Hi Melissa
It's from a while back, but ingenious.org.uk is still available - this
was a NOF-digi project so at the time everyone was super-keen on
metadata. Have a look at the source:
http://ingenious.org.uk/See/Entertainmentandmedia/Television/?target=SeeMedium&ObjectID={FBE05FFB-9FF9-12AD-0EC4-01228E4A76FD}&s=S1&viewby=images&
<META NAME="DC.Identifier" CONTENT="10263217; ">
<META NAME="DC.Rights"
CONTENT="http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/copyright/copyright.asp">
<META NAME="DC.Language" CONTENT="en-uk">
<META NAME="DC.Type.category" CONTENT="image">
<META NAME="DC.Format" CONTENT="text/html">
<META NAME="Robots" CONTENT="all">
<META NAME="DC.Date.Created" CONTENT="- 1960-1969; ">
<META NAME="DC.Subject.SSPL" CONTENT="Television Sets, 1960s; ">
<META NAME="DC.Title" CONTENT="Philips 'TV-ette' portable television
receiver, c 1960s.; ">
<META NAME="DC.Description" CONTENT="This dual standard 405/625 line
television set with a 12 inch screen was one of the first truly portable
television sets. It was produced in the early 1960s during the boom-time
for television. Manufacturing techniques were more advanced than ever
before, meaning even cheaper television sets for many families who now
also had higher incomes. By 1963 there were more than 15 million sets in
Britain. The Philips Company was founded in 1891 by a Dutchman, Gerard
Philips, to manufacture lightbulbs. In the early 1900s the company
expanded its research into other areas of electronics, including the
development of radio, and later television. ">
<META NAME="DC.Relation.isPartOf" CONTENT="National Museum of
Photography Film & Television">
...there we were hoping NOF might do something useful with it like build
an aggregator or something...
cheers
Mike
_____________________________
*Mike Ellis *
Thirty8 Digital: a small but perfectly formed digital
agency:http://thirty8.co.uk <http://thirty8.co.uk/>
* My book: http://heritageweb.co.uk <http://heritageweb.co.uk/> *
Melissa Terras wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I'm teaching metadata in class tomorrow, and I find myself scrabbling
> (again) to find any examples of full metadata in the cultural and heritage
> sector, using VRA or IPTC or even Dublin Core. What I'd really like is a
> site that had various examples of a digitised image of something, plus all
> the metadata that goes alongside that item (this information is generally
> seldom public facing). I'm wondering why such a site doesnt exist, and what
> it would take to put it together... but in the meantime, would anyone care
> to share with me one good example of an image plus ALL of its metadata that
> you have? We really need examples of these to show students and to help
> teach them about the best practice, the complexities, and what people are
> actually doing in the sector...
>
> Any help gratefully received, and if its not in time for tomorrow, no
> matter! I can keep examples for class next term!
>
> best
>
> Melissa
>
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