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DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle

DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle. Managing in Response to Technological Change. Nancy Y McGovern. Topics. Nature of technological change Types of technology Community model Management principles. “Technology”. Defined as:

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DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle

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  1. DigCCurr Professional Institute: Curation Practices for the Digital Object Lifecycle Managing in Response to Technological Change Nancy Y McGovern

  2. Topics • Nature of technological change • Types of technology • Community model • Management principles

  3. “Technology” Defined as: • “scientific study of practical or industrial arts” [OED] • “physical devices of technical performance” * • knowledge about how innovations work * • “skills, methods, procedures, routines…” * • problem-solving activities * • Sociotechnical system involving the “manufacture and use of objects involving people and other objects in combination” * * UK Technology Education Centre

  4. “Technological Change” “accumulation of technology developments and the resulting changes in capabilities provided by the sum of technology developments” McGovern, 2009

  5. “Technology Development” Outcomes: • Enhancement: doing an existing thing better • Alternative: doing an existing thing differently • New ability: doing a new and desired thing • Innovation: doing a new and unimagined thing McGovern, 2009

  6. Innovation Cycle Adapted by McGovern, 2009

  7. Human Response Rogers’ technology adoption model

  8. Technology for Curation More than “avoid file format obsolescence”…

  9. Preservation Planning

  10. OAIS: Monitor Technology • Objective: track emerging technologies, information standards, computing platforms • Purpose: avoid obsolescence that could prevent access • Scope: may include prototyping • Activities: provides reports, external data standards, prototype results, alerts

  11. “Technology Watch” • Characteristics: • Absence of formal definition • Range in services • Often reviews of 6 technologies annually • JTC 1 standard

  12. Community Efforts • Digital Preservation for Museums: Recommendations - CHIN, 2004 • Service requirements • LIFE Project - UCL/BL, 2006-2008 • Cost of technology watch for organizations • Technology Watch Reports • e.g., DigiCULT, DPC, DCC, NSF

  13. Technology Example: File Formats • Identification: PRONOM (UDFR) and DROID • Validation: JHOVE • Preservation Plans: PLANETS • Normalization: XENA • Risk identification: LC sustainability factors • Risk assessment: KB format risk metrics • Risk notification: AONS (migration pathways) • Management costs: LIFE Project • Method: Cornell File Format Risk Report

  14. Scope Adjustment • More than: avoid file format obsolescence • Holistic approach required for Technology: • technology portion of OAIS administration • technology support for all of OAIS • archival storage management • automated policy enforcement • system security • expertise and advise

  15. Macro Monitoring • Object: file formats, media metadata • Collection: relationships, metadata • Repository: software, tools, modules • Platform: protocols, security, software, hardware • Organization: policies, procedures, protocols • Standards: IT, Internet, archival, description • Competencies: knowledge, skills, experience

  16. Micro Monitoring • e.g., 35 technology types enable OAIS • Examples (implicit or explicit) • Communication: the ability to convey a message or a specific piece of information – messaging mechanisms • Logs computer: files, often using a standard format, that document activities performed • Policy enforcement: the ability to perform a function or activity using rules to allow or prohibit activities

  17. Priorities for Monitoring • Contact: requires direct contact with digital content • Interaction: must respond to, not just be made aware of, changes in digital content • Exploitation:potential to contribute to digital preservation strategies by exploiting opportunities • Risk management: participates in the avoidance of risks to integrity, longevity, or authenticity • Automation: potential to perform more effectively for digital preservation if automated

  18. Responding to Technology • Identify potential new technology • Monitor new technology • Assess new technology • Respond to new technology • Act to avoid obsolescence of existing technologies McGovern, 2009

  19. Curation Response McGovern, 2009

  20. “Technology Responsiveness” • Community objectives • accumulate current and historical information • develop competencies and tools • incorporate community developments • build a network of contributors and users • ensure sustainability

  21. Managing Technology Leg • Follow key developments • Balance monitoring and doing • Know yourself (5 stages) • Adjust for your organizational context • Manage human side of technology, too • No on/off switch – incremental progress • Anticipate change • Manage technology leg over time

  22. Technology Investments • Prioritize: meet essential requirements • Sequence: identify stages to accomplish • Assess: determine when to respond • Fund: decide when to own/share • Anticipate: understand past, look ahead • Evaluate: establish ongoing review

  23. Optimal Developments • Characteristics of good developments • written in a well-documented language • usable on a wide variety of platforms • modular in design • support for batch processing • designed for workflow integration • open source licensing • development driven by credible organization

  24. Community Developments • NDIIPP Partner Tool and Service Inventory http://www.digitalpreservation.gov/partners/resources/tools/index.html • Digital Curation Center: Digital Curation Tools http://www.dcc.ac.uk/tools/digital-curation-tools/ • PADI Digital Preservation Tools http://www.nla.gov.au/padi/topics/535.html • PRONOM Information Resources http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/aboutapps/pronom/tools.htm • Web archiving tools: IIPC http://netpreserve.org/software/downloads.php

  25. Technology Readiness

  26. Curation Community Readiness • Launch • Develop (production-level) • Demonstrate • Develop capability • Prove feasibility • Research

  27. “…the best way to forecast the future is to create it.” Michael J. Gelb “The most reliable way to forecast the future is to try to understand the present.” John Naisbitt

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