Melissa,
You will find various examples with images, including user facing displays
and the same record as xml code, available from this site:
http://core.vraweb.org/vracore_examplescat01.html
J.
On Thu, Nov 19, 2015 at 10:11 AM, Mike Ellis <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> 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
>>
>>
>
> ****************************************************************
> website: http://museumscomputergroup.org.uk/
> Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ukmcg
> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/museumscomputergroup
> [un]subscribe: http://museumscomputergroup.org.uk/email-list/
> ****************************************************************
>
--
////////:\\\\\\\\:////////
Joan E. Beaudoin
Assistant Professor
School of Library and Information Science
Wayne State University
http://slis.wayne.edu/faculty/bio.php?id=61932
about.me/joan_e_beaudoin
[image: Joan E. Beaudoin on about.me]
<http://about.me/joan_e_beaudoin>
****************************************************************
website: http://museumscomputergroup.org.uk/
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/ukmcg
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/museumscomputergroup
[un]subscribe: http://museumscomputergroup.org.uk/email-list/
****************************************************************
|