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Title
Project "The Digital City Revives" A Case Study of Web Archaeology: Paper - iPRES 2016 - Swiss National Library, Bern
Language
English
Description (en)
Twenty-two years ago a city emerged from computers, modems and telephone cables. On 15 January 1994 De Digitale Stad (DDS; The Digital City) opened its virtual gates in Amsterdam. DDS, the first virtual city in the world, and made the internet (free) accessible for the first time to the general public in the Netherlands. But like many other cities in the world history, this city disappeared. In 2001 The Digital City, the website, was taken offline and perished as a virtual Atlantis. Although the digital (r)evolution has reshaped our lives dramatically in the last decades, our digital heritage, and especially the digital memory of the early web, is at risk of being lost. Or worse already gone. Time for the Amsterdam Museum and partners to act and start to safeguard our digital heritage. But, how to excavate The Digital City, a virtual Atlantis, and reconstruct it into a virtual Pompeii? In the case study of web archaeology we will try to answer the questions: how to excavate, reconstruct, present, preserve and sustainably store born-digital heritage and make it accessible to the future generations?
Author of the digital object
Tjarda  de Haan
Publisher
Swiss National Library, Bern
Format
application/pdf
Size
321.4 kB
Licence Selected
CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 AT
Content
Details
Object type
PDFDocument
Format
application/pdf
Created
27.01.2017 04:07:57
Metadata