Showing posts with label POWRR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POWRR. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Some Assembly Required – Micro-services and Digital Preservation

Some Assembly Required – Micro-services and Digital Preservation. Danielle Spalenka. POWRR Blog. March 22, 2016.   
     Very informative article about how micro services and tools can benefit libraries of all sizes and financial abilities. Many struggle with implementing a digital preservation infrastructure.  University of California created a set of free-standing but inter-operable applications that performed a single or limited number of tasks in the larger curation and preservation process, which they described as a micro-services approach.

This approach, which did not require the installation of a single, long-lived application, can help medium-sized and smaller institutions to identify and achieve digital preservation goals. The set of twelve independent but compatible micro-services performed preservation functions such as identity, storage, fixity, replication, inventory, ingest, index, search, transformation, notification and annotation. These simple utilities would pose fewer challenges in their development, deployment, maintenance and enhancement than a large, integrated system. The strategic combination of individual services could produce “the complex global function needed for effective curation” at large institutions. The Digital POWRR (Preserving Digital Resources with Restricted Resources) Project team begin a study of the problems and possible solutions for preserving digital objects.

Some understood that digital curation and preservation was an either/or issue: either an institution had implemented a digital preservation system or it had not. In reality, the preservation activities are "an ongoing, iterative set of actions, reactions, workflows, and policies." This means institutions can begin taking small steps rather than waiting to devise an ideal solution. The NDSA Levels of Digital Preservation provides a yardstick to measure progress toward a digital curation and preservation capacity. Two fundamental understandings at the heart of a micro-services approach are:
  1. digital curation and preservation is an uncertain process in which continuous, rapid technological change often renders monolithic, integrated applications cumbersome and outdated;
  2. simple tools focused on a specific aspect or aspects of the process can prove more helpful.
Micro-services tools can only be effective if users understand what roles they play in the larger digital preservation process and the path they take through the NDSA Levels. The COPTR (Community Owned Digital Preservation Tool Registry) web site provides information about many helpful tools and services that can provide incremental value.  Micro-services tools can also help those adopting more robust tools.

The use of individual tools performing discrete functions can help those starting preservation activities. The Digital POWRR Project has described the stages of a digital curation and preservation workflow and associated activities. Tools performing these functions are available at the COPTR web site.


Saturday, September 05, 2015

New Case Study: Digital Preservation Strategies for a Small Private College

New Case Study: Digital Preservation Strategies for a Small Private College. Meg Miner. Society of American Archivists. May 19, 2015.
     Well established “best practices” in digital preservation do little to address day-to-day realities in repositories that do not have the money or staff for digital preservation activities. The question then is how to provide good stewardship for digital content before a complete preservation system is in place?

They assumed their institutional repository (IR) would work as a preservation platform. After attending a NEDCC workshop about digital preservation program attributes, it became apparent that IWU’s repository, DigitalCommons, hosted by bepress,  did not meet the requirements for a full DP system. It lacked included bit-level analysis on ingest and during storage, file format normalization, and a means for detecting and replacing corrupt files.

The article is an in-depth explanation of actions taken by IWU’s archivist prior to the POWRR Project and the workflows established as a result of it. The Archives does not currently have a full scale preservation solution, but insights from the POWRR helped establish digital records’ documentation practices and storage strategies.

In 2009, files were copied to a 5-disk Redundant Array of Independent Disks (RAID) drive that was monitored by library IT. One disk failed in 2014 and the entire RAID was replaced with one of reduced capacity and relocated from the library. Several project members were looking for a quick, simple solution, but from the workshop they realized no tool will replace making decisions about which historical records hold significance to our institutions. These values and individual behaviors are what the cultural heritage community truly needs to spend time on.

Anne Kenney and Nancy McGovern on digital preservation: “A fully implemented and viable preservation program addresses organizational issues, technological concerns, and funding questions, balancing them like a three-legged stool.”

A lack of answers for everything does not mean "being free to stand by and do nothing. If support for a full preservation program is unlikely, there are less resource intensive ways to provide good stewardship for digital records". The lessons learned in the Digital POWRR workshop and confirmed by practices now in place show that "slight modifications to familiar accession workflows will create an audit trail and prepare digital objects for bit-level preservation storage". It is important to start documenting our decisions today so that future repository managers who will inherit the outcomes of our work, will be able to carry these objects into the next generation of preservation products.


Thursday, July 30, 2015

DPOE Interview with Danielle Spalenka of the Digital POWRR Project

DPOE Interview with Danielle Spalenka of the Digital POWRR Project. Susan Manus, Barrie Howard. The Signal. July 20, 2015.
     Article about an interview with Danielle Spalenka, Project Director for the Digital POWRR Project. They had a National Leadership Grant to investigate digital preservation at institutions with limited resources. They have prepared a workshop, a white paper and the Tool Grid. The workshop, free through the end of 2016 with funding is from the NEH, looks at best practices and standards. 

Our review of the landscape of digital preservation instruction was that it is largely aimed at an audience beginning to come to grips with the idea that digital objects are subject to loss if we don’t actively care for them. There are lots of offerings discussing the theory of digital preservation – the “why” of the problem – and we found that there were limited opportunities to learn the “how” of digital preservation, both on the advocacy and technical sides. We also found that other great offerings, like the Digital Preservation Management Workshop Series based at MIT, had a tuition fee that was unaffordable for many prospective attendees, especially from under-funded institutions. Our goal in this phase is to make the workshops free to attend.

"A major goal of the workshop is to discuss specific tools and provide a hands-on portion so that participants could try a tool that they could apply directly at their own institutions." It provides an  overview of how digital preservation services and tools actually relate to the standards, how to use them in a workflow, and how to advocate for implementation. The POWRR Tool Grid is now maintained by COPTR (Community Owned digital Preservation Tool Registry).

Some recommendations for those just starting out:
  • First consider what type of tool you might be interested in (processing, storage, etc.) Looking at the specific function of a tool might be a good place to understand the wide variety of tools better.
  • A number of tools and services offer free webinars and information sessions to learn more about a specific tool. Download the tools to gain some hands-on experience.
  • Remember that digital preservation is an incremental process, and there are small steps you can take now to start digital preservation activities at your own institution. 
  • Remember you are not alone! 
  • See what others are doing and talking about. 

Related posts:

Thursday, February 19, 2015

From Theory to Action: Good Enough Digital Preservation for Under-Resourced Cultural Heritage Institutions

From Theory to Action: Good Enough Digital Preservation for Under-Resourced Cultural Heritage Institutions. Jaime Schumacher, et al. Digital POWRR White Paper for the Institute of Museum and Library Services. 27 August 2014.
The Digital POWRR team is comprised of archivists, curators, librarians, and a digital humanist, from small and mid-sized Illinois institutions who know that digital content is vulnerable, but are  lacking significant financial resources and have been unable to come up with programmatic and technical solutions to mitigate the risk. Each institution produced a case study and a gap analysis, with a plan to address the obstacles.  Some institutions have created and implemented digital preservation programs; however, medium-sized and smaller organizations with fewer resources like those of the POWRR institutions are in a vulnerable position.Some statements of interest:
  • "Common elements emerged from our gap analyses: a lack of available financial resources; limited or nonexistent dedicated staff time for digital preservation activities; and inadequate levels of appropriate technical expertise. Some of the case studies also mentioned a lack of institutional awareness of the fragility of digital content and a lack of cohesive policies and practices across departments as a contributing factor towards the absence of real progress." 
  • Digital preservation is best thought of as an incremental, ongoing, and ever-shifting set of actions, reactions, workflows, and policies.
  • the notion that it is necessary to research all available tools and services exhaustively before taking any basic steps to secure digital content is yet another misconception that often prevents any progress from occurring.
  • Fortunately, practitioners can get started with simple, freely available triage tools while researching which of the more robust solutions will best suit their needs.
The group developed the POWRR tool for evaluating solutions and tools. The appendix also has recommendations for the Developer Community.

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Phase Two of POWRR: Extending the Reach of Digital Preservation Workshops

Phase Two of POWRR: Extending the Reach of Digital Preservation Workshops. Danielle Spalenka. January 27, 2015.
     The Digital POWRR Project (Preserving digital Objects with Restricted Resources) will continue the POWRR workshops for two years.

Project team members realized that many information professionals feel overwhelmed by the scope of the digital preservation problem, which prevents them from implementing digital preservation activities. They found that digital preservation is best thought of as an incremental, ongoing, and ever-shifting set of actions, reactions, workflows, and policies. Digital preservation activities can be started by taking small steps to prioritize and triage digital collections, while working to build awareness and advocate for resources.

Some of the resources on the site include: 

Friday, November 14, 2014

POWRR Tool Grid

POWRR Tool Grid. COPTR Consortium. November 2014.
     The Digital POWRR Project has produced version 2 of the Digital POWRR Tools Grid. The Grid, which helps practitioners find software tools to solve their digital preservation challenges, provides information about almost 400 digital preservation tools.The Tools Grid can also be found on a new domain for community owned digital preservation resources: Digipres Commons.

Digipres Commons highlights useful collaborative preservation resources from around the web as well as hosting these other collaborative services:
  • The COPTR tools registry
  • The Digital Preservation Question and Answer site
  • The File Formats aggregation service
The main topics of tools, subdivided by material or format, are:
  •  Access, Use and Reuse 
  •  Create or Receive (Acquire) 
  •  Cross-Lifecycle Functions 
  •  Dispose 
  •  Ingest 
  •  Preservation Action 
  •  Preservation Planning 
  •  Store 

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Digital Preservation Tool Grid

Digital Preservation Tool Grid. Preserving Objects With Restricted Resources. May 15, 2013.
     This is a grid, created by POWRR, that looks at 24 different features, such as ingest, processing, access, storage, maintenance, and cost, for about 50 digital preservation tools. The tools range from simple tools to full digital preservation systems, from ACE to Xena. This tool is very informative.