Programming Historian is DH 2016 Award Winner - Best Series of Posts.
Congratulations to our 2016 authors for winning the 2016 Digital Humanities Award for best series of posts.
A full recap of their contributions can be found on our 2016 Roundup.
Contributions this year include:
- Amanda Visconti, ‘Building a static website with Jekyll and GitHub Pages’, Programming Historian (18 April 2016).
- Matthew Lincoln, ‘Reshaping JSON with jq’, Programming Historian (24 May 2016).
- Shawn Graham, ‘The Sound of Data (a gentle introduction to sonification for historians)’, Programming Historian (7 June 2016).
- Daniel van Strien, ‘An Introduction to Version Control Using GitHub Desktop’, Programming Historian (17 June 2016).
- M. H. Beals, ‘Transforming Data for Reuse and Re-publication with XML and XSL’, Programming Historian (7 July 2016).
- Ted Dawson, ‘Introduction to the Windows Command Line with Powershell’, Programming Historian (21 July 2016).
- Jacob W. Green, ‘Introduction to Mobile Augmented Reality Development in Unity’, Programming Historian (24 July 2016).
- Jonathan Reeve, ‘Installing Omeka’, Programming Historian (24 July 2016).
- Brandon Walsh, ‘Editing Audio with Audacity’, Programming Historian (5 August 2016).
- Taryn Dewar, ‘R Basics with Tabular Data’, Programming Historian (5 September 2016).
- Peter Organisciak and Boris Capitanu, ‘Text Mining in Python through the HTRC Feature Reader’, Programming Historian (22 November 2016).
A great group like that is tough to beat. Thanks to everyone who voted to support the project.
About the author
Adam Crymble is Associate Professor of Digital Humanities at University College London.