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Series: DigiCULT Technology Watch Reports
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Issue Title
Access Type
Publication
Type
Author / Editor
Abstract
Publication
Year
Core technologies for the cultural and scientific heritage sector
Seamus Ross
Martin Donnelly
Milena Dobreva
Daisy Abbott
Andrew McHugh
Adam Rusbridge
2004
Emerging technologies for the cultural and scientific heritage sector
Seamus Ross
Martin Donnelly
Milena Dobreva
The issue examines technologies that improve interoperability between sectors, standards that promote long term viability of resources, approaches that support access to shared spaces, and mechanisms that enable curators and users of the heritage to participate in enriched real and virtual environments. It includes sections on Application Service Providers; the EML family of technologies; cultural agents and avatars, electronic programming guides and personalisation; mobile access to cultural information resources; rights management and payment technologies; and collaborative mechanisms and technologies. Each section consists of an introduction to the technology; a description of how it works; an examination of its use in the heritage sector, including case studies and scenarios; a look at the benefits and risks, and a note on introducing it to heritage organisations.
2004
New technologies for the cultural and scientific heritage sector
Seamus Ross
Martin Donnelly
Milena Dobreva
Significant improvements in technology are enabling the heritage community to make better use of technology, and several of the technologies examined in this issue reflect these developments. Cultural organisations recognise that they need well-managed information about customers including a detailed database of customer relationships and software dedicated to the storage, organisation and maximum utilisation of customer information. The issue includes sections on customer relationship management; digital asset management systems; smart labels and smart tags (RFID technology); virtual reality and display technologies; human interfaces; and games technologies. Each section consists of an introduction to the technology; a description of how it works; an examination of its use in the heritage sector, including case studies and scenarios; a look at the benefits and risks, and a note on introducing it to heritage organisations.
2003
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