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Funded By
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PRESERV 2 is funded by JISC within its capital programme in response to the September 06 call (Circular 04/06), Repositories and Preservation strand
PRESERV was originally funded by JISC within the 4/04 programme
Supporting Digital Preservation and Asset Management in Institutions, theme 3: Institutional repository infrastructure development
MORE INFORMATION?
EMAIL: Steve Hitchcock, Project
Manager
TEL: +44 (0)23 8059 3256
FAX: +44 (0)23 8059 2865
PRESERV Project,
IAM (Intelligence, Agents, Multimedia) Group,
Department of Electronics & Computer Science,
University of Southampton,
Highfield,
Southampton
SO17 1BJ, UK
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Repositories at the crossroads
March 2009 - Repositories are changing. One of the main drivers for this is the
emergence of network-based, or 'cloud', computing and storage. This may
sound technical, but it is really an emerging utility and adoption will
be motivated more by economics and flexibility than innovation. It will
affect computing applications and services that manage digital data,
and focus critical review on the role of these applications and
services, their value and competitiveness. While this is not only aimed
at repositories, repositories are such an application and will be
affected.
"Repositories could become
interfaces to remote storage where content is represented and accessed
via an OAI-ORE resource map ... we can envisage the prospect of
many repository softwares (EPrints, Fedora, etc.) running over one set
of resources." Full paper
We don't know yet what the outcomes will be, but in this section we
bring together strands in the Preserv project that can offer some clues
and indicate how institutional repositories might change and adapt. It
covers repository architecture, repository management including
OAI-ORE, metadata and, since it will guide decisions, repository policy, with some tutorial
material as well.
The remaining parts of this section provide a critical overview of digital
repositories, reinterpreting what they are, what they do, how they
relate to digital and physical libraries, how they can be modelled on
curation and lifecycle models, and an analysis of the role of
repository software. A short glossary of repository terms is provided.
Repository software and architecture
Presentation Preservation
as a Process of a Repository (slides), Sun Preservation and
Archiving Special Interest Group (PASIG) Fall Meeting 2008,
November
What is a repository? What services and processes are repositories
based on? This presentation reappraises repository services and processes, and
illustrates how and where services such as preservation can act in
emerging repository architectures. Approaches for managing repository
storage and file format risk analysis within this framework are
presented.
"the adoption of a large-scale
object store can help turn the repository into a kind of 'thin client',
relieving it of the responsibility of simulating a persistent object
store."
Institutional repository preservation contexts, December 2006
Answers a series of key questions about the relation between
repositories and preservation
http://preserv.eprints.org/contexts.html
OAI-ORE Object Reuse and Exchange
Since copy and collection are an intrinsic part of repository data management and preservation practice, it is obvious that OAI-ORE, which has these motivations at its heart, provides a new tool to help in this area. How will OAI-ORE affect repository architecture? Institutional repositories were effectively
founded on the interoperablity provided by OAI-PMH. The first production
release of ORE appeared late in 2008. As a result its potential to
transform digital content collections has yet to be fully appreciated.
The following papers shed some light on what may result.
Paper Using
OAI-ORE to Transform Digital Repositories into Interoperable Storage
and Services Applications, Code4Lib
Journal, Issue 6, 2009-03-30
OAI-ORE provides opportunities to bind low-level objects into
multiple collections that can be used by higher level software while
avoiding the need to make copies. Binding objects in this manner would
allow the construction of a layered repository where the core is the
storage and binding and all other software and services sit on top of
this layer. In this scenario, if a repository wanted to change its
software, instead of migrating the objects from one software to
another, we could simply swap the software. More work may open the
possibility of two repository softwares simultaneously managing the
same set of objects.
The above C4L paper was inspired by
Video
Mining For ORE, Blip.tv, April 2008
Demo showing how data was moved between two repository softwares with quite distinct data models, from an EPrints repository to a Fedora repository and then back again, using the OAI-ORE. Video includes expert panel Q&A.
Paper OAI-ORE,
PRESERV2 and Digital Preservation, Ariadne, Issue 57,
30-October-2008
The paper reveals how ORE might be applied at a whole-repository level.
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