News: digital humanities
World Digital Preservation Day
Coordinated by the Digital Preservation Coalition, World Digital Preservation DayÌýaims to improve awareness of the challenges of digital preservation, and gives us an opportunity to highlight the changing nature of University Library collections and how we’re looking after those collections for the future.
New look database page
We've launched our new look databases page for semester 2!ÌýNow you can just search for a database either by name or by selecting one of the categories.
What will research collections be like in 2121? Digital Preservation and the University Library
The University Library looks after many wonderful and unique collections of manuscripts and archives. These collections may contain correspondence, diaries and notebooks, all of which provide a valuable insight into notable researchers’ experience and approach.Ìý We know that in 2021 much of this work now happens digitally.
Fallen WW1 ANZACs remembered
Since 2014, the and the have been researching their players who served in the Great War (1914 - 1918). Today, in partnership with the AUFC/AUCC WWI Memorial Committee, we launch the profiles of twenty Fallen WWI Anzacs.
Welcome to Adelaide Connect
This new showcasesÌýdigitised content from ourÌýspecial collections and is a powerful resourceÌýfor researchers and the community.Ìý
World Digital Preservation Day
Digital preservation recognises that the digital research output and associated intellectual property needs to outlast the medium on which it is created.
Digital innovation at the library: building the Digital Humanities Lab
Held on Wednesday 2 September, the ‘Building the Digital Humanities Lab’ workshop provided an opportunity forÌýdiscussion and input from the ³ÉÈË´óƬ community on the library's future plans for a Digital Humanities Lab.
[Read more about Digital innovation at the library: building the Digital Humanities Lab]
Open Access Week 2020 - Open with Purpose
This week is Open Access Week, 19 to 25 October 2020.ÌýIf you’re interestedÌýin finding out more about open access, the Australasian Open Access Strategy Group are running a series of online events.
Celebrating women in STEM
(ALD), held on the second Tuesday in October,Ìýis an international celebration of the achievements of women inÌýscience, technology, engineering and maths (STEM). There are many extraordinary women who have studied STEM at the ³ÉÈË´óƬ. Read on to find out more about one of the most ground-breaking, Barbara Kidman.Ìý
A new look for Trove
The ³ÉÈË´óƬ is proud to be part ofÌý. Our collections contribute to aÌýnetwork of libraries, archives, universities, museums, and galleries that make Australia’s history freely discoverable.