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Welcome to the DAILP wiki! This page should give you a short introduction to the project, while linking to more detailed documentation about its goals, design, and implementation. See more details on the DAILP website.
DAILP is a community-based digital archive created to continuously support indigenous peoples’ knowledge, interpretations, and representations of the past. Our selection of handwritten documents in the Cherokee syllabary are sourced from the Kilpatrick Collection at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Yale University. These manuscripts have been translated by Cherokee speakers and thoroughly analyzed and annotated by Cherokee linguists in our collective. Moving forward, we hope for DAILP to become a collaborative place for indigenous language learners, speakers, and scholars to translate documents and other media across American Indian languages.
This wiki is broken down into several sections that correspond to major workflows within the project.
- Annotation and Analysis: Details about how language data flows through the system.
- Community-based Design: Workflows for user experience and community-based participatory design within the project
- Technical Design: How the project is built and links to in-depth technical documentation for writing code on DAILP.
- Development Processes: How to make deployments and releases