A few months ago I wrote about the LUNA BookReader, a slick interface for displaying multi-page documents in the LUNA Viewer. Here I'd like to share two beautiful examples of BookReader objects that have been in the news recently...
Papyri in the John Rylands Library
From the Nag Hammadi codices discovered in 1945 to the tiny, business card-sized scrap of papyrus mentioning Jesus' wife that surfaced in 2012, Egyptian papyri have yielded some of the most interesting tidbits about early Christianity. The latest such discovery is now accessible in digital form through our LUNA software courtesy of the John Rylands Library at the University of Manchester...
Freely Usable Images From The Folger Shakespeare Library
Last Tuesday the Folger Shakespeare Library announced that almost 80,000 images in their Digital Image Collection can now be used under a Creative Commons license. The Library's digital collection, hosted through our LUNA software, is an amazing trove of documents that includes images relating to the Bard himself, as well as a massive amount of historic materials from the 1400s through the mid-1700s...
Crowdsourcing with LUNA
Behind the Scenes: Adventures in Digitization
I am one of those children who grew up in the ‘90s with a computer-geek brother, myself dabbling with his Frankensteinian cast-offs. I can actually remember a time when there was no ubiquitous internet--although I also remember X-Files usenet groups. I coded Geocities web pages from scratch (dedicated to Harry Potter novels, of course) and my brother navigated me by way of text-based user interface to some mysterious server that had “Hakuna Matata” in every language imaginable...
The LUNA BookReader
LUNA Includes Support for Shibboleth
Archiving the Naked City: LUNA Hosts the NYC Dept of Records
LUNA Eclipse
Announcing LUNA v7.1
Embedding Memories
I’ve had digital images floating around for the past 14 years. On my four-year-old desktop computer they reside in an iPhoto file labeled “images for transfer.” Prior to this date they have lived on various laptops and portable drives. I don’t think I’m alone in confessing that my digital images are a mess...