Presentació de la Barbara Sierman (National Library of the Netherlands) a les jornades "Biblioteques patrimonials: conservant el futur, construint el passat"
organitzades per la Biblioteca de l’Ateneu Barcelonès el 24 de novembre de 2010
IIIF at europeana, IIIF conference, Vatican, 2017Nuno Freire
This document summarizes Europeana's work to aggregate metadata from cultural heritage institutions using the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). It describes Europeana's goals of making over 54 million digitized objects discoverable. Case studies were conducted with partners to test crawling IIIF services and aggregating metadata. Ongoing work involves representing metadata in Schema.org and using linked data notifications. Future collaboration opportunities are discussed to further test IIIF for metadata aggregation across Europeana's network.
Rebecca Grant, Kathryn Cassidy, Marta Bustillo - Implementing Orphan Works Le...dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant (Digital Repository of Ireland) Kathryn Cassidy (Digital Repository of Ireland) and Marta Bustillo (Trinity College Dublin) at Open Repositories, Dublin on 14 June 2016. The presentation gives an overview of the EU Orphan Works Directive and its implementation in Ireland, and discusses how the Digital Repository of Ireland adapted its workflows and UI to allow the publication of registered Orphan Works.
Developing KB online services... for a changeOlaf Janssen
In this presentation Olaf Janssen - project manager for the national library of the Netherlands - talks about developing web services in a rapidly changing information landscape.
Rebecca Grant, Sharon Webb - Preserving Ireland's Digital Cultural Identity T...dri_ireland
The Digital Repository of Ireland project aimed to preserve Ireland's digital cultural identity by ingesting collections related to the 1912-1922 Irish centenaries. They issued an open call for relevant digitized collections and worked with three winners to prepare the collections for the repository. The project highlighted major resourcing issues for Irish archives and a need for more training, especially in digital preservation and metadata standards. Next steps include making digitization equipment available and providing additional training to stakeholders.
DRI Community Forum - Current Publicationsdri_ireland
Presentation given by Kevin Long, Digital Archivist at Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, reviewing current and upcoming DRI publications
Presentation given by Dr Natalie Harrower, Director of Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, welcoming participating stakeholders and other attendees and providing an overview of the day.
LD4 conference 2020 The Use of Linked Data at the ISSN International CentreISSN International Centre
1) The ISSN International Centre provides identifiers for continuing resources and serials and shares data about these publications using linked open data to enrich information and interconnect with other datasets.
2) They maintain a portal with metadata on nearly 2.4 million publications and work to align their data model with standards like Schema.org and share information with other organizations through their API and datasets on Wikidata.
3) Current projects include sharing ISSN data with Wikidata, developing actionable identifiers that resolve to archived content, and testing additional identifiers like ARKs to further link publications and related information on the web of data.
IIIF at europeana, IIIF conference, Vatican, 2017Nuno Freire
This document summarizes Europeana's work to aggregate metadata from cultural heritage institutions using the International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF). It describes Europeana's goals of making over 54 million digitized objects discoverable. Case studies were conducted with partners to test crawling IIIF services and aggregating metadata. Ongoing work involves representing metadata in Schema.org and using linked data notifications. Future collaboration opportunities are discussed to further test IIIF for metadata aggregation across Europeana's network.
Rebecca Grant, Kathryn Cassidy, Marta Bustillo - Implementing Orphan Works Le...dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant (Digital Repository of Ireland) Kathryn Cassidy (Digital Repository of Ireland) and Marta Bustillo (Trinity College Dublin) at Open Repositories, Dublin on 14 June 2016. The presentation gives an overview of the EU Orphan Works Directive and its implementation in Ireland, and discusses how the Digital Repository of Ireland adapted its workflows and UI to allow the publication of registered Orphan Works.
Developing KB online services... for a changeOlaf Janssen
In this presentation Olaf Janssen - project manager for the national library of the Netherlands - talks about developing web services in a rapidly changing information landscape.
Rebecca Grant, Sharon Webb - Preserving Ireland's Digital Cultural Identity T...dri_ireland
The Digital Repository of Ireland project aimed to preserve Ireland's digital cultural identity by ingesting collections related to the 1912-1922 Irish centenaries. They issued an open call for relevant digitized collections and worked with three winners to prepare the collections for the repository. The project highlighted major resourcing issues for Irish archives and a need for more training, especially in digital preservation and metadata standards. Next steps include making digitization equipment available and providing additional training to stakeholders.
DRI Community Forum - Current Publicationsdri_ireland
Presentation given by Kevin Long, Digital Archivist at Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, reviewing current and upcoming DRI publications
Presentation given by Dr Natalie Harrower, Director of Digital Repository of Ireland at the 2017 DRI Community Forum, welcoming participating stakeholders and other attendees and providing an overview of the day.
LD4 conference 2020 The Use of Linked Data at the ISSN International CentreISSN International Centre
1) The ISSN International Centre provides identifiers for continuing resources and serials and shares data about these publications using linked open data to enrich information and interconnect with other datasets.
2) They maintain a portal with metadata on nearly 2.4 million publications and work to align their data model with standards like Schema.org and share information with other organizations through their API and datasets on Wikidata.
3) Current projects include sharing ISSN data with Wikidata, developing actionable identifiers that resolve to archived content, and testing additional identifiers like ARKs to further link publications and related information on the web of data.
Inmagic user group meeting Melbourne june 2011Peter Neish
The document discusses a meeting of the Victorian Parliamentary Library Inmagic User Group. It provides information on who the library's clients are, the library's services, and how it uses various electronic systems and databases like DB/Textworks. It also introduces jQuery, describing it as a JavaScript framework that allows dynamic webpage updates without reloading and includes pre-built widgets and plugins.
This document discusses linked data and a project by the Parliamentary Library and Information Service to implement linked data. It describes linked data and its use in libraries and government. It outlines the linked data workflow used, including preparing data using the Popolo ontology, cleaning and reconciling data, and publishing to a triple store and embedding in documents. The benefits realized include being able to perform complex queries across linked datasets and providing related external linked data.
The document provides information on the services and products offered by the Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS). ICOS generates high quality greenhouse gas observation data from over 130 monitoring stations across Europe. It processes data through a standardized pipeline from raw measurements to quality-controlled data products. ICOS also coordinates the research infrastructure, provides data management and access services, and communicates scientific findings to inform policymaking and public understanding of climate change.
Presentation on ‘Web Archiving at the NLI', delivered by Maria Ryan from the National Library of Ireland as part of the DRI webinar 'Using Digital Archives for Social Sciences Research', which took place on 20 April 2021.
This document provides an overview of open data and data sharing in archaeology. It discusses intellectual property rights related to archaeological data, copyright issues, open access and open data principles. The benefits of data sharing are outlined, such as increased visibility, verification of research and enabling new collaborations. However, barriers to sharing such as lack of incentives and concerns about misuse are also covered. The document provides guidance on using open licenses, depositing data in repositories, and attributing data to maximize the benefits of open sharing practices.
Martin Donnelly - Digital Data Curation at the Digital Curation Centre (DH2016)dri_ireland
Presentation given by Martin Donnelly, Senior Institutional Support Officer at the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), as part of the panel session “Digital data sharing: the opportunities and challenges of opening research” at the Digital Humanities conference, Krakow, 15 July 2016. The presentation looks at digital data curation at the DCC.
This document discusses how businesses manage digital documents through their lifecycle. It covers the initial storage and online access of documents, workflows used for complex business processes like transactions and case files, records management to distinguish documents from official records, and the need for integration across applications to manage a document's full lifecycle. The conclusion is that businesses need a single, integrated solution that automates processes to eliminate the use of separate applications and better manage documents from start to finish.
The document describes FREME, a framework for smart and standards-based digital content solutions. FREME provides enrichment services including machine translation, semantic enrichment using linked data, and predictive analytics. It has a set of graphical and software interfaces designed around business cases. The document outlines several FREME demonstrations taking place at an event including a semantic book, a CKEditor plugin, and content personalization. It also discusses how FREME can be used to predict what content to publish next based on trends and audience interests.
Rebecca Grant - DH research data: identification and challenges (DH2016)dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant as part of the panel session “Digital data sharing: the opportunities and challenges of opening research” at the Digital Humanities conference, Krakow, 15 July 2016. This paper “DH research data: identification and challenges” provided an introduction to concepts of research data in the digital humanities, including accepted definitions of what constitutes research data in a DH context.
This document summarizes a presentation on using digital audio archives to promote performance studies. It discusses two projects - the Baudelaire Song Project and Visualising Voice. The Baudelaire Song Project analyzes French art songs set to the poetry of Baudelaire over four years with AHRC funding. Visualising Voice uses a Europeana Research Award to create a public-facing web interface for digital audio analysis. Both projects use open-access digital archives but face challenges regarding language barriers, audio quality, copyright and data storage.
Big Science isn't just for physics - PoliMedia - Automatically Linking Politi...Martijn Kleppe
Slides presented during the session 'Big Science isn't just for physics' during the ESOF 2016 conference in Manchester, UK. More info on the session at http://www.esof.eu/the-programme/event-information/big-science-not-just-physics.html
Presentada en la Jornada Internacional sobre Archivos Web y Depósito Legal Electrónico, en la Biblioteca Nacional de España (BNE), el día 9 de julio de 2013.
WEBINAR: Open Research Data in Horizon 2020OpenAIRE
The document discusses a webinar about open research data in the Horizon 2020 program. It provides information on the European Commission's open research data pilot, including details on the flexible nature of the pilot, which areas are participating, and how projects can partially or fully opt-out. It also covers what a data management plan is, how to write one, and what it should include regarding FAIR data principles and making data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable. Recommendations are provided on issues like metadata, file formats, storage, and where to deposit data for long-term preservation and access.
Using Wikidata as an Authority for the SowiDataNet Research Data RepositoryJoachim Neubert
Wikidata provides a comprehensive authority for geographical entities that can be used by the SowiDataNet Research Data Repository. Wikidata contains countries, German states, the European Union, and geographical regions without needing to create a custom authority. A custom query can access just the required geographical data items from Wikidata, gaining identifiers, multilingual labels, links to other identifiers, and abundant information from Wikipedia with minimal cost and effort compared to maintaining a custom authority.
EKAW2014 Keynote: Ontology Engineering for and by the Masses: are we already ...Oscar Corcho
Presentation for one of the keynotes at EKAW2014, where I talked about the need to lower the barrier for ontology development for those who have no experience with ontologies.
This document summarizes a presentation on recent developments in cataloging standards and practices, including RDA, Bibframe, and linked data. The presentation discusses how standards like RDA and FRBR are moving cataloging towards a more entity-centric model based on semantic web principles. It also outlines proposals to encode library metadata as linked open data using the Resource Description Framework (RDF) to represent bibliographic records as sets of semantic triples and link them to external datasets. The goal is to transform library data into a true "Web of data" rather than just making it available on the traditional document-based web.
Este documento explora la relación entre imágenes y texto. Discuten que las imágenes pueden ser consideradas como un tipo de texto, y viceversa. También examinan cómo las imágenes pueden surgir de textos literarios, y cómo los textos a menudo surgen en respuesta a preguntas planteadas por imágenes visuales. El documento utiliza numerosos ejemplos de obras de arte para ilustrar estas ideas.
Inmagic user group meeting Melbourne june 2011Peter Neish
The document discusses a meeting of the Victorian Parliamentary Library Inmagic User Group. It provides information on who the library's clients are, the library's services, and how it uses various electronic systems and databases like DB/Textworks. It also introduces jQuery, describing it as a JavaScript framework that allows dynamic webpage updates without reloading and includes pre-built widgets and plugins.
This document discusses linked data and a project by the Parliamentary Library and Information Service to implement linked data. It describes linked data and its use in libraries and government. It outlines the linked data workflow used, including preparing data using the Popolo ontology, cleaning and reconciling data, and publishing to a triple store and embedding in documents. The benefits realized include being able to perform complex queries across linked datasets and providing related external linked data.
The document provides information on the services and products offered by the Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS). ICOS generates high quality greenhouse gas observation data from over 130 monitoring stations across Europe. It processes data through a standardized pipeline from raw measurements to quality-controlled data products. ICOS also coordinates the research infrastructure, provides data management and access services, and communicates scientific findings to inform policymaking and public understanding of climate change.
Presentation on ‘Web Archiving at the NLI', delivered by Maria Ryan from the National Library of Ireland as part of the DRI webinar 'Using Digital Archives for Social Sciences Research', which took place on 20 April 2021.
This document provides an overview of open data and data sharing in archaeology. It discusses intellectual property rights related to archaeological data, copyright issues, open access and open data principles. The benefits of data sharing are outlined, such as increased visibility, verification of research and enabling new collaborations. However, barriers to sharing such as lack of incentives and concerns about misuse are also covered. The document provides guidance on using open licenses, depositing data in repositories, and attributing data to maximize the benefits of open sharing practices.
Martin Donnelly - Digital Data Curation at the Digital Curation Centre (DH2016)dri_ireland
Presentation given by Martin Donnelly, Senior Institutional Support Officer at the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), as part of the panel session “Digital data sharing: the opportunities and challenges of opening research” at the Digital Humanities conference, Krakow, 15 July 2016. The presentation looks at digital data curation at the DCC.
This document discusses how businesses manage digital documents through their lifecycle. It covers the initial storage and online access of documents, workflows used for complex business processes like transactions and case files, records management to distinguish documents from official records, and the need for integration across applications to manage a document's full lifecycle. The conclusion is that businesses need a single, integrated solution that automates processes to eliminate the use of separate applications and better manage documents from start to finish.
The document describes FREME, a framework for smart and standards-based digital content solutions. FREME provides enrichment services including machine translation, semantic enrichment using linked data, and predictive analytics. It has a set of graphical and software interfaces designed around business cases. The document outlines several FREME demonstrations taking place at an event including a semantic book, a CKEditor plugin, and content personalization. It also discusses how FREME can be used to predict what content to publish next based on trends and audience interests.
Rebecca Grant - DH research data: identification and challenges (DH2016)dri_ireland
Presentation made by Rebecca Grant as part of the panel session “Digital data sharing: the opportunities and challenges of opening research” at the Digital Humanities conference, Krakow, 15 July 2016. This paper “DH research data: identification and challenges” provided an introduction to concepts of research data in the digital humanities, including accepted definitions of what constitutes research data in a DH context.
This document summarizes a presentation on using digital audio archives to promote performance studies. It discusses two projects - the Baudelaire Song Project and Visualising Voice. The Baudelaire Song Project analyzes French art songs set to the poetry of Baudelaire over four years with AHRC funding. Visualising Voice uses a Europeana Research Award to create a public-facing web interface for digital audio analysis. Both projects use open-access digital archives but face challenges regarding language barriers, audio quality, copyright and data storage.
Big Science isn't just for physics - PoliMedia - Automatically Linking Politi...Martijn Kleppe
Slides presented during the session 'Big Science isn't just for physics' during the ESOF 2016 conference in Manchester, UK. More info on the session at http://www.esof.eu/the-programme/event-information/big-science-not-just-physics.html
Presentada en la Jornada Internacional sobre Archivos Web y Depósito Legal Electrónico, en la Biblioteca Nacional de España (BNE), el día 9 de julio de 2013.
WEBINAR: Open Research Data in Horizon 2020OpenAIRE
The document discusses a webinar about open research data in the Horizon 2020 program. It provides information on the European Commission's open research data pilot, including details on the flexible nature of the pilot, which areas are participating, and how projects can partially or fully opt-out. It also covers what a data management plan is, how to write one, and what it should include regarding FAIR data principles and making data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable. Recommendations are provided on issues like metadata, file formats, storage, and where to deposit data for long-term preservation and access.
Using Wikidata as an Authority for the SowiDataNet Research Data RepositoryJoachim Neubert
Wikidata provides a comprehensive authority for geographical entities that can be used by the SowiDataNet Research Data Repository. Wikidata contains countries, German states, the European Union, and geographical regions without needing to create a custom authority. A custom query can access just the required geographical data items from Wikidata, gaining identifiers, multilingual labels, links to other identifiers, and abundant information from Wikipedia with minimal cost and effort compared to maintaining a custom authority.
EKAW2014 Keynote: Ontology Engineering for and by the Masses: are we already ...Oscar Corcho
Presentation for one of the keynotes at EKAW2014, where I talked about the need to lower the barrier for ontology development for those who have no experience with ontologies.
This document summarizes a presentation on recent developments in cataloging standards and practices, including RDA, Bibframe, and linked data. The presentation discusses how standards like RDA and FRBR are moving cataloging towards a more entity-centric model based on semantic web principles. It also outlines proposals to encode library metadata as linked open data using the Resource Description Framework (RDF) to represent bibliographic records as sets of semantic triples and link them to external datasets. The goal is to transform library data into a true "Web of data" rather than just making it available on the traditional document-based web.
Este documento explora la relación entre imágenes y texto. Discuten que las imágenes pueden ser consideradas como un tipo de texto, y viceversa. También examinan cómo las imágenes pueden surgir de textos literarios, y cómo los textos a menudo surgen en respuesta a preguntas planteadas por imágenes visuales. El documento utiliza numerosos ejemplos de obras de arte para ilustrar estas ideas.
Projecte Almirall : portal de pensament i cultura del segle XIX Ateneu Barcelonès
Presentació de Lluís Vicente (director de la Biblioteca de l'Ateneu Barcelonès) a les jornades "Biblioteques patrimonials: conservant el futur, construint el passat"
organitzades per la Biblioteca de l’Ateneu Barcelonès el 24 de novembre de 2010
Presentació de Montse Sampietro (Departament educatiu - Àrea de Cultura. Fundació "la Caixa) a les jornades "Biblioteques patrimonials: conservant el futur, construint el passat" organitzades per la Biblioteca de l’Ateneu Barcelonès el 24 de novembre de 2010
20yrs: 2007 Brussels Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of...Neil Beagrie
“Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change” , a conference keynote from 2007, available now on Slideshare is the ninth of 12 presentations I’ve selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015.
This presentation was the opening keynote to a conference in 2007 held by the Belgian Association of Documentation (BDA) to celebrate its 60th anniversary. It dates from my time at the British Library.
The conference theme was "Europe facing the challenge of the long term conservation of digitalised archives". My keynote synthesised many of the topics I was focussing on at the time (and have featured in some of my earlier slide shares in this series) including encouraging University libraries to engage more actively with research data management in the sciences, to begin developing digital special collections of individuals, and to support international efforts to ensure continuing access and preservation of e-Journals as part of the scholarly record. In addition, given the European focus I briefly covered some of the major European initiatives in digital preservation at that time.
I have selected this presentation as one of the 12 in this series, not only as it is synthesising these key themes but also because it includes some thoughts on whether digital preservation needed to be evolution or revolution (or a bit of both) for libraries and archives.
1. Managing digital collections presents new challenges for libraries as collections become more hybrid in nature, incorporating both physical and born-digital materials.
2. The Bodleian Library's futureArch project aims to transform its capacity for managing hybrid archives over three years by establishing new workflows, training staff, and developing infrastructure like a digital archive system.
3. Personal digital collections are an emerging issue as individuals increasingly capture their lives digitally; the Bodleian must adapt to maintain its role as a repository and establish trust with creators of these collections.
UKOLN is a national centre of expertise in digital information management located at the University of Bath. This document provides an overview of UKOLN and the speaker, along with resources for digital preservation. It then outlines sources of additional information on topics like digitization planning, selection of materials, and ensuring long-term access. Suggested next steps include arming oneself with knowledge about demand, benefits, costs and long-term sustainability to inform discussions and approaches regarding digitization projects.
Digital Preservation: Other Sources of InformationMarieke Guy
Digital Preservation: Other Sources of Information - talk given by Marieke Guy, UKOLN, at Approaches to Digitisation course run by Research Libraries UK at the British Library, Wednesday 9th February 2011.
Preservation Issues:Other Sources of Information and Next StepsMarieke Guy
Preservation Issues:Other Sources of Information and Next Steps - presentation given by Marieke Guy, UKOLN at RLUK Approaches to Digitisation day at British Library, Wednesday 9th February 2011
From Beowulf to the Beatles: British Library Digital Activities (21-01-10)Richard Davies
The document discusses the British Library's efforts to digitize its vast collection of over 150 linear kilometers of material. It provides examples of digitized books, manuscripts, newspapers, journals, sound recordings, videos, and born-digital content that have been made available online. It also outlines the challenges of ongoing digitization projects, such as funding, storage, sustainability, and technical standards.
An Introduction to digital preservation at the Library of Congresslljohnston
Introduction to digital preservation initiatives at the Library of Congress and the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program
The document discusses the Bodleian Library's efforts to address the challenges of preserving personal digital collections. It notes the rapid growth of personal digital media and the need to adapt archival practices. The Bodleian's project, called futureArch, aims to transform its capacity for hybrid archives over three years by establishing workflows, roles, infrastructure, and access methods for born-digital materials. FutureArch will help the Bodleian better preserve, process, catalogue, and provide access to creators' digital archives.
Developing a national digital library stapel - meijers 20160302Enno Meijers
In 2015, the Koninklijke Bibliotheek (KB) became legally responsible for the digital infrastructure of the Dutch public libraries.
The KB wants to offer a platform where people and information come together. Their most important task for the years to come is the development of a national digital library - together with their partners in the network.
In this session, representatives from the KB will present their approach towards the Dutch digital library infrastructure. They will address some issues and welcome input from colleague librarians that are facing the same challenges.
The document discusses digitization efforts at the British Library and other national libraries in Europe. It notes that while digitization projects have created valuable digital resources, the vast majority of collections still need to be digitized. Ongoing improvements in technology could eventually make it feasible to digitize entire library holdings and make the world's knowledge universally accessible.
Seoul, Republic of Korea: Libraries as a Catalyst for Economic Growth and Com...San Antonio Public Library
The document summarizes the development of the National Digital Library of Korea, including its goals of providing integrated online and offline access to digital information resources and improving public access to knowledge. It describes the library's digital collections and services, such as its digital portal and information commons physical spaces. The document also outlines the library's efforts to build digital collections through purchasing commercial databases, collecting publicly available online resources, and legislating the collection of domestic online data. It discusses the library's plans to expand access through alliances with smaller libraries and increasing digital content offerings.
An introduction to the Scottish Archive Network, including its benefits, issues and lessons learnt. Part of the "Electric Connections 2008: Collaborating on Content" conference.
Facilitating digital research in the humanities: from local services to Europ...Sally Chambers
This presentation was given as part of the 'Séminaire Européen de l’Ecole doctorale' on 'Les Infrastructures de la recherché, quels enjeux pour les humanités numériques ?' held at the University of Lille on 3 March 2016, see:
http://geriico.recherche.univ-lille3.fr/index.php?page=annee-2015---2016
Going, going, gone - Can legal deposit save us from the digital black hole? -...CONUL Conference
Presented at the CONUL Conference, July 2015, Athlone, Ireland by Margaret Flood, Arlene Healy, Trinity College Dublin.
Abstract
The internet has evolved beyond recognition since its advent in 1980s; fundamentally changing the way we live, work and communicate. However its pervasiveness is mirrored by the transient nature of much of the content and the consequent loss of collective memory has been described as the digital black hole. Historically nations have relied on national libraries and other legal deposit libraries, to collect preserve and provide ongoing access to the intellectual, cultural and social outputs of their country, and in an increasingly digital world restricting legal deposit to publications in print has put the national record at risk. Over the last decade countries across the world have extended legal deposit provisions in their legislation to cover non-print formats. This presentation focuses on the experience of the UK, as a case study, from new legislation in 2003 through the experience of implementation in 2013 to where we are today. Challenges, viewed through the lens of an academic library, include defining what is national in a digital world; balancing the interests of multiple stakeholders; technical challenges to implement robust collection, preservation and access systems within legal constraints; dealing with multiple and rapidly evolving formats; the sheer scale and cost of collecting and preserving content and providing ongoing access to it. Two years on from UK implementation of the legislation how successful have the legal deposit libraries been in this endeavour, what does the future look like and what lessons might be applicable to the Irish digital environment?
Biography
"Margaret Flood heads the Collection Management Division of Trinity College Library. She has been actively engaged with the British Library and UK legal deposit libraries since 2003 in the planning to bring non-print legal deposit from legislation to implementation and ultimately business as usual. She represents TCD on a number of key committees including the Legal Deposit Implementation Group and Joint Committee for Legal Deposit which draws its representation from the publishing and library communities. She chairs the TCD internal Steering Group responsible for coordination of the implementation of UK Non-Print Legal Deposit within TCD. Margaret also chairs the CONUL Regulatory Affairs Sub-Committee which includes legal deposit in its remit. On behalf of CONUL the Sub-Committee responded to public the two public consultations initiated by the Copyright Review Committee including detailed submissions on the urgency of legislating for digital legal deposit for Ireland
Arlene Healy is Sub-librarian of the Digital Systems and Services (Readers’ Services Division) in Trinity College Library, Dublin, where she is a member of the Leadership Team. In her role she provides strategic leadership for digital services and
The document discusses several projects related to open metadata and linked data including:
1. The AIM25 project which aggregates archive descriptions from 123 partners and aims to test the value of linked data.
2. The COMET project which is releasing a large subset of bibliographic records under an open license and working to convert them to linked open data.
3. The Jerome project which harvests and unifies data from several library systems, supplements it with open data, and provides fast search APIs.
Approach in Spain to the implementation of electronic documents and electroni...Miguel A. Amutio
Spain is developing all the issues about the electronic document as a collective and multidisciplinary effort along the time, including an exhaustive legal framework with lower level regulations and supporting documents, governance, cooperation and collaboration between the public and private sectors, with the engagement of all interested stakeholders, professional or institutional, and the deployment of services for the management of administrative electronic documents and for electronic archiving.
Process, not product Experiences from developing a digital interface of arch...Åsa Larsson
Presented at "Towards a Spatial Data Infrastructure for Archaeology" organised by Historic Environment Scotland and TheRoyal Society of Edinburgh at Stirling, UK 2019-12-12
Similar to Permanent access to digital material (20)
Este documento presenta Time Mapper, una herramienta para crear mapas de tiempo interactivos. Proporciona enlaces a ejemplos de mapas de tiempo creados con esta herramienta sobre temas como reyes españoles, batallas históricas y ciudades. Además, explica los pasos para crear un mapa de tiempo y comparte otros recursos como StoryMap JS, Timeline JS y Awesome Tables que pueden usarse para contar historias de manera visual.
Reflexions sobre l'impacte del mecenatge cultural: el model francès, un exemple a seguir?
A càrrec de Robert Fohr – Cap de la Missió de Mecenatge del Ministeri de Cultura i Comunicació del Govern de França.
Conferència a l'Ateneu Barcelonès (14 abril 2016)
També hi participaran:
Jordi Casassas – president de l’Ateneu Barcelonès.
Carles Duarte – president del CoNCA.
Enric Crous – president de la Fundació Catalunya Cultura.
Presentació d'Ismael Nafría (Director de Continguts Digitals de La Vanguardia – Grup Godó) a les jornades "Biblioteques patrimonials: conservant el futur, construint el passat"
organitzades per la Biblioteca de l’Ateneu Barcelonès el 24 de novembre de 2010
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.
How Barcodes Can Be Leveraged Within Odoo 17Celine George
In this presentation, we will explore how barcodes can be leveraged within Odoo 17 to streamline our manufacturing processes. We will cover the configuration steps, how to utilize barcodes in different manufacturing scenarios, and the overall benefits of implementing this technology.
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
Level 3 NCEA - NZ: A Nation In the Making 1872 - 1900 SML.pptHenry Hollis
The History of NZ 1870-1900.
Making of a Nation.
From the NZ Wars to Liberals,
Richard Seddon, George Grey,
Social Laboratory, New Zealand,
Confiscations, Kotahitanga, Kingitanga, Parliament, Suffrage, Repudiation, Economic Change, Agriculture, Gold Mining, Timber, Flax, Sheep, Dairying,
THE SACRIFICE HOW PRO-PALESTINE PROTESTS STUDENTS ARE SACRIFICING TO CHANGE T...indexPub
The recent surge in pro-Palestine student activism has prompted significant responses from universities, ranging from negotiations and divestment commitments to increased transparency about investments in companies supporting the war on Gaza. This activism has led to the cessation of student encampments but also highlighted the substantial sacrifices made by students, including academic disruptions and personal risks. The primary drivers of these protests are poor university administration, lack of transparency, and inadequate communication between officials and students. This study examines the profound emotional, psychological, and professional impacts on students engaged in pro-Palestine protests, focusing on Generation Z's (Gen-Z) activism dynamics. This paper explores the significant sacrifices made by these students and even the professors supporting the pro-Palestine movement, with a focus on recent global movements. Through an in-depth analysis of printed and electronic media, the study examines the impacts of these sacrifices on the academic and personal lives of those involved. The paper highlights examples from various universities, demonstrating student activism's long-term and short-term effects, including disciplinary actions, social backlash, and career implications. The researchers also explore the broader implications of student sacrifices. The findings reveal that these sacrifices are driven by a profound commitment to justice and human rights, and are influenced by the increasing availability of information, peer interactions, and personal convictions. The study also discusses the broader implications of this activism, comparing it to historical precedents and assessing its potential to influence policy and public opinion. The emotional and psychological toll on student activists is significant, but their sense of purpose and community support mitigates some of these challenges. However, the researchers call for acknowledging the broader Impact of these sacrifices on the future global movement of FreePalestine.
16. Permanent access to digital material System management Collection Building User Services Collection Mgt. Metadata Ingest Consultancy & Advice Board of Governors Collections User Services Document Processing Digitization Product Support Corporate Communication Finance & Corporate Services Information Technology - Management Human Resources Policy Support Building & Facilities Operations Online Services Marketing Communication Collection Care Marketing & Services Finance Innovative Projects Innovation & Development Director General Research Information Technology - Development Corporate Secretary Project Management Office
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18. DIAS Current workflow Pre-process Batch Builder Error recovery e-Post Office Supplier Identifier Object Metadata CMS/DIAS Catalogue I A A End user INGEST ARCHIVAL STORAGE ACCESS Permanent access to digital material
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Editor's Notes
Thanks you for inviting me in this beautiful city and this beautiful library nd I congratulate you with your birthday and wish you another 150 years of library activities, may be quite different from what you did in the past. I also brought you a small present, a chocolate representative of the most famous person, yearly arriving in the Netherlands from Spain to bring presents to children and grown ups. But now back to the topic of this presentation..
Digital Preservation Activities in Europe
Dutch parliamentary papers 1814-1995 2.500.000 Dutch Print Online (1781-1800) 2.100.000 Databank of Digital Daily newspapers 8 .000.000 The Memory of the Netherlands Metamorfoze Various smaller projects Google Book project ( to come) 160.000 books (18-19th century) Digitalisering tijdschriften 1840-1950 1.500.000 This year 2010, the Digital Universe will grow almost as fast to 1.2 million petabytes, or 1.2 zettabytes. (There’s a word we haven’t had to use until now.) While much of the digital content we create is simply not that important (not much different from the paper magazines and newspapers that we throw away, or the telephone conversations, receipts, bad pictures, etc., that we never save), the amount of data that does require permanent or longer-term preservation for a multitude of reasons is increasing exponentially But as we peer into the future, we see the greatest challenges are related not to how to store the information we want to keep, but rather to: Reducing the cost to store all of this content Reducing the risk (and even greater cost) of losing all of this content Extracting all of the value out of the content that we save IDC data shows that nearly 75% of our digital world is a copy – in other words, only 25% is unique.
The way that material is published changes rapidly. When we started with the e-Depot, our e-journals consisted mainly of pdf files. Over the year, when the pdf format offered more possibilities, the pdf files contained more embedded material. Now we also receive supplemental files with all kinds of file formats. You all know the developments around e-books, with their own propriety reading devices like the Kindle of Amazon or the Nook(?). During the Driver project we investigated a new way of scholarly publication, the enhanced publications, where not only the text of the article is stored, but also related material like datasets, websites, video’s etc. We can expect this to become more complicated and may be we, as a library, need to reconsider whether our definitions of “publication”is still valid
Although there are many similarities with analogue material like books or journals, Authenticity Collection building requirements *** Etc. there is also a major difference with didgtial material. And that is the interpreter you need to translate the bits into meaningful information. There lies also the risk:
The updated version of the OAIS model, which is the basic conceptual model for nearly all organisations that are involved in digital preservation. It offers a shared set of terminology and concepts.
Simplified OAIS model, may be familiar with your organisation, but with the difference that these activities are not isolated activities but hightly influence each other, I’ll explain how we do that in the KB
De KB recently started a new progam with the central theme of really to become a Digital Library. Although we are involved in digital preservation for more then a decade, this reorganisation of activities is intended to lead to an integrated approach of digital and analogue material. Digital material will be the preferred format in case a publication will arrive both digitally and physically
Internationaal: 20 international publishers (STM) 10.000 journal titles open access and restricted access Nationaal agreement with Dutch Publishers Association 16 academische repositories Webarchivering 3000 websites, 4 TB
Let op: niet alle hokjes hebben dezelfde kleur (in origineel zit dat niet zo?!) This is the official new organisation. With regard to digital preservation my personal opinion is that this overview should also need a kind of controller function to relate the activities and to judge whether the separate activities led to the goal of well preserved material. Currently the working processes are designed and they should help ta achiee this. Deze slide zou later kunnen als je uitlegt dat DP iets is van hele organisatie en ook linken aan RAC Identifying departments that contribute to the activity of permanent access will be helpful in identifying and streamlining activities, and to make job descriptions, it might even save resources and define clear responsibilities.
DP in organisatie is in ontwikkeling. Het e-Depot zat bij Collection Management, maar in de praktijk integreerde het niet met de papieren wereld en bleef het gescheiden In de nieuwe organisatie streven naar meer integratie: beleid onderling op elkaar afstemmen (later vertellen over keuzes bij aanschaf: digitaal de voorkeur) Digital preservation should not be an isolated activity, but should be part of the whole organisation: just to show you some examples I take the new organisation chart of the KB
Het proces zal niet van A tot Z worden besproken, maar van Z tot A. Het is namelijk makkelijker te begrijpen waarom bepaalde processtappen plaatsvinden, als je weet wat de eisen van het systeem zijn. Daarom beginnen we bij de toegang, en eindigen we bij de aanlevering. Tijdens deze presentatie wordt de gang van het digitale bestand besproken aan de hand van 4 verschillende fases: Toegang en beschikbaarstelling Opslag Verwerking Aanlevering en distributie Voor elk van deze processen zal ik een vergelijking trekken naar de fysieke bibliotheek. Voor wat betreft het e-Depot zal ik per fase inzoomen om te verduidelijken wat er op dat moment gebeurt met het digitale bestand.
A policy is a commitment of the organization towards digital preservation KB : policies in progress, not ready yet
Recently a Spanish translation of the Premis model was launched!
Local initiatives, but it has the attention of the European Commission, the Alliance for Permanent Access , but also new European projects in relation to DP alwayshave a training workpackage to disseminate knowledge and research results
As long term preservation is a long term commitment it is important that the organization in charge realizes this and manages the costs well. Although it is not an easy task to predict the costs of digital preservation, some important publications can support organizations. To name just a few: the Life project - UCL and the British Library, UK project,, tool to support prediction of costs in the life cycle of the digital objects and the Blue Ribbon Task Force helps to set the focus : the ones who pays for preservation are not necessarely the ones that benefit, digital preservation is a derived activitiy, access is the importance
Digital material is trusted to organizations, questions for the organization: am I doing the right things and for society; is this organization trustworthy? Self audit to help: Drambora to identify risks Trac to do a self audit and to get some feeling Prepared to become an ISO standard with a audit body Funding bodies will require this in the future
Digital preservation too complicated to do on your own Collaboration will lead to better results Valuable networking: national / international
The web is full of material of interest for people involved in taking care of digital material. The webites of large libraries and archives, and of European projects or projects in de United States like NDIIP offers an overwhelming amount of material. No one can do it on its own, there are basic rules to follow but there are no strict guidelines yet. Please help to develop these guidelines, like the set of guidelines for books, written down some centuries ago. Like William Dougherty, the Executive Director of Network Infrastructure & Services, Virginia Tech [University] wrote in an article about digital preservation in the Journal of Academic Librarianship “There is no better group to be in charge of developing and promulgating standards for the future of digital materials than librarians.” Thank you