The IIIF Consortium and the The National Film and Sound Archive (NFSA) are organizing a series of IIIF events alongside the AI4LAM Fantastic Futures conference. The Showcase and Workshops are free with a paid registration for the Fantastic Futures Conference. You must be a registered attendee of FF24 to attend.
You can register for the conference at Fantastic Futures Conference - NFSA - 15th to 18th October
You can register for the showcase at IIIF Showcase - Fantastic Futures - October 15th
You can register for the ‘Hands on IIIF’ and the ‘Glycerine’ workshops at IIIF Workshops - IIIF Consortium - October 16
Showcase
On Tuesday, October 15th, the Australian National University will host a special IIIF Showcase to introduce newcomers to IIIF.
- If you are interested in engaging with other museum, library, archive and technical professionals…
- If you are ready to learn more about using and sharing your institution’s images…
- If you’d like to know more about IIIF…
…then we would love to have you join us at the IIIF Showcase. All are welcome!
Come join us for a day-long free event that will educate, inspire, and reinvent your technical infrastructure.
The event is free for attendees of the 2024 Fantastic Futures conference, but require registration. Please register early to guarantee yourself a spot!.
Showcase registration available via NFSA with FF24 ticket.
Who is it for?
The IIIF Showcase is an event for people new to IIIF to get an overview and discover the latest developments in a single event. It assumes no previous experience with IIIF and will cover the full gamut of IIIF from the basics to Showcases of the latest developments in the IIIF Community.
Program
Location: McDonald Room, Menzies Library, Australian National University
Time | Session | Authors |
---|---|---|
9:00am - 09:10am | Welcome | Katrina Grant, University of Sydney |
9:10am - 09:40am | Introduction to IIIF: Technology and Community | Tom Cramer, Stanford University and chair of the IIIF Executive Committee |
9:40am - 9:55am | IIIF in the British Library | Neil Fitzgerald, British Library |
9:55am - 10:10am | Glycerine - Image Annotation Workbench | Ian McCrabb, Systemik Solutions |
10:10am - 10:25am | Developing an online catalogue for the ANU College of Asia and the Pacific Collection | Rose Faunce, YiYu Liu and Michael Warren, Australian National University |
10:30am - 11:00am | Tea & Coffee Break (provided) | |
11:00am - 11:15am | PROV API | Asa Letourneau & Conal Tuohy, Public Record Office Victoria |
11:15am - 11:30am | AI4LAM Secretariat | Mike Trizna, Smithsonian |
11:30am - 11:45am | Implementing IIIF with Audio and Visual resources | Jon Dunn, Indiana University |
11:45am - 12:00pm | How to get started with IIIF | Glen Robson, IIIF Technical Coordinator |
12:00pm - 2:00pm | Lunch (on your own) | |
2:00pm - 4:00pm | Group discussions / Unconference sessions |
Workshops
For those that are interested in getting hands on with IIIF and learning how it works there will be two workshops available on October the 16th.
Space is limited, please register soon.
Hands on with IIIF
9:00am - 12:00pm
This session will introduce you to the IIIF Image and Presentation standards and go through some hands on exercises to show how you can create and use off the shelf tools to get started with these standards. We will discuss how to setup a IIIF system in production starting with a small collection and then how to scale up to millions of images. We will then conclude with a discussion on the wider IIIF community and where you can go for help and advice after the workshop has completed.
Attendees should leave the session with a good understanding of the different IIIF standards and what choices need to be looked at when setting up a IIIF system in their own institution.
No prior knowledge of IIIF is required and the core sessions should be easily accessible to those with confidence using the Web.
Glycerine users
2:00pm - 4:00pm
This session will introduce Glycerine, a workbench for image annotation. Annotations can combine semantic tags from domain specific vocabularies with critical analysis references. Researchers can collaborate across institutional repositories and publish the annotated images as research outputs.
We will go through hands-on exercises to create your own collection of images, create annotations, and publish them. In the second hour we will break out into research and implementation streams. Researchers can discuss collection building and annotation methods; digital professionals can explore API access and integration of Glycerine workflows and viewer. Attendees should leave the session with all the competencies to build and publish annotated image collections and a good understanding of the possibilities for integration of Glycerine at their own institution.
No prior knowledge is required, and the session should be easily accessible to those with confidence using the Web.
Glycerine received investment from the Australian Research Data Commons (ARDC) as part of the HASS and Indigenous RDC CDL project. The ARDC is funded by the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS).