Another practical application for digitization

CBC News reports that "Researchers at Dartmouth College have developed a new mathematical process of authenticating art that they claim equals that of human authenticators." The process uses "high-resolution digital photos and complex computer analyses to map out the idiosyncrasies of an artist's style."

A Mellon Foundation study: Reproduction charging models & rights policy for digital images in American art museums

King's College London Digital Consultancy Services (KDCS) has published their Mellon-funded report on American art museum policy and practice regarding the market for digital resources. The report is based on a survey of 100 US art museums, 20 of whom were interviewed in depth.

DSpace@Cambridge Digital Preservation project

Another preservation-related item on the DSpace wiki: the DSpace@Cambridge Project Digital Preservation Workplan "aims to make some concrete steps towards improving the digital preservation functionality of the current DSpace software, and to engage on more open ended research that will be of benefit to the wider preservation community." Major sections of the workplan include "Automating Ingest for Preservation Support", "Preservation Planning", "Representation Information Infrastructure" (type registries, persistent I

MARC::Crosswalk::DublinCore

Brian Cassidy has released the first version of the MARC::Crosswalk::DublinCore Perl module.

Exploring & Collecting History Online

Echo (from the Center for History and New Media, George Mason University) offers "free consultation services to assist other historical practitioners in launching their own websites" and a set of tools that includes a scrapbook (billed as a "clipping file for the Internet") and something called Scribe, ("the next step in the evolution of traditional 3x5 note cards").

Freedom’s Fortress: The Library of Congress, 1939-1953

The Library of Congress has just announced a new collection calleed "Freedom’s Fortress: The Library of Congress, 1939-1953," available at http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/freedoms_fortress/. The collection is comprised of 209 letters, memoranda, photographs, and Library of Congress publications (1,176 images total) and documents the history of LC during what is described as a period of great transition for the institution.

noid − nice opaque identifier generator commands

John A. Kunze from the California Digital Library has released noid (nice opague identifer generator commands), a Perl utility for creating persistent, globally unique names for documents, databases, images, vocabulary terms, etc. Documentation, including a tutorial, is available at http://www.cdlib.org/inside/diglib/ark/noid.pdf and the utility itself is available for download at various CPAN locations.

Welcome to digitizationblog

Hi,

I've started a blog devoted to digitization in libraries and allied institutions. The blog is open to anyone who is interested in digitizing content, with an emphasis on tools and techniques. Postings announcing new technologies (particularly software), trends in metadata, and government or consortial initiaves are welcome, as are pointers to new and innovative collections of digitized material.

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