- Pre-conference workshops at DH2010
- Medieval Manuscript Studies in the Digital Age
- Practical Epigraphy Workshop
- Computer Applications in Archaeology Conference (CAA2010)
- Host your texts on Google in one day, Jan 11, 2010
- DH2010: Digital Humanities 2010 CFP
- BL on CD-ROM
- Immediate opening for webmaster/systems administrator at ISAW
- Rome was built in a day…
- UK team digs into data from scroll scans
- CFP Handwriting Recognition and Collaborative Editing
- Stanford’s Virtual Archives Open House
- GRBS Free Online
- Assisted Transcription Software
- Call for Book Proposals in Digital Classics
- Digital Classicist seminars update
- Digital Humanities Conference Schedule
- Digital Classicist seminar update
- EpiDoc Training Sessions 2009
- Codicology and Palaeography in the Digital Age (Munich, July 3-4, 2009)
- Digital Classicist Work-in-Progress seminar series
- IEEE Conference Seeks Humanities Proposals
- InterFace 2009: Second Call for Papers
- Ancient World and e-Science (report)
- Digital Imaging and Human Rights Justice
EpiDoc Training Sessions 2009
Wednesday, May 20, 2009EpiDoc Training Sessions 2009
London 20-24 July
Rome 21-25 September
The EpiDoc community has been developing protocols for the publication of inscriptions, papyri, and other documentary Classical texts in TEI-compliant XML: for details see the community website at http://epidoc.sf.net.
Over the last few years there has been increasing demand for training by scholars wishing to use EpiDoc. We are delighted to be able to announce two training workshops, which will be offered in 2009. Both will be led by Dr Gabriel Bodard. These sessions will benefit scholars working on Greek or Latin documents with an interest in developing skills in the markup, encoding, and exploitation of digital editions. Competence in Greek and/or Latin, and knowledge of the Leiden Conventions will be assumed; no particular computer skills are required.
London session, 20-24 July 2009. This will take place at the Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College London, 26-29 Drury Lane. The cost of attendance will be £50 for students; £100 for employees of universities or other non-profit institutions; £200 for employees of commercial institutions. Those interested in enrolling should apply to Dr Bodard, gabriel.bodard@kcl.ac.uk by 20 June 2009.
We hope to be able to offer some follow-up internships after the session, to enable participants to consolidate their experience under supervision; please let us know if that would be of interest to you.
Rome session, 21-25 September 2009. This will take place at the British School at Rome. Thanks to the generous support of the International Association of Greek and Latin Epigraphy, the British School and Terra Italia Onlus, attendance will be free.
Those interested in enrolling should apply to Dr Silvia Orlandi, silvia.orlandi@uniroma1.it by 30 June 2009.
Practical matters
Both courses will run from Monday to Friday starting at 10:00 am and ending at 16:00 each day.
Participants should bring a wireless-enabled laptop. You should acquire and install a copy of Oxygen *and* either an educational licence ($48) or a 30-day trial licence (free). Don’t worry if you don’t know how to use it!
...Original article from http://www.stoa.org/?p=929