2007 Digital Preservation Award Shortlist
The Digital Preservation Award of £5,000 is sponsored by the Digital
Preservation Coalition. This prestigious Award recognises achievement
and encourages innovation in the new and challenging field of digital
preservation – simply put, preserving things whose very existence
depends on computers.
Short-listed for the Digital Preservation Award are:
1. LIFE: The British Library.
LIFE (Lifecycle Information for E-Literature) has made a major contribution
to understanding the long-term costs of digital preservation, an essential
step in helping institutions plan for the future. Its methodology models
the digital lifecycle and calculates the costs of preserving digital
information for the next 5, 10 or 100 years. Organisations can apply
this process to understand costs and focus resources on those items
or collections most in need of them.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ls/life/1/conference.shtml
2. Web Curator Tool software development project: National Library
of New Zealand
& The British Library.
The web is a huge and interconnected digital asset with which we are
all familiar, and one in which material changes and disappears with frightening
regularity. Conscious of this problem, the National Library of New Zealand
and The British Library worked together in an international collaboration
to build this tool, which supports selective and thematic web-harvesting
by collaborating users in a library environment. Swift development over
just 10 months enabled it to be released as free software for the benefit
of the international web-archiving community in September 2006, from
webcurator.sf.net.
http://webcurator.sourceforge.net/
3. Active Preservation at The National Archives - PRONOM Technical
Registry and DROID file format identification tool: The National Archives
of the UK.
One of the fundamental challenges of digital preservation is to understand
the technologies required to access digital information, and plan the
actions we will need to take to ensure continued access in the future
in the face of constant technological change. Is the software needed
to read this document still supported by the supplier, and is the format
of this digital movie still readable by most computers? PRONOM is a unique
and innovative online service which helps to answer questions like these
and includes a knowledge base of technical information about over 600
file formats and 250 software tools, which has been developed by The
National Archives to answer these challenges.
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/aboutapps/pronom/puid.htm
4. PARADIGM (The Personal
Archives Accessible in Digital Media): Bodleian
Library, University of Oxford, & John Rylands University Library,
University of Manchester.
Personal archives are important components of cultural memory, but inexperience
in curating their modern counterparts – e-mail, digital photographs,
online calendars, blogs and many more - puts the survival of today's
personal histories at risk. The diversity and volatility of digital technology
far exceeds that of any medium that creators, archivists and researchers
have previously worked with. The Paradigm project has worked with politicians,
archivists and researchers to investigate these challenges in an exemplar
project so that the archives of significant contemporaries can continue
to enrich our history.
http://www.paradigm.ac.uk/
5. Digital Repository Audit and Certification: CRL, RLG-OCLC,
NARA, the DCC, DPE and Nestor.
As the number of organisations, both public and private, preserving
digital information increases, it becomes important to be able to assess
how well they are doing and how well-prepared they are for the unknown
challenges of the future. The Trustworthy Repositories Audit and Certification
(TRAC) Criteria and Checklist (maintained by the US Center for Research
Libraries), the nestor project's Criteria Catalogue and the Digital
Repository Audit Method Based on Risk Assessment (DRAMBORA) published
by the Digital Curation Centre and DigitalPreservationEurope present
complementary methods for the self assessment, audit and certification
of digital repository infrastructures.
http://www.repositoryaudit.eu/
All the short-listed projects will give a presentation to the Digital
Preservation Award judges on 19 June. The winners of the Conservation
Awards 2007 will be announced at the British Museum on 27 September. |