Robert Casties
robertcasties.fedihum.org.ap.brid.gy
Robert Casties
@robertcasties.fedihum.org.ap.brid.gy
Researcher and developer at the MPI for History of Science. Member of DH-Tech ADHO SIG. Developer of digilib image server. Active in the IIIF community […]

[bridged from https://fedihum.org/@robertcasties on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
Reposted by Robert Casties
Die Weite beim Beschauen reifer Felder
ist jene, die uns an den Rand der Zeit
geführt hat, wo ein Mann im Mantel schreit,
die Ähren wüchsen nur durch Steuergelder –
die Weite beim Beschauen reifer Felder.
November 28, 2025 at 7:15 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
This is how you do it people. I feel like I could have written this article, as it is extremely detailed as to all of the valid reasons why they would want to ban such content from being associated with Nature.

Every journalistic & creative outlet you follow should be publishing something like […]
Original post on indieweb.social
indieweb.social
November 26, 2025 at 3:58 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
In der Infektionsmedizin und pathogenen Epidemiologie muss man unterscheiden (und viele tun das nicht) zwischen:

Eradication - ein Pathogen wird vollständig ausgelöscht. Das gibt es _sehr_ selten, und oft nicht durch menschliche Intervention. Zuletzt hatten wir das mit Variola, auch als […]
Original post on medic.cafe
medic.cafe
November 24, 2025 at 7:40 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
There is a certain bleakness in finding hope where one expected certainty.

-- Ursula K. LeGuin, "The Farthest Shore"
November 15, 2025 at 10:09 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
A rare interview with the creators of the always-funny, always-brilliant, and *usually*-sexy—or occasionally anti-sexy—OGLAF!

Cooper has kept a low profile over the years, but is legitimately one of the very best artists in comics today. Read OGLAF if you're old enough to drive!
Talking Oglaf with Trudy Cooper and Doug Bayne: 'We'd stay up all night drawing stuff to make each other laugh' - The Comics Journal
Other than some time off every year for Christmas, Trudy Cooper and Doug Bayne have delivered a new Oglaf comic, skewering fantasy tropes with absolutely not safe for work humor, every week since 2008...
www.tcj.com
November 10, 2025 at 6:42 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
"Von der Handschrift zum Volltext: HTR in der Digital History"
https://digihistbie.hypotheses.org/771
"Vor wenigen Jahren war Handwritten Text Recognition (#HTR) noch ein Nischenthema in der digitalen Geschichtswissenschaft. Inzwischen gehört sie zum methodischen Repertoire vieler Projekte und […]
Original post on openbiblio.social
openbiblio.social
November 10, 2025 at 8:06 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
This week I have been digging around in the #internetarchive looking for digitised Arabic periodicals. With a bit of #rstats and far too many hours with #xslt and #tei/XML spent on identifying titles based on the very patchy metadata provided by uploaders, there are quite some exciting finds […]
Original post on digitalcourage.social
digitalcourage.social
November 7, 2025 at 9:09 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
Data rescue for World Digital Preservation Day 2025
Today, Thursday 6 November 2025 if I actually manage to finish and publish this today, is World Digital Preservation Day so I thought I would try and get a blog post out about some work I’ve been doing to rescue at-risk data. I’ve briefly mentioned this in my post about Library of Congress Subject Headings but not in much detail. The project is Safeguarding Research & Culture and I got involved back in March or April when Henrik reached out on social media looking for someone with library & metadata experience to contribute. I said that I wasn’t a Real Librarian but I’d love to help if I could, and now here we are. The concept is simple: download public datasets that are at risk of being lost, and replicate them as widely as possible to make them hard to destroy, though obviously there’s a lot of complexity buried in that statement. When the Trump administration first took power, there were a lot of people around the world worried about this issue and wanting to help, so while there are a number of institutions & better resourced groups doing similar things, we aim to complement them by mobilising grassroots volunteers. Downloading data isn’t always straightforward. It may be necessary to crawl an entire website, or query a poorly-documented API, or work within the constraints of rate-limiting so as not to overload an under-resourced server. That takes knowledge and skill, so part of the work is guiding and mentoring new contributors and fostering a community that can share what they learn and proactively find and try out new tools. We also need people to be able to find and access the data, and volunteers to be able to contribute their storage to the network. We distribute data via the venerable BitTorrent protocol, which is very good at defeating censorship and getting data out to as many peers as possible as quickly as possible. To make those torrents discoverable, our dev team led by the incredible Jonny have built a catalogue of dataset torrents, playfully named SciOp. That’s built on well-established linked data standards like DCAT, the Data Catalogue Vocabulary, so the metadata is standardised and interoperable, and there’s a public API and a developing commandline client to make it even easier to process and upload datasets. There are even RSS and RDF feeds of datasets by tag, size, threat status or number of seeds (copies) in the network that you can plug into your favourite BitTorrent client to automatically start downloading newly published datasets. There are even exciting plans in the works to make it federated via ActivityPub, to give us a network of catalogues instead of just a single one. We’re accidentally finding ourselves needing to push the state of the art in BitTorrent client implementations. If you’re familiar with the history of BitTorrent as a favoured tool for _ahem_ less-than-legal media sharing, it probably won’t surprise you that most current BitTorrent clients are optimised for working with single audio-visual streams of about 1 to 2½ hours in length. Our scientific & cultural data is much more diverse than that, and the most popular clients can struggle for various reasons. In many cases there are BEPs (BitTorrent Enhancement Proposals) to extend the protocol to improve things, but these are optimal features that most clients don’t implement. The collection of BEPs that make up “BitTorrent v2” is a good example: most clients don’t support v2 well, so most people don’t bother making v2-compatible torrents, but that means there’s no demand to implement v2 in the clients. We are planning to make a scientific-grade BitTorrent client as a test-bed for these and other new ideas. Myself I’m running one of a small number of “super” nodes in the swarm, with much more storage available than the average laptop or desktop, and often much better bandwidth too. That’s good, because some of our datasets run to multiple terabytes, plus to ensure new nodes can get started quickly we need to have some always-on nodes with most of the data available to others. Since BitTorrent is truly peer-to-peer, it doesn’t matter how many people have a copy of a given dataset, if none of them are online no-one else can access it. This is all very technically interesting, but communications, community, governance, policy, documentation, funding are also vitally important, and for us these are all works in progress. We need volunteers to help with all of this, but especially those less-technical aspects. If you’re interested in helping, please drop us a line at contact@safeguar.de, or join our community forum and introduce yourself and your interests. If you want to contribute but don’t feel you have the time or skills, well, to start with we’re more than happy to show you the ropes and help you get started, but as an alternative, I’m running one of those “super” nodes and you can contribute to my storage costs via GoFundMe: even a few quid helps. I currently have 3x 6TB hard drives with no space to mount them, so I’m currently in need of a drive cage to hold them and plug them into my server. Special shout-out also to our sibling project, the Data Rescue Project, who are doing amazing work on this and often send us requests for websites or complex datasets for our community to save. I’ve barely scratched the surface here, but I _really_ want to actually get this post out for WDPD so I’m going to stop here and hopefully continue soon!
erambler.co.uk
November 6, 2025 at 9:32 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
You can check out the first official volume from the DH Tech Symposium, edited by Julia Damerow and @suttonkoeser.bsky.social.

anthology.ach.org/volumes/vol0...
Edited by Julia Damerow and Rebecca Sutton Koeser
anthology.ach.org
October 29, 2025 at 3:41 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
As DH grows, it’s increasingly important to publish conference papers, but there hasn’t been a clear venue for that.

So I’m thrilled to share this new home for DH proceedings, which will include CHR papers & more.

Thanks to @taylor-arnold.bsky.social for leading this effort!

bit.ly/ach-anthology
October 29, 2025 at 3:39 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
"Inzwischen gehen 872.000 Deutsche keiner geregelten Erwerbstätigkeit mehr nach, sondern leben von Dividenden, Gewinnausschüttungen oder Mieteinnahmen. Und weil die Aktienkurse gestiegen sind, die Profite sprudeln und eine gewaltige Erbschaftswelle übers Land rollt, werden immer mehr Menschen […]
Original post on ohai.social
ohai.social
October 27, 2025 at 2:38 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
I'm in a #github internal group for high-profile FOSS projects (due to @leaflet having a few kilo-stars), and the second most-wanted feature is "plz allow us to disable copilot reviews", with the most-wanted feature being "plz allow us to block issues/PRs […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
October 24, 2025 at 4:17 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
funny how I got through decades and decades of my life carrying fingerprints around on my fingers and getting zero benefit from them, and suddenly now they're part of my daily routine for just about everything
October 24, 2025 at 7:35 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
“A main objec­tive of this col­lec­tion is to pro­vide a more com­plete under­stand­ing of the life and work of the icon­ic artist, who died in 1986 at the age of 98.”

Explore 1,100 Works of Art by Georgia O’Keeffe: They’re Digitized and Free to View Online […]

[Original post on mastodon.social]
October 24, 2025 at 7:20 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
Key findings:
45% of all AI answers had at least one significant issue.
31% of responses showed serious sourcing problems – missing, misleading, or incorrect attributions.
20% contained major accuracy issues, including hallucinated details and outdated information.
Gemini performed worst with […]
Original post on xoxo.zone
xoxo.zone
October 22, 2025 at 11:56 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
#xkcd readers know what happened to #aws ...

https://xkcd.com/908/
October 20, 2025 at 9:24 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
📢 Neu im digiS-Workshop-Programm:

„✨From Zero to SPARQL✨– Eine Einführung in die Abfrage von Wissensgraphen (Schwerpunkt @wikidata )"

🗓️ 04. November 2025
⏰ 10 - 13 Uhr
📍 Zoom

Unser Kollege @awinkler führt euch in die Welt von SPARQL ein – der […]

[Original post on openbiblio.social]
October 15, 2025 at 12:05 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
Reposted by Robert Casties
I made a thing called Wellness Ping because someone I care about went silent and it took too long for anyone to notice.

You get regular check-ins via email. If you don't respond, your emergency contacts get notified.

Built it for anyone who might go missing and needs someone to notice […]
Original post on wetdry.world
wetdry.world
October 15, 2025 at 2:10 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
Verkäufer:
"In diesem #Auto können sie 5 Leute ohne Probleme mitnehmen."
Ich:
"Ich kenne keine 5 Leute ohne Probleme"

#flachwitz
October 13, 2025 at 12:53 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
2006: "Data is the new oil"
2025: "AI is the new microplastics"
October 11, 2025 at 9:37 AM
Reposted by Robert Casties
"Earlier this year, the AI detection company behind GPTZero made a pivot from trying to detect AI usage from students to offering educators an AI-powered grading assistant." https://marcwatkins.substack.com/p/the-dangers-of-using-ai-to-grade h/t @alfiekohn
The Dangers of using AI to Grade
Nobody Learns, Nobody Gains
marcwatkins.substack.com
October 11, 2025 at 12:11 PM
Reposted by Robert Casties
We are delighted to announce that the new, multidisciplinary Diamond #openaccess journal **Replication Research (R2)** is now accepting submissions for replications and reproductions in a broad range of disciplines including #linguistics, #cogsci, and […]

[Original post on fediscience.org]
October 10, 2025 at 7:34 AM