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Archive: 2011 (172 Posts)

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E is for ecology

Posted by: Martha Anderson

A continuing series of digital preservation topics organized alphabetically.   I have always wanted to write something entitled, Everything I know about digital preservation, I learned in my garden.   I think it is because I have always perceived the practice and development around digital preservation to be organic.  A garden is the interaction among insects and birds, microorganisms, weather conditions, soil chemistry, …

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The Future of the Past of the Web

Posted by: Susan Manus

The following is a guest post by Abbey Potter, Program Officer, NDIIPP.  She is also Communications Officer for the IIPC. The Future of the Past of the Web was a well-named event hosted by the Digital Preservation Coalition, JISC, and the British Library on October 7th. It followed in a sequence of DPC events on …

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Information or Artifact: Digitizing Photographic Negatives and Transparencies, Part 2

Posted by: Bill LeFurgy

The following is a guest post by Carl Fleischhauer, a Digital Initiatives Project Manager in NDIIPP. This is the final blog on the topic of informational and artifactual values in the digitization of books (and other documents) and photographic negatives and transparencies.  Here are links to the book-related blogs: Part 1 and Part 2. Part …

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Information or Artifact: Digitizing Photographic Negatives and Transparencies, Part 1

Posted by: Bill LeFurgy

The following is a guest post by Carl Fleischhauer, a Digital Initiatives Project Manager in NDIIPP. What does it mean to digitize a photographic negative?  My previous pair of blogs discussed digitizing books (and other textual materials), exploring the ways that the process captures informational and artifactual aspects of the original item.  The short version …

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Information or Artifact: Digitizing a Book, Part 2

Posted by: Bill LeFurgy

The following is a guest post by Carl Fleischhauer, a Digital Initiatives Project Manager in NDIIPP. Yesterday, I blogged about the digital reformatting of historical books and other documents.  I reported that virtually all digitization projects in memory institutions present the information from the pages in the form of a searchable text.  I also noted …

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Data is the New Black

Posted by: Leslie Johnston

At our recent Preservation Storage Meeting, the word “data” was frequently mentioned.  This was of some note to me, as cultural heritage organizations have, until recently, spoken of “collections” and “content” or even “files,” but not data.  This is of course not the case at universities, where social science and observational datasets are very much …