FYI
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: DRH2005 -- Digital Resources for the Humanities 2005 CFP
Date: Sat, 29 Jan 2005 22:57:40 +0000
From: Michael Fraser <mike.fraser(a)computing-services.oxford.ac.uk>
Reply-To: mike.fraser(a)computing-services.oxford.ac.uk
To: TEI-L(a)LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU
**** First Announcement and call for proposals: DRH 2005 ****
DRH 2005: Digital Resources for the Humanities
University of Lancaster, UK
4th - 8th September 2005
IMPORTANT DATES:
* 31st January 2005: proposals can be submitted via the electronic
submission form at the conference website.
* 28th February, 2005: Deadline for submission of abstracts
* 15th April, 2005: Notification of acceptance of papers, sessions,
posters and workshops
* April 2005: Registration opens
* May 2005: Provisional programme announced.
Conference Web Site: http://www.drh.org.uk
The DRH conferences have established themselves firmly in the UK and
international calendar as a major forum bringing together scholars,
postgraduate students, librarians, archivists, curators, information
scientists and computing professionals in a unique and positive way,
to share ideas and information about the creation, exploitation, use,
management and preservation of digital resources in the arts and
humanities.
At this, the tenth DRH conference, we plan to encourage papers and
sessions that focus on critical evaluation of the use of digital
resources in the arts and humanities. What has the impact really
been? What kinds of methodologies are being used? What are the
assumptions that underlie our work? How do we know that the work
that we accomplish is truly new and innovative? How does technology
change the way that we work?
The Conference will also address some of the key emerging themes and
strategic issues that engagement with ICT is bringing to scholarly
research in the arts and humanities, with a particular focus on
advanced research methods. The kinds of questions that we would like
to see addressed might include the following: what sort of research
does ICT in the arts and humanities enable researchers to do that
could not be done before at all? Does this enable 'old' research to
be done in a significantly new way? In what ways does the technology
serve the scholarship? Similarly, what are the key aspects of
virtual research environments ("cyberinfrasture") which can
facilitate collaborative research?
Proposals for individual papers, sessions, workshops and posters are
invited, and the abstract submission system at the conference website
will be accepting proposals from January 31st, 2005.
Types of presentation for which proposals are invited:
Papers
Proposals for papers should be no less than 750 words. Papers will be
allocated 30 minutes for presentation, including questions.
Sessions
Sessions (90 minutes) take the form of either:
Three papers. The session organizer should submit a 500-word
statement describing the proposed session topic, and include
abstracts of no less than 750 words for each paper. The session
organizer must also indicate that each author is willing to
participate in the session;
or
A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit an
abstract of 750-1500 words describing the panel topic, how it will be
organized, the names of all the speakers, and an indication that each
speaker is willing to participate in the session.
Poster Presentations
Poster presentations may include computer technology and project
demonstrations. Posters presentations may be a more suitable way of
presenting late-breaking results, or significant work in progress.
There should be no difference in quality between poster presentations
and papers, and both will be submitted to the same refereeing process.
As an acknowledgement of the special contribution of the posters to
the conference, the Programme Committee will once again award a prize
for the best poster presentation.
The Local Organising Committee is headed by Tony McEnery and Andrew
Hardie, Department of Linguistics and English Language, University of
Lancaster.
Please contact the local organizers with any questions about
registration or conference arrangements at Lancaster:
drhconf(a)lancaster.ac.uk
The chair of the Programme Committee is Lorna Hughes, Assistant Director
for Humanities Computing, New York University. Please contact the
Programme Chair with any questions about submitting abstracts, or about
the reviewing process: (Lorna.Hughes(a)nyu.edu).
Please visit http://www.drh.org.uk for regularly updated details about the
conference and, for information on how to submit proposals.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
--
Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford
James dot Cummings at oucs dot ox dot ac dot uk
I use Cocoon a lot, and for a particular project I've built a system
similar to what you describe. I run an instance of Cocoon on my laptop,
which serves out html forms to my browser, populated with info from a
particular xml file. When I submit a form, another pipeline writes the
results back to the original XML file, using the Source Writing
Transformer
(http://cocoon.apache.org/2.1/userdocs/transformers/sourcewriting-transf
ormer.html). This allows me to use the amazing power of Cocoon Forms to
manage the mapping from the source xml to the form and back again
(http://cocoon.apache.org/2.1/userdocs/forms/sample.html).
It would probably be overkill to pick up Cocoon from scratch for this
purpose, but maybe you've been looking for an opportunity to try Cocoon?
Peter
Peter Binkley
Digital Initiatives Technology Librarian
Information Technology Services
4-30 Cameron Library
University of Alberta Libraries
Edmonton, Alberta
Canada T6G 2J8
Phone: (780) 492-3743
Fax: (780) 492-9243
e-mail: peter.binkley(a)ualberta.ca
> -----Original Message-----
> From: dm-l-bounces(a)uleth.ca [mailto:dm-l-bounces@uleth.ca] On
> Behalf Of Daniel O'Donnell
> Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 02:16 PM
> To: Digital Medievalist list
> Subject: [dm-l] Form-based methods of building xml?
>
> The Digital Medievalist List (see end of message for contact
> information and project URLs).
>
> ----------------------------------
> Hi all,
> Does anybody know of a good method for form-based
> xml-file construction? I am looking for something to use on a
> local (winxp) machine.
> Like most people I have a number of files that are
> written either through accretion (e.g. like a CV) or that
> consist largely of boiler plate with minor customisation
> (e.g. class schedules, web-pages, etc.).
> I'm in the process of converting these to xml from various
> formats, as I hope to gain some real efficiencies.
> My question whether anybody can suggest a good method
> for adding marked up text to such files using a form. The CV
> is probably the best case:
> I'd like to have a form that allows me to read in the
> existing material, enter the new item, and have the expanded
> document as output.
> In the past I've used javascript and HTML forms to
> build standard webpages, and emacs form-mode to build simple
> form-based database entry mechanisms. Since I'm basically
> looking for a very simple way of adding markup to highly
> standard text, I'm trying to avoid using a spreadsheet as an
> intermediate. In fact I'm probably looking for a combination
> of the emacs-style forms (which import or create datafiles
> and allow users to easily update existing data) and a
> java-script type solution that allows me to add markup around
> form-field contents.
> Any suggestions?
> -dan
> --
> Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
> Associate Professor of English
> University of Lethbridge
> Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
> Tel. (403) 329-2377
> Fax. (403) 382-7191
> E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
> Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
> The Digital Medievalist Project: <http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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>
Hi all,
Does anybody know of a good method for form-based xml-file
construction? I am looking for something to use on a local (winxp) machine.
Like most people I have a number of files that are written either
through accretion (e.g. like a CV) or that consist largely of boiler
plate with minor customisation (e.g. class schedules, web-pages, etc.).
I'm in the process of converting these to xml from various formats, as I
hope to gain some real efficiencies.
My question whether anybody can suggest a good method for adding marked
up text to such files using a form. The CV is probably the best case:
I'd like to have a form that allows me to read in the existing material,
enter the new item, and have the expanded document as output.
In the past I've used javascript and HTML forms to build standard
webpages, and emacs form-mode to build simple form-based database entry
mechanisms. Since I'm basically looking for a very simple way of adding
markup to highly standard text, I'm trying to avoid using a spreadsheet
as an intermediate. In fact I'm probably looking for a combination of
the emacs-style forms (which import or create datafiles and allow users
to easily update existing data) and a java-script type solution that
allows me to add markup around form-field contents.
Any suggestions?
-dan
--
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD
Associate Professor of English
University of Lethbridge
Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4
Tel. (403) 329-2377
Fax. (403) 382-7191
E-mail <daniel.odonnell(a)uleth.ca>
Home Page <http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/>
The Digital Medievalist Project: <http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/>