Arachne: Difference between revisions

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== Director ==
== Director ==
* Reinhard Foertsch
 
* [http://archaeologie.uni-koeln.de/node/86 Reinhard Förtsch]
 
== Institutions ==
 
* [http://www.dainst.org/dai/meldungen Deutsches Archäologisches Institut]
 
* [http://archaeologie.uni-koeln.de/ Archäologisches Institut of the Universität zu Köln]


== Description ==
== Description ==
'''''Arcahne''''' is the centralized online database of the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut (DAI) and of the Archäologisches Institut of the Universität zu Köln, and it is administrated by Reinhard Förtsch.
It is a free search tool for archeology and classical antiquity on the Internet: it allows to search objects and context in a great number of records, both for analogic documents and for digital data. All the digitalized informations, images and texts, are long term stored on a Tivoli Storage System and are put online, available all over the world, in the Storage Area Network through AFS of Cologne.  [http://arachne.uni-koeln.de/]
from the project website (accessed 2016-04-05)
from the project website (accessed 2016-04-05)
:Arachne is intended to provide archaeologists and Classicists with a free internet research tool for quickly searching hundreds of thousands of records on objects and their attributes. This combines an ongoing process of digitizing traditional documentation (stored on media which are both threatened by decay and largely unexplored) with the production of new digital object and graphic data. Wherever possible, Arachne follows a paradigm of highly structurized object-metadata which is mapped onto the CIDOC-CRM, to address machine-readable metadata strategies of the Semantic Web. This »structured world« of Arachne requires high efforts in time and money and therefore is only possible for privileged areas of data. While on the ever-increasing range of new, digital born data in reality only a small effort-per-object ratio can be applied. It therefore requires a “low-threshold” processing structure which is located in the »unstructured world« of Arachne. All digital (graphic and textual) information is secure on a Tivoli Storage System (featuring long-term multiple redundancy) and distributed online through the Storage Area Network in Cologne via AFS.  
:Arachne is intended to provide archaeologists and Classicists with a free internet research tool for quickly searching hundreds of thousands of records on objects and their attributes. This combines an ongoing process of digitizing traditional documentation (stored on media which are both threatened by decay and largely unexplored) with the production of new digital object and graphic data. Wherever possible, Arachne follows a paradigm of highly structurized object-metadata which is mapped onto the CIDOC-CRM, to address machine-readable metadata strategies of the Semantic Web. This »structured world« of Arachne requires high efforts in time and money and therefore is only possible for privileged areas of data. While on the ever-increasing range of new, digital born data in reality only a small effort-per-object ratio can be applied. It therefore requires a “low-threshold” processing structure which is located in the »unstructured world« of Arachne. All digital (graphic and textual) information is secure on a Tivoli Storage System (featuring long-term multiple redundancy) and distributed online through the Storage Area Network in Cologne via AFS.  
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[[category:Archaeology]]
[[category:Archaeology]]
[[category:Linked open data]]
[[category:Linked open data]]
[[category:epigraphy]]
[[category:openaccess]]
[[category:images]]
[[category:late antiquity]]

Revision as of 17:31, 5 April 2016

Available

Director

Institutions

Description

Arcahne is the centralized online database of the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut (DAI) and of the Archäologisches Institut of the Universität zu Köln, and it is administrated by Reinhard Förtsch. It is a free search tool for archeology and classical antiquity on the Internet: it allows to search objects and context in a great number of records, both for analogic documents and for digital data. All the digitalized informations, images and texts, are long term stored on a Tivoli Storage System and are put online, available all over the world, in the Storage Area Network through AFS of Cologne. [1]


from the project website (accessed 2016-04-05)

Arachne is intended to provide archaeologists and Classicists with a free internet research tool for quickly searching hundreds of thousands of records on objects and their attributes. This combines an ongoing process of digitizing traditional documentation (stored on media which are both threatened by decay and largely unexplored) with the production of new digital object and graphic data. Wherever possible, Arachne follows a paradigm of highly structurized object-metadata which is mapped onto the CIDOC-CRM, to address machine-readable metadata strategies of the Semantic Web. This »structured world« of Arachne requires high efforts in time and money and therefore is only possible for privileged areas of data. While on the ever-increasing range of new, digital born data in reality only a small effort-per-object ratio can be applied. It therefore requires a “low-threshold” processing structure which is located in the »unstructured world« of Arachne. All digital (graphic and textual) information is secure on a Tivoli Storage System (featuring long-term multiple redundancy) and distributed online through the Storage Area Network in Cologne via AFS.