Electronic Records and Digital Preservation
Electronic records and digital preservation catch your fancy? If you're an archivist or historian or just plain anyone worried about the digital future, The Ten Thousand Year Blog is for you. The title is inspired by physicist and speculative fiction author Gregory Benford's Deep Time: How Humanity Communicates Across Millennia (01999). My review of this book appears in the Association of Canadian Archivists' journal Archivaria no. 52 (Fall 02001). David Mattison. If you wonder about the "0" in front of the years, see my post for 02002 11 11 about the Long Now Foundation.
Tuesday, February 25, 2003

LiveVault offers Web-based management of long-term data storage in partnership with Iron Mountain.
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COLLEGE PARK, Md., Feb. 20 (U.S. Newswire) -- The National Archives and Records Administration will host its 18th annual preservation conference on Thursday, March 27, 2003. This year's theme will focus on the advantages and disadvantages of digital and analog formats in the context of reformatting archival information
from one medium to another - such as paper to microfilm or to digital images - for the purpose of preserving permanently valuable information. The conference is open to interested members of the public and the media.


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ALBANY, NY (February 20, 2003)- "Scholarly Publishing and Archiving on the Web: New Opportunities"  will be held on April 7, 8:45 am-4 pm, at UAlbany's Campus Center. Reservations for the symposium are due Tuesday, April 1, 2003.
  The day-long symposium will focus on the changing nature of academic publishing and scholarly communication.  Digital full-text and image files are becoming the norm for academic communication. Scholars now use world-wide networks to distribute articles, data, and images to colleagues. Commercial publishing is no longer the only option for disciplinary peers and the scholarly community.
  This symposium, the fifth in the last several years to be offered by Albany's University Libraries, will explore emerging models for Web publishing and archiving electronic scholarship using institutional venues. The symposium will present several  options to facilitate self-publishing and institutional  archiving by scholars.  Aditionally, speakers will discuss various implications and issues surrounding scholarly electronic publishing and the creation of repositories.
  Speakers will include Professor Steven Harnad , Director of  the Cognitive Sciences Centre of the University of  Southampton, who will present the keynote talk regarding scholarly publishing and archiving. Other speakers include: Simeon Warner, from Cornell University; Nancy Harm, from Luna Imaging Inc.; Professor Rob Kling, from Indiana  University; Maria Bonn, Director of the Scholarly Publishing  Office of the University of Michigan ; Susan Gibbons from the  University of Rochester Institutional Repository System; Catherine Candee, from the California Digital Library; and  Professor Timothy Stephen, from the University at Albany Communications Department.

Source: Archives & Archivists LISTSERV List, 24 Feb 02003


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© 2003 David Mattison
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