Experiments
1. A manifest for a basic map from the Peel site
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/M000104-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
2. Barebones newspaper issue
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/EDB-1918-11-11-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
3. Newspaper issue with TOC using ranges
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/EDB-1918-11-11-toc-ranges-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
Articles are listed in the left sidebar, represented by ranges using canvas-level links. Linking to zones on the canvas is theoretically possible under Presentation API 2.1, using #xywh
fragments, but it is not supported by Mirador or Universal Viewer (or at least I can’t make it work). The implementation of ranges in 2.1 and is being redeveloped in 3.0.
4. Newspaper issue with headlines as text annotations
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/EDB-1918-11-11-headline-annotations-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
Headlines are text annotations, positioned with an xywh fragment, and listed in a page-level annotation list.
5. Olive monograph
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/796-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
Monograph from Olive XML
6. Olive monograph with section ranges based on data
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/796-datarange-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
Enriched monograph from Olive XML plus external data file containing page labels and section titles
7. Olive monograph with section ranges and search
https://pbinkley.github.io/iiif-experiments/manifests/796-datarange-search-manifest.json
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
> Universal Viewer > Mirador
Enriched monograph from Olive XML with ranges, and search. The search results are a static file, so whatever you search you’ll get results for “stony”.