Showing posts with label DCAPE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DCAPE. Show all posts

Friday, December 5, 2008

DCAPE meeting: day two

Today was the second day of the inaugural meeting of the Distributed Custodial Archival Preservation Environments group. We went over over the project timeline (which needs some revision), and spent some time discussing the specifics of the archivist partners' first task: outlining, with reference to the Open Archival Information System Reference Model, the specific functional requirements of the preservation system. We then spent some time going over some practical stuff (travel reimbursements, etc.), talked about the records that each partner was thinking of contributing to the project, and wrapped up at around 11:30 AM. We continued talking informally over lunch, and then broke up headed our separate ways.

Right before lunch, Rich Szary, the director of the Wilson Library, gave me a quick tour of the Carolina Digital Library and Archives, which is housed in Wilson Library and which has an astounding array of scanning equipment -- including a high-capacity, autofeed paper scanner that UNC's conservation staff have approved for use with archival records -- and is digitizing archival materials and rare books with immense speed.

Immediately after lunch, I had to leave for RDU. I had another long layover at EWR. I'm getting really familiar with Concourse C, and got to watch the sun set over the "Airtrain" connecting it to the other concourses; unfortunately, my the window glass through which I shot this picture reflected some of the light in the concourse's interior.

Although the good people at Continental no doubt wanted a different outcome, I was really happy with the way my flight arrangements worked out: none of the planes I was on were full, and I didn't have any seatmats on any of my flights. Owing to the clear night sky, I also got a stunning view of Manhattan, Brooklyn and Queens on the flight from EWR to ALB.

Nonetheless, I am really, really glad to be home.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

DCAPE meeting: day one

I'm in Chapel Hill, North Carolina for the kickoff meeting of the Distributed Custodial Archival Preservation Environments project, which is funded by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission and headed by the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's School of Information and Library Science (UNC SILS) and Renaissance Computing Institute (RENCI).

DCAPE's goal is to build a trustworthy and geographically distributed system that automates many of the processes associated with taking in and managing archival electronic records and ensuring that the records are preserved appropriately. The main system will be built by RENCI and the Data Intensive Cyber Environments group within, and two other institutions -- West Virginia University and Carleton University (which is not receiving grant funding) -- will maintain identical systems.

Guidance concerning the functional requirements of the system and sample records used to test its workings will be provided by archivists from an array of repositories:

We met on the third floor of the Wilson Library, which houses the university's music library and manuscript and rare books collections, in a meeting room just off the library's exhibit space; as a result, we got to see Presenting John Keats, a display of first editions and elegantly bound volumes mounted in honor of the university libraries' acquisition of their six millionth volume, during our breaks.

We spent a good portion of the morning discussing iRODS, the software that will drive the system that SILS and RENCI are building. I'm still trying to wrap my mind around precisely how it works (and have the feeling that I will continue to do so for some time), but iRODS is designed to allow users to create rules that govern how records will be handled by the system; for example, it's possible to write a rule that instructs the system to perform integrity checks on each record, compare the results with those of past integrity checks, and perform a specific action in the event that a discrepancy is discovered.

We also discussed how the archivists involved in the project will go about defining the functional requirements that the system should incorporate. We'll need to continue this discussion tomorrow.

We also got to talk informally, which I consider essential to the success of any collaborative project, over lunch at the Top of the Hill and dinner at the Carolina Inn's Carolina CrossRoads, both of which are Chapel Hill institutions. Although many of us know each other from past projects or from SAA or the Best Practices Exchange, this project is pretty large and not everyone knows each other pretty well. Over meals, we got to share news about the other stuff we're working on, trade war stories, and talk about the increasingly severe budget constraints that almost all of us face.