I'm late to this discussion, but I spent some time last year trying to find 
presentations from the earliest days of Code4Lib conferences, and found that 
not all are still there--certainly those that exist on external servers. In 
some cases, those are presentations about projects that have disappeared since 
then. In that case, clearly no one cared about the topic at all, either to save 
the project or the presentation. The fact that the material is missing tells us 
something in itself. 

Margaret Heller
Digital Services Librarian
Loyola University Chicago
773-508-2686

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kyle 
Banerjee
Sent: Tuesday, December 12, 2017 7:22 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] curating code4lib

On Tue, Dec 12, 2017 at 1:28 PM, Jonathan Rochkind <[email protected]>
wrote:

> > Generally speaking, if you have to wonder about the value of 
> > something,
> you
> already have the answer.... ;)
>
> Kyle, I honestly am not sure which answer you are suggesting is the 
> right one in cases where you have to wonder!
>

What I was thinking was that it doesn't make sense to permanently commit 
resources without a specific reason -- i.e. if in doubt, throw it out :)


> By temperament, most of us library professionals are inclined to want 
> to err on the side of "preservation" -- shouldn't we preserve it _just 
> in case_, because once gone it will be too late if someone needs it later?
>

Not necessarily. The only thing that distinguishes the Smithsonian Institution 
from a landfill is selection, organization, and presentation -- both are filled 
with old junk.

The value libraries contribute is selecting and presenting things within 
meaningful contexts. If we just start keeping stuff, we're effectively a 
digital landfill filled with random junk -- and any good stuff we might have 
becomes much harder or even impossible to use.

kyle

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