Top of page

Archive: March 2013 (6 Posts)

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

Residency Program Applications Due April 5th

Posted by: Susan Manus

This announcement is from the Library’s Digital Preservation Outreach and Education program. There is only a short time left to apply for the National Digital Stewardship Residency program. The deadline is April 5th, 2013!  Interested applicants can apply to the program on the USA Jobs website. The NDSR is a new field experience program developed …

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

Death, Taxes, Digital Audits and PUPPIES!

Posted by: Susan Manus

The following is a guest post by Tess Webre, intern with NDIIPP at the Library of Congress Note: there will be photographs of puppies throughout this post. TS Eliot wasn’t wrong. The upcoming April is the cruelest month. The days are grey and cold, the nights are rainy and windy, the temperature fluctuates wildly, and …

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

Announcing a Free “Perspectives on Personal Digital Archiving” Publication

Posted by: Susan Manus

We are very excited to unveil our new e-publication, Perspectives on Personal Digital Archiving! This is something new for us: a published compilation of selected blog posts published in The Signal. All of these posts are written by NDIIPP staff as well as guest bloggers from inside and outside the Library of Congress. This resource …

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

Advocating for Digital Preservation During Alternative Spring Break

Posted by: Susan Manus

The following is a guest post by Jennifer Clark, intern with NDIIPP at the Library of Congress. I am a first-year Master of Science student at the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign through their online distance-learning LEEP program. I am pursuing a specialization in Data Curation …

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

What Resolution Should I Use? Part 3

Posted by: Susan Manus

The following is a guest post by Barry Wheeler, Digital Projects Coordinator, Office of Strategic Initiatives. In Part 1 of this series, we examined how a simple scanner was built and showed how the manufacturer determined their claimed “resolution.”  We noted that the International Standards Organization calls this the “sampling rate” and defines resolution differently.  …