London Literary Reviews
Selection for digital preservation by Michael Seadle
Mr. Seadle stressed the value of long-term archiving and access by breaking down three important criteria.
Even
while having a criteria, value, endangered, standards and access, the
problem of which format to use varies based on the media and has not
been standardized. Even if a format begins digitally, software
dependencies used to edit may render the file obsolete and unusable.
Both the file and the software need to be saved together. While the file
may be saved, access is not necessarily granted. Libraries with
primarily paper documents have an easier chance of creating standards
and procedures that would offer long-term survival chance. Libraries
using mostly multimedia collections will have more complex copyright
issues and ever changing technology to deal with.
Addressing Digital Preservation: Proposals for New Perspectives by Barateiro
The
authors covered the importance of maintaining an object’s access over
an extended period of time. While there are threats and vulnerabilities
that exist such as changing hardware and software, it is important to
protect the authenticity and integrity of the digital object. The
standardization processes being created by the Open Archival Information
System Reference Model (OAIS) and the Preservation Metadata:
Implementation Strategies (PREMIS) are working to close the gap that
existed for decades. Identifying and analyzing the risks associated
helps to improve the digital preservation techniques that exist while
learning the most appropriate time to apply them.
An introduction to digital convergence: libraries, archives, and museums in the information age by Paul F. Marty
Mr.
Marty put together a tri-level approach to digitization as they relate
to information organizations. While discussing the needs of the three
institutions, the roles and responsibilities as they exist in our
information age as well as the types of educational programming to
prepare future professionals to handle the needs of libraries, archives
and museums. Rather than viewing them the organizations individually,
it is suggested that they appear as transparent as possible while
transcending their traditional, functional boundaries. There will
always be challenges but working as a unified effort helps to ease the
struggle.
Digital Preservation: A Time Bomb for Digital Libraries by Margaret Hedstrom
As
Ms. Hedstrom wrote in her article, libraries and archives must include
preservation as one of their core functions. Once again, it is stressed
that stable materials should be introduced at the beginning of the
creation process. The author mentioned the absolutism and idealism of
producing work and viewing them as permanent. The lack of established
standards and the rabid speed in which digital works are created,
technology changes, strains the preservation process. The preservation
requirements vary based on the users of the digital materials as well as
the custodians who maintain and distribute the information. Most
importantly, if the materials are only preserved and not optimised
through metadata, the end users will not receive the full benefits.
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