Search Results
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- Description:
A poster given at Samvera Connect 2018.
- Keyword:
Metadata, Workflow, Preservation, International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF), Connect 2018, Samvera, and Valkyrie
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Tampakis, Nikitas, Griffin, James, Stroop, Jon, Kayiwa, Francis, Chortaria, Christina, Headley, Anna, Pendragon, Trey, Jordan, Eliot, and Cowles, Esmé
- Contributor:
Princeton University Library
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/10/2018
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Poster
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- Description:
A recording of a presentation at Samvera Connect 2018 described thus, prototyping a core component of our new architecture to be horizontally scalable, designing a new architecture for our digital library with a wide ranging set of requirements and users, Stanford University Library has a robust digital library system called the Stanford Digital Repository. This repository holds a little under 500 TB of materials in preservation, and a little less than that for online access, from our cultural heritage digitization efforts and institutional repository outputs. These materials are managed across 90+ codebases serving a variety of functions from self-deposit web applications, to a nearly 10 year old parallel processing framework, to a digital repository assets publication mechanism leading into our Blacklight, Spotlight, and Geoblacklight applications - among other services and needs. At the core of this system is a Fedora 3 store. With Fedora 3 now end-of-lifed, and our system suffering from limited to no horizontal scalability options, we’re revisiting our system and architecture. We are writing it from the start with a goal to have data-forward, distributed microservices and some event-driven processing components. TACO, our new core management API, is the heart of this new architecture, and is currently being developed as a prototype. This talk will walk through the process of analysing our current system via a dataflows analysis, then planning how to create ‘seams’ in our current system to migrate towards our new system in an evolutionary fashion instead of a turn-key migration. A video recording of this session is available at the 'Related URL' below., and seeing where community technologies like Hyrax, Blacklight, and IIIF will connect
- Keyword:
Workflow, Architecture, Repository, Connect 2018, and Samvera
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Frost, Hannah and Harlow, Christina
- Contributor:
Stanford University Libraries and University of Utah
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/2018
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Video
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- Description:
This article centres on the recently completed REMAP Project undertaken at the University of Hull, which has been a key step toward realising a larger vision of the role a repository can play in enabling and supporting digital content management for an institution. The first step was the Joint Information Systems Committee (JISC)-funded RepoMMan Project that the team undertook between 2005 and 2007. The second step has been the REMAP Project itself, a key component of a university's information management. In this vision the institutional repository provides not only a showcase for finished digital output, but also a workspace in which members of the University can, if they wish, develop those same materials.
This remains the case but with REMAP we added in notions of records management and digital preservation (RMDP) once the materials were placed in the repository. Thus the repository can play a key part throughout the lifetime of the content. It turns out that others share this vision of repository-enabled management over the full lifecycle of born-digital materials, a concept that some are calling the
scholar's workbench. (Others are calling it the
scholars' workbench, Hull uses the Fedora repository software, its development is undertaken by the not-for-profit organisation Fedora Commons. Hull will also be working with King's College London on the CLIF project to December 2010, work that will run in parallel with and complement Hydra. In the Ariadne article describing the work of RepoMMan we wrote,
The vision at Hull was, and is, of a repository placed at the heart of a Web Services architecture, the community has not yet decided quite where the apostrophe belongs!), and JISC-funded again, this second two-year project further developed the work that RepoMMan had started. The third step, more of a leap maybe, is a three-year venture (2008-11), the Hydra Project, being undertaken in partnership with colleagues at Stanford University, the University of Virginia and Fedora Commons- Keyword:
Architecture, Workflow, Hydra, Repository, and Jisc
- Subject:
Hydra Project
- Creator:
Awre, Christopher L and Green, Richard A
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
04/2009
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Article
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- Description:
A presentation given at Connect 2017.
- Keyword:
Hyrax, Workflow, Connect 2017, and Samvera
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Van Tuyl, Steve
- Contributor:
Oregon State University
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
11/08/2017
- Rights Statement Tesim:
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- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
Using Hydra to manage and present cultural heritage resources raises a set of interesting challenges that are beyond the scope of the traditional institutional repository. These include more complex data models, elaborate and varied workflows, richer descriptive metadata, support for more and varied controlled vocabularies, the requirement to manage larger objects comprised of larger files and multiple derivatives, support for IIIF, and a desire for richer viewing environments in general. In this presentation we will discuss these challenges and highlight examples and implementations that have gone ‘beyond the repository’. An audio recording of the session is available for download below. and A presentation at Hydra Connect 2016 described thus
- Keyword:
International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF), Connect 2016, Workflow, Hydra, and Metadata
- Subject:
Hydra Project
- Creator:
Allinson, Julie and Stroop, Jon
- Contributor:
Princeton University Library and University of York
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/05/2016
- Rights Statement Tesim:
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- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
In the UK, the Universities of York and Hull are looking at Archivematica's place in a research data pipeline. The two universities have slightly different use cases but share the desire to put research (and likely other) content through Archivematica on its way to the repository thus giving us a solid base for long-term preservation. We are both now in the third phase of a joint project to build proof-of-concepts to illustrate how Hydra and Archivematica can work together to manage and preserve research data. Since our project began, Jisc have launched an ambitious UK national research data shared service where a range of suppliers offer systems in different lots. Both Hydra / Fedora and Islandora / Fedora are part of the the ‘research repository’ lot of the service and the work of York and Hull has heavily informed the ‘preservation’ lot, with Archivematica one of the systems on offer. This presentation will describe the proof-of-concept work done by Hull and York, and will provide an overview of the new Jisc service. An audio recording of the session is available for download below. and A presentation at Hydra Connect 2016 described thus
- Keyword:
Connect 2016, Archivematica, Workflow, Hydra, and Preservation
- Subject:
Hydra Project
- Creator:
Allinson, Julie and Green, Richard A
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/05/2016
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
Resource models. This will include information on the major changes that were made, descriptions of gotchas and workarounds, and a look at how close we are to being able to use any Valkyrie storage adapter. I’m hoping to include benchmark data as well to compare the various adapters. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning., A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus, I will talk about the process I went through (and possibly am continuing to go through) to convert our Hyrax application’s ActiveFedora, and Base object models to Valkyrie
- Keyword:
Hyrax, Workflow, Connect 2020, Samvera, and Valkyrie
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Rayle, E Lynette
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/29/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
The Emory Libraries implemented a second-generation preservation infrastructure in 2019 utilizing Hyrax 3, Fedora 4 and AWS, following a requirements gathering phase that included developing a preservation policy and a review of preservation community best practices. This presentation describes our solution design including locally-defined entities such as preservation workflows and events and FileSet expansion to support derivative files. We will also address implementation lessons learned while leveraging existing Samvera functionality and building new features to bridge gaps between existing framework components. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning. and A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus
- Keyword:
Fedora, Cloud services, Samvera, Workflow, Connect 2020, Hyrax, Preservation, and Metadata
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Porter, Emily and Matlawala, Devanshu
- Contributor:
Emory University
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/29/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus and Collaboration is more than just sharing costs, and the PALCI and PALNI consortia are pushing that idea into our repository management. We want to create the flexibility for both IR workflows and more “traditional” library-owned content within the same instance of Hyku. We also want to enable libraries to collaborate and share work, not just with their consortial partners, but also among their own departments across campus. To us, this means enhancing the ability to manage user and tenant settings to enable different workflows. By working with a number of libraries testing out the Hyku multi-tenant option, we realized that a robust dashboard for user/role assignment and the expansion of a few more roles would enable us to manage these flexible workflow options. PALNI and PALCI are working with Notch 8 to enhance the underlying “role” and “group” functionality in Hyku and develop a new administrative dashboard to control permissions across multiple tenants. We will also be expanding role and group functions within tenant management. This presentation will discuss how we researched and developed our requirements as well as the plan and progress to date. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning.
- Keyword:
Workflow, Collaboration, Repository, Hyku, Samvera, Digital collections, and Connect 2020
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Hurford, Amanda and Gueguen, Gretchen
- Contributor:
PALNI and PALCI
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/28/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation
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- Description:
A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus and Figgy is Princeton University Library’s staff-facing repository management application. This presentation will share screenshots, user stories, and technical overviews of all the forms, magic buttons, storage integrations, drag-and-drop targets, rake tasks, and directory watchers that Figgy provides to support the different workflows our users have for ingesting content. The 'Related URL' below links to beginning of this presentation in the day's YouTube recording.
- Keyword:
Metadata, Workflow, Connect 2020, Migration, Archives, Samvera, and Digitization
- Subject:
Samvera Community
- Creator:
Headley, Anna and Pendragon, Trey
- Contributor:
Princeton University Library
- Owner:
- Language:
English
- Date Modified:
07/24/2023
- Date Created:
10/27/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- License Tesim:
- Resource Type:
Presentation