A Digital Day Book

Long ago, businesses would keep a log of daily minutiae but we don’t have that today. We want to make one because recording our own history will benefit future colleagues.

About the project

It’s a combination of two things:

  1. Research results on our 100-year plan – There’s an early theme around mentorship and documentation. Colleagues who haven’t been born yet will need to access and absorb the history of the organisation. That’s going to be impossible if we don’t archive our digital work.
  2. Continuation of a 2014 research project with Het Nieuw Instituut about architects MVRDV in Rotterdam. Pondering how we might “view corporate [digital] archives through a feeling of human activity and depth, and not just a set of static documents.”

“Companies today don’t have a filing cabinet with all the things to be kept. They use hundreds or thousands of additional services owned by other people to keep their most precious information. That’s a big hairy problem.”

-> The need for human intervention: Annet Dekker in conversation with George Oates

How do we archive ourselves?

Welcome Rachel Frick to Our Board!

Digital libraries and cultural heritage leader, Rachel L. Frick, joins our Board of Directors.

Data Lifeboats at the XVI International Conference of the Image

Our second stop on the European conference circuit was Paris, for the Sixteenth International Conference on The Image where George and Tori shared the release of Data Lifeboat and the importance of citizen-driven collecting.

International Conference of Cyber-Humanities Recap

Tori shares her reflections on a recent conference in Florence, where she detailed our progress on the Data Lifeboat alpha alongside the value of collecting from social media for heritage practitioners.