I grew up reading pulp science fiction. There was a time when I would never had admitted something like that in public. But times have changed. Computer programming is now a career instead of a bizarre waste of time that might get you arrested. People wear and fiddle with mobile computers; displaying them at coffee shops like peacock plumage. When I was a kid and told adults I liked computers they assured my parents it was a phase I would grow out of.
As bitter as I may be of the past, I was delighted to find that the University of Sydney Library had combined my youthful passion for computers and science fiction comics into one mammoth project of love. They digitized the Frontiers of Science, a comic strip which was a big deal in Australia in the early 60's by way of the Sydney Morning Herald.
But they did more than just scan the damn things. Any unpaid intern can do that. Instead, they relied on the eXtensible Text Framework (XTF) in order to provide contextual search capabilities for the comic strip. XTF is designed to allow you to work with heterogenous media sources, and index them based on disparate types of metadata. It comes in handy, if say you want to build a database of comics that have already been scanned, and say the knucklehead that did the scanning saved some images as BMPs, others as JPGs and the rest as PDFs. All of these images contain usable metadata, and XTF is clever enough to grab it all and re-index it into a consistent format.
As bitter as I may be of the past, I was delighted to find that the University of Sydney Library had combined my youthful passion for computers and science fiction comics into one mammoth project of love. They digitized the Frontiers of Science, a comic strip which was a big deal in Australia in the early 60's by way of the Sydney Morning Herald.
But they did more than just scan the damn things. Any unpaid intern can do that. Instead, they relied on the eXtensible Text Framework (XTF) in order to provide contextual search capabilities for the comic strip. XTF is designed to allow you to work with heterogenous media sources, and index them based on disparate types of metadata. It comes in handy, if say you want to build a database of comics that have already been scanned, and say the knucklehead that did the scanning saved some images as BMPs, others as JPGs and the rest as PDFs. All of these images contain usable metadata, and XTF is clever enough to grab it all and re-index it into a consistent format.
So bear this in mind for future projects, and go check out the Frontiers of Science at the University of Sydney Library's web site.