Source Link: https://opensiddur.org/?p=1318
open_content_license: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike (CC BY-SA) 4.0 International copyleft licenseDate: 2010-08-16
Last Updated: 2025-02-18
Categories: Development
Tags: communications
Excerpt:
Hello friends,
Check out our progress! This development status update chronicles progress on the Open Siddur made since our last update, February 15, 2010.
If you’d like to get news of Open Siddur Project development as it occurs, make sure to follow @opensiddur at Twitter, or join the opensiddur-announce email list. We also recommend following updates on opensiddur.org with our RSS feed. (Just visit this URL with your favorite RSS reader: https://opensiddur.org/feed/ .)
The creative work used in our traditional liturgies is the common cultural heritage of the Jewish people. Most of this work resides in the public domain. The Open Siddur is your Siddur. Join the Open Siddur Project today and begin crafting and sharing the siddur you’ve always wanted.
Project Overview
Ever wonder what our project looks like as a flowchart? Aharon updated the old one to be more readable — do you get it?
Did you want an Open Siddur web application last year and aren’t sure how you can help bring it into reality? Check out these ways you can help advance this project — even if you’re not a computer programmer!
Fascinated by technology and wondering how our work fits into the future of book publishing? Check out this link if you were wondering what a print-to-digital-to-print technology project such as our web application can offer the world more generally: http://thinkubator.ccsp.sfu.ca/wikis/xmlProduction/XMLProductionStartWithTheWeb
Project Team Updates
One way of helping to contribute to the project is offering work opportunities for our volunteers, some of whom are unemployed, freelance, and pay for their own health insurance. If you have a job opportunity and need committed workers and creative thinkers, contact us.
We welcome Shmueli Gonzales and Amir Starr Weg to our team of transcribers. Shmuel’s work can already be appreciated here.
Ben Varadi may have graduated Tulane’s Law School (congrats!) but the Tulane Center for Intellectual Property Law & Culture continues to provide the Open Siddur Project with excellent copyright research thanks to Justin A. Levy and an application that Ben devised, the Durationator. Ben’s also created a rather excellent Book Scanner. Ben’s now working for jgrad, a project of the NOLA Jewish federation providing Jewish resources for graduate students and recent college grads.
New Contributions
Application Development (step by step until it’s ready)
We tested and then made public our transliteration engine with eight transliteration tables to choose from including International Phonetic Alphabet, Modern Ashkenazi dialect, and Academy of the Hebrew Language.
Efraim documented and tested his encoding engine on the Singer Siddur.
Work on a replacement for our transcription/proofreading interface on our wiki is beginning. All transcribers are invited to provide input on the design and function of this transcription interface. (We want to make it easier for you to help us transcribe text.) Contact us directly or share your ideas on the opensiddur-talk discussion list.
Communications
We’ve made an effort to separate technical discussion into its own area for non-tech participants and followers of the Open Siddur Project.
Most recently we separated the Live Chat conferences we organize on IRC into separate tech and non-tech sessions. Logs are posted here.
Following his session at Limmud NY in January, Aharon Varady gave a public presentation on the Open Siddur Project at the Academy of Jewish Religon’s Spring Intensive in Riverdale, NY last March. (Other guest speakers included authors Lawrence Hoffman and Jill Hammer).
Aharon gave another public presentation on the value of Open Source for Jewish non-profits at the Future of Jewish Nonprofit Summit late last month in New York City. Afterwards, Aharon was interviewed by Radio613’s co-hosts Avi and Malcha, on CFRC Kingston, Ontario 101.9 FM.
Efraim presented the Open Siddur Project at the NewCAJE conference for Jewish educators. Follow-up thoughts are here.
New Documentation
Our Transcription Rules for transcribing and proofreading text were completely revamped.
Efraim wrote up an introduction to conditional inclusion feature.
Many, many additions, disambiguations, and edits were made to existing pages on the wiki and at opensiddur.org .
To follow our development more regularly, follow our opensiddur RSS feed, twitter feed, and facebook group.
Contributor: the Hierophant
Co-authors: