James,

Definitely a simple and elegant solution, but that is not a viable long-term 
option for us. We currently have tons of old CDs and DVDs full of data, and one 
of our goals is to wean off those media completely.  Most consumer-grade CDs 
and DVDs are very poor in terms of long-term data integrity. Those discs have a 
shelf life of probably a decade or two tops. Plus we are wanting more 
redundancy than what is offered by having the backups as a collection of discs 
in a single physical location. But if that works for you guys, power to you. 
Cheap is good.

Josh Welker


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of James 
Gilbert
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 9:34 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Digital collection backups

Hi Josh,

I lurked on this thread, as I did not know the size of your institution.

Being a public library serving about 24,000 residents - we have the 
small-institution issues as well for this type of project. We recently tackled 
a similar situation and the solution:

1) Purchase a 3TB SeaGate external network storage device (residential drive 
from Best Buy)
2) Burn archived materials to DVD
3) Copy files to external storage (on site in my server room)
4) DVDs reside off-site (we are still determining where this would be, as the 
library does not have a Safe Deposit Box)

This removes external companies, and the data is quick trip home and back.

I know it is not elaborate and fancy, very little code... but it was $150 for 
the drive; and cost of DVDs. 

James Gilbert, BS, MLIS
Systems Librarian
Whitehall Township Public Library
3700 Mechanicsville Road
Whitehall, PA 18052
 
610-432-4330 ext: 203


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joshua 
Welker
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 10:09 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Digital collection backups

Matt,

I appreciate the information. At that price, it looks like MetaArchive would be 
a better option than most of the other services mentioned in this thread.
At this point, I think it is going to come down to a LOCKSS solution such as 
what MetaArchive provides or Amazon Glacier. We anticipate our digital 
collection growing to about 3TB in the first two years. With Glacier, that 
would be $368 per year vs $3,072 per year for MetaArchive and LOCKSS. As much 
as I would like to support library initiatives like LOCKSS, we are a small 
institution with a very small budget, and the pricing of Glacier is starting to 
look too good to pass up.

Josh Welker


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matt 
Schultz
Sent: Friday, January 11, 2013 8:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Digital collection backups

Hi Josh,

Glad you are looking into LOCKSS as a potential solution for your needs and 
that you are thinking beyond simple backup solutions for more long-term 
preservation. Here at MetaArchive Cooperative we make use of LOCKSS to preserve 
a range of content/collections from our member institutions.

The nice thing (I think) about our approach and our use of LOCKSS as an 
embedded technology is that you as an institution retain full control over your 
collections in the preservation network and get to play an active and on-going 
part in their preservation treatment over time. Storage costs in MetaArchive 
are competitive ($1/GB/year), and with that you get up to 7 geographic 
replications. MetaArchive is international at this point and so your 
collections really do achieve some safe distance from any disasters that may 
hit close to home.

I'd be more than happy to talk with you further about your collection needs, 
why we like LOCKSS, and any interest your institution may have in being part of 
a collaborative approach to preserving your content above and beyond simple 
backup. Feel free to contact me directly.

Matt Schultz
Program Manager
Educopia Institute, MetaArchive Cooperative http://www.metaarchive.org 
[email protected]
616-566-3204

On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 5:20 PM, Joshua Welker <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi everyone,
>
> We are starting a digitization project for some of our special 
> collections, and we are having a hard time setting up a backup system 
> that meets the long-term preservation needs of digital archives. The 
> backup mechanisms currently used by campus IT are short-term 
> full-server
backups.
> What we are looking for is more granular, file-level backup over the 
> very long term. Does anyone have any recommendations of software or 
> some service or technique? We are looking into LOCKSS but haven't dug 
> too
deeply yet.
> Can anyone who uses LOCKSS tell me a bit of their experiences with it?
>
> Josh Welker
> Electronic/Media Services Librarian
> College Liaison
> University Libraries
> Southwest Baptist University
> 417.328.1624
>



--
Matt Schultz
Program Manager
Educopia Institute, MetaArchive Cooperative http://www.metaarchive.org 
[email protected]
616-566-3204

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