This webinar discussed digital preservation standards and auditing digital repositories. It covered several standards for digital preservation including OAIS, PREMIS, METS, and BagIt. It described CRL's work testing early audit standards like TRAC and conducting case studies. CRL now aims to certify repositories using ISO 16363 and provide reports to help research communities identify trusted repositories for digital content preservation.
Présentation Archive eXchange Format (AXF) par Front porch Digital - ficam ju...Marc Bourhis
Front Porch Digital provides DIVArchive, a content storage management solution that uses the Archive eXchange Format (AXF) to store, manage, and distribute digital assets over the long term. AXF encapsulates files into self-contained objects that can scale indefinitely and are agnostic to storage technology and file systems. While LTFS is useful for transporting assets, AXF is better suited for long-term preservation due to its support for features like fixity, provenance, and resiliency across multiple storage types and operating systems.
This document discusses risk management and auditing for digital preservation. It addresses establishing a threat model by understanding what is being preserved and for what purpose. Common threats to digital data include physical medium failure, file format obsolescence, and organizational commitment issues. Audit frameworks like TRAC, DRAMBORA, and SPOT can be used to evaluate repositories, while tools like checksums, migration, and emulation can help mitigate specific risks like bitrot and obsolete formats. Determining file formats and testing file integrity is important for digital preservation.
Keepit Course 5: Tools for Assessing Trustworthy RepositoriesJISC KeepIt project
This presentation provides a quick overview of two key, and complementary, tools used to measure trust of digital repositories. First it focusses on Trustworthy Repositories Audit and Certification (TRAC), leading towards another tool, DRAMBORA, that is applied more extensively in the next presentation. The presentation was given as part of the final module of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag ’KeepIt course’ in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
Trustworthiness is a key characteristic that digital repositories must demonstrate. The document discusses how repositories can build trust through organizational, procedural, and technological practices that manage risks and uncertainties. It introduces the DRAMBORA toolkit for assessing trust in repositories.
KeepIt Course 5: DRAMBORA: Risk and Trust and Data Management, by Martin Donn...JISC KeepIt project
This presentation provides an extensive introduction to the Digital Repository Audit Method Based On Risk Assessment
(DRAMBORA). After considering how the ideas of risk and trust might affect digital repositories, the DRAMBORA methodology is applied using two practical exercises. DRAMBORA can also be applied using an interactive Web-based version of the tool, and the presentation provides an illustrated guided tour of this version of the tool. The presentation was given as part of the final module of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. Concluding by comparing DRAMBORA with DAF, the Data Asset Framework, also produced by the DCC, brings the KeepIt course effectively full circle, as the course began in module 1 with DAF. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag ’KeepIt course’ in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
DPE/Planets/CASPAR/nestor
Joint Training Event:
The Preservation challenge: basic concepts and practical applications
March, 23th- 27th 2008
Barcelona, Spain
Christian Keitel
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg and nestor
As more and more artifacts of our cultural heritage and scholarly work product become digitally created and disseminated, long-term preservation becomes increasingly challenging for archives, libraries and other memory organizations. To help these institutions fulfill their mission, software manufacturers and service providers have developed specialized digital preservation solutions for a variety of scholarly and cultural materials. These solutions utilize many of the current standards and best practices for assuring the authenticity, findability, accessibility and usability of digital content.
NISO is pleased to host a 90-minute webinar that will present an overview of several digital preservation standards, describe how preservation is distinct from general repository maintenance, and describe preservation applications in multiple environments.
Metadata, the CARARE aggregation service and 3D ICONS3D ICONS Project
The document discusses the CARARE project, which aims to aggregate cultural heritage metadata from various European organizations and make it available through Europeana. It develops an intermediary metadata schema to help partners map their native schemas to Europeana's requirements. Partners use tools like MINT to map metadata to CARARE's schema, which is then transformed to Europeana's EDM schema for harvesting. While technical challenges remain, the project helps overcome differences in partners' systems to provide enriched metadata at Europeana.
Présentation Archive eXchange Format (AXF) par Front porch Digital - ficam ju...Marc Bourhis
Front Porch Digital provides DIVArchive, a content storage management solution that uses the Archive eXchange Format (AXF) to store, manage, and distribute digital assets over the long term. AXF encapsulates files into self-contained objects that can scale indefinitely and are agnostic to storage technology and file systems. While LTFS is useful for transporting assets, AXF is better suited for long-term preservation due to its support for features like fixity, provenance, and resiliency across multiple storage types and operating systems.
This document discusses risk management and auditing for digital preservation. It addresses establishing a threat model by understanding what is being preserved and for what purpose. Common threats to digital data include physical medium failure, file format obsolescence, and organizational commitment issues. Audit frameworks like TRAC, DRAMBORA, and SPOT can be used to evaluate repositories, while tools like checksums, migration, and emulation can help mitigate specific risks like bitrot and obsolete formats. Determining file formats and testing file integrity is important for digital preservation.
Keepit Course 5: Tools for Assessing Trustworthy RepositoriesJISC KeepIt project
This presentation provides a quick overview of two key, and complementary, tools used to measure trust of digital repositories. First it focusses on Trustworthy Repositories Audit and Certification (TRAC), leading towards another tool, DRAMBORA, that is applied more extensively in the next presentation. The presentation was given as part of the final module of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag ’KeepIt course’ in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
Trustworthiness is a key characteristic that digital repositories must demonstrate. The document discusses how repositories can build trust through organizational, procedural, and technological practices that manage risks and uncertainties. It introduces the DRAMBORA toolkit for assessing trust in repositories.
KeepIt Course 5: DRAMBORA: Risk and Trust and Data Management, by Martin Donn...JISC KeepIt project
This presentation provides an extensive introduction to the Digital Repository Audit Method Based On Risk Assessment
(DRAMBORA). After considering how the ideas of risk and trust might affect digital repositories, the DRAMBORA methodology is applied using two practical exercises. DRAMBORA can also be applied using an interactive Web-based version of the tool, and the presentation provides an illustrated guided tour of this version of the tool. The presentation was given as part of the final module of a 5-module course on digital preservation tools for repository managers, presented by the JISC KeepIt project. Concluding by comparing DRAMBORA with DAF, the Data Asset Framework, also produced by the DCC, brings the KeepIt course effectively full circle, as the course began in module 1 with DAF. For more on this and other presentations in this course look for the tag ’KeepIt course’ in the project blog http://blogs.ecs.soton.ac.uk/keepit/
DPE/Planets/CASPAR/nestor
Joint Training Event:
The Preservation challenge: basic concepts and practical applications
March, 23th- 27th 2008
Barcelona, Spain
Christian Keitel
Landesarchiv Baden-Württemberg and nestor
As more and more artifacts of our cultural heritage and scholarly work product become digitally created and disseminated, long-term preservation becomes increasingly challenging for archives, libraries and other memory organizations. To help these institutions fulfill their mission, software manufacturers and service providers have developed specialized digital preservation solutions for a variety of scholarly and cultural materials. These solutions utilize many of the current standards and best practices for assuring the authenticity, findability, accessibility and usability of digital content.
NISO is pleased to host a 90-minute webinar that will present an overview of several digital preservation standards, describe how preservation is distinct from general repository maintenance, and describe preservation applications in multiple environments.
Metadata, the CARARE aggregation service and 3D ICONS3D ICONS Project
The document discusses the CARARE project, which aims to aggregate cultural heritage metadata from various European organizations and make it available through Europeana. It develops an intermediary metadata schema to help partners map their native schemas to Europeana's requirements. Partners use tools like MINT to map metadata to CARARE's schema, which is then transformed to Europeana's EDM schema for harvesting. While technical challenges remain, the project helps overcome differences in partners' systems to provide enriched metadata at Europeana.
Scalability challenges for distributed video infrastructureZafar Shahid, PhD
Creating an end-to-end streaming video pipeline for VoD and Live is a challenge but it has been well understood and solved. Since video takes lot of resources in terms of bandwidth, compute and memory, there is still a challenge to scale the streaming video pipeline for billions of people. For example, how to handle the video infrastructure for new-year eve, when everyone is sharing their live videos with their near and dear ones, or when it is a goal in soccer world-cup final. In this talk, I will focus on these challenges of video infra structure at scale and how industry is addressing them by using approaches from heterogeneous domains including Machine Learning, Single Processing and Statistical Analysis.
Are you considering digitizing your paper-based assets? If yes, check this presentation which discusses PDF/A. It also talks about the challenges of digitizing and preserving paper-based documents.
Vna for indexing & storing dicom & non dicom objects - peter lange - ibmPeter B. Lange
This document discusses vendor neutral archives (VNA) for indexing and storing DICOM and non-DICOM objects from a chief technology officer's perspective. It describes how VNAs provide a centralized medical content repository that allows access across different vendors and applications while ensuring privacy and compliance. The document highlights considerations for indexing and storing objects in a VNA to manage costs and avoid vendor lock-in. It also discusses various interface standards and delivery models for VNAs.
Webinar: Applying REST to Network Management – An Implementor’s View Tail-f Systems
This webinar gives an introduction to the principles of REST, shows how it can be used to expose programmable APIs on network elements and provides some real world examples from our implementation.
The principles of Representational State Transfer (REST) have gained a strong following since they were described by Roy Fielding in his doctoral dissertation written in 2000. REST’s strength lies in its scalability and generality, allowing it to be used for many types of applications.
The industry has already seen a number of implementations of network management applications that use REST interfaces on the infrastructure management layer, notably OpenStack Quantum and the Sun Cloud API. As a vendor to the vendors, we’ve seen a significant increase in interest around having REST interfaces exposed directly on the network element, be they hardware based or virtual.
http://www.tail-f.com
The document discusses ensuring data integrity in the LDS Church's digital preservation archive (DRPS). It describes the DRPS system architecture which uses multiple copies across locations, automatic replication, and various integrity checks like fixity values and cyclic redundancy checks to ensure data integrity from ingest to permanent tape storage. It highlights how tape storage provides better long-term preservation than disk, though it presents some access challenges, and discusses ongoing efforts to verify archive integrity through periodic reading and drive-level error checking of tapes.
To view this webcast on-demand, visit http://ecast.opensystemsmedia.com/337
How to Minimize Cost and Risk for Developing Safety-Certifiable Systems
Designing modern avionics systems, for manned as well as unmanned aircraft, requires a challenging and unique integration of safety-critical components, including processors, operating systems, communication media and application software. The requirement to meet RTCA DO-178 Level A or other safety certification criteria makes designs for these systems even more demanding.
In this webinar, learn how the use of one common integration platform in your designs lowers development and certification costs and reduces overall project risk. We will discuss testability of distributed systems, how to avoid sources of non-determinism, design alternatives to reliable communication and more.
As an innovator of safety-certifiable communications software based on the world's leading implementation of the OMG Data Distribution Service (DDS), we are working with dozens of teams developing safety-critical distributed systems. Our position renders a unique perspective spanning very different designs that we will share with you during the webinar. The intended audience includes architects and chief engineers for safety-critical systems.
Metadata is essential for managing digital files and provides valuable information for digital preservation. There are two types of metadata - descriptive metadata that describes files' content and technical metadata captured during digitization. When digitizing files, metadata should be embedded in both preservation and access files and technical data captured by the digitizer. For born digital files, original metadata and file structure should be maintained in the preservation copy while access copies can embed metadata. Standards help ensure metadata integrity when files are moved.
Demo Etom Information Strucure solution
Demonstrate personal skill S.Khilevich to develop materials about complex software products.Animated version aviable too.
DPFManager workshop in Barcelona with members of the Official Association of at the Librarians (Col·legi Oficial de Bibliotecaris i Documentalistes de Catalunya – COBDC), to show the functionalities offered by the DPF Manager to check TIFF files.
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the closing segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Eight: Limitations and Potential Solutions, was held on May 23, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the seventh segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session 7: Open Source Language Models, was held on May 16, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the sixth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Six: Text Classification with LLMs, was held on May 9, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fifth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Five: Named Entity Recognition with LLMs, was held on May 2, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fourth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Four: Structured Data and Assistants, was held on April 25, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the third segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Three: Beginning Conversations, was held on April 18, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Kaveh Bazargan of River Valley Technologies, during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Dana Compton of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the second segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Two: Large Language Models, was held on April 11, 2024.
More Related Content
Similar to NISO Webinar: Discoverable, Available, Accessible: Preserving Digital Content
Scalability challenges for distributed video infrastructureZafar Shahid, PhD
Creating an end-to-end streaming video pipeline for VoD and Live is a challenge but it has been well understood and solved. Since video takes lot of resources in terms of bandwidth, compute and memory, there is still a challenge to scale the streaming video pipeline for billions of people. For example, how to handle the video infrastructure for new-year eve, when everyone is sharing their live videos with their near and dear ones, or when it is a goal in soccer world-cup final. In this talk, I will focus on these challenges of video infra structure at scale and how industry is addressing them by using approaches from heterogeneous domains including Machine Learning, Single Processing and Statistical Analysis.
Are you considering digitizing your paper-based assets? If yes, check this presentation which discusses PDF/A. It also talks about the challenges of digitizing and preserving paper-based documents.
Vna for indexing & storing dicom & non dicom objects - peter lange - ibmPeter B. Lange
This document discusses vendor neutral archives (VNA) for indexing and storing DICOM and non-DICOM objects from a chief technology officer's perspective. It describes how VNAs provide a centralized medical content repository that allows access across different vendors and applications while ensuring privacy and compliance. The document highlights considerations for indexing and storing objects in a VNA to manage costs and avoid vendor lock-in. It also discusses various interface standards and delivery models for VNAs.
Webinar: Applying REST to Network Management – An Implementor’s View Tail-f Systems
This webinar gives an introduction to the principles of REST, shows how it can be used to expose programmable APIs on network elements and provides some real world examples from our implementation.
The principles of Representational State Transfer (REST) have gained a strong following since they were described by Roy Fielding in his doctoral dissertation written in 2000. REST’s strength lies in its scalability and generality, allowing it to be used for many types of applications.
The industry has already seen a number of implementations of network management applications that use REST interfaces on the infrastructure management layer, notably OpenStack Quantum and the Sun Cloud API. As a vendor to the vendors, we’ve seen a significant increase in interest around having REST interfaces exposed directly on the network element, be they hardware based or virtual.
http://www.tail-f.com
The document discusses ensuring data integrity in the LDS Church's digital preservation archive (DRPS). It describes the DRPS system architecture which uses multiple copies across locations, automatic replication, and various integrity checks like fixity values and cyclic redundancy checks to ensure data integrity from ingest to permanent tape storage. It highlights how tape storage provides better long-term preservation than disk, though it presents some access challenges, and discusses ongoing efforts to verify archive integrity through periodic reading and drive-level error checking of tapes.
To view this webcast on-demand, visit http://ecast.opensystemsmedia.com/337
How to Minimize Cost and Risk for Developing Safety-Certifiable Systems
Designing modern avionics systems, for manned as well as unmanned aircraft, requires a challenging and unique integration of safety-critical components, including processors, operating systems, communication media and application software. The requirement to meet RTCA DO-178 Level A or other safety certification criteria makes designs for these systems even more demanding.
In this webinar, learn how the use of one common integration platform in your designs lowers development and certification costs and reduces overall project risk. We will discuss testability of distributed systems, how to avoid sources of non-determinism, design alternatives to reliable communication and more.
As an innovator of safety-certifiable communications software based on the world's leading implementation of the OMG Data Distribution Service (DDS), we are working with dozens of teams developing safety-critical distributed systems. Our position renders a unique perspective spanning very different designs that we will share with you during the webinar. The intended audience includes architects and chief engineers for safety-critical systems.
Metadata is essential for managing digital files and provides valuable information for digital preservation. There are two types of metadata - descriptive metadata that describes files' content and technical metadata captured during digitization. When digitizing files, metadata should be embedded in both preservation and access files and technical data captured by the digitizer. For born digital files, original metadata and file structure should be maintained in the preservation copy while access copies can embed metadata. Standards help ensure metadata integrity when files are moved.
Demo Etom Information Strucure solution
Demonstrate personal skill S.Khilevich to develop materials about complex software products.Animated version aviable too.
DPFManager workshop in Barcelona with members of the Official Association of at the Librarians (Col·legi Oficial de Bibliotecaris i Documentalistes de Catalunya – COBDC), to show the functionalities offered by the DPF Manager to check TIFF files.
Similar to NISO Webinar: Discoverable, Available, Accessible: Preserving Digital Content (9)
This presentation was provided by Racquel Jemison, Ph.D., Christina MacLaughlin, Ph.D., and Paulomi Majumder. Ph.D., all of the American Chemical Society, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the closing segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Eight: Limitations and Potential Solutions, was held on May 23, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the seventh segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session 7: Open Source Language Models, was held on May 16, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the sixth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Six: Text Classification with LLMs, was held on May 9, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fifth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Five: Named Entity Recognition with LLMs, was held on May 2, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the fourth segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Four: Structured Data and Assistants, was held on April 25, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the third segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Three: Beginning Conversations, was held on April 18, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Kaveh Bazargan of River Valley Technologies, during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Dana Compton of the American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), during the NISO webinar "Sustainability in Publishing." The event was held April 17, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the second segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session Two: Large Language Models, was held on April 11, 2024.
This presentation was provided by Teresa Hazen of the University of Arizona, Geoff Morse of Northwestern University. and Ken Varnum of the University of Michigan, during the Spring ODI Conformance Statement Workshop for Libraries. This event was held on April 9, 2024
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, during the opening segment of the NISO training series "AI & Prompt Design." Session One: Introduction to Machine Learning, was held on April 4, 2024.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the eight and final session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session eight, "Building Data Driven Applications" was held on Thursday, December 7, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the seventh session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session seven, "Vector Databases and Semantic Searching" was held on Thursday, November 30, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the sixth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session six, "Text Mining Techniques" was held on Thursday, November 16, 2023.
This presentation was provided by William Mattingly of the Smithsonian Institution, for the fifth session of NISO's 2023 Training Series on Text and Data Mining. Session five, "Text Processing for Library Data" was held on Thursday, November 9, 2023.
This presentation was provided by Todd Carpenter, Executive Director, during the NISO webinar on "Strategic Planning." The event was held virtually on November 8, 2023.
More from National Information Standards Organization (NISO) (20)
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
78. Meeting the Expectations of the
Community : CRL & the Auditing
of Digital Repositories
Marie Waltz
Center for Research Libraries
79. What is the Center for Research Libraries
(CRL)
• A consortium of over 260 College and
University Library’s, primarily in the U.S.
and Canada.
• Our members have an interest in auditing
and certification because they are
investing in digital repositories.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
11/28/2007 Practices & Challenges in Preservation
80. Research libraries are changing...content
is no longer on library shelves
•The collections of 80% of U.S. research libraries are duplicating the contents
of other research libraries. Most of what is owned will be digitized within the
next ten years.
•Google has digitized more than 12 million volumes.
•Born digital material is now the norm for many types of academic materials
(course syllabi, articles, and many manuscripts submitted to publishers.)
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
81. CRL & Digital Preservation
2002 - 2004 – Political Communications
Web Archiving Project
2005 - 2006 – Test audits of TRAC
2008 - 2010 – NSF Case Studies
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
82. CRL & Test Audits using TRAC
RLG/CRL Mellon Foundation Project to
audits digital repositories
– ICPSR, Portico, KB, LOCKSS
– Tested the TRAC metrics
– Understanding of the auditing process.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
83. CRL & NSF Case Studies
• Looked at eight organizations of various
sizes who house digital content
• Gave us a broader understanding of what
makes a “successful” organization
• Allowed us to see how technology
decisions effect a repository.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
84. Current Digital Preservation Projects at
CRL
• Certifying digital repositories of interest to
members.
• Participation in establishment of ISO
16363
• Human Rights Archives & Documentation.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
85. NISO Presentation
What is a Trusted Digital Repository?
A trusted digital repository is one whose
mission is to provide reliable, long-term
access to managed digital resources to its
designated community, now and in the
future
– Trusted Digital Repositories : Attributes and
Responsibilities, An RLG-OCLC Report (RLG, 2002)
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
86. NISO Presentation
Why Auditing?
An audit establishes the soundness and
dependability of a repository.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
87. NISO Presentation
Auditing a Digital Repository
• Advisory Panel
• Audit Criteria
• Time table
• Standards in auditing
• Certification and reporting to community
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
88. Current Advisory Panel
• Martha Brogan (Chair) • Anne Pottier
Director of Collection Development & Associate University Librarian
Management McMaster University
University of Pennsylvania
• Oya Y. Rieger
• Winston Atkins Associate University Librarian for
Preservation Officer Information Technologies
Duke University Cornell University
• William Parod • Perry Willett
Senior Repository Developer Digital Preservation Services Manager
Northwestern University Libraries California Digital Library
• Mark Phillips
Assistant Dean for Digital Libraries
University of North Texas Libraries
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
89. NISO Presentation
Criteria
• Advisory Panel
• ISO 16363 (TDR) / TRAC
• Community feedback
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
90. NISO Presentation
Timetable for an Audit
1. Logistics for the audit
2. Request for Documentation
3. Identify activities, policies etc. of key
significance for preservation
4. Evaluation of Repository (includes site visit)
5. Review findings with panel
6. Report findings
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
91. NISO Presentation
Standards Used in Auditing
• Metadata Standards, Dublin Core, Content
Standard for Digital Geospatial Metadata
(CSDGM)
• Technical Standards, ISO 27001
• Data and format standards, PDF/A, etc.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
92. NISO Presentation
Certification
• Means the Repository is “Trusted”
• We report findings to the Research
Community
• Considerations for: Length of Certification
and Re-Certification
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
93. NISO Presentation
Certification of HathiTrust& Portico
• More information about preservation on
their websites
• Assurance they are adhering to standards
and preservation strategies
• Assurance that changes will take
preservation into account
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
94. NISO Presentation
ISO Standard 16363
• Work on the standard: PTAB Group
• Test audits
• Future plans for auditing using ISO 16363
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
95. NISO Presentation
Test Audits of ISO 16363
• May-July 2011. Tested six digital
repositories, three in the U.S. and three in
Europe.
• Future plans for auditing using ISO 16363.
– European Framework for Certification
and Auditing.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
96. NISO Presentation
Future Plans for CRL Auditing
• Use ISO 16363
• Audit repositories of interest to academic
and independent researchers in the United
States and Canada.
• Encourage community feedback
• Become a resource for information about
digital repositories
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
97. NISO Presentation
Community involvement
• Without community feedback we will not
be successful at targeting our audits
• We want to audit repositories of interest to
academic and independent researchers.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
98. NISO Presentation
CRL is becoming a Resource for
Information about Digital Repositories
• Global Resources Forum (GRF) Reviews
and Profiles
• Audit reports
• Webinars
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
99. NISO Presentation
Summary
CRL will continue to audit digital repositories
of interest on behalf of our members using
ISO 16363.
Speaker: Marie Waltz
Practices & Challenges in Preservation
Join 15 minutes early.Close everything that might ding: yammer, AIM, rescue time, Outlook, etc.Undock the Chat and Questions and move them over to the left hand screen.Mute my phone and turn cell to alarm and BB off.Felicity starts the broadcast. Until then, the users will see the Go To Webinar entrance screen and hear silence.The meeting will be recorded. Send Felicity my polls.--Thank you Pamela.Excited to talk to you about some of the research and analysis we’ve done in this area.Questions … happy to take questions. Tricky to keep an eye on both. If I miss one while going through, I’ll catch it at the end. Also happy to take additional questions by email or phone after the fact.
Archive Service product manager for Portico and ITHAKA as a whole.I like to describe what I do as problem solving … from relatively high level archival policy setting to help figuring out what to do with particular files (or rather, teaching folks how to think about what to do with particular files).
General advice …Set your policies first, make design and implementation decisions based upon your strategies. Use standards if they will help you.If you choose not to follow standards, make sure you can accept them both at import and export.
Mind Map …Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
On my white board …I teach classes on this to inculcate new hires …Emphasize long-term before clicking into key goals …
Standards around receiptStandards around metadata to add/subtract/modify during ingestStandards around files during ingestStandards around archive management
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
there must be preservation planningthe archive requires ongoing administrationcontent in the form of files and metadata about the files must come into the archivecontent in the form of files and metadata about the files must go out of the archivethe archive is not the hardware or software—rather the hardware and software are elements of the archive, which includes activities performed by peoplethe original producer of the content and the eventual users of the content must have input into the ongoing management of the archiveat its very base, the preserved information consists of the content to be archived and metadata about the content—both of which are required for long-term preservation.
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Must describe the packaging, includes abbreviated DMD.The Preservation and Packaging MD file is the thing that will let you manage the content over the long term.
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
Wide World of standards, I’m going to stick with the ones we use or have seriously considered …
General advice …Set your policies first, make design and implementation decisions based upon your strategies. Use standards if they will help you.If you choose not to follow standards, make sure you can accept them both at import and export.
Change presenter to Pamela when done.Stay on afterward.
Community knowledge sharing on technical and business decisions:FormatsRisksPreservation plans and actions
sustainable digital preservation services are possible only when combine with access services.Although access to information tomorrow depends on preservation actions taken today, without access there is no need for preservation.This is why is was crucial to make the distribution model as optimized as possible.