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RETOLD News

RETOLD folder about where we stand

In the past months we have been working hard to show the results of our projects. One of the most important product is our system for documentation of houses and crafts. We have created a website, where we explain everything in detail (Retold.eu), but it is a lot to process. In order to share it at our conference in Batavialand, with our stakeholders, with non-RETOLD participants and with the EXARC members, we have designed an A4 folder...

Open-air museums and the Wikimedia community

Once you have digital data, anybody can do anything with those! Therefore, RETOLD had formulated very early the wish to find communities, we could cooperate with. But we needed to zoom out first. Our open-air museums are part of something larger, Galleries, Libraries, Archives & Museums (in short called GLAM). Although there is a big diversity between these categories, we all strive for free and open access to digital cultural heritage.

3D models done Complexul National Muzeal ASTRA (RO)

This summer a photogrammetry workshop held by dr. Laurențiu Angheluță, specialist in the digitalization of cultural heritage, took place in the ASTRA National Museum Complex as part of the Retold project. The purpose of the workshop was to teach museum specialists to take optimal photos for the creation of 3D models with the help of specific software.

Sneak Peek: Museums, but not as you know them

The RETOLD platform is by far the largest project of this year. Some bits and pieces are still coming together, and we will only officially launch the RETOLD platform at our conference in September (see here for conference details). It has been a voyage of four long years, with many partners along the way, to design a system for open-air museums to tell their stories and bring them into new universes and dimensions...

External Evaluation of the RETOLD project

Four years. That is how long the RETOLD project takes. With many goals and a hectic schedule, we may get tunnel vision and forget what we promised, or at least bits of it. We knew this would be happening, so already before RETOLD started, we had planned an external evaluation during, not after the project. While the financial mid-way audit was done by an accountant, we invited Mr Städing from DigiCULT to evaluate how well RETOLD was on its way to reach its goals.

Podcast: Future-proofing the Past

Like many things in the modern world, digitalisation has transformed the way we interact with the past and opened opportunities for visualisation, curation and sharing. But how do we actually use these digital tools? If you'd like to hear more from our speakers after the episode, they will both be presenting their research at our Digitalisation in Open-Air Museums and Reconstructions conference in September.

RETOLD: Development and evaluation of the RETOLD app

As we steer towards the completion of RETOLD, the development and evaluation of the RETOLD app have provided significant strategic wisdom. The application has enhanced our understanding of the current technological landscape and readiness levels as well as the specific needs of the open-air museum sector. It will drive future post-RETOLD digital initiatives that contribute to innovation and creativity in the field of...

RETOLD is never boring!

We are running high speed now, as we only have four months to go until the big conference. Sometimes you wish there were more hours in the day... We just returned from another visit to Museum Village Düppel in Berlin (14-16 May, 2024). Our goal was to test the Retold app "in the wild", or as this exercise is called, do a User Acceptance Test. Several scenarios were staged, for example: "you want to open the app and document a craft activity".

RETOLD: Things go fast!

Retold is in its final year, and yes, things go fast! While our colleagues in Spain are crunching code for the app, some of us went to Northern Germany to the Stone Age Park in Albersdorf, just before their tourist season started (March 2024). It was great to spend a few days with the museum's webmaster, the Social Media coordinator, the young volunteers as well as the Neolithic Farmer. Unfortunately, the Mesolithic Gatherer was still travelling, as they usually do...