…

Via Tom D'Amico (@TDOttawa)
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Library world, new trends, technologies
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Library and Information History - timeline

Library and Information History - timeline | information analyst | Scoop.it
A timeline of libraries and information history including technologies, epic events and just cool things you didn't know before.

Via Joao Brogueira, Karen du Toit, Patrick Provencher
Rescooped by michel verstrepen from The 21st Century
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Internet Archive

Internet Archive | information analyst | Scoop.it

Welcome to the Archive's Moving Images library of free movies, films, and videos.


Via Dr. Susan Bainbridge
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Science News
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VIMEO: A quick history of satellites in space

A short information animation about all launched, decayed and orbiting satellites in space.


Via Sakis Koukouvis
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Into the Driver's Seat
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Introduction to Digital Analysis Techniques: A Workbook for History Modules

Introduction to Digital Analysis Techniques: A Workbook for History Modules | information analyst | Scoop.it
This spring witnessed the début of my new final-year module, The Press and American Society. As May dawns, teaching has concluded, final assessments have been submitted and the time for reflection ...

Via Dr. Susan Bainbridge, Bryan R. D., Jim Lerman
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from The 21st Century
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Hilarious and Awesome Computer Ads from the Golden Age of PCs

Hilarious and Awesome Computer Ads from the Golden Age of PCs | information analyst | Scoop.it
I bet you don't remember that both William Shatner and Isaac Asmiov were pitchmen for PCs. Well, people who had "home computers" back in the 1980s do. Here's a collection of insanely great (and greatly insane) computer ads from the days of WarGames and Tron.

Via Dr. Susan Bainbridge
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Web 2.0 for juandoming
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Digital mapping at Stanford reveals social networks of 18th-century travelers

Digital mapping at Stanford reveals social networks of 18th-century travelers | information analyst | Scoop.it
Through a digital analysis of correspondence from elite tourists in Europe, classicist Giovanna Ceserani is discovering how international travel fostered cultural and academic trends.

Via juandoming
Rui Guimarães Lima's curator insight, April 12, 2013 12:07 PM

Afinal ainda faltava mais esta... Bom  fim-de-semana!

luiy's curator insight, April 12, 2013 3:25 PM

We live in a world of networks, of nonstop messaging and degrees of separation. So did intellectuals of the early modern age, according to new research at Stanford.

 

During the 18th century, thousands of letters, often on academic subjects like mathematics, were exchanged between scholars across Europe. Wealthy aristocrats and their tutors penned many of those letters when they were on the famed "Grand Tour" of ancient sites in Europe.

 

A pioneering digital visualization project has allowedGiovanna Ceserani, an associate professor of classics, to map the routes of thousands of British and Irish elite travelers who went to Italy in the heyday of the Grand Tour.

Ceserani's digital humanities project, the Grand Tour Travelers, has uncovered unexpectedly close connections between intellectuals, illuminated the rise and fall of cities, and occasionally offered warnings about how visualization can sometimes prove misleading.

Analysis of digital interpretations of the records of over 6,000 travelers from the British Isles illustrate just how small the elite world of tourists in this period was, as well as how, "irrespective of profession and social status, travel abroad seems to have lowered social boundaries and enabled otherwise unlikely connections,"

 

Ceserani said.

The project began with the encoding of a digitized version of the Dictionary of British and Irish Travelers to Italy, 1701-1800, generously supplied by the Paul Mellon Centre in London. For each traveler, Ceserani and her team recorded the sites they visited, the dates of their visits and their birthplace and year, as well as their area of expertise, educational background and social status, among other variables.

 

A scholar with an interest in how classical sites in Italy influenced broader European culture, Ceserani wanted to trace "the actual movements of scholars, of travelers," as they undertook journeys across Europe, often coming into contact with other travelers as they did so.

 

Digital humanities experts within the Mapping the Republic of Letters project, of which Ceserani is a core member, helped Ceserani build the platforms "to place these objects and events onto maps and graphs, visualizing in revealing ways our material."

Rescooped by michel verstrepen from visual data
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Graphing the history of philosophy

Graphing the history of philosophy | information analyst | Scoop.it

Each philosopher is a node in the network and the lines between them (or edges in the terminology of graph theory) represents lines of influence. The node and text are sized according to the number of connections. The algorithm that visualises the graph also tends to put the better connected nodes in the centre of the diagram so we the most influential philosophers, in large text, clustered in the centre. It all seems about right with the major figures in the western philosophical tradition taking the centre stage. (I need to also add the direction of influence with a arrow head – something I’ve not got round to yet.)

A shortcoming however is that this evaluation only takes into account direct lines of influence. Indirect influence via another person in the network does not enter into it. This probably explains why Descartes is smaller than you’d think.

It gets more interesting when we use Gephi to identify communities (or modules) within the network. Roughly speaking it identifies groups of nodes which are more connected with each other than with nodes in other groups. Philosophy has many traditions and schools so a good test would be whether the algorithm picks them out...


Via Martin Daumiller, Lauren Moss
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from Informatics Technology in Education
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Infographic: The History of Networks

Infographic: The History of Networks | information analyst | Scoop.it
Remember rotary phones? Still know that morse code from Scouts? Superhighway on-ramps to a series of tubes! DARPA to Derp!

Via Informatics
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Rescooped by michel verstrepen from visual data
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Archive Gallery: The Power of Data

Archive Gallery: The Power of Data | information analyst | Scoop.it
Supercomputers, search functions and the scattering of personal data to the four winds (Computer Visualization of a Black Hole Emission Supercomputers, search functions and the scattering of personal...)...

Now that we've spent time looking at all the incredible ways data is gathered, computed, analyzed and used, we thought we'd take a look through the archives to see how we got to this data age to begin with.


Via Lauren Moss
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