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vici.org , a crowd sourced Roman map René Voorburg, DH2014, The Hague [email protected]

Vici.org, a crowd sourced Roman map

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Vici.org, a crowd sourced Roman map. Presentation given at Digital Humanities Benelux 2014 in The Hague.

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Page 1: Vici.org, a crowd sourced Roman map

vici.org, a crowd

sourced Roman mapRené Voorburg, DH2014, The Hague

[email protected]

Page 2: Vici.org, a crowd sourced Roman map

Introduction

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location aware

HTML5

static JSON

data

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Design considerations

• When creating a database backend, why not opening it

up for others to add / edit data?

• If others provide data, why not help them to retrieve

and access the data?

• Wikipedia as a model, but maps central & multi-lingual

• Map embeddable by other websites

• Open JSON API, Pelagios RDF, downloads

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Core functionality

Users can add:

• Markers (since February 2012)

• Images (since May 2013)

• KML line tracings (March 2014)

.. but no real community supporting features as of yet.

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User engagement

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User engagement

summarized• 200 activated user accounts

• 68 users added markers

• 6073 markers added by users

• 90% of all markers were added by 9 users.

(June 2014)

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Discussion

• How to attract users beyond NL, DE and BE?

• What did the 132 users that only registered expect?

• Populating the map ’enough’ appears to have been

essential in engaging users

• Will an investment in community features pay off?

• Stuck in the middle between science and

marketing?