Hi Will,
I recommend the NDSA's Levels of Digital Preservation for practical,
incremental steps you can take to improve how you store and handle digital data.
http://digitalpreservation.gov/ndsa/activities/levels.html
First step: get the content off the medium and into your storage system (on
Cynthia wrote:
As to whether people know who's a regular or not, reading through last year's
discussion, we might consider the idea of people self-identifying as female,
minority, first-timers, etc. as part of their proposals. Thoughts?
---
I would like to see the proposal requirements
Hi Paul,
Thanks for your response! I like the idea that this could be a standalone way
to capture first-person accounts as well as a way to launch more
in-depth/traditional oral history interviews.
Some of your requirements remind me of the National Library of Medicine's video
player:
NLM
accessible.
Colorado Voice Preserve (they are currently looking at the infrastructure
needed for a statewide oral history initiative, including technical
requirements): http://www.voicepreserve.org
IMLS Oral History in the Digital Age site:
http://ohda.matrix.msu.edu/
Best,
Robin Dean
Director
the ebook records:
http://www.clicweb.org/images/stories/ediscover/history_of_record_enhancement_.pdf
Hope this helps!
Your friendly fan of Colorado consortia,
Robin Dean
Director, Alliance Digital Repository
Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries