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About the authors Foreword Introduction

PART I: MEMORY, PRIVACY AND TRANSPARENCY
1. Inheritance of digital media - Edina Harbinja
2. Curbing the online assimilation of personal information - Paulan Korenhof
3. The rise of computer-assisted reporting: challenges and successes - Brant Houston
4. Link rot, reference rot and the thorny problems of legal citation - Ellie Margolis

PART II: THE PHYSICAL WORLD: OBJECTS, ART AND ARCHITECTURE
5. The Internet of Things: the risks and impacts of ubiquitous computing - Eireann Leverett
6. Accurate digital colour reproduction on displays: from hardware design to software features - Abhijit Sarkar
7. Historical building information model (BIM)+: sharing, preserving and reusing architectural design data - Ju Hyun Lee and Ning Gu

PART III: DATA AND PROGRAMMING
8. Preparing and releasing official statistical data - Natalie Shlomo
9. Sharing research data, data standards and improving opportunities for creating visualisations - Vetria Byrd
10. Open source, version control and software sustainability - Ildiko VancsaAftermath

Index

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Partners for preservation : advancing digital preservation through cross-community collaboration 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
등록번호 청구기호 권별정보 자료실 이용여부
0002510485 025.84 -A19-4 서울관 서고(열람신청 후 1층 대출대) 이용가능

출판사 책소개

알라딘제공

Who could be partners to archivists working in digital preservation? This book features chapters from international contributors from diverse backgrounds and professions discussing their challenges with and victories over digital problems that share common issues with those facing digital preservationists. The only certainty about technology is that it will change. The speed of that change, and the ever-increasing diversity of digital formats, tools, and platforms, will present stark challenges to the long-term preservation of digital records. Archivists are frequently challenged by the technical expertise, subject matter knowledge, time, and resource requirements needed to solve the broad set of challenges sure to be faced by the archival profession. Partners for Preservation advocates the need for archivists to recruit partners and learn lessons from across diverse professions to work more effectively within the digital landscape. Includes discussion of: the internet of things digital architecture research data and collaboration open source programming privacy, memory and transparency inheritance of digital media.



This book features chapters from international contributors from diverse backgrounds and professions discussing their challenges with and victories over digital problems that share common issues with those facing digital preservationists. The only certainty about technology is that it will change.