Dear Colleagues,


ANNOUNCEMENT

Today we are launching the EaaSI Open Source Software 
Sandbox<https://www.softwarepreservationnetwork.org/eaasi-sandbox/>:

The sandbox provides free, public access to emulated computer environments 
featuring operating systems and software from over twenty years of open source 
development including:

  *   landmark open source distributions,

  *   alternatives to major proprietary software titles,

  *   interfaces for the R programming language and

  *   open source educational software.

We’re offering the sandbox to show how EaaSI makes access to emulation possible 
at the click of a button. You can also review the metadata records we are 
sharing via the Wikidata knowledge base to learn more about the open software 
inside and to verify its accuracy.  We invite you to poke around these 
fascinating legacy programs and to learn more about the capabilities of the 
EaaSI system as you do.



STAY INFORMED

To receive bi-monthly EaaSI updates via newsletter and share your software 
preservation successes/challenges, sign up for the Software Preservation 
Network mailing list by visiting 
https://groups.google.com/d/forum/software-preservation-network.

If you have questions for the project team, please contact the EaaSI Community 
Outreach Lead, Jessica Meyerson, at <jessica[at]educopia[dot]org>.



MORE ABOUT EAASI

The EaaSI program builds on previous work to apply the 
Emulation-as-a-Service(EaaS)<http://eaas.uni-freiburg.de/> framework for access 
and use of preserved software and digital objects. The project is focused on 
scaling the technological framework necessary for multiple institutions to 
configure, share, and access software and configured environments. EaaSI is 
focused on a distributed, community-driven architecture that sits on top of 
existing digital preservation infrastructure. This directly complements 
existing efforts by the Software Preservation 
Network<https://www.softwarepreservationnetwork.org/> and others to address key 
aspects of software preservation including legal advocacy, research about local 
software preservation needs, institutional capacity building for software 
preservation, collection development, professional development and training, 
and workflow recommendations.

--
Ethan Gates
Software Preservation Analyst
Digital Preservation Services, Yale University LIbrary
D152, 344 Winchester Ave. 203-436-9487

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