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, University College London.