What does it take to get a document digitized and published online here at the Rudolf Steiner e.Lib? Here are the steps:
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- Proofread to locate all footnotes and graphics (e.g., diagrams, drawings) in order to place them correctly in the online version.
- Proofread to locate all references to items online in order to set up links for cross-references.
- Convert to HTML. For a single lecture, this is a single file. If this is a book or collection, there are multiple files, including cover image, contents, prefaces, appendices, synopses, notes, footnotes, cross-references – much of this is automated, but the human eye is still needed, and a lot of this must be done manually.
- All browsers are not equal! There is quite a bit of work that needs to be done to make the document render, at least close to the same way, in all browsers! What looks fine in one browser may look terrible in another. And when you fix it in the other browser, it breaks the first one. We recommend Firefox!
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Most of the digitizing project is done inhouse, but we have wonderful volunteers all over the world who acquire and scan documents, run against their own OCR software (if they have it), and create files that they send to us. The final proofreading, cross-references, creation of HTML files, setting up for our databases and tools, and online publication are all done inhouse. And, of course, we provide the heavy-duty servers and broadband to make it all available to the world.
Our Search and Research Tools and Database Management
Jim Stewart has designed and created the online tools — the database, searching capability, keyword indexing and cross referencing, etc. — that enable users to access and research the on-line documents with ease. This has been an ongoing project for almost 30 years.
How to Help
We have a tremendous backlog of materials we want to get online, and there are so many irreplaceable resources at risk worldwide! If you can afford to donate even a little to help support this initiative, you will be helping save irreplaceable works and to make the information available to so many others! Please check our Donation and Appeal pages to see how you can help!
Jim Stewart has designed and created the online tools — the database, searching capability, keyword indexing and cross referencing, etc. — that enable users to access and research the on-line documents with ease. This has been an ongoing project for almost 30 years.
How to Help
We have a tremendous backlog of materials we want to get online, and there are so many irreplaceable resources at risk worldwide! If you can afford to donate even a little to help support this initiative, you will be helping save irreplaceable works and to make the information available to so many others! Please check our Donation and Appeal pages to see how you can help!