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[PADG:1023] Follow up to a question during Photo. & Rec. Media DG
- To: padg@xxxxxxx
- Subject: [PADG:1023] Follow up to a question during Photo. & Rec. Media DG
- From: "Werner C Haun" <whau@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 11 Jul 2000 12:23:54 -0700
- Message-id: <s96b3a88.042@loc.gov>
Following up on question asked at the PARS Photographic and Recording
Media Discussion Group, here's a summary and link to a thorough
article by Caroline Arms on how the Library of Congress is
mainintaining/preserving its files of digitally reformatted
photographs, texts, maps, etc.
Arms, Caroline R. "Keeping Memory Alive: Practices for Preserving
Digital Content at the National Digital Library Program of the
Library
of Congress" RLG DigiNews 4(3) (June 15, 2000)
(http://www.rlg.org/preserv/diginews/diginews4-3.html). - It is
likely
that the Library of Congress is overseeing the single largest
library
digitization effort on the planet (producing over 14GB of new
digital
files per workday). And what luck for the rest of us -- they
frequently share what they learn, the processes they create, the
best
practices they set, and even their Requests for Proposals (RFPs)
to
digitization vendors (see http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ftp
files.html). In this article Caroline Arms continues her tradition
of
promulgating information vital to those attempting similar
projects
(for example, see other articles of hers cited in Current Cites).
In this case she describes LC efforts at preserving the digital
material that LC is creating while building a National Digital
Library. Of particular use is a chart that briefly describes all
the
current accepted digital preservation methods, all of which may
be
logically employed in the course of preserving any particular item
or
to recover an item that hasn't been properly preserved by using
these
methods. - RT [Roy Tennant, UC Berkeley]