| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | 2010-02-26 Newspaper Resources in transition: Digital Preservation and Access - keynote - IFLA International Newspaper.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Lecture 2 - Revenue Models
Advertisements

Electronic Books Whats in a Name? Are We Really Talking About Books?
Archiving Electronic Journals. Aims and objectives To get an overview of the challenges of archiving electronic journals To consider who can take responsibility.
JISC/BL Workshop Digital Libraries and their services March 6, 2006 Richard Boulderstone Director eStrategy, The British Library.
DIGITAL POLICY MANAGEMENT IN THE DOM PROGRAMME Richard Masters Programme Manager Digital Object Management Programme Digital Policy Management Workshop.
The Future of Scholarship in the Digital Age: The Role of Institutional Repositories Ann J. Wolpert Director of Libraries Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Review of Chapter 2. Important concepts – The Internet is a worldwide collection of networks that links millions of businesses, government agencies, educational.
Long-Term Preservation. Technical Approaches to Long-Term Preservation the challenge is to interpret formats a similar development: sound carriers From.
By : Swaran lata Country Manager W3C India Office 6,CGO Complex, Electronics Niketan, New Delhi E-Publishing standard 1.
Preservation of Software Barbara Sierman (digital preservation manager) E-Humanities Software and Tools Sustainability,
Putting scholarship online Robert Faber Editorial Director, Scholarly and General Reference.
Online Content and Media
Digital Content Solutions Digital content management technology has transformed the way to manage content and knowledge, in this knowledge era. Research.
JINR / CERN Grid and advanced information systems 2012 Anne Gentil-Beccot CERN Library GS/SIS The Library behind the scene Opportunities for Scientific.
The Library behind the scene How does it work ? The Library behind the scenes 1 JINR / CERN Grid and advanced information systems 2012 Anne Gentil-Beccot.
| IFLA2010. Newspaper section | Changing preservations tasks for the German National Library: Some insights and preliminary remarks IFLA International.
ETD‘s as pilot materials for long-term preservation efforts in kopal 9th ETD Conference 2006, Quebec Dr. Thomas Wollschläger, German National Library (GNL)
DIGITIZATION OF AUDIOVISUAL COLLECTIONS: EMPOWERING PUBLIC LIBRARIES THROUGH THE PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS Bogdan Trifunović Digital Projects Librarian.
Public library users response to e-books and e-audio Dr Bob Pymm School of Information Studies.
Lindsay Hartgraves, Kaci Barry.  E-Material: educational material that revolves around hyperlinks to other sites on the internet. It includes: texts,
Discovering Computers: Chapter 1
TC2-Computer Literacy Mr. Sencer February 4, 2010.
December 9, 2004International Conference on Developing Digital Institutional Repositories ©MIT1 Managing Digital Research Data With DSpace MacKenzie Smith.
Depositing and Disseminating Digital Resources Alan Morrison Collections Manager AHDS Subject Centre for Literature, Linguistics and Languages.
The Marketing Landscape. Partnering & Packaging Creates authentic experiences that provide a unique sense of place Keeps visitors in town longer Stretches.
1 CS 502: Computing Methods for Digital Libraries Lecture 27 Preservation.
Digitization of Historical Materials Dana Logalbo-Baij LIBR559L June 9, 2011.
E-books and consumer models; identifying consumer licence models Lynette Owen, Copyright Director, Pearson Education Ltd, United Kingdom Vilnius May 12.
New SpringerLink… ICSTI Conference, Moscow November 2010 Elwin Gardeur.
DIGITAL Download Sharing and Copying. Digital Download Process of downloading content or materials with the elimination of physical media. (dvd/cdrom)
In 1993 Simon Fowler defined income generation by archives as ‘those activities organised by archival staff with the aim of raising.
The University of Auckland New Zealand 3 November 2006 Teaching & Learning Online: a perspective from a University Librarian Speaker: Janet Copsey, The.
Co-funded by the European Union under FP7-ICT Co-ordinated by aparsen.eu #APARSEN Dealing with DRM and Digital Rights at the German National Library.
Web 2.0: Concepts and Applications 3 Syndicating Content.
ETD Repositories Using DSpace Software Andrew Penman The Robert Gordon University 27 th September 2004.
Bibliography in the Digital Age - IFLA Satellite Meeting Warsaw, 9 August Online materials published in Austria collecting, archiving and metadata.
E-Commerce. What is E-Commerce Industry Canada version Commercial activity conducted over networks linking electronic devices (usually computers.) Simple.
Untitled (Hidden Track): Born Digital Content Preservation Service at UIUC Tracy Popp, MS LIS, CAS Digital Preservation Coordinator University Library.
Records Management: It’s Not Just Paper
Identifiers for the digital world Brian Green EDItEUR / International ISBN Agency The Book Business and International Information Standards EDItEUR Seminar,
Stefanie Bollin, UB GreifswaldAcademica Tartu 2011 We are drowning in information but starved for knowledge. John Naisbitt.
Franco Amato. CD-Rom CD-ROM (Compact Disc, read-only-memory) is an adaptation of the CD that is designed to store computer data in the form of text and.
The DSpace Course Module – An introduction to DSpace.
Brussels, Belgium, ABD/BVD 60, Conference 2007 november 19 The legal deposit for digital publications - new challenges for the German National Library.
1 Guidelines For The Future Sharing Best Practice For National Bibliographies In The Digital Era Neil Wilson Information Coordinator IFLA Bibliography.
Publishing Technology & Media Solutions.  The flips are back with new features.  Embed Audio & video with seamless streaming.
By : Bobbie Bermudez This timeline incorporates what I consider great advancements in both physical book publishing in addition to alternatives such as.
1. 2 Press and media relations CPR Introductory Briefing, 18 March, Gigiri  Promotes global press coverage of urban and human settlements issues  Media.
Digital Archiving in the Hungarian Széchényi Library The story and the plans of the Hungarian Electronic Library Rome, 21. Oct István Moldován OSZK,
“ “Screens are the new paper.” READING AND WRITING IN THE DIGITAL AGE The University of the Third Age Course leader: Tony Whittingham:
Chinese-European Workshop on Digital Preservation, Beijing July 14 – Network of Expertise in Digital Preservation 1 General Introduction: Technological.
European Commission on Preservation and Access Preservation of digital heritage Yola de Lusenet Lisbon, November
IT and IM: Promises and Pitfalls Greta Lowe August 15, 2011.
Introduction to IDPF & EPUB O’Reilly TOC February 14, 2011 Speaker George Kerscher.
The KB e-Depot long-term preservation of scientific publications in practice Marcel Ras, National library of The Netherlands.
Storage of digital objects Adolf Knoll National Library of the Czech Republic
OCLC Online Computer Library Center The ‘Hows’ and ‘Whys’ of Preserving Digital Materials Brian Lavoie Research Scientist OCLC CARL program: “Here Today,
Digital Preservation across the technologies, strategies, open standards & interoperability aspects including the legal issues Pratik Shrivastava Scientist.
Public Library Survey FY 2015 SDC General Session December 08, 2015.
Institutional Repositories: the DSpace Experience Ann J. Wolpert Director of Libraries Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
DEEP BLUE University of Michigan Institutional Repository.
Portico’s “d-collections” preservation service Stephanie Orphan Positive trends in sustainability? Emerging approaches to archiving commercial databases.
Digital Media Content MCD 7213 Development. Presentation outline What is media What is DIGITAL media? What is DIGITAL content? Traits of digital content.
Preservation of Digital Data by Christian Wellner Based on: Howard Besser. Digital longevity. In: Maxine Sitts (ed.) Handbook for Digital Projects: A Management.
Leveraging the Expertise of our Staff and the Information Resources We Manage MIT Libraries Visiting Committee April 13, 2005.
Libraries in the digital age Collection & preservation for generational access part two The LOCKSS Program.
Submitted By : Group No:42 Rahul Pandey(1159) Jayant Mali(1129) Pallavi Kesare(1058) Prerna Preeti (1153) Mr. Milind Arjun Project Guide.
Building A Repository for Digital Objects
Unit 9 Writing for New Media
Library Web Portals: Reinventing Libraries for the Future
Presentation transcript:

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Newspaper Resources in transition: Digital Preservation and Access - keynote - IFLA International Newspaper Conference 2010 at IGNCA, New Delhi in India during 26th February to 28th February, 2010 "Digital Preservation and Access to news and views” Reinhard Altenhöner German National Library 1

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Some general changes  Google has digitized 10 Mill. books  Scientific publishers, such as Elesevier, Springer and most others offer their journals online – currently and backwards  November 2007: Amazon has released the Kindle eBook reader 2009: at Christmas more eBooks were sold than paper versions  Apple: iPad and will offer eBooks very likely via their iTunes platform. 2

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section |  Newspaper market worldwide: ca 480 mio items a day, but decreasing  Especially the income from advertisement decreases.  Since 2005 clear: Crisis of newspapers in printed form  “Winner”: the Internet – really?  Long-Term Study of german public television agency on the usage of media:  2000: 30 minutes newspaper / 13 minutes internet  2005: 44 minutes Internet / 28 minutes newspaper Changes in area of newspapers 3c

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section |

The answer: Be present in the internet! E-paper or E-Newspaper  2001 German „Rhein-Zeitung“ was the first one, which published a daily e-paperRhein-Zeitung  Now most of the newspapers have their e-paper  Usually close to the printed version Online-Newspaper  Published in the Internet only  Example: Spiegel (since 1994 October 25th), one day later: Time Magazine)  Often: Mixes in the editorial staff, but in principal independent from each other 5

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | German market  Ca. 760 newspapers, 24.5 mio items per day  Online: 658 german e-papers / online-Newspapers  A lot of them with Web 2.0 features, multimedia- elements; more than 25% offer optimised versions for mobile devices  But: only less then items a day as payed- service  problems to generate a self-substantial market 6

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | German National Library: Collecting and archiving, providing permanent access  Publications issued in Germany since 1913  Special collections  Digital "hand-hold" publications (CD-ROM, DVD, floppies)  Since June 22, 2006: Online- / Net- publications are covered by a new law  Collection of e-theses, e-journals, e-books, newsletters, results from digitisation projects, electronic publications, Web-Sites 7c

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | * 196 b.c. - † not yet * † 2010 (?) The problem of the digital age

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Archiving the bit stream  Digital information is stored as a bit stream on physical media  Storage media types change quickly and are subject to obsolescence  Storage media are unstable and can degrade quickly  So we need  Stability of the data-carrier  Continuous copying (refreshing)  Migration of the data carrier e.g. magnetic  optical  Risk management 9

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Conclusion: the challenge of LTP Bit-stream Hard- and Software to read Hard- and Software to interpret Hard- and Software to display Metadata 10

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Preservation challenges  Huge number of publications in the web  Newspaper publications are being delivered in different file formats, often containing interactive elements  Fragmented and linked information, dynamic ressources like websites, boards, blogs, mailings,...)  Innovative file formats have been encouraged over the years  3-D images & simulations  Embedded audio and video  Executables  First file types are no longer accessible 11

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section |  Not all digital materials can be collected & preserved.  different selection traditions in memory institutions / data archives  Need  to identify relevant producers, collections, domains  for machine-based support & communication  for cooperation to share the work - national and international Selection & indexing Challenges (1) 12

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section |  Ensuring as much of the original „look and feel“ as possible & preserving the context  Covering copyright regulations  Conservation of binary data: bit stream- preservation  Access to the content: permanent action necessary  Migration (regular conversion)  Emulation (re-enacting used systems) Ensuring permanent access Challenges (2) 13c

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section |  Maintaining authenticity throughout the digital life cycle means working closely together with different groups:  Creators or producers  Hosts and their users  Long term preservation institutions  Access providers  Should be done by local/dedicated contact persons Authenticity Challenges (3) 14

| IFLA2010. Newspaper Section | Reinhard Altenhöner 15