I'm working on a piece of software for collaborative manuscript transcription and annotation. That's a bit of a mouthful, but what it boils down is this: I've got temporary access to several family documents which I am trying to transcribe and distribute. Being a software engineer by trade, it seems to me that the easiest way to do this is to write a system that allows me and other volunteers to write down, annotate, proofread and print the page images I've scanned. This would allow those of us who are more comfortable with the technology (or are perhaps merely quicker typists) to do the bulk of the complex work, while other (older) volunteers with more context for the manuscripts make interpretive decisions about names and events.
My proximate goal is for the online system allow wiki-like hyperlinking to (at minimum) proper names, which -- when backed by a relational database -- would completely automate creation of indices in a "final" printed copy. I'd also like to allow the reader/printer to choose whether to preserve original line-breaks and/or spelling, mark sections of text as sensitive (so that they would not be visible to the general public), and include images of illegible text to appear in print versions as footnotes.
My eventual goal is to release the system as (possibly) Open Source and open up fee-based hosting on my own servers to fund whatever hosting bills my own project incurs. The grandiose vision is to try to get people in the family history community to direct their efforts into making primary texts accessible to the public.
LisaS says
this is an awesome idea! I’m the family historian (on hiatus since having kids, but recently found all my stuff again) and would love to have a database like this available.
Anonymous says
I have some ideas about manuscript transcription software. I’m not a programmer. please contact me
mrond at tiscali dot nl
Margo Burns says
Please feel free to contact me if you are still working on this. I am working with another major transcription project and setting up a transcription management system for them, to accommodate an estimated 100,000 items and 40-50 users…
Ben W. Brumfield says
FromThePage is still under active development, and I'd love to talk with you about your own projects. How may I get in contact with you? Feel free to send me email at benwbrum@gmail.com.
TheMerryArchivist says
Wonderful idea. Lisa Spiro directed me to your blog. I am very much interested into crowdsourcing, collaborative projects. I would like to get in contact with you. My mail is rebullap@tcd.ie, if you are interested. Thanks
ankur says
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