Resources and Tools

TWINE:
-Good step-by-step intro from a past DH workshop (held in 2019 and led by Kristin Herr): https://dhc.sdsu.edu/twine101/
-Adam Hammond’s “A Total Beginner’s Guide to Twine”
-Step-by-step Youtube tutorials
-Jared Zeider’s Google doc for the workshop (2020): https://drive.google.com/file/d/1xZCf7l_fL65JrPMsxssYrf1AxXmSGZLj/view?usp=sharing It will appear as nonsense in the drive, but once you download the file, you can load it into Twine. You shouldn’t need to download Twine for the workshop, but it is recommended for saving your files afterwards.

SCALAR
tinyurl.com/DHCScalar (Workshop in DHC)
*example “Surfacing” by Nicole Starosielski, Erik Loyer, and Shane Brennan. Design and programming by Erik Loyer

OTHER TOOLS

DH Toychest: Website with list of tools for Digital Humanities project

Inform 7: interactive fiction engine

Popcorn Maker: annotation tool for video. Read about the free tool

Diigo and Scrible, enable users to  bookmark, highlight, and comment on web-content directly on the page in your browser.You can annotate the web– to share your comments or, for the final project, take screenshots of your annotations

Annotation Studio: various ways of annotating and marking up digital documents

 TimeRime: create visual timelines
CamStudio: free recording software

Prezi: motion-enabled version of slide presentation (like PowerPoint)

Between Page and Screen source code.

Visualization Tools:
Textexture: Using this tool you can visualize any text as a network.
Gephi: Make graphs

Neatline: a geotemporal exhibit-builder

RESOURCES @SDSU

-Digital Humanities Center

-DH@SDSU: dh.sdsu.edu