Discovery, Preservation and Access to the Past——Magic Lantern Slides at the University of Hawaii at Manoa Library
Tokiko Y. Bazzell——University of Hawaii at Manona Presentation[PDF]
Tokiko Y. Bazzell——University of Hawaii at Manona Presentation[PDF]
Peter Zhou——UC Berkeley Presnentation[PDF][Video]
Hyokyoung Yi——Korean Studies Librarian Presentation[PDF]
Brian E. C. Schottlaender – University Librarian, University of California, San Diego Libraries The UC San Diego Libraries are building the San Diego Technology History
The Hong Kong Memory Project (HKMP) was initiated by the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) Government in 2002. The goal is to establish a web-based digital repository for the collection, preservation, presentation and dissemination of Hong Kong’s unique historical and cultural heritage.
In 2008, out of the increased mass digitization demands of the University, the Library established the University Digitization Center and one of the two University Data Centers. The goals are to centralize the digitization activities on the campus, to discover and preserve the institutional information resources, and to reinforce implementation of standards and as well as cooperation among different units on the campus.
n April 2008, the University of California, San Diego sent its first shipment of books to be digitized as part of the Google Book Search Library Project, a global effort launched in 2004 to digitize collections from the world’s top universities and libraries to make them searchable and discoverable online.
Brian Flaherty, Assistant University Librarian-Library IT, University of Auckland Martha Chantiny, Division Head for Library Information Technology, University of Hawaii at Manoa Robin Chandler, Director,
Dr. Sim Chuin Peng, Head of Chinese Library, NUS Libraries, Singapore Abstract The Chinese Library of NUS Libraries has a growing unique collection of historical
This presentation will outline the National Library of New Zealand’s work on digital preservation, how the National Digital Heritage Archive (NDHA) fits into that work, what is expected to be delivered through the NDHA, and how the organisation is preparing to integrate the new systems.
Jieh Hsiang, National Taiwan University View Presentation (PDF)
An overview of the UCSD/NCAR/University of Maryland ChronopolisTM preservation environment,
including ingestion, curation, preservation, distributed storage, data replication and storage management
tools and services.
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