From arthurpasquinelli at gmail.com Tue May 1 13:39:16 2018 From: arthurpasquinelli at gmail.com (Arthur Pasquinelli) Date: Tue, 01 May 2018 10:39:16 -0700 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] International Conference on Massive Storage Systems and Technology (MSST 2018) - May 14-16, 2018 In-Reply-To: References: <3A5CA15F-2B18-4583-A8A8-4CEEAC0F0797@stanford.edu> Message-ID: [Apologies for cross postings.] The Massive Storage Systems and Technology Conference (MSST) has posted its final agenda at http://storageconference.us/. Early Bird registration ends on May 7. This conference will take place at Santa Clara University May 14-16. MSST is a collegial venue for technical practitioners interested in storage-related topics such as long-term architectures, new hardware technologies and trends, high performance computing, massive data scalability, cloud, and distributed storage. There will be a morning collaborative workshop on Distributed Digital Preservation and LOCKSS technical developments on May 14. David Rosenthal will be presenting on May 16. His two presentation topics are 1) The Medium-Term Prospects For Long-Term Storage, 2) DNA's Niche in the Storage Market. Other expert speakers from Coughlin Associates, Los Alamos National Laboratory, DreamWorks, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, CERN, BackBlaze, Argonne National Laboratory, Intel, Oracle, IBM, and HP will also be presenting. -- Art Pasquinelli LOCKSS Partnership Manager Stanford University Libraries Cell: 1-650-430-2441 artpasquinelli at stanford.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From szl20 at cam.ac.uk Wed May 2 13:11:58 2018 From: szl20 at cam.ac.uk (Somaya Langley) Date: Wed, 2 May 2018 17:11:58 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] Digital Preservation Survey on Maturity, Strategy and Staffing Resources Message-ID: <378F3AFE-7133-4D47-BAA8-193E4AE357ED@cam.ac.uk> Hi PASIG List Members, The Digital Preservation Oxford and Cambridge (DPOC) project in collaboration with the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) has developed a short survey intended to gather information from collecting and research organisations around the world who have a remit to manage digital content. The survey has a particular focus on staffing resources, but also briefly covers policy, strategy, and maturity modelling. We are aware that concrete information for benchmarking institutions against their peers - particularly in regards to maturity and staffing resources - is required by those looking to make the case for digital preservation within their organisations. We are interested in obtaining figures from institutions around the world, regardless of an institution?s size or whether any digital preservation effort has already commenced. We are particularly keen to obtain information from institutions based outside of the USA. We would be very grateful if you would take the time to fill out our survey: https://cambridge.eu.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_brWr12R8hMwfIOh The survey should take between 10-20 minutes to complete. Deadline for survey responses is: 31 May 2018 (Though we would very much appreciate input earlier than this date.) Further information can be found at: http://www.dpoc.ac.uk/2018/04/23/maturity-and-resourcing-survey/ Anonymised raw data will be shared via the DPOC website for all in the digital preservation community to use, in August 2018: http://www.dpoc.ac.uk/ Any questions about the survey can be directed to: digitalpreservation at lib.cam.ac.uk Many thanks Somaya -- Somaya Langley Digital Preservation Specialist - Policy and Planning (Polonsky Fellow) Cambridge University Library West Road, Cambridge, CB3 9DR T: +44 (0)1223 765576 E: szl20 at cam.ac.uk -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From akropilot at gmail.com Wed May 2 16:21:19 2018 From: akropilot at gmail.com (Mike Davis) Date: Wed, 2 May 2018 13:21:19 -0700 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] AWS Preservation Archival Meetup, Washington DC, May 16 Message-ID: Hi PASIG Members I am hosting a half-day seminar on preservation archival in AWS covering the features and services related to preservation (particularly storage), migration considerations, best practices, a demo of image recognition that uses machine learning, and one or more customers talking about their usage of AWS. The seminar will be lunchtime through 5pm on Wednesday May 16th. We'll be providing lunch where you'll have time to connect with other DC-area preservationists. You can register here: https://awspreservationarchivalsummit.splashthat.com/ And feel free to ping me if you have any questions. Regards, Mike *Mike * *Davis *Glacier & S3 Storage | Large scale archival | Amazon Web Services *mikdav at amazon.com* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From stelnabli at ucsd.edu Wed May 2 17:20:48 2018 From: stelnabli at ucsd.edu (Elnabli, Stefan) Date: Wed, 2 May 2018 21:20:48 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] ALA 2018 CFP: Digital Conversion Interest Group / Diversity & Inclusion In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear PASIG list members, **Please excuse any cross-postings** Reminder that deadline approaches: The ALCTS PARS Digital Conversion Interest Group is currently accepting proposals for 15 minute presentations at the ALA Annual Conference (New Orleans, LA) on June 23, 1:00 PM-2:00 PM MCC Rm 297 (Theater). This year?s theme is Diversity and Inclusion as it relates to projects or theory concerned with digitization, preservation, and access of print, audio, photographic, and moving image materials, as well as the migration, preservation, and access of born digital collections, including web-based and software-based materials. Both academic and public institutions are encouraged to propose presentations. Special priority will be given to proposals that focus on equal access and respected participation of all groups and individuals regardless of their culture, race, ethnicity, gender, age, religion, language, abilities/disabilities, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, geographic origin, political views, or level of education. Topics may include: * Projects featuring digitized or reformatted content related to underrepresented groups * Collaborations with underrepresented communities * Influencing digital conversion through accessibility guidelines for online access (e.g. OCR technologies/methods, video captioning) * Collaborations with library information technology experts and staff on making web accessible platforms for access * Promoting digitized/reformatted collections related to underrepresented groups (whether through social media, presentations, cooperation with historical societies and/or genealogical societies) Please email proposals to the co-chairs (William Schlaack or Stefan Elnabli) by May 11, 2018 The co-chairs are also seeking a new co-chair to serve from 2019-2020. Please send an email to express your interest. In this role you will work alongside a co-chair (Stefan Elnabli, UC San Diego) to plan and coordinate IG meetings for the ALA annual meeting (Midwinter is not required but encouraged). William Schlaack (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) Stefan Elnabli (UC San Diego) DCIG Co-Chairs -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From elisemtanner at gmail.com Thu May 3 08:56:27 2018 From: elisemtanner at gmail.com (Elise Tanner) Date: Thu, 3 May 2018 08:56:27 -0400 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] Event Announcement, NDSR Art Capstone: Preserving Media Art & Digital Art Information Message-ID: *NDSR Art Capstone: Preserving Media Art & Digital Art InformationFriday, June 29, 2018, 8:30-5Kislak Center at Penn Libraries, University of Pennsylvania 3420 Walnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19104To signal the end of the 2017-2018 National Digital Stewardship Residency for Art Information (NDSR Art), the cohort is hosting a one-day capstone event to discuss their year-long projects and offer new perspectives on preserving media art and digital art information. The capstone will examine the residents' work at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the University of Pennsylvania Fisher Fine Arts Library, the Yale Center for British Art, and the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Their efforts aspire to contribute to the larger conversation surrounding arts-related preservation issues and to identify strategies to preserve unique digital assets and documentation. The event will expand the discussion and offer perspectives from practitioners in the field, including new media curators, time-based media artists, conservators, and preservationists. The mission of the National Digital Stewardship Residency (NDSR) is to build a dedicated community of professionals who will advance our nation's capabilities in managing, preserving, and providing access to the digital record of human achievement. NDSR Art adapts and expands the NDSR model by addressing issues of digital preservation and stewardship in relation to the arts, with a particular focus on new media and arts information. This program is free and open to the public, although registration is recommended. Registration information and a program schedule will be made available soon. For more information please contact Elise Tanner, NDSR Art Resident at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, elise.tanner at philamuseum.org or Coral Salom?n, NDSR Art Resident at the University of Pennsylvania, Fisher Fine Arts Library, Corals at upenn.edu .NDSR Art Capstone: Preserving Media Art & Digital Art Information is sponsored by the National Digital Stewardship Residency for Art Information (NDSR Art) and Penn Libraries.* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From nickkrabbenhoeft at nypl.org Thu May 3 10:17:07 2018 From: nickkrabbenhoeft at nypl.org (Nick Krabbenhoeft) Date: Thu, 03 May 2018 14:17:07 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] Reminder, Archivematica User Group Today at 12PM EDT/ 9AM PDT Message-ID: Hello everyone, Just a reminder that the next Archivematica User Forum is this today, May 3rd, 2018 at 12pm EDT / 9am PDT. We'll be discussing types of pipelines and workflows. As a reminder, the Archivematica Users Forum is an ongoing series of bi-monthly calls for active Archivematica users or stakeholders. These calls are entirely driven and run by the user community. The goal is to create a space for discussion that will enable practitioners to connect with one another and identify common denominators, issues, and roadblocks that affect users across different organizations. For more information about the Archivematica User Forum including call-in details, please see: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xowR7G9u_5HmJFLcnQRp5rWiPfocmjQ7o-2T6QVkAu4 To view or add items to the agenda, please see: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1k7XhWsFZssJGipuy7QhrFb8IWtqFRQHH3S6CB1ItUWw Thanks, Nick -- Head of Digital Preservation, NYPL Library Services Center 205B x39596 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jessica at educopia.org Fri May 4 09:18:44 2018 From: jessica at educopia.org (Jessica Meyerson) Date: Fri, 4 May 2018 08:18:44 -0500 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] RECORDING POSTED: Episode 2 // Software Preservation Webinar Series Message-ID: *Greetings Colleagues!* *Continuing our Software Preservation Webinar Series, the recording from this week?s episode ?Episode 2: Software Collection Development? is now available! You are invited to watch the recording and explore the supplementary resources provided for this episode here: http://bit.ly/webinar-episode2 * *This episode reviews existing software collections and the users of those collections. In order to better capture current efforts in collecting software, Research & Facilitation Lead, Anne-Marie Trepanier (Canadian Center for Architecture), provides different collection profiles and the set of features that characterize each of them. Through round-table discussion, guests explore how collection development policies and strategies for existing collections impact community goals of sharing and reuse. Episode 2 features Patricia Falcao (Tate), Paula Jabloner (Computer History Museum) and Tim Walsh (Canadian Center for Architecture). More to come next week after ?Episode 3: Software (Re) Use Cases? featuring special guests Eric Kaltman (Carnegie Mellon University) and Matthew Allen (University of Toronto, Harvard Graduate School of Design)! Episode 3 Research & Facilitation Lead is Andrea Altenbach (Studio Gang). About the SeriesThe Software Preservation Webinar Series provides a survey of software preservation contexts. Each episode explores a different software preservation context by providing an overview, discussion with guest speakers (specialists in digital preservation, software studies, scholarly communication, open source software and more) and open discussion with attendees. The webinar is jointly hosted by the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) and the Software Preservation Network (SPN). Special thanks to Sarah Middleton (DPC) and all the members of SPN Training & Education Working Group: Anne-Marie Tr?panier (Canadian Centre for Architecture), Sherry Lake (University of Virginia), Andi Altenbach (Studio Gang), Neil Chue Hong (Software Sustainability Institute), Elizabeth Parke (McGill University), Daina Bouquin (Harvard/Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics).Due to user limits on our web conferencing software, registration for the series is now closed. However, all episodes will be recorded and posted to the DPC and SPN websites.We plan to build on this series with additional programming, including a series of in-depth interviews with researchers, developers, archivists, curators and others on their work in software preservation and curation. Stay tuned!On behalf of the SPN and DPC,Jessica Meyerson* -- *Jessica Meyerson* Research Program Officer Educopia Institute http://educopia.org Working from Austin, TX jessica at educopia.org | 512-864-4575 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From awoods at duraspace.org Wed May 9 22:48:17 2018 From: awoods at duraspace.org (Andrew Woods) Date: Wed, 9 May 2018 22:48:17 -0400 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] 2018-05-09 Updates: Oxford Common File Layout Message-ID: Hello All, Recognizing that the pasig-discuss mailing list may not be interested in receiving a constant flow of updates and discussion related to the OCFL effort, we will be transitioning most of the conversation to the OCFL Community mailing list: - https://groups.google.com/d/forum/ocfl-community You are encouraged to join! As previously posted, the next community call will take place on Friday, May 25th @11am ET. https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?msg=Oxford+Common+Filesystem+Layout+planning&iso=20180525T11&p1=179&ah=1 Please feel free to add items to the upcoming agenda: - http://bit.ly/ocfl-2018-05-notes Additionally, an editorial team has been formed to move a draft OCFL specification forward. This effort and meeting notes will be maintained in GitHub: https://github.com/OCFL/spec Today's editorial meeting focused on: - Details of the specification outline and format - Increasing transparency of editorial and community OCFL activity - Organizing an upcoming Open Repositories session Full notes: - https://github.com/OCFL/spec/wiki/2018.05.09-Editors-Meeting Regards, Andrew Woods -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From sschaefer at ucsd.edu Fri May 11 15:31:17 2018 From: sschaefer at ucsd.edu (Schaefer, Sibyl) Date: Fri, 11 May 2018 19:31:17 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] iPRES online registration open Message-ID: We are pleased to announce that iPres 2018 online registration is now open: https://ipres2018.org/registration! There are a number of open registrations ? if you have any questions, please contact the Registration Team. There are workshops and tutorials to sign up for, papers and panels, posters and demonstrations, and more. Watch for updates about the first digital preservation game room, original graphics, lightning sessions, and other programming. Please note that early bird registration ends June 30. Look forward to seeing you in September! Best- iPRES 2018 Organizing Team -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jessica at educopia.org Mon May 14 06:44:18 2018 From: jessica at educopia.org (Jessica Meyerson) Date: Mon, 14 May 2018 05:44:18 -0500 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] RECORDING POSTED: Episode 3 // Software Preservation Webinar Series Message-ID: *Greetings Colleagues!Apologies for the delay! The recording from this week?s episode ?Episode 3: Software (Re)Use Cases? is now available! You are invited to watch the recording and explore the supplementary resources provided for this episode here: http://bit.ly/webinar-episode2 The ?collections as data? initiative centers user communities and use cases in discussions about collection development. This episode highlights research use cases for software collections, unique qualities of software as a research object and explores whether and how the ?collections as data? approach is a useful response to the unique challenges of collecting, preserving and providing access to software. Episode 3 features Matthew Allen (University of Toronto, Harvard Graduate School of Design) and Eric Kaltman (Carnegie Mellon University). Episode 3 Research & Facilitation Lead is Andrea Altenbach (Studio Gang). More to come after this week's episode ?Episode 4: Software in Scholarly Communications? featuring Special Guests: Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati (Vanderbilt University), Neil Chue Hong (Software Sustainability Institute) and James Howison (University of Texas at Austin) with Research & Facilitation Lead Elizabeth Parke (McGill University).About the SeriesThe Software Preservation Webinar Series provides a survey of software preservation contexts. Each episode explores a different software preservation context by providing an overview, discussion with guest speakers (specialists in digital preservation, software studies, scholarly communication, open source software and more) and open discussion with attendees. The webinar is jointly hosted by the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) and the Software Preservation Network (SPN). Special thanks to Sarah Middleton (DPC) and all the members of SPN Training & Education Working Group: Anne-Marie Tr?panier (Canadian Centre for Architecture), Sherry Lake (University of Virginia), Andi Altenbach (Studio Gang), Neil Chue Hong (Software Sustainability Institute), Elizabeth Parke (McGill University), Daina Bouquin (Harvard/Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics).Due to user limits on our web conferencing software, registration for the series is now closed. However, all episodes will be recorded and posted to the DPC and SPN websites.We plan to build on this series with additional programming, including a series of in-depth interviews with researchers, developers, archivists, curators and others on their work in software preservation and curation. Stay tuned!On behalf of the SPN and DPC,Jessica Meyerson* -- *Jessica Meyerson* Research Program Officer Educopia Institute http://educopia.org Working from Austin, TX jessica at educopia.org | 512-864-4575 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From maria at tacc.utexas.edu Thu May 17 09:50:07 2018 From: maria at tacc.utexas.edu (Maria Esteva) Date: Thu, 17 May 2018 13:50:07 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] Workshop on Cyberinfrastructure and Machine Learning for Digital Libraries and Archives - June 3rd at JCDL 2018 - Final schedule Message-ID: <005FF9CA-F8FA-49EB-ADA3-2B1AA2EEB0ED@contoso.com> Join us! Workshop on Cyberinfrastructure and Machine Learning for Digital Libraries and Archives - June 3rd at JCDL 2018 - Final schedule The workshop introduces a tryptic model that connects digital libraries and archives, cyberinfrastructure, and machine learning to stimulate research and implementation of automated methods to describe, represent, preserve, and facilitate access and reuse of large-scale scholarly data. Cyberinfrastructure refers to shared online research environments, backed up by advanced computing resources and supported by experts. Coupled with cyberinfrastructure, machine learning methods and tools can provide digital libraries and archives with powerful resources to enhance their ability to curate, organize, represent, and provide persistent access to large-scale collections, thus facilitating their discoverability and reuse. The papers and activities address the combination of cyberinfrastructure and machine learning throughout the lifecycle of digital collections; from data management planning, requirements gathering, description, preservation, access and publication. Bring your laptop for a day of lectures by remarkable researchers and for exciting hands-on exercises. 9:00-9:30 Conference chairs: Welcome and overview of the workshop?s agenda. 9:30-10:00 Matthew McEniry, Jessica Trelogan, and Santi Thompson: Expanding Library Capacity and Facilitating Reuse through a Consortial Data Repository 10:00-10:30 Coffee break. 10:30-11:00 Tanya Clement, Jon Dunn, Juliet Hardesty, Chris Lacinak and Amy Rudersdorf, Audiovisual Metadata Platform Planning Project. 11:00-11:30 Will Thomas, Benjamin Galewsky, Gregory Jansen, Sandeep Satheesan, Richard Marciano, Shannon Bradley, Jong Lee, Luigi Marini and Kenton McHenry, Petabytes in Practice: Working with Collections as Data at Scale. 11:30- 12:00 Maria Esteva, Hands-on tutorial: A Method for Modeling Large-scale Data Requirements to Cyberinfrastructure and Machine Learning. After introducing how data modelling was used in the design of the Digital Rocks Portal (https://www.digitalrocksportal.org/), attendees working in multi-disciplinary groups will model large-scale data use cases including analysis, curation, access and publication functions and will map those to cyberinfrastructure. You are welcomed to share large scale data curation and analysis cases to discuss and resolve during the workshop. 12:00-1:30 Lunch Break 1:30 -2:00 Matt Lease: What can Machine Learning and Crowdsourcing do for you? Exploring New Tools for Scalable Data Processing. 2:00-2:30 Sachith Withana, Inna Kouper, and Beth Plale, Data Capsule Appliance for Restricted Data in Libraries. 2:30-3:00 Ruizhu Huang, Hands-on tutorial: Machine Learning on Cyberinfrastructure Attendees will get chance to learn how to log on to a supercomputer and start an interactive sessions using a big data cluster to explore how it can be used for a machine learning project. 3:00-3:30 Coffee Break 3:30-4:00 Dan Wu and Shaobo Liang, Predicting Library OPAC Users? Cross-device Transitions. 4:00-4:30 Amit Gupta, Pankaj Jaiswal, Crispin Taylor, and Weijia Xu, Improve Accessibility of Biology Papers through Integration of Domain Information Extraction in the Publication Pipeline. 4:30-5:00 Closing Discussion -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jessica at educopia.org Mon May 21 11:19:55 2018 From: jessica at educopia.org (Jessica Meyerson) Date: Mon, 21 May 2018 10:19:55 -0500 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] RECORDING POSTED: Episode 4 // Software in Scholarly Communications Message-ID: Greetings Colleagues! The recording from this week?s episode ?Episode 4: Software in Scholarly Communications? is now available! You are invited to watch the recording and explore the supplementary resources provided for this episode here: http://bit.ly/spwebinars-episode4 This episode provides an overview of scholarly communication practices as they relate to software preservation and citation within contemporary scholarly research methods. Attention is paid to evolving and changing practices in a variety of institutional settings (e.g. post-secondary institutions, GLAMs, nonprofits), and to the need for disciplinary responsiveness in publication and citation practices. More to come this week with ?Episode 5: Scaling Software Preservation and Emulation? featuring Special Guests: Maureen Pennock (British Library), Euan Cochrane (Yale University) and Klaus Rechert (University of Frieburg) with Research Lead and Facilitator Paul Wheatley (Digital Preservation Coalition ). About the Series The Software Preservation Webinar Series provides a survey of software preservation contexts. Each episode explores a different software preservation context by providing an overview, discussion with guest speakers (specialists in digital preservation, software studies, scholarly communication, open source software and more) and open discussion with attendees. The webinar is jointly hosted by the Digital Preservation Coalition (DPC) and the Software Preservation Network (SPN). Special thanks to Sarah Middleton (DPC) and all the members of SPN Training & Education Working Group: Anne-Marie Tr?panier (Canadian Centre for Architecture), Sherry Lake (University of Virginia), Andi Altenbach (Studio Gang), Neil Chue Hong (Software Sustainability Institute), Elizabeth Parke (McGill University), Daina Bouquin (Harvard/Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), Julia Kim (Library of Congress) and Morgan McKeehan (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill). Due to user limits on our web conferencing software, registration for the series is now closed. However, all episodes will be recorded and posted to the DPC and SPN websites. We plan to build on this series with additional programming, including a series of in-depth interviews with researchers, developers, archivists, curators and others on their work in software preservation and curation. Stay tuned! On behalf of the SPN and DPC, Jessica Meyerson -- *Jessica Meyerson* Research Program Officer Educopia Institute http://educopia.org Working from Austin, TX jessica at educopia.org | 512-864-4575 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From seth.r.anderson at yale.edu Mon May 21 15:57:59 2018 From: seth.r.anderson at yale.edu (Anderson, Seth) Date: Mon, 21 May 2018 19:57:59 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] JOB POSTING: Software Preservation Analyst @ Yale University Library Message-ID: <0181E20A-A9E0-4A41-8B98-8A7D02C752A7@yale.edu> Greetings Colleagues! On behalf of Yale University Library (YUL), the EaaSI project team invites applications for a Software Preservation Analyst that will play a crucial role in the future of the YUL software preservation program and the EaaSI emulation-as-a-service network. * Are you passionate about digital curation workflows? * Are you interested in contributing to a community-driven network that supports software preservation and emulation? * Do you believe in the importance of documentation and training to advance the field? The Software Preservation Analyst will lead efforts to build a collection of emulated operating systems and computer environments, create documentation of system workflows and technology, and develop training and support materials for the emulation service. The position is an essential member of the EaaSI project team and will make valuable contributions to emerging tools and practices for software preservation and emulation. Learn more about the posting and submit your application here: http://bit.ly/YaleSWPA If you have additional questions, please contact me at seth.anderson at yale.edu. Best, Seth ? Seth Anderson Software Preservation Program Manager Digital Preservation Services Yale University Library T 203-436-9440 E seth.r.anderson at yale.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rscott at asist.org Fri May 25 13:09:52 2018 From: rscott at asist.org (Rodneikka Scott) Date: Fri, 25 May 2018 17:09:52 +0000 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] This listserv moving to New ASIS&T Community Message-ID: ASIS&T will begin transitioning this Listserv from its existing software platform to a new and improved community platform: the ASIS&T Community (http://community.asist.org/home). This transition is necessary because it ASIS&T to comply with General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) which goes into effect on May 25, 2018 which requires specific compliance that we are not able to achieve using the current system. As a result, communication using this platform has been suspended. Those who are ASIS&T Members, your subscription will be migrated to a new "eGroup" on the ASIS&T Community site. Not an ASIS&T Member? We have a solution for you. Please keep an eye on your inbox for a message regarding steps to join the ASIS&T Community site. Here's a quick overview of some of the new features you can expect in the ASIS&T Community: * Enhanced discussion capabilities. Now you'll receive emails that are more structured and easier to read than a traditional listserv or forum alert. * Improved Member Directory search. You can find members by name, location, SIG affiliation, area of expertise, work setting, and more. * Granular privacy controls. You can have complete control over what information you share with members of the community and your contacts. * Centralized subscription management. You can manage your subscriptions to all discussions in one place. Choose to receive daily digests or real-time emails by group. * Resource sharing. All attachments posted to discussions are archived in a dedicated Resource Library. You can also add documents to share anytime you want. You will receive final notification on or before June 22nd once the transition has been completed. Stay Connected! Learn more about ASIS&T Member Benefits. Join ASIS&T Today. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From elisemtanner at gmail.com Fri May 25 10:12:17 2018 From: elisemtanner at gmail.com (Elise Tanner) Date: Fri, 25 May 2018 10:12:17 -0400 Subject: [Pasig-discuss] =?utf-8?q?Registration_Open=3A_NDSR_Art_Capstone_?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=93_Preserving_Media_Art_=26_Digital_Art_Informati?= =?utf-8?q?on?= Message-ID: *NDSR Art Capstone: Preserving Media Art & Digital Art InformationFriday, June 29, 2018, 9:30am-5:15pmKislak Center (6th floor), Van Pelt-Dietrich Library CenterUniversity of PennsylvaniaThis symposium will provide a platform for the NDSR Art residents to discuss their experiences developing preservation and access strategies for GLAM assets, as well as offer perspectives from new media curators, time-based media artists, conservators, and preservationists.To signal the end of the 2017-2018 National Digital Stewardship Residency for Art Information (NDSR Art), the NDSR Art cohort is hosting a one-day capstone event to discuss their year-long projects and offer new perspectives on preserving media art and digital art information. The capstone will examine the residents? work at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the University of Pennsylvania Fisher Fine Arts Library, the Yale Center for British Art, and the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Their efforts aspire to contribute to the larger conversation surrounding arts-related preservation issues and to identify strategies to preserve unique digital assets and documentation. The event will expand the discussion and offer perspectives from practitioners in the field, including new media curators, time-based media artists, conservators, and preservationists.This program is free and open to the public. The event schedule can be found here . Please register in advance by RSVP-ing here . Schedule: http://ndsr-pma.arlisna.org/2018/05/21/registration-open-ndsr-art-capstone-preserving-media-art-digital-art-information/ RSVP: http://ndsr-pma.arlisna.org/2018/05/21/registration-open-ndsr-art-capstone-preserving-media-art-digital-art-information/ For more information, please contact Elise Tanner, NDSR Art Resident at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, elise.tanner at philamuseum.org or Coral Salom?n, NDSR Art Resident at the University of Pennsylvania, Fisher Fine Arts Library, corals at upenn.edu .* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: