Born Digital Archiving & eXchange will be held on March 28th, 2017. Themes for this years BDAX will are focused on the recovery of data from obsolete computer media and born digital workflows.
The Cabrinety-NIST Project is a collaborative large-scale digital preservation effort between SUL and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology) to create forensic disk images and photographic scans of the software series in the Stephen M. Cabrinety Collection in the History of Microcomputing, ca. 1975-1995.
Using spatial-temporal visualization and Linked Data to make 20+ years of excavation results accessible. Principal Investigator: Ian Hodder, Department of Anthropology.
Understanding how Chinese migrants whose labor on the Transcontinental Railroad helped to shape the physical and social landscape of the American West.
Explore and analyze uneven distributions of natural spaces at neighborhood scale in large US cities. Principal Investigators: Jon Christensen and Michael Kahan
Everyday Electronic Materials (EEMs) is a set of policy and practices created for selectors to add electronic items of scholarly interest to Stanford’s collections, leveraging the Stanford Digital Repository online deposit tool to also catalog and preserve the content.
A collaboration focused on developing a next-generation, feature-rich, robust, flexible digital repository, advancing the goals of the cultural heritage community using the latest web technologies.
Hypatia—a Hydra application—was a grant funded proof-of-concept to support accessioning, arrangement, description, discovery, delivery, and long term preservation of born digital archival collections.
A network of 30,000 people, including many iconic figures in British culture, connected through family relationships. Principal Investigator: Nicholas Jenkins, English.
Training opportunities, consulting services, documentation, and other resources to support the Stanford community in learning and using the R software.
LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe) provides libraries with digital preservation tools to easily and inexpensively collect and preserve their own copies of authorized e-content.
The Stanford Geospatial Center has created this site to help people analyze the data related to the mass shootings in the United States over the past few decades.
The Stanford Media Preservation Lab (SMPL) serves to preserve and enhance access to original sound and moving image collection materials held by Stanford University Libraries.
Palladio is a web-based platform for the visualization of complex, multi-dimensional data. Palladio is being supported by the Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research (CIDR) and Humanities + Design, a lab of the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis.
Stanford’s Silicon Valley Archives identify, preserve, and make the documentary record of science and technology available to students, scholars, and the general public.
The Stanford University Library Publication and Citation Tracking Database harvests and stores citations and biographical information for works authored by Stanford researchers.