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Open Objects

'Every age has its orthodoxy and no orthodoxy is ever right.'

Recent Posts

  • Documenting AI-created/enhanced records in catalogues/metadata/displays?
  • AI and Machine Learning in Libraries: Promising, But Not Ready Yet
  • Cultures of collective work and crowdsourcing?
  • Notes from the Museum Data Service launch
  • 57 Varieties of Digital History? Towards the future of looking at the past

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  • mia on Documenting AI-created/enhanced records in catalogues/metadata/displays?
  • mia on AI and Machine Learning in Libraries: Promising, But Not Ready Yet
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  • Cultures of collective work and crowdsourcing? – Open Objects on National approaches to crowdsourcing / citizen science?
  • Cultures of collective work and crowdsourcing? – Open Objects on Crowdsourcing the world's heritage

Crowdsourcing Our Cultural Heritage

Curious about crowdsourcing in cultural heritage? My introduction to my edited volume, Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage, is free online (for now) as a 'preview PDF' from the publisher of Crowdsourcing our Cultural Heritage.

About this blog

Posts from a cultural heritage technologist on digital humanities, heritage and history, and user experience research and design. A bit of wishful thinking about organisational change thrown in with a few questions and challenges to the cultural heritage sector on audience research, museum interpretation, interactives and collections online.

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Popular Posts

  • A New Year's resolution for start-ups, PRs and journalists writing about museums
  • The rise of interpolated content?
  • Max Anderson, Indianapolis Museum of Art, 'Moving from virtual to visceral'
  • How did 'play' shape the design and experience of creating Serendip-o-matic?
  • New challenges in digital history: sharing women's history on Wikipedia - my talk notes
  • Sharing is caring keynote 'Enriching cultural heritage collections through a Participatory Commons'

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Tag: virtual

This Wired article includes a video of the process of reconstructing a 3D face (a 'high resolution 3D mesh') from a single image. Depending on how the base 'average' face was set up, the applications for history or archaeology could be interesting. Hang on or skip to the end for the reconstructed Mona Lisa.

A Morphable Model of 3D Faces

Posted on 4 April 200726 December 2023Categories UncategorisedTags virtualLeave a comment on
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