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Hypothes.is: Annotating the World’s Knowledge, a project briefing from CNI's spring 2013 member meeting by Peter Brantley, is now available on CNI's video channels:
Hypothes.is, a not-for-profit start-up, is building a reference implementation for open annotation that will be a distributed, open-source platform for the collaborative evaluation of information based on a new draft standard for annotating digital documents. It is currently being developed by the Open Annotation Collaboration, a consortium that includes the Internet Archive, NISO (National Information Standards Organization), O’Reilly Books, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and a number of academic institutions. This presentation includes discussion of the system under development, as well as a demonstration of some of its new tools, presented by Hypothes.is scholarly communications director Peter Brantley. More information is at http://www.cni.org/topics/scholarly-communication/hypothes-is-annotating-the-worlds-knowledge/
Previously released video from CNI's spring 2013 meeting:
-Not Your Grandfather's Web Any More (David S.H. Rosenthal, Kris Carpenter Negulescu)
-Not Another Cross-Search Tool: The Digital Commons Network (JG Bankier, bepress)
-Publication and Research Roles for Libraries Using Spectral Imaging Data (Todd Grappone & Stephen Davison, UCLA)
- Discovery Turned Inside Out: Using schema.org & Google Site Search with Library Digital Collections (Will Sexton & Sean Aery)
-The Library Building as Research Platform (Antelman & York, NCSU)
-From the Version of Record to a Version of the Record (Herbert Van de Sompel)
-The Ithaka S+R Faculty Survey US 2012: First Release of Key Findings (Deanna Marcum & Roger Schonfeld of Ithaka S+R, and Judy Russell, U. of Florida)
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