Name: Harvard University Arts & Humanities Research Computing (DARTH)
Type: Organization
Bio: Arts & Humanities Research Computing provides software engineering, consultation, and project management for Harvard FAS faculty engaged in digital humanities
Twitter: artshumrc
Location: United States of America
Blog: https://digitalhumanities.fas.harvard.edu/
Harvard University Arts & Humanities Research Computing (DARTH)'s Projects
A django package to store/process zotero items
annonatate
This is the Meteor application for the Beyond Words 2016 exhibition.
Beyond Words tile sources
CAHL Wordpress
Charlie Hebdo Archive at the Harvard Library Mobile App
GraphQL API for the CAHL application
React frontend based off of the Orphe.us codebase: http://gitlab.archimedes.digital/archimedes/orpheus. Rails application running Ruby 2.4.1 and Rails 5.1.4.
annotation storage backend
Code and data for D3 exercises and examples, originally developed by @ColeDCrawford with @jaguillette for DataFest 2018
Static files for the symposium portion of the Dharma and Punya Exhibition website
Custom Omeka theme for the Eileen Southern project. Based on the Thanks Roy theme.
Static files for EVQ frontend redesign
JSON API (for TMS Database) and Django 2 application for Digital Giza
Unused design files for IIIF-Harvard redesign
Unused IIIF website upgrade
A digital mosaic from the November 2015 Paris attacks, comprising over 60,000 tweets. Flask + Neo4j - Christopher Morse
A repository of IIIF manifests for resources associated with the Mary Magdalene digital edition
Front page network visualization for the Mind the Gap project
Orpheus application for Mind the Gap
GraphQL API for Mind the Gap
An open-source, web-based 'multi-up' viewer that supports zoom-pan-rotate functionality, ability to display/compare simple images, and images with annotations.
a Mirador 3 plugin that adds annotation creation tools to the user interface
Various Mirador 3 builds for Giza, iiif.harvard.edu, and other projects
A clientside mixtape creation tool built for SoundLab
Manuscript viewer page for "Exploring Medieval Mary Magdalene," a graduate seminar course taught in 2017-2019 by Professor Racha Kirakosian.