One of the projects that I have been working on this semester has been the development of an online exhibit with the museum lab class in the Historic Preservation department. As this project builds momentum, I am starting to get really excited about the work already done as well as the herculean tasks that still lie ahead. Thus far the students have uploaded over 100 images to their image gallery, which represent each of the ten decades of UMW’s 100 year history. It has has been a treat, thus far, to see this online archive of UMW’s past coalesce into the beginnings of a pictorial narrative. And while the class presently remains hard at work both scanning images and creating an “On-the Wall” exhibit, I am beginning to ramp up a content management system that will allow them to frame their images and text into an organized, cohesive and flexible format for course’s virtual museum.
To accomplish this I am planning on designing a site with typo3. This open-source CMS is by no means simple to work with ( a fact readily acknowledged by anyone working with this program), but it does provide an amazing amount of flexibility that has been luring me in for some time now. I have made some pretty significant strides in template design and implementation over the last couple of months (by far the most difficult tasks when working with typo3), and I feel comfortable enough to start documenting the process for creating templates with typo3 and setting up a system of permissions that will allow the students to use this program as a kind of “text-editor on steroids” to input the particular details of their webpages.

Philip K. Dick Robot Missing!!! Boing Boing reports
The 
Look at our own pushy New Yorker working the angles already! I thought Cathy was the new President for a second … read the whole story on 