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Tag Archives: Rebecca Daly
VALA2016 Session 16 Organ
Christopher Moore
Michael Organ
Rebecca Daly
3D immersive collection and teaching environments: the Yellow House project at UOW
VALA2016 CONCURRENT SESSION 16: Virtual Travels
Thursday 11 February 2016, 15:20 – 15:50
Persistent URL: http://www.vala.org.au/vala2016-proceedings/vala2016-session-16-organ
Michael Organ, Christopher Moore, Rebecca Daly and Neil Cairns
University of Wollongong, NSW
Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala16 #s41
Read the paper, view the video of the presentation on the VALA2016 GigTV channel and view the presentation slides here:
- VALA2016 Session 16 Organ Paper 171.91 KB
- VALA2016 Session 16 Organ Video 0.00 KB
- VALA2016 Session 16 Organ Slides 1.78 MB
Abstract
This paper discusses the Yellow House VR project at the University of Wollongong. Innovative virtual reality technologies such as Oculus Rift are being utilised to recreate the 1970s Sydney artist community space known as the Yellow House, as both an historic replication and openly accessible, immersive teaching and learning environment for use and adaptation by teachers, students, researchers and the general community. The paper considers the role of the library in the enhanced presentation of digitised collections through new and evolving technologies which provide opportunities for knowledge enhancement and support the development of student e-portfolios.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.
VALA2014 Session 11 Organ
What’s on the telly? Streaming the archives to new audiencesVALA2014 CONCURRENT SESSION 11: Crossing the Stream Michael Organ and Rebecca DalyUniversity of Wollongong Library, NSW Please tag your comments, tweets, and blog posts about this session: #vala14 and #s31 | |
Abstract
University libraries face an increasingly diverse digital world in which tablet and mobile devices are the preferred access platforms for research, teaching and learning. The University of Wollongong Library has responded by digitising its unique archival collections, embedding digitisation processes, developing a digitisation program and providing a Digital Collections portal to material held within its repositories. The Library has also embarked on digitisation of the nationally significant WIN4 television news collection 1964-84. Comprising over 1,000 reels of 16mm black and white film and associated scripts, the project entails significant technological, copyright and logistical hurdles in providing streamed access to content.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License.