For
Immediate
Release:
For More Information:
September
29,
2010
Elise Proulx,
Outreach & Marketing Coordinator
Publishing Group, California Digital Library
415 20th Street, 4th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
510-587-6439 | elise.proulx@ucop.edu
eXtensible Text
Framework (XTF) Website Launched
Robust
open-source application makes managing access to digital content simple
The
Publishing Group of the California Digital Library (CDL) announces the launch
of the eXtensible Text Framework (XTF) website (http://xtf.cdlib.org/), supporting a robust open-source application for
providing access to digital content. Developed and maintained
by the CDL, XTF functions as the primary access technology for the CDL’s
digital collections and similar projects worldwide.
XTF
excels in supporting rapid, customized application development and deployment.
Its high degree of extensibility and performance (even for large documents and
large collections) frees implementers to focus on building sophisticated
presentations for their digital object collections.
“It's
all about balancing flexibility and ease of use: putting infinite customization
ability in the hands of curators and scholars with a driving need to provide
deep access to their special collections,” says XTF lead developer Martin
Haye.
XTF-based
applications range from primary source image collections to publishing
platforms and archival finding aid repositories at the University of California
and many other institutions, including Northwestern University, the University
of Sydney (Australia), Indiana University, Visual Arkiv (Sweden), Morehouse
College, Durham University (UK), and the University of Virginia.
Highly
customized implementations include:
·
CDL’s eScholarship (http://www.escholarship.org/), UC’s open
access scholarly publishing platform, which publishes recent research from
across the 10 campuses as well as nearly 40 UC-based scholarly journals. XTF
customizations include a streamlined facet-selection interface, dynamic PDF
snippets called "KWIC Pics," PDF document previews in the browser,
and support for a deep hierarchy of contributing academic units.
·
CDL’s Online Archive of California
(http://www.oac.cdlib.org/), a collection
of more than 20,000 archival finding aids and 200,000 digital primary sources
(images and texts) from more than 150 archives, libraries, and other
institutions in the state of California. XTF implementation features full-text
search and display, detailed descriptive metadata, and a robust finding aid
interface.
·
Indiana University’s The Chymistry
of Isaac Newton (http://webapp1.dlib.indiana.edu/newton/),
a digital repository of transcriptions of Newton’s alchemical
manuscripts. Site features a seamless blend of various web tools, including XTF
as the search technology.
·
The Encyclopedia of Chicago (http://encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/),
a collaboration between the Chicago Historical Society, Northwestern
University, and the Newberry Library. Site integrates XTF with an image zoomer
to display a large collection of historic photographs and maps, as well as
using XTF for search and display of descriptive metadata.
Lightly customized implementations include:
·
OhioLink Finding Aids Repository (http://ead.ohiolink.edu/xtf-ead/),
this consortium of archives, libraries, and other institutions in the state of
Ohio uses the default XTF implementation with dedicated branding and other
slight modifications.
·
University of Buffalo Finding Aids (http://libweb1.lib.buffalo.edu:8080/findingaids/search)
uses a basic XTF application to enable browse and search of collection guides
from the university’s archival and manuscript collections.
The new site serves as an expanded resource for
programmers, librarians, and the general public to
explore and implement the Java and XSLT 2.0-based framework. Features
include:
·
XTF application download –
full release or core updates to maintain customizations (http://xtf.cdlib.org/download/)
·
Documentation,
including downloadable deployment guide, programming guide, and tag reference (http://xtf.cdlib.org/documentation)
·
Video tutorials focusing
on basic setup and customization of XTF (http://xtf.cdlib.org/getting-started-tutorials)
·
Example XTF implementations
highlighting customized features. (http://xtf.cdlib.org/xtf)
For a
full list of XTF’s features and benefits, as well as a technical
overview, please visit http://xtf.cdlib.org/about or address queries to Martin Haye
at Martin.Haye@ucop.edu.
###
-----------------------------------------------
Lisa Schiff, Ph.D.
Technical Lead
Publishing Group
California Digital Library
University of California
Office of the President
415 20th Street, 4th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612-2901
510-987-0881 (t) 510-893-5212
(f)
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