Hi Mike--

As far predicting the cost of digital archives, you might check out the LIFE project [1], which has been through three cycles now. The first couple focused on analysis of costing structures for various use cases (including electronic journal content), and the third one focused on creating a predictive model for the same. Check out the 'Documentation' section for each.

For further reading, I always point people to the PADI resource pages [2], which are just a fantastic source for pulling together major pieces of work on most digital preservation topics. Looks like costing is no exception[3].

Let me know if you run into more specific questions.

Best,

Steve



[1]: http://www.life.ac.uk/
[2]: http://www.nla.gov.au/padi/topics/thesaurus.html
[3]: http://www.nla.gov.au/padi/topics/5.html




On 11-10-24 5:36 AM, Mike Taylor wrote:
Does anyone out there know what recent studies predict for the
lifetime of digitally archived and preserved documents?

For example, there is a long and mostly pretty successful tradition of
preserving journal articles as paper in bound volumes, and experiment
shows that this approach is usually good for hundreds of years.  It
*seems* obvious to me that the physical resilience of paper is
outweighed by the ability to make infinite perfect copies of digital
documents, but obviously we haven't had hundreds of years of
experience in which empirically test that idea.

Are there any published studies that predict and compare the long-term
preservation ability and cost efficiency of physical and digital
archives?  I would like to either back up or refute my intuition!

Thanks,
         -- Mike.


--



Stephen Marks
Digital Preservation Librarian
Scholars Portal
Ontario Council of University Libraries

[email protected]
416.946.0300

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