Top of page

Blogs Categories: Uncategorized

Blogs Categories: Uncategorized

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

DPOE Interview with Danielle Spalenka of the Digital POWRR Project

By:

The following is a guest post by Barrie Howard, IT Project Manager at the Library of Congress. This post is part of a series about digital preservation training informed by the Library’s Digital Preservation Outreach & Education (DPOE) Program. Today I’ll focus on an exceptional individual, Danielle Spalenka, Project Director for the Digital POWRR Project. …

A man playing a guitar and singing to a close crowd of a dozen or so men and women

Tracking Tricksters in Washington, DC

By:

The following is a guest post by Dr Emily Marshall, who specializes in Postcolonial and migrant literatures and cultures at Leeds Beckett University in the UK. In April I visited the incredible folklore archives at the American Folklife Center in Washington, D.C., supported by Leeds Beckett University Early Career Researcher funding.  The Center is housed …

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

We Welcome Our Email Overlords: Highlights from the Archiving Email Symposium

By:

This post is co-authored with Erin Engle, a Digital Archivist in the Office of Strategic Initiatives. Despite the occasional death knell claims, email is alive, well and exponentially thriving in many organizations. It’s become an increasingly complex challenge for collecting and memory institutions as we struggle with the same issues: How is email processed differently …

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

DPOE Makes a Splash Down Under!

By:

The following is a guest post by Barrie Howard, IT Project Manager at the Library of Congress. The Digital Preservation Outreach and Education (DPOE) program is pleased to announce a successful outcome for two international Train-the-Trainer workshops. These workshops were recently held in Australia, and are the first of their kind to be held outside …

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

NDSR 2015 Begins with Conference, Workshops

By:

The 2015 NDSR residents have arrived! The launching of this next class of the NDSR Washington, D.C. residency program (the inaugural class was in 2013-14) began with a week-long orientation for the residents. The centerpiece event was the Opening Conference on June 10th, which took place in one of the historic rooms of the Jefferson …

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

DPOE Interview with Jim Corridan

By:

The following is a guest post by Barrie Howard, IT Project Manager at the Library of Congress. This post is part of a series about digital preservation training inspired by the Library’s Digital Preservation Outreach & Education (DPOE) Program. Today I’ll focus on an exceptional individual, who among other things, hosted one of the DPOE …

Close-up of the fingers of two hands as the touch a paged filled with raised dots

News about popular contemporary music? Yeah, we got that!

By:

My colleague, Amanda Smith recently blogged about one of our magazines Musical Mainstream. While I have written of my classical music background and attend concerts in the area, I still like to be connected with what is trending in popular music. Contemporary Soundtrack is a compilation of magazine articles and reviews of popular music, featuring …

Dozens of squares, each with its own individual color or shade, lined up in rows and columns

Dodge that Memory Hole: Saving Digital News

By:

Newspapers are some of the most-used collections at libraries. They have been carefully selected and preserved and represent what is often referred to as “the first draft of history.” Digitized historical newspapers provide broad and rich access to a community’s past, enabling new kinds of inquiry and research. However, these kinds of resources are at …

Smiling woman dressed in outdoor winter clothes holds a large, old-style camera

Caught Our Eyes: Going to Lengths with Hair

By:

As the days grow hot and humid in Washington, D.C., my mind turns to summer haircuts. A look back offers a reminder of reasons beyond the purely seasonal for hair cutting. This print from our Popular Graphic Arts collection depicts a character in the novel The Guardian Angel by Oliver Wendell Holmes. The story originally …