Mirador is an open-source, JavaScript-based tool for comparing and annotating images from multiple repositories. It allows users to view objects side by side without institutional barriers and collect annotations about several objects in one place. Mirador is compatible with the IIIF image and presentation APIs and various IIIF-compliant software. It has been developed since 2013 in a collaborative effort between several universities and is available on GitHub under an open source license.
7. Interoperability and
comparison
• My research concerns the content; I do not
want to be burdened by institutional barriers.
• I want to view objects from multiple
institutions side by side, without significant
friction.
• I want to collect annotations about several
objects in one place.
• I want to be able to refer others to exactly the
thing I am discussing or researching.
8. “get pixels” via a
simple, RESTful,
web service
Just enough metadata to
drive a remote viewing
experience
Image API Presentation API
IIIF: Two APIs
9. Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
10. Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
11. Compatible Software
IIP Image
IIP Moo Viewer
digilib
FSI Viewer
FSI Server
Wellcome Player
Mirador diva.js
Image
Server
s
Image
Clients
Image
Apps
Internet Archive
Book Reader
12. Advanced Applications
• Embed a specific view in another context.
• Tie into internal events to take advantage of
some features while providing a custom
interface to others.
• Seamlessly reconstruct fragmented documents from
dozens of separate sources.
14. “Open Source” No, really.
2013-~2014
• Yale and Stanford obtain grant to create Mirador 1
• Chris Jesudeuai and Drew Winget at Stanford, open on github
2014-2015
• Dedicated joint effort by Harvard and Stanford
• Rashmi Singhal joining as a primary developer
• Mirador 2.0 released
• Integration with HarvardX and Harvard Libraries
• Contributions from broader community including Princeton and Biblissima.
2016
NGA + ConservationSpace, EPFL, Yale
Mirador 2.1 - full IIIF feature support (“Shared Canvas”)
15. Roadmap
Unfinished Business
• Detail images embedded on virtual canvas
• Multiple alternate images overlaid on virtual canvas
• Viewing direction updates
• 2.0 ranges
• Support for IIIF collection browsing
• More robust metadata fields display
• Per-canvas metadata
• Per-resource annotation and metadata display
• Support for blank canvases