77 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2024
    1. this trend took some time

      But what is the trend in the US, in terms of reading level?

    2. The news is mostly an aggregation of every bad event that happened in the last twenty four hours, anywhere on Earth.

      This is a British perspective; the same is not true for residents of the U.S., for whom the world beyond its borders is rarely mentioned in the news, apart from the various wars that the US supports

  2. Mar 2019
    1. House with separate gites, as well as two discreet guest bedrooms to potentially let. Near the Canal du Midi

  3. Feb 2019
  4. Sep 2018
    1. The exemplar at London (UK), British Library (General Reference Collection 1602/138) has been digitised and is available at https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0011

    2. London (UK), British Library (General Reference Collection 1602/138) https://www.salamanca.school/en/iiif-out.xql?wid=W0011

    1. Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca (BG/5480) https://www.salamanca.school/en/iiif-out.xql?wid=W0055

    2. An exemplar at Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca (BG/5480) has been digitised by the the project 'The School of Salamanca. A Digital Collection of Sources and a Dictionary of its Juridical-Political Language.' (http://salamanca.adwmainz.de) and is available at [https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0055](https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0055

    1. An exemplar at Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca has been digitised by the the project 'The School of Salamanca. A Digital Collection of Sources and a Dictionary of its Juridical-Political Language.' (http://salamanca.adwmainz.de) and is available at [https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0004](https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0004

    2. Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca https://www.salamanca.school/en/iiif-out.xql?wid=W0004

    1. Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca (exemplar not specified) https://www.salamanca.school/en/iiif-out.xql?wid=W0003

    2. An exemplar at Salamanca (Es), Universidad de Salamanca has been digitised by the the project 'The School of Salamanca. A Digital Collection of Sources and a Dictionary of its Juridical-Political Language.' (http://salamanca.adwmainz.de) and is available at https://www.salamanca.school/en/mirador.html?wid=W0003

  5. Aug 2018
  6. Jul 2017
    1. HTML

      For this and following items, I think that it might be better to link to your endpoint rather than to quote the text.

    2. FromThePgae

      typo

    3. "motivation": "TODO",

      If it relates directly to what is represented on the canvas, my understanding is that sc:painting still applies ... at least according to Rob Sanderon

    4. seeAlso Machine-processable links for this page include page-level representations of texts for consumption into indexing services. Verbatim Plaintext [Proposed] Emended Plaintext [Proposed] Plaintext for full-text search [Proposed]

      Isn't this redundant?

    5. seeAlso

      Assuming that the items following are represented with URI references

    1. Actually, the building does still exist, but it is now 'surrounded' by a later addition. This is clear from Google maps: see https://goo.gl/maps/PvhMFSkn16K2

  7. Mar 2017
    1. An image of St. Paul's School, Herbert Road, Bray, Co. Wicklow, appears at archiseek:

    1. See the website of St. Cronan's School, Bray: http://www.stcronans.ie/

      The site includes a photograph of the school building which housed the school from 1932.

  8. Feb 2017
  9. Nov 2016
  10. Jul 2016
    1. TWO GALLANTS

      Places named in the Joyce's story "Two Gallants" are charted sequentially and visualised in the StoryMap presentation at this location.

  11. May 2016
    1. "Historic trove of documents discovered in city attic," Herald.ie (2016-05-16) http://www.herald.ie/news/historic-trove-of-documents-discovered-in-city-attic-34707155.html

      The four missing volumes of Prisoner Books listing the arrests of more than 30,000 people between 1905 and 1918 include the "crimes" of labour leaders Jim Larkin (seditious conspiracy), James Connolly (incitement to crime), revolutionary Maud Gonne MacBride (defence of the realm), and suffragette Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington (glass-breaking with other suffragettes).

    2. "Dublin Metropolitan Police Prisoner Books 1905-1918," The British GENES blog (2016-05-12) http://britishgenes.blogspot.ie/2016/05/dublin-metropolitan-police-prisoner.html

      University College Dublin's Digital Library (http://digital.ucd.ie) has just uploaded digitised editions of four Dublin Metropolitan Police prisoners books from 1905-1908, and 1911-1918, at http://digital.ucd.ie/view/ucdlib:43945.

  12. Apr 2016
    1. Related writings:

      Crossman, V. (1998). The Shan Van Vocht: Women, Republicanism, and the Commemoration of the 1798 Rebellion. Eighteenth-Century Life, 22(3), 128–139. Retrieved from https://muse.jhu.edu/article/10463

      Innes, C. L. (1991). “A voice in directing the affairs of Ireland”: L’Irlande libre, The Shan Van Vocht and Bean na h-Eireann. In P. Hyland & N. Sammells (Eds.), Irish Writing (pp. 146–158). Palgrave Macmillan UK. Retrieved from http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-1-349-21755-7_10

      Steele, K. (2002). Editing out Factionalism: The Political and Literary Consequences in Ireland’s “Shan Van Vocht.” Victorian Periodicals Review, 35(2), 113–132. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/20083865

  13. Jul 2015
    1. Users need digital collections that contain interoperable content or functionality that facilitates comparative analyses of digital materials.

      Enter IIIF for images

    1. Dundalk market day, Co. Louth

      The Dundalk Market Square web site offers the following history of the Dundalk market:

      In the 17th century, Lord Limerick (later James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Clanbrassil) created the modern town we know today. He was responsible for the construction of streets leading to the town centre; his ideas came from many visits to Europe. In addition to the demolition of the old walls and castles, he had new roads laid out eastwards of the principal streets. The most important of these new roads connected a newly laid down Market Square, which still survives, with a linen and cambric factory at its eastern end, adjacent to what was once an army cavalry and artillery barracks (now Aiken Military Barracks).

      In the 19th century, the town grew in importance and many industries were set up in the local area. This development was helped considerably by the opening of railways, the expansion of the docks area or 'Quay' and the setting up of a board of commissioners to run the town.

      The present photograph was captured by the Coimisiún Béaloideasa Éireann (CBÉ) / Irish Folklore Commission (1935).

      Dundalk market day, 1935

  14. Jun 2015
    1. Inclusion Guidelines for Webmasters

      This documentation describes the technology behind indexing of websites with scholarly articles in Google Scholar. It's written for webmasters who would like their papers included in Google Scholar search results. Detailed technical information is helpful if you're trying to fix an error in indexing of your own website, or you need to make sure that your article hosting product is compatible with Google and Google Scholar search services.

  15. May 2015
    1. Fundamental questions for the library revolve around issues of: stewardship (what types of annotations are appropriate for library ownership, vs. say a course platform), persistence (how long should different types of annotations be persisted and preserved), costs (who will fund annotation storage over time) access (what privacy and distribution controls need to be placed on access to annotations.)