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2018 Keynote Speakers Nominations

10 bytes removed, 17:41, 29 September 2017
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==Jane Doe (example)==
Some pertinent history/biography/hyperlinks that elucidates why Jane would be a good keynote speaker.
==Pamela WrightTerry Brady ==Pamela Wright Terry Brady is a software developer in Seattle working for the UGeorgetown University Library.S. National Archives' first Chief Innovation OfficerTerry is the lead developer for DigitalGeorgetown. She oversees Terry is a committer for the Agency's online public access CatalogDSpace repository platform. Terry has built applications for higher education, webgovernment, social medianon-profit, and authorities programs as well as corporate institutions including LexisNexis and the Innovation Hub. She has hosted coding communities National Archives and worked with other institutions to help Records Administration--including the Agency become a more digital, citizenamazingly handy File-centric institutionAnalyzer. She has Strengthening communities is a goldmine passion of content and adores coders who can do interesting and enlightening things with it. She launched Terry's: he regularly participates in the Citizen Archivist DashboardDSpace Community Advisory Team meetings, which has been a gateway for and initiated the public to engage recent DSpace Users Group meeting hosted by Georgetown University in new ways with our contentAugust of 2017. She is currently collaborating with staff from the Smithsonian Terry does what all developers do, he writes code enthusiastically, and Library of Congress many times for no personal advantage, merely because it's work that needs doing, or is an interesting challenge. His work inspires that same approach in others; his observations on History Hub (see link below)the work we all do will be equally inspiring.
[https://twittergithub.com/PamelaSWterrywbrady/info GitHub][https://github.com/Georgetown-University-Libraries/File-Analyzer File-Analyzer][https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/ DigitalGeorgetown]
[https://historyhub.==Jessica Marie Johnson==Jessica Marie Johnson is an assistant professor of historyat Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.gov/welcome] [https://wwwHer work is focused around radical black feminist praxis in the digital humanities.linkedinOne of her more recent projects is titled "The Codex," a triptych that also functions as an exploration of the Atlantic slave trade by using code and software applications.com/in/pamela-wright-8ab59861]
[http://history.jhu.edu/directory/jessica-johnson/]
[https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/digital-humanities-interview-jessica-marie-johnson/#!]
[http://dh.jmjafrx.com/]
==Veni Kunche==
[https://www.linkedin.com/in/venikunche/ Linkedin]
 
[https://twitter.com/venikunche @venikunche]
 
[http://www.codewithveni.com/ Code with Veni]
Shane studies the history of computing and the impact of digital technology on culture and politics. His dissertation, “Kingdom of Code: Cryptography and the New Privacy” tracks the development of civilian encryption technology and the emergence of cryptography as an academic field of study, the debates over crypto regulation, and the concomitant construction of a new, far more expansive notion of privacy from 1975 to 2000. His perspectives on technology, encryption, and privacy would be especially interesting to a wide audience.
 
[http://scholarslab.org/people/shane-lin/ Shane Lin]
 
[http://scholarslab.org/digital-humanities/the-long-and-messy-history-of-privacy/ Privacy Post]
==Jessica Marie JohnsonPamela Wright==Jessica Marie Johnson Pamela Wright is an assistant professor of history at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimorethe U. Her work is focused around radical black feminist praxis in S. National Archives' first Chief Innovation Officer. She oversees the digital humanitiesAgency's online public access Catalog, web, social media, and authorities programs as well as the Innovation Hub. One of her She has hosted coding communities and worked with other institutions to help the Agency become a more recent projects is titled "The Codexdigital," citizen-centric institution. She has a triptych that also functions as an exploration goldmine of content and adores coders who can do interesting and enlightening things with it. She launched the Atlantic slave trade by using code Citizen Archivist Dashboard, which has been a gateway for the public to engage in new ways with our content. She is currently collaborating with staff from the Smithsonian and software applicationsLibrary of Congress on History Hub (see link below).
[http://history.jhu.edu/directory/jessica-johnson/] [https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/digital-humanities-interview-jessica-marie-johnson/#!] [http://dh.jmjafrxtwitter.com/PamelaSW== Terry Brady ==Terry Brady is a software developer in Seattle working for the Georgetown University Library. Terry is the lead developer for DigitalGeorgetown. Terry is a committer for the DSpace repository platform. Terry has built applications for higher education, government, non-profit, and corporate institutions including LexisNexis and the National Archives and Records Administration--including the amazingly handy File-Analyzer. Strengthening communities is a passion of Terry's: he regularly participates in the DSpace Community Advisory Team meetings, and initiated the recent DSpace Users Group meeting hosted by Georgetown University in August of 2017. Terry does what all developers do, he writes code enthusiastically, and many times for no personal advantage, merely because it's work that needs doing, or is an interesting challenge. His work inspires that same approach in others; his observations on the work we all do will be equally inspiring. [https://githubhistoryhub.comhistory.gov/terrywbrady/info GitHubwelcome] [https://githubwww.linkedin.com/Georgetown-University-Librariesin/Filepamela-Analyzer Filewright-Analyzer] [https://repository.library.georgetown.edu/ DigitalGeorgetown8ab59861]
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