scannade
Scannade is a term used in digital heritage and information science to describe the class of practices and outputs produced by high-resolution scanning of physical objects and spaces, and the ensuing creation of digital models and metadata. In practice, a scannade workflow covers acquisition, processing, and dissemination, yielding models that can be studied, archived, or displayed in virtual environments. The term is relatively new and is used variably across disciplines; it is not standardized by any single governing body.
Origins and usage: The word appears in scholarly and project documentation from the 2010s onward, particularly
Process and components: A typical scannade pipeline begins with data acquisition, employing laser scanners, structured-light systems,
Applications and limitations: Scannade supports archaeology, cultural heritage preservation, architectural documentation, and digital exhibitions. Limitations include