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OHMS: Enhancing Oral History Online

The Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History at the University of Kentucky Libraries and the UK Libraries Division of Library Technologies have created a web-based, system called OHMS (Oral History Metadata Synchonizer)to inexpensively and efficiently enhance access to and discovery of oral history online. The OHMS system provides users word-level search capability and a time-correlated transcript or index connecting the textual search term to the corresponding moment in the recorded interview online.

You can test out the OHMS oral history viewer on the Kentuckiana Digital Library


C2Ky and the IPad: Veterans Interviews Are Mobile Compliant

The Nunn Center has worked hard over the years to adapt to emerging technologies exploring ways to more efficiently and effectively deliver oral histories online. As an avid IPhone and IPad user, I have been interested in looking at ways we could deploy oral histories via mobile devices.  Initially, I was not completely convinced that users would want to watch video oral history interviews on a smart phone since the screen sizes were so small and the length of interviews were typically fairly lengthy.  However, I quickly changed my tune when I connected to the internet for the first time on my, IPad.  This category of mobile device will greatly increase users’ expectation (of archives of all types and sizes) to  use the archival material in a mobile digital environment.  My one frustration with the IPad has been the digital void created online when Apple abandoned Adobe Flash for delivering video on its mobile devices.  Users are commonly faced with a large “X” over the video that they hoped to view on their mobile device.  Not happy with frustration, the Nunn Center team has focused energies on adapting once more.

Using our From Combat to Kentucky website, a video-based oral history project with student veterans here in Kentucky, we successfully deployed an HTML 5 mobile video solution to enable a more universal video delivery solution for our oral history interviews online.  As of last week, we successfully tweaked our C2Ky interface to deliver video interviews to mobile devices such as the IPhone as well as the IPad.   Over time, we will be investigating ways to apply this technology to our larger video holdings online, so stay tuned!

New Oral History Interface for the KDL

Louie B. Nunn Nunn Center Oral History Interface on the KDL

Oral history, as a historical resource, has traditionally been very difficult to use for both casual and serious researchers.  Simply putting oral histories online is certainly nothing new.  Many institutions are providing access to their transcripts or the audio/video interviews online as either full interviews are as interview excerpts.  However, the digital archival platforms being used by most institutions were designed to serve up digital photographs and manuscript materials.  Users can search the transcripts and you can browse the audio or video but you cannot link your transcript search to specific locations in the audio or video. Last year the Louie B. Nunn Center for Oral History, in partnership with the Kentuckiana Digital Library, developed a cutting edge method of delivering oral history online.   With our development of the OHMS synchronizing application and its deployment on the Kentuckiana Digital Library, we have empowered users to search for text and link to the corresponding place in the audio interview.   Now we have successfully applied this technology to our video interviews.  We have launched the interface with our From Combat to Kentucky Oral History Project (C2Ky) giving users the ability to search by keyword in the transcript and jump to the correlate in the video interview.  I will talk about the C2Ky project in a future post.  Check it out online and let us know what you think.

Oral Histories on the KDL