Characterising and Preserving Digital Repositories: File Format Profiles |
Steve Hitchcock and David Tarrant show how file format profiles, the starting point for preservation plans and actions, can also be used to reveal the fingerprints of emerging types of institutional repositories.
issue66 January 2011 |
accessibility, adobe, amazon, archives, bibliographic data, blog, cloud computing, css, csv, curation, data, data management, database, digital curation, digital preservation, digital repositories, dissemination, document format, droid, eprints, file format, flash, flash video, framework, gif, google, graphics, harvard university, html, hypertext, identifier, institutional repository, java, jisc, jisc information environment, jpeg, keepit, latex, linked data, metadata, microsoft, mpeg, mpeg-1, open access, open source, photoshop, php, plain text, preservation, quicktime, repositories, research, schema, semantic web, software, standards, the national archives, university of illinois, university of northampton, university of southampton, university of the arts london, vector graphics, video, web 2.0, wellcome library, wiki, wikipedia, windows, windows media, xml, xml schema |
Hold It, Hold It ... Start Again: The Perils of Project Video Production |
It's not like writing a paper. Film production, when the camera points at you, can challenge all sorts of sensitivities. Steve Hitchcock survived the ordeal to tell the story of the Preserv Project video.
issue51 April 2007 |
apple, archives, british library, cataloguing, curation, dcc, digital curation, digital preservation, dissemination, eprints, itunes, jisc, mobile, mobile phone, open access, podcast, preserv, preservation, repositories, software, the national archives, university of oxford, university of southampton, video, youtube |
Interface: Les Carr Interview |
Steve Hitchcock and Les Carr of the Open Journal Project link up with Ian Budden.
issue7 January 1997 |
archives, browser, data, database, elib, framework, hypertext, research, search technology, web browser |
Open Journals |
Steve Hitchcock describes the Open Journals project. This involves the use of an innovative approach to handling the hyperlinks between Web-based resources, which could have significant implications for on-line journals and publishing.
issue5 September 1996 |
accessibility, adobe, browser, copyright, data, database, document management, html, multimedia, oxford university press, research, university of nottingham, university of oxford, university of southampton, web browser |