Please excuse cross-postings.

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The Koninklijke Bibliotheek, National Library of the Netherlands, has
published a report on possible alternative file formats for storing master
images from mass digitisation projects. Uncompressed TIFFs, the KB's
preferred format so far, take up far too much storage capacity to be a
viable storage strategy for the long term. The report is available from the
KB website.

At the Koninklijke Bibliotheek mass digitisation projects are taking off. In
the next four years millions of high resolution RGB master image files will
be produced and will have to be (permanently) archived. However, if all
projected 40 million images are to be stored as uncompressed TIFFs, the KB
will need some 650 TB of storage capacity by 2011. This is quite a capacity
challenge, and thus the need arose to develop a new strategy for storage of
images.

The project considered whether it would be possible to distinguish between
master image files which must be stored for all 'eternity' (because the
originals decay rapidly and/or digitisation costs are so high that repeating
the digitisation process is not a viable solution) and objects which are
stored for access. The distinction would allow for a more pragmatic and
economic storage policy, whereby projected usage would determine the storage
strategy.

The draft of the report was reviewed by a group of selected specialists on
digitisation, digital preservation and image science. Their feedback was
incorporated in the final version of the report which is available at:
http://www.kb.nl/hrd/dd/dd_links_en_publicaties/links_en_publicaties_intro-en.html

Astrid Verheusen
Projectmanager
Research & Development
Koninklijke Bibliotheek
PO BOX 90407
2509 LK Den Haag
The Netherlands
astrid.verheusen at kb.nl


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