Difference between revisions of "Simile Exhibit"
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= Description = | = Description = | ||
Exhibit lets you easily create web pages with advanced text search and filtering functionalities, with interactive maps, timelines, and other visualizations. Developed by MIT. Written in JavaScript, JSON. | Exhibit lets you easily create web pages with advanced text search and filtering functionalities, with interactive maps, timelines, and other visualizations. Developed by MIT. Written in JavaScript, JSON. | ||
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+ | This "data publishing tool" was created by through MIT's Similie Project (http://www.simile-widgets.org/exhibit3/ExhibitPR.pdf). cultural centers, libraries and institutions that handle large amounts of information can import data from spreadsheets into a web-based application (called Babel) that converts the text into to an html file that can be edited. A text editor such as Notepad or TextEdit is needed to add code that is written in JavaScript (JSON) to create online data visualizations. | ||
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+ | Exhibit gives institutions the ability to present a target communities data to a worldwide audience by creating webpages that can be freely accessed online. The visualizations produced by Exhibit are searchable. Templates for HTML Exhibit pages and the JSON data files are available for free on the [http://simile-widgets.org/wiki/Exhibit#Templates Exhibit Wiki]. | ||
= Platform = | = Platform = |
Revision as of 00:58, 7 October 2014
Description
Exhibit lets you easily create web pages with advanced text search and filtering functionalities, with interactive maps, timelines, and other visualizations. Developed by MIT. Written in JavaScript, JSON.
This "data publishing tool" was created by through MIT's Similie Project (http://www.simile-widgets.org/exhibit3/ExhibitPR.pdf). cultural centers, libraries and institutions that handle large amounts of information can import data from spreadsheets into a web-based application (called Babel) that converts the text into to an html file that can be edited. A text editor such as Notepad or TextEdit is needed to add code that is written in JavaScript (JSON) to create online data visualizations.
Exhibit gives institutions the ability to present a target communities data to a worldwide audience by creating webpages that can be freely accessed online. The visualizations produced by Exhibit are searchable. Templates for HTML Exhibit pages and the JSON data files are available for free on the Exhibit Wiki.
Platform
Web based, Text editor required.
Applicable Text Editors and Web Page Debuggers
Documentation and User Support
The Exhibit Wiki provides how-to guides, templates, documentation and FAQ's for the software.
User Experiences
- Javascript Timeline Libaries - A Review
- Enhanced Reading of Travel Accounts with the SIMILE Exhibit Widget
- Making a SIMILE Timeline with a Google Map
Development Activity
Exhibit software is open-source and maintained by community members. It was created by David Francois Huynh for the SIMILE project. Exhibit 3.0 was supported by The MIT Libraries and Zepheira, LLC.