Print

Print


Hello Colleagues. 

Here is a summary of responses to my Timelines query. Dizzying. Tiki Toki
seemed to catch my eye. Also, for my needs..Timeline Maker.

Margaret Ericson, Arts Librarian, Colby College Libraries

[log in to unmask]

 

 

.         2 recommendations for Tiki-Toki http://www.tiki-toki.com/. There
is a free version and premium version.

 

See:  http://mag.rochester.edu/timeline

Lu Harper

Librarian/Webmaster

Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester

 

 

See: Irving Penn Archives website, including Penn's life and career
<http://www.artic.edu/aic/timeline/penn/>  and an exhibition history
<http://extras.artic.edu/timelines/penn-exhibition/index.html> . The
museum's web team was responsible for transferring content that I created in
.doc to XML for inclusion in the timeline software, and I believe that the
workflow was smooth. Images can be included

Bridget Madden
Assistant Director, Visual Resources Center
The University of Chicago Department of Art History

 

 

.         1 recommendation for Timeline Maker
http://www.timelinemaker.com/index.php

Free trial.

Sally Stokes

Interim Head

Art and Architecture Libraries

University of Maryland

 

 

.         1 recommendation for History Pin http://www.historypin.com/

This is a social timeline platform for sharing using your
Google/Facebook/Twitter Account. Read the FAQ http://www.historypin.com/faq/





.         My  IT people at Colby: 

 

MS Office:

http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/word-help/create-a-timeline-HA010336240.as
px

 

Capzles. A Social Media Timeline. You need to make an account for this one
but it is free and has gorgeous results. http://www.capzles.com/#
<http://www.capzles.com/> 

 

Preceden http://www.preceden.com/

Again you need to create an account but it seems straightforward with less
of a learning curve than Capzles. 

 

.         2 recommendations for Neatline, which is a propriety Omeka plugin
http://neatline.org/

From John Taormina (Duke) and Susanne Javorski  (Wesleyan)

 

 

.         From : Susanne Javorski, Art and Reference Librarian
Wesleyan University, Art Library

 

o   TimelineJS http://timeline.knightlab.com/#
An open-source tool for building interactive timelines. Available in 40
languages. Built-in support for pulling in media from: Twitter, Flickr,
Google Maps, YouTube, Vimeo, Vine, Dailymotion, Wikipedia, SoundCloud.

o   SIMILE http://wordpress.org/plugins/simile-timeline-display/
Create interactive timelines for websites; also available as a plugin in
Wesleyan's WordPress system

o   ViewShare http://viewshare.org/
Library of Congress platform for presenting digital collections - includes a
timeline

 

.         From: Maria Gonzalez

My students have been interested in using Zotero [
http://www.zotero.org/blog/visualize-your-zotero-collections-in-timelines/ 

], but I don't find it user friendly. Years ago there was Visio and the
like...I still rely on MS WORD and its ability to print vertically.

 

 

 



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mail submissions to [log in to unmask] For information about joining ARLIS/NA see: http://www.arlisna.org/join.html Send administrative matters (file requests, subscription requests, etc) to [log in to unmask] ARLIS-L Archives and subscription maintenance: http://lsv.arlisna.org Questions may be addressed to list owner (Judy Dyki) at: [log in to unmask]
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~