Hi all,
I have a question: we all know presses that publish CD-ROMs of textual projects, and some graphics projects. But what about things like corpora, linguistic research, dictionaries, and other digital material that are not intended as representations of primary sources? I can think of some obvious examples (e.g. the DOE, I suppose the OED); but what about projects on a smaller scale?
Any ideas?
-dan
Have a look at the Leiden Armenian Lexical Textbase, just published by SDE.. (available free till 1 January; by subscription after that) http://www.sd-editions.com/LALT/home.html all the best Peter Robinson On 15 Nov 2006, at 22:24, Dan O'Donnell wrote:
Hi all,
I have a question: we all know presses that publish CD-ROMs of textual projects, and some graphics projects. But what about things like corpora, linguistic research, dictionaries, and other digital material that are not intended as representations of primary sources? I can think of some obvious examples (e.g. the DOE, I suppose the OED); but what about projects on a smaller scale?
Any ideas?
-dan
Daniel Paul O'Donnell, PhD Chair, Text Encoding Initiative http://www.tei-c.org/ Director, Digital Medievalist Project <http:// www.digitalmedievalist.org/> Associate Professor and Chair of English University of Lethbridge Lethbridge AB T1K 3M4 Vox: +1 403 329 2378 Fax: +1 403 382-7191 Homepage: http://people.uleth.ca/~daniel.odonnell/
Digital Medievalist Project Homepage: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org Journal (Spring 2005-): http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal.cfm RSS (announcements) server: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/rss/ rss2.cfm Wiki: http://sql.uleth.ca/dmorgwiki/index.php Change membership options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/ listinfo/dm-l Submit RSS announcement: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/newitem.cfm Contact editorial Board: digitalmedievalist@uleth.ca dm-l mailing list dm-l@uleth.ca http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l
Peter Robinson Institute for Textual Scholarship and Electronic Editing Elmfield House, Selly Oak Campus University of Birmingham Edgbaston B29 6LG P.M.Robinson@bham.ac.uk p. +44 (0)121 4158441, f. +44 (0) 121 415 8376 www.itsee.bham.ac.uk
Most science text books now come with a CD of additional materials for both students and teachers. They have all kinds of information for students: study guides, textbook graphics, quizzes, extra photos for graphic intensive subjects like microscopy. The faculty CDs will come with teaching guides, text banks, powerpoint slides, text book graphics to make our own powerpoints, suggested lab experiments, etc. These CDs have really been the difference in which textbooks are adopted for large classes. Science classes are often huge (>100 in single lecture rooms or multiple sections) and each department tends to adopt the same text book for all sections of say microbiology or anatomy, so these are truly large text book purchases. The publishers have really jumped on CDs and websites as making the difference in getting the textbook order. On the downside, textbook prices have skyrocketed. Its not unusual for a basic science text book to cost > $100.
Other digital publications include all kinds of government agencies and university institutes. Our Institute of Biosecurity (Public Health) at St. Louis U publishes about a half-dozen CDs on bioterrorism response that are sent out to government agencies and primary responders. I'm sitting here looking at an Avian Flu Compendium that was supplied in both paper and on a CD (in the same package). The CD contains the entire paper compendium as pdfs. Given that the CD has images of all the relavent public health notices and reports it is a modern primary source compendium as well.
I suspect that it won't be very long before science is virtually paperless....
Michelle Ziegler
-----Original Message----- From: daniel.odonnell@uleth.ca To: dm-l@uleth.ca Sent: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 4:24 PM Subject: [dm-l] Digital presses
Hi all,
I have a question: we all know presses that publish CD-ROMs of textual projects, and some graphics projects. But what about things like corpora, linguistic research, dictionaries, and other digital material that are not intended as representations of primary sources? I can think of some obvious examples (e.g. the DOE, I suppose the OED); but what about projects on a smaller scale?
Any ideas?
-dan
Dan O'Donnell wrote:
Hi all,
I have a question: we all know presses that publish CD-ROMs of textual projects, and some graphics projects. But what about things like corpora, linguistic research, dictionaries, and other digital material that are not intended as representations of primary sources? I can think of some obvious examples (e.g. the DOE, I suppose the OED); but what about projects on a smaller scale?
If it is indeed things like corpora, linguistic research, dictionaries and other digital primary material, then the Oxford Text Archive which hosts the UK's Arts and Humanities Data Service subject centre for Literature, Languages, and Linguistics is an alternative to CD-ROM-based publication. While not publication per se, it is free long-term preservation, cataloguing and dissemination of suitable resources.
If anyone is interested, do let me know.
-James --- Dr James Cummings, Oxford Text Archive, University of Oxford