These recommended resources for Digital Humanities projects and management have been suggested at the barcamp and conferences I’ve attended:
- Computer Science Unplugged (http://csunplugged.org/)
- Computer Science Field Guide developed at U of Canterbury (http://csfieldguide.org.nz/)
- Software Carpentry: sends people around the world to lead bootcamps for people who don’t know coding (http://softwarecarpentry.org/)
- Taiga: free open source project management system (https://taiga.io/)
- Trello: free organization tool and app (https://trello.com/)
- Kan Ban: lean, Agile project management tool (https://kanbanflow.com/features)
- Zotero: free online library and references tool including PDFs and images plus personal research assistant (https://www.zotero.org/)
- Junaio: augmented reality platform (http://www.junaio.com/)
- Cathy: program that catalogs files on hard drives and allows printing the contents or directory of folders which is helpful for archival purposes
- Jhove: JSTOR/Harvard project to help with policy and processing decisions around object storage and preservation (http://jhove.sourceforge.net/) and FIDO (http://openpreservation.org/technology/products/fido/), a tool to identify file formats of digital objects
- Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Bridge, and Irfanview (http://www.irfanview.com/): graphic viewers which can help you manipulate metadata and open files with strange formats
- Adobe XMP: file labelling technology to embed metadata (http://www.adobe.com/products/xmp.html)
- EXIF: metadata stored with an image (like camera setting, date, and location). Use viewer to see (http://regex.info/exif.cgi).
- Hathi Trust Research Center’s 4.8 million books (https://www.hathitrust.org/htrc)
- io: web scraper to harvest data (http://morph.io/)