Top Banner
LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E- literature Richard Davies LIFE Project Manager The British Library CARL Visit to the BL 27 November 2007
21

LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

Jan 01, 2016

Download

Documents

garrett-slater

Richard Davies LIFE Project Manager The British Library. LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature. CARL Visit to the BL 27 November 2007. Overview. Digital Preservation Team (DPT) What is the LIFE Project? LIFE 1 LIFE 2 Further Information. Digital Preservation Team (DPT). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

LIFE ProjectLifecycle Information for E-literature

Richard DaviesLIFE Project ManagerThe British Library

CARL Visit to the BL27 November 2007

Page 2: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

2LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Overview

► Digital Preservation Team (DPT)

► What is the LIFE Project?

► LIFE1

► LIFE2

► Further Information

Page 3: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

3LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Digital Preservation Team (DPT)

Page 4: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

4LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

DPT Projects & Activities

► PLANETS Projecthttp://www.planets-project.eu

► Digital Lives Projecthttp://www.bl.uk/digital-lives

► Risk Assessment

► DP Strategic Plans

Page 5: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

5LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Lifecycle Information for E-literature

Project phases:

► LIFE1 (12 months)

► LIFE2 (18 months)

Page 6: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

6LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

$LIFE starts to answer the question:

What is the long term costof preserving digital material?

Page 7: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

7LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Why use lifecycle costing?

►Enables evaluation of all the financial commitments for an item in a collection

►Important for digital collections, where many costs are largely unknown

Page 8: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

8LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Aims

► Better understanding of the digital lifecycle

► Plan and prepare for digital preservation activities

► Evaluate and improve efforts

► Compare analogue and digital

Page 9: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

9LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

LIFE1 project

1. Literature Review

2. Economic Lifecycle Model

3. Generic Preservation Model

4. Case Studies

5. International Conference

Page 10: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

10LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

LIFE1 Case Studies

eJournals

Web Archiving

VDEP

Page 11: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

LIFE1 LIFE2

Page 12: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

12LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Aim of LIFE2

To evaluate, refine and further develop the techniques developed in phase one of LIFE

Page 13: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

13LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

The LIFE Model v1.1

Inspection

Re-ingest BackupReference

Linking

User Support

Preservation Action

RefreshmentMetadata Extraction

Holdings Update

Access Control

Preservation Planning

Storage Provision

Metadata Creation

Deposit

Access Provision

Preservation Watch

Repository Admin

Re-use Existing

Metadata

Quality Assurance

Life

cy

cle

Ele

me

nts

AccessContent

PreservationBit-stream

PreservationMetadataCreation

Ingest

Check-in

Obtaining

Ordering & Invoicing

IPR & Licensing

Submission Agreement

Selection

Acquisition

....

....

....

....

Creation or

Purchase

Life

cy

cle

S

tag

e

AccessContent

PreservationBit-stream

PreservationMetadataCreation

IngestAcquisitionCreation

or Purchase

Page 14: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

14LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

LIFE2 Case Studies

Institutional Repositories

Primary Data

Digitised Newspapers

01101101010101011001110100110110101010101100111010011011010101010110011101001101101010101011001110100110110101010101100111010110

Page 15: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

15LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Institutional Repositories

Page 16: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

16LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

The Burney Collection

► Purchased by the British Library in 1818 for

£13,500

► 1,100 volumes of the earliest known

newspapers

► 1,000,000 pages from 17th, 18th and 19th

Centuries.

► Re-scanning or re-microfilming is not possible.

► Microfilmed in the 1970s

► Digitisation completed in 2004.

Page 17: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

17LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Questions that arise from Burney

► Comparing digital and analogue lifecycles

► What is the lifecycle cost to an institution of producing digitised surrogates?

► What are the key preservation issues common across digitisation projects of differing scales?

Page 18: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

18LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

LIFE2 deliverables

► Economic Evaluation of LIFE1

► Revision of the LIFE Model Version 1.1 (October 2007) Version 2 (Summer 2008)

► Updated Preservation Model (Summer 2008)

► Final report

► End of project conference

Page 19: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

19LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Benefits of LIFE

► Assess the financial commitment for acquiring or creating new digital materials

► More effective planning for preservation activities

► Comparison of digital lifecycles across collections

► Evaluation and optimisation of existing digital lifecycles

► Predictive future cost of digital preservation

Page 20: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

20LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

LIFE Website & Blog

Websitewww.life.ac.uk

LIFE Blogwww.life.ac.uk/bl

og

Page 21: LIFE Project Lifecycle Information for E-literature

21LIFE Project (27 Nov 2007)

Thank you.

e [email protected] +44 (0) 20 7412 7182w www.life.ac.uk | www.bl.uk/dp

x

01101101010101011001110100110110101010101100111010011011010101010110011101001101101010101011001110100110110101010101100111010110