Top of page

Category: Tools and Infrastructure

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

Upgrading Image Thumbnails… Or How to Fill a Large Display Without Your Content Team Quitting

Posted by: Butch Lazorchak

The following is a guest post by Chris Adams from the Repository Development Center at the Library of Congress, the technical lead for the World Digital Library. Preservation is usually about maintaining as much information as possible for the future but access requires us to balance factors like image quality against file size and design …

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

Untangling the Knot of CAD Preservation

Posted by: Mike Ashenfelder

At the 2014 Society of American Archivists meeting, the CAD/BIM Taskforce held a session titled “Frameworks for the Discussion of Architectural Digital Data” to consider the daunting matter of archiving computer-aided design and Building Information Modelling files. This was the latest evidence that — despite some progress in standards and file exchange — the digital preservationist …

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

Emulation as a Service (EaaS) at Yale University Library

Posted by: Trevor Owens

The following is a guest post from Euan Cochrane, ‎Digital Preservation Manager at Yale University Library. This piece continues and extends exploration of the potential of emulation as a service and virtualization platforms. Increasingly, the intellectual productivity of scholars involves the creation and development of software and software-dependent content. For universities to act as responsible stewards …

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

Curating Extragalactic Distances: An interview with Karl Nilsen & Robin Dasler

Posted by: Trevor Owens

While a fair amount of digital preservation focuses on objects that have clear corollaries to objects from our analog world (still and moving images and documents for example), there are a range of forms that are basically natively digital. Completely native digital forms, like database-driven web applications, introduce a variety of challenges for long-term preservation …

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

National Geospatial Advisory Committee: The Shape of Geo to Come

Posted by: Butch Lazorchak

Back in late June I attended the National Geospatial Advisory Committee (NGAC) meeting here in DC. NGAC is a Federal Advisory Committee sponsored by the Department of the Interior under the Federal Advisory Committee Act. The committee is composed of (mostly) non-federal representatives from all sectors of the geospatial community and features very high profile …

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

The MH17 Crash and Selective Web Archiving

Posted by: Butch Lazorchak

The following is a guest post by Nicholas Taylor, Web Archiving Service Manager for Stanford University Libraries. The Internet Archive Wayback Machine has been mentioned in several news articles within the last week  (see here, here and here) for having archived a since-deleted blog post from a Ukrainian separatist leader touting his shooting down a …

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

Scoring, Not Storing: Digital Preservation Assessment Criteria at #digpres14

Posted by: Erin Engle

The following is a guest post by Seth Anderson, consultant at AVPreserve.  This is part of an ongoing series of posts to highlight and preview the Digital Preservation 2014 program.  Here Seth previews the session he organized, “Digital Preservation Audit and Planning with ISO 16363 and NDSA Levels of Preservation,” scheduled for Wednesday, July 23 …

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

Extending the Life of a Story Through Taxonomy at National Public Radio

Posted by: Butch Lazorchak

Hannah Sommers has done just about every job one can do in a library.  Today she serves as NPR’s first Library Program Manager, helping forge a new path for the profession in her role directing product development for the NPR Library. This is her guest post. NPR’s mission is to create a more informed public, …