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1 2025-02-05T14:09:53-05:00 Paul Vadan f46fd2a7a6d2ab1ecca0ec13c84118eaf61facfa 9 1 plain 2025-02-05T14:09:53-05:00 Paul Vadan f46fd2a7a6d2ab1ecca0ec13c84118eaf61facfaThis page is referenced by:
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Veles: The Data Catalog
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Data security. Data-driven decisions. Data mining. Data science. Big data...
You get the idea: data is everywhere. You consume it, you produce it. But what is it, really? According to the Oxford English Dictionary, we use the word "data" to describe related items of (chiefly numerical) information considered collectively, typically obtained by scientific work and used for reference, analysis, or calculation.
That may or may not resonate with you. Maybe you think of data as structured information. Maybe you think of it as magic or the ultimate source of power in the modern world. However you define it, you will most likely agree that data is a valuable commodity. The better the quality, and the harder it is to obtain, the more it is worth.
Archives and libraries are filled with related items of information, but converting the documentary record of the human past into data that is both usable and meaningful requires labor and expertise (and a lot of coffee).That is where we come in.
We provide freely-accessible, well-documented, utterly fascinating data about the world that was once the Russian Empire to a primarily English-speaking audience. Why do such a thing? It's simple. Our goal is to lower the barrier for spatial analysis so that students, scholars, and members of the public can connect the tsarist past with today's technology.If you find yourself making use of our datasets, or have ideas for a new one, we would love to hear about it. Email imperiia@fas.harvard.edu or hit us up on Twitter @ImperiiaProject.
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