Archived Announcements

  • November 15, 2006:
    • Classics in a Digital World: Curious about where classics might go in a digital world? See the preprint of a new article about ePhilology that will appear in The Blackwell Companion to Digital Literary Studies.
  • June 21, 2006: Art and Archaeology Browser Updated
  • March 15, 2006: Improvements to the Perseus Digital Library
    • Migration of core data to the Tufts University Repository: We are beginning to shift core Perseus data to the Tufts Institutional Repository, where it will become a part of the university's permanent collection. There are several implications:
    • Preservation: This step addresses the long term needs of preservation and access: while Perseus has been in operation for almost two decades, libraries are better suited to maintain collections over time than particular projects.
    • Separation of production from research: The on-line version of the Perseus Digital Library, now more than ten years old, has combined services with research and development activities. As time progresses, established services will shift to the institutional repository, with the Perseus Digital Library focusing progressively more on research and development. As research services become established and prove useful, they will subsequently migrate to the production server.
    • Named entity browsing and searching: Perseus has extracted placenames and dates from full text for more than five years. This version of the Perseus Digital Library adds additional functionality:
      • You can now search for and browse placenames and dates in Perseus documents.
      • We are adding personal names and will soon add other categories (e.g., organizations). Personal names are in the new Perseus American collection and will be added to classical texts. Classical texts have placenames and dates marked in their public XML source.
    • Downloadable XML source texts: Public domain primary materials are now available under a Creative Commons license for download in their native XML format.
    • Bug fixes and incremental modifications: many general optimizations have been implemented, and various display issues have been fixed, based on user reports.
    • Improved hardware: we are adding new servers that are not only faster but easier to manage. This should improve not only speed but reliability.
  • May 27, 2005: Perseus 4.0 released -- a new implementation of the Perseus Digital Library.
    • Perseus 4.0, a new Java-based version of the Perseus Digital Library, is available for testing. It contains a faster, more manageable back-end and a more modern look and feel. Many features of Perseus are now available as XML services -- for example, developers can extract well-formed XML fragments of primary sources with full TEI-conformant markup in order to create their own front ends. Read more...

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Art and Archaeology