Perseus DL

@PerseusDigLib

Since planning began in 1985, the Perseus Digital Library has explored what happens when libraries move online.

Medford, MA
Joined September 2011

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  1. Jan 31

    Call for applications: Digital Editions in Practice, A Two-Day Workshop May 31-June 1, 2019 The Perseus Digital Library at Tufts University will host a two-day workshop that provides an overview of a sample, practical digital editions creation...

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  2. Retweeted
    6 Dec 2018

    I got to fangirl out in the offices yesterday - note pile of books pages, cut apart by for scanning back in the day.

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  3. 29 Nov 2018

    Thank you! We don’t know this information unless we’re told by the giver so we never have the chance to personally thank supporters for their generosity. Also, feel free to give our stuff away! If it’s open source (all but a handful of texts are) it’s there to be shared.

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  4. 29 Nov 2018
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  5. Retweeted
    14 Nov 2018

    I have better data on the Logeion and Perseus versions of the LSJ lexicon data, based on a little scripting with CITE and CEX: .

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  6. Retweeted
    6 Nov 2018

    The new LSJ data was from . It was super clean; easy to transform. and really spend their resources well getting these resources into many hands.

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  7. Retweeted
    6 Nov 2018
    Replying to and

    And there's nothing specific to lexemes about this approach. Could be applied to ANY resource with universal identifiers where scholars differ on the lumping and splitting.

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  8. Retweeted
    6 Nov 2018
    Replying to and

    Yes, it layers on top of citable URNs very nicely (esp. taking all nodes to be citable URNs). The key to allowing "splits", though, is that if a scholar wants to distinguish A and B and LSJ conflates them, we map the URN for the LSJ conflation to the set {URN for A, URN for B}

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  9. Retweeted
    5 Nov 2018
    Replying to

    This *must* become the cornerstone for any future lemmatization work on Ancient Greek texts, including the Ancient Greek Dependency Treebank

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  10. Retweeted
    2 Nov 2018

    Another fundamental step forward for linked open lexical data for ancient Greek. Exciting times!

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  11. Retweeted
    2 Nov 2018

    A citable LSJ Greek-English lexicon, published as a CEX file and exposed via a CITE Architecture web-application. With boundless thanks to the Perseus Digital Library, the NEH, and Giuseppe Celano for the data!

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  12. Retweeted
    16 Oct 2018

    Elements of textual criticism of manuscripts surface even when dealing with digitisation of printed books. On a current project, I can tell which electronic texts were manually keyed (from haplography) versus OCR'd and, in the OCR cases, can tell which image scan they used.

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  13. Retweeted
    8 Oct 2018

    Now available: Beta Release of Alpheios Reading Tools for Chrome & Firefox. Inflection tables enhancements for Latin & Greek, lookup of user-supplied words an and improved UI. Full details in the Release Notes. Safari and Mobile support coming soon.

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  14. Retweeted
    26 Sep 2018
    Replying to

    The passage references are just how the XML (and citation references) in are set up. The XML _does_ appear to have links to the Iliad text itself but the reader doesn't know to interpret them (yet). Would be a nice feature to add so I'll create an issue.

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  15. Retweeted
    26 Sep 2018

    Trying to navigate the Scaife viewer to read scholia, but it is proving impossible to find any particular passage. Search does not work, and passage references don't correspond to book and line numbers. Am I missing something ?

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  16. Retweeted
    31 Aug 2018
    Replying to and

    It would be great to feature on our site some examples of how LDLT data could be reused with Recogito to create an annotated resource. Let's talk!

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  17. Retweeted
    30 Aug 2018

    Paging - Could Recogito be of use for producing digital editions and/or commentaries? We're keen to hear from you.

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  18. Retweeted
    31 Aug 2018
    Replying to and

    We're in favor of anything that will facilitate the participation of those who prefer not to type pointy brackets. There's real potential in using Recogito for annotating the texts that we will publish in the Library of Digital Latin Texts.

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  19. Retweeted
    15 May 2018

    Curious—has anybody gotten Morpheus to run successfully on OSX (High Sierra, even)? I've gotten so, so close... cc:

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  20. Retweeted
    1 May 2018

    new paper on "Individual Developments and Systematic Change in Philology": , includes shout outs for CHS commentaries, and Archimedes Digital, , Venetus A, and Furman. The world really is changing, and, in at least some ways, for the better.

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