Joyfully cross-posted!

The new issue of the Code4Lib Journal, Issue 40, is now available. Many thanks 
to the authors and editors who worked hard to make this issue happen. 
Interested in a survey of filenaming practices? Wondering how to develop 
centralized accessioning for born-digital archival materials? Want to bring 
together cataloging and wikidata edits to contribute your expertise and augment 
your library's catalog? Wondering what ever happened to that Arduino-based 
transaction counter (update, it's now a Pi!)? Or considering the principles 
behind digital collections? This issue's got something for you!

Editorial: Beyond Posters: On Hospitality in Libtech
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13432

Ruth Kitchin Tillman

In this editorial, I will be using the word hospitality to mean the intentional 
welcome of others into a space which one currently occupies, possibly as a 
member of a dominant group. I do not wish to encourage the idea that one should 
cultivate or maintain a role of benevolent host in a way that forces others to 
remain forever guest or outsider, although there will always be newcomers. 
Hospitality may be a first step to ceding one’s position as host in a space. It 
may be expanding that space to become a place with many potential hosts, each 
respected for their varied contributions and skillsets. It may also be 
supporting those in a different space or a different role, such as those who 
use the technologies we build and support (both colleagues and patrons), and 
respecting them in that space.

What’s in a Name? On ‘Meaningfulness’ and Best Practices in Filenaming within 
the LAM Community
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13438

Drew Krewer and Mary Wahl

Cultural institutions such as libraries, archives and museums (LAM) face many 
challenges with managing digital collections, particularly when it comes to 
organizing the individual files that make up each collection. While tools such 
as metadata and collection management systems support identification and 
arrangement for digital files, administrative control depends significantly on 
the mere filenaming in use beneath the surface. Anecdotal evidence has shown 
that many LAM institutions have specialized filenaming schemes in place for 
their digital collections. This paper includes a literature review of 
filenaming practices in the LAM community, followed by a description and 
analysis of survey data regarding filenaming practices in the LAM community. 
The purpose of the survey was to learn about filenaming conventions in use 
within LAM organizations who have filenaming policies in place. The data 
suggests that: similarities and differences exist in filenaming approaches 
between museums/galleries, archives/special collections, and academic 
institutions; it is preferred that filenaming be simultaneously meaningful to 
both humans and computers; and conventions that affect sortability are deemed 
more important than those that affect readability. The data also indicate 
several subtopics related to filenaming that would benefit from further study.

Centralized Accessioning Support for Born Digital Archives
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13494

Alice Sara Prael

Archives often receive obsolete digital storage media alongside paper 
acquisitions: CDs and DVDs mixed in with folders of correspondence, Zip disks, 
and floppy disks set aside by the donor with the intention to review the 
content later. Archives must not only have the expertise to work with digital 
media, but also the hardware and software to capture the content without the 
risk of altering the files merely by viewing them. This article will describe 
how Yale University Libraries and Museums addressed accessioning of 
born-digital archival content on physical media through a centralized digital 
accessioning support service. Centralizing the hardware and expertise required 
for working with physical media made it possible to accession media more 
quickly and return the files to the originating archives for arrangement and 
description.

Wikidata: a platform for your library’s linked open data
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13424

Stacy Allison-Cassin and Dan Scott

Seized with the desire to improve the visibility of Canadian music in the 
world, a ragtag band of librarians led by Stacy Allison-Cassin set out to host 
Wikipedia edit-a-thons in the style of Art+Feminism, but with a focus on 
addressing Canadian music instead. Along the way, they recognized that Wikidata 
offered a low-barrier, high-result method of making that data not only visible 
but reusable as linked open data, and consequently incorporated Wikidata into 
their edit-a-thons. This is their story.

Redux: Tabulating Transactions with Raspberry Pi and Visualizing Results
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13385

Tim Ribaric

Often in the library tech world we are not given the opportunity to attempt a 
project again. Effort spent re-doing a previous project in a different way, in 
some sense, means wasting time that could be used to work on new initiatives. 
This article describes a redux of a project, a revenge story so to speak. In 
2013 the Arduino based Tabulatron first entered production at Brock University 
Library. The device had its flaws, an attempt to rectify those flaws was 
manifested in the creation of the PiTab, the story of which is presented here.

FAIR Principles for Library, Archive and Museum Collections: A proposal for 
standards for reusable collections
http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/13427

Lukas Koster, Saskia Woutersen-Windhouwer

Many heritage institutions would like their collections to be open and reusable 
but fail to achieve that situation because of organizational, legal and 
technological barriers. A set of guidelines and best practices is proposed to 
facilitate the process of making heritage collections reusable. These 
guidelines are based on the FAIR Principles for scholarly output (FAIR data 
principles [2014]), taking into account a number of other recent initiatives 
for making data findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable. The resulting 
FAIR Principles for Heritage Library, Archive and Museum Collections focus on 
three levels: objects, metadata and metadata records. Clarifications and 
examples of these proposed principles are presented, as well as recommendations 
for the assessment of current situations and implementations of the principles.

Ruth Kitchin Tillman
Coordinating Editor


Ruth Kitchin Tillman
Cataloging Systems & Linked Data Strategist
Penn State University Libraries
Paterno Library 126J | 814-867-1038
[email protected]

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