NDSA:Tuesday, Mar 25, 2014: Difference between revisions
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==Roster== | ==Roster== | ||
*Trevor Owens, Library of Congress | *Trevor Owens, Library of Congress |
Revision as of 09:59, 26 March 2014
Roster
- Trevor Owens, Library of Congress
- Karen Cariani, WGBH
- Barrie Howard, Library of Congress
- Dave MacCarn, WGBH
- Jim Harper, PFA Inc.
- Joe Pawletko, New York University
- Martin Jacobson, U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
- Shawn Nicholson, Michigan State University
- Kevin McCarthy, U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
- Martin Kong, Chicago State University
- Chelcie Rowell, Wake Forest University
- Kat Bell, Dance Heritage Coalition
- Leah Prescott, Georgetown Law
Earnest, NARA
Agenda
- Update on 2015 National Agenda for Digital Stewardship
- Fixity check factsheet
- Update on NDSA Storage Survey report
- Ideas for potential speakers - ArchivesSpace was well attended, and awaiting interview responses
- Digital Preservation 2014 meeting
- Open source software in digital preservation projects (interview series)
- Future directions
Action Items
- Recommend what call the document, update it, and distribute to a larger group to solicit
Discussion
The fixity document has had a fair amount of comments on email. The document may not be
Documents
File:NDSA Fixity Check Project Concept Draft v6 5.pdf
CSU is part of an IMLS grant working on tools for DP for small to mid-sized academic institutions. They finished the tool testing, and are aobut to finish workshops? Digital POWRR
The Fixity Check factsheet is missing, add as #2. The call for the summer meeting has closed, but if there are any requests send them to Trevor, #5.
1. Update on Nat. Agenda
2. Fixity Check factsheet
3. Update on NDSA Storage report
4. Potential speakers - ArchivesSpace was well attended, and awaiting interview responses
5. Digital Preservation 2014
6. OS in DP project (interview series)
7. future directions
1. Talked about Infrastructure section. Read it if you haven't. Had a call, and put together the ideas and passed along to CC. Email back to the list, or back to Trevor or Karen if you have anything to add. Questions 2. We haven't gotten a lot of feedback from blog post. In a previous call we worked up a factsheet. People are happy with what we've done, so we're in a position to call it done and release a first version. Put a link in the notes for the call. Give it another week or two, and then call it a day. Thoughts 3. Once it comes together, we may need some help writing the actual report. Does anyone want to join the group and write that report? It will still be awhile. We're updating it from last time, in about 2 - 3 months. Leah would like to participate. Once the charting stuff is finished. We'll do it again in 2015. It takes awhile to get the analysis done. When the data comes back, and is in shape we'll move forward. 4. of interest to infrastructure people, and NDSA people. DPN; we did have a call. Maybe someone who is an implementer can speak. Mark Leggett from Islandora spoke recently. Olive Library Project from CMU, emulation and virtualization as a service. A service to LTO tape from 4 to 6. Object store open source like SEF nodes could be interesting. Amazon is built on top of object stores, so there is a serious of projects that like that model of interfacing with your storage over those protocol. Share things over the list 5. We had over 80 proposals. Mark your calendars for July 22-24. Would it be interesting to have a face to face. We could meet up for happy hour. A lot of the SIGs would meet for breakfast before. It would be good to meet face to face for those who will be there. Lightning Talk on the fixity check factsheet - Trevor 6. Pull out some thematic things from the blog posts, and share with the group - Trevor 7. open discussion - round robin a tour of someone's set up would be helpful
Jim Harper, PFA Inc, local gov't in backing up their records, bp in preservation electronic records. As industry changes, tech changes and new talen wants to do things differently and how we monitor these changes. What we do it, and how do we sustain it. Great variety of things. Document the exchange of property
Leah Prescott at Georgetown Law at beginning of server to store bagged files and METS records for metadata and workflow process for digital content. virtual storage in a server farm. it's not something the Law Library has done before. Working with born-digital procedures for WRLC and main campus to acquire a DAMS.
Joe Pawlekto, NYU, in house digitization and a lot of images, audio, video, using BagIt and usin git at upload. Amazon storage, and microservices approach to fixity checks. Re-engineering message architecture, and an event logger to log things as they happen. Can talk about this in a couple of months
Kevin, NARA is re-architecting ERA. Digital processing environment, preprocessing of materials that comes in prior to putting into a repository. A cloud-based staging area with some tools. Need to find out what they can share.
Kat at Dance Heritage, Dance digitization is implementing LTO 6, but can't share publicly. We're digitizing through hubs that are in NY, DC, and SF. Unique moving image materials and creating preservation copies and access nodes. Dave Rice is main technical consultant, and best person to talk to. QC tools into final stage of dev bootcamp tomorrow in SF. BayVC stuff on NEH grant. Digital management and tools, got an NEH P&A grant. Lauren just got picked up by the Library.
Dave, WGBH, NEH digital preservation grant to build a Hydra stack on fedora, and wrapping it up. Wanted to see if they could build something to handle large files, and have it replicated. Built off thing at Penn State, but accommodate their needs. Will take all file tapes. Run into challenges managing large files, and moving things around. Were using proprietary tape robot for years, but tested the Hydra implementation. Managing the expectation of the user cause you're not going to get that 100MB file back immediately. Re-working their workflow. Instead of relying robot system, go back to a vault. Pull things from the archive, pull the LTO tape, and can pull the file back to their computer. Very difficult to put a lot of money on infrastructure. Give a talk on down the road. The Hydra system works, and they have total control over the code. fedora 4 has come out. How do you migrate from 3 to 4, and what does it offer?
Trevor has been working with best editions statement on software, and LC may be putting out some format guidance to come out in the near future. It'll be broadly distributed.
Shawn, MSU, they just sent Media Preserve 40 VHS and discussed what mezzanine. They have a fedora repository, and store on a SAN. Tried Archivematica with fedora. Pretty much an Islandora shop. 12 TB of data with mezanine files. Drupal for access on top of Archivematica, then lost a key staff member and has derailed things.
Martin, CSU, sent out Digital POWRR grant. They and others have issues for access and preservation, espectially money. Tried to look at tools that are available out there either OS or for purchase. Five different institutions, different sizes, different constituencies. Tested: DuraCloud; MetaArchive; Archivematica; Preservica. Take results and use them going forward. Not sure if this will be consortially addressed. Law passed for state universities to have an open access mandate. Mandate to store and provide pertetual access.