2019 Volume 3 Issue 3 Pages 292-294
"Digital Archiving and Visualization" examples are not always along the common design guideline, but they are produced one after another by the creativeness of various creators emerging from rising technology, and continue to evolve. In this special issue, In order to "visualize" such present situation, I will introduce examples: visualization of public data archive by a researcher, visualization of data of a university library by designer, visualization of big data by researchers in an enterprise, VR contents of Hiroshima before and after exposure by high school student team, and coloring practice of black and white photo data using AI by collaboration of the author and a high school student.