Digitization Database Designing
The original position requirements are a bachelor's degree in history, science, arts, with experience in project management and a particular knowledge of database designs to categorize artworks with a local museum and thousands of miles of film, archival artifacts, and for access that can be recognizable to staff.
Check out local listings, stay in newsletters that post regularly, and begin designing your portfolio on their requirements. This particular listing, I am personally unprepared for, but have experience in certain subjects. The main criteria I want to focus on, is the digitization archive with database design.
Note: I recommend scanning job descriptions of any kind with your children in their becoming age (teenagers) and prepare learning skills for a career. Get excited about wanting to learn a skill, find a way as soon as possible to earn it, and maintain those skills in daily activities. You may not qualify but never turn away from the listing until you know what the job does. You can do it - change your time now and choose wisely. Keep picking out things you want to do and like to refine what you want your career to be upon graduation without losing time, energy, or gratification in work and money spent on a direction away from what you have been wanting for a very long time!
VHS, CD, and MP3 files may be known, but are you familiar with dubbing these files in a digitization format that can render quality, audio, and supply your archive a rich history virtually? The access to the equipment is desirable for any technical historian working on securing incoming artifacts, artwork, and mixed mediums of any kind. How do you restore it and how do you preserve it?
A museum can contain a set number of items that typically can be secured under claims of insurance, historical preservation protections, and local agreements between artist and museum. The space for each item may only provide a certain amount of time, in which, how would you want to keep a part of this history within the walls of the museum - if it were a seasonal gallery?
Scanning, Photography - using angles, lighting, and delicate contact (in some cases), VHS to DVD or Mp4 file dubbing (creating duplicates) and using the departmental staff in history to archive any footnotes of the quality when in contact during and after display. I have witnessed those footnotes useful during the Antiques Roadshow, during auction pricing, they would have a package with the artifact and research the footnotes to validate any concerns or notes from their professional perspective. These are the skills you want to perform this project with to assure your staff can research and be researched using the database you design.
Software - Digitization
At best, you will be using a Macintosh hardware system to coordinate the efforts of preserving the quality of the image. They are best known for graphic design artists, website designers, and adobe has become one of the leading software designers for these specific tasks that you can familiarize yourself now with. The quality of the image, the editing and restoration effects provide a high-quality image that most would use to preserve any piece of artwork. It is also very useful to alter, for future galleries, invitations, and permission to adjust as needed (depending on the copyright).
To be fair, Windows database with SQL is a leading contender for general museum staff to easily navigate its portals and store what they need to find. This is typically a hierarchical system, but it doesn't always have to be. Storing that many artifacts, images, and artworks takes effort and classifying each piece may require attention to the database memory and server you choose to store these precious historical remnants.
Note: I state these because I am familiar with it. If you would recommend a different style, I assume it would take effort to coordinate use by other staff if unfamiliar. Technical software use can be difficult to navigate if not properly maintained with time to adjust.
The photography software is also another episode to invest in. I normally would not, because adobe is requested in online displays for quality and rendering capabilities, but for actual tangible artwork - I would want to validate its authenticity using some form of software that isn't able to duplicate or distort. Also, to protect the image as well.
Database Design
Upon uploading, securing information, and organizing the categories of this project - how would you classify these objects and input description for search queries?
The Business Proposal describing any rules for gallery (seasonal display, schedule, shipment), museum (location, exchange, archival rotation), distribution (sale, terms, and insurance), copyright (year, expiration, maintenance), licensing (details, origination, use), etc. would first be stated within the Project Management. This is the main criteria that anybody involved in the archival and database design will be referencing throughout the project.
The style you use to database, offers insight in future additions that are uncategorized at the time of the original. This is very important since this will be a running catalogue from present to future. The consistency of addition and mapping will be an effective resource that should maintain memory space for hardware maintenance and operating systems. This normally isn't an issue but considering that the quality of the image and the type of artifact it is - could be an issue of the future. Plus, the security keys instilled for certain access, if necessary, can also be implemented.
Database Potential Project
As an artist, I want to invest in my community and the appreciation of art itself by categorizing without the ability to modify the image beyond the uploaded original by qualitative purpose of a professional photographer. This image would be categorized by a database and only applicable to the uploaded software that cannot alter this image - further increasing the virtual image itself to be secured and held in trust. I could then invest in a gallery of database security designed for the museum that would hold these archives intact for its digitization articles and be conceivable upon terms, agreements, license, and local benefits. These would gain status in a professional holding that would benefit the value of museum, artist, community, archival staff, and future investors after.
The art of photography, the museum historian, the software communicative purposes with unified languages and machine learning all have a contribution to decreasing the value of artwork by making it readily available. Mainstream culture is uploading, posting, and distributing free images of sacred temples, sacred objects, one-of-a-kind artworks, and having it viewed from home or with the lack of emotional intelligence that arrives upon its presence. These are not content graphical images that prepare you or request your permission to excuse its fundamental aspirations of society, religion, renaissance, and appreciation of these sorts.
This project is exactly why I am in the Software Developer Program with NWTC, my local education for Information Technology - is all I need. I just need something to gap the integration of what I want and what is already available. How do I make this happen?
The actual software I am looking for would coincide with online currency. However, with so many firmware, hardware, and software integration to be used for unifying any operating system and its financial obligations - it is the world pot of honey at this point. But what a great start at a bank note - using artwork like this.
My actual idea stems from artwork in database for display. A company is surrounded by it, creates innovation, invention, or otherwise a surplus to coordinate an effective gain monetarily and affirms the artistic inspiration to create an investment towards this bank note. These are archived and considered valid by display time within a financial company that does such a thing. This was part of contributing towards what made money valuable by people and not resourceful products that we want to consider in human value that did not degrade or enslave the idea of money as evil. The critique is contributed towards the sale or monetary gain by public to change awareness from habits. (Read that last sentence again - what does this mean? The critique is value to create people who contribute their world perspective on artwork to promote a lifestyle that caters to new goals in people, their intellect, and the sale itself.)
Art is an emotional expression that is measured by personal involvement to act. This is the first harness of intangible value that people intelligently are capable of defining.
Conclusion
Online currency also needs a mathematical design, one that is reliable, explains everything without being encrypted and secure. Factors to consider when online currency of the future contends with personal input. The bank note of museum gallery software and the private sectors of availability provide value in keeping. Being selective with our artwork for the sole purpose of being exposed to only "these" pieces during renovation for innovation can provide an intellectualism unlike before. We need to go hungry in America every so often. It is okay to starve of art. Starve of music. Starve of our families. We do not need to go to war to understand these values in people. Consider it when you look at the next gallery available to you - the time these artists invest, usually and most times underpaid! Can you contribute your starving periods and become inspired for change? And make an impact?
How big?