This week marks the opening of the David Rumsey Map Center at Stanford University. Our LUNA software has long been the discovery platform for the amazing collection that David has had the vision to assemble. Now with the opening of the Center there is a physical home for the collection, with a focus on its stunning visual content.
A New Year. A New Look.
Luna Imaging's 600 Year Old Connection to Geoffrey Chaucer
LUNA and IIIF: Making LUNA's image repositories interoperable and accessible to the world
LUNA v7.1.6 is now available.
We are delighted to announce the release of LUNA v7.1.6! Enjoy new features like Find & Replace in the LUNA Library and Custom Thumbnail selection for audio, video and pdf files. We also support Related Media discovery in the LUNA Viewer and we’ve added a new Full View to see an image in full screen mode.
LUNA SOLO: The collection management tool for individuals
NASA Images is a Hit with Users
Last week our new NASA Images site launched with a bang. On Tuesday we made the collection public and by Thursday the press had picked up on it. Since then we've seen a steady stream of traffic with around 20,000 unique visitors per day for each of the last few days...
NASA Images Launches in LUNA
We're excited to announce the public availability of the NASA Images collection in LUNA software, featuring over 100,000 historic photos documenting America's space program. With over 70 NASA imagery collections combined into a single, searchable resource, it's a powerful example of LUNA software in action.
Cesar Chavez and California's Archives of Activism
Chavez' birthday, March 31, is a state holiday in California, Colorado, and Texas, and his legacy of activism is well documented in archives and museums throughout the U.S. Today, in honor of Chavez' birthday, we look at three archives that celebrate California's history of activism, protest and reform...
LUNA v7.1.5 is Now Available!
Ten Songs to Digitize By
Arctic History in the John Carter Brown Library's Archive
Arctic history is suddenly hot. An exhibition currently on view at the British Library - Lines in the Ice: Seeking the Northwest Passage - is bringing attention to early prints and maps of the Arctic and to the historic search for the Northwest Passage. Earlier this week an article published on Slate's history blog The Vault highlighted images from a 19th-century British expedition of Baffin Bay captained by John Ross. The images in the Slate article are all drawn from the John Carter Brown Library's superb online Archive of Early American Images. And they're just the tip of the iceberg...