際際滷shows by User: Nbeagrie / http://www.slideshare.net/images/logo.gif 際際滷shows by User: Nbeagrie / Thu, 21 Mar 2019 11:46:28 GMT 際際滷Share feed for 際際滷shows by User: Nbeagrie Datanomics: the value of research data. /slideshow/dpc-datanomics-glasgow2019slideshare-137475191/137475191 dpcdatanomicsglasgow2019slideshare-190321114628
Twenty years ago format obsolescence was seen as the greatest long-term threat to digital information. Arguably, experience to date has shown that funding and organisational challenges are perhaps more significant threats. I hope this presentation helps those grappling with these challenges and shows some key advances in how to use knowledge of costs, benefits and value to support long-term sustainability of digital data and services. These are the slides from my keynote presentation to the Digital Preservation Coalition and Jisc joint workshop on Digital Assets and Digital Liabilities - the Value of Data held in Glasgow in February 2018. The slides summarise work over the last decade in the key areas of exploring costs, benefits and value for data. The slides posted here have additional slide notes and references to new publications since the workshop and some modifications such as removal of animations. One day I hope to have time to synthesis this presentation in an accessible way as an article but hope this slide deck is a useful interim resource. ]]>

Twenty years ago format obsolescence was seen as the greatest long-term threat to digital information. Arguably, experience to date has shown that funding and organisational challenges are perhaps more significant threats. I hope this presentation helps those grappling with these challenges and shows some key advances in how to use knowledge of costs, benefits and value to support long-term sustainability of digital data and services. These are the slides from my keynote presentation to the Digital Preservation Coalition and Jisc joint workshop on Digital Assets and Digital Liabilities - the Value of Data held in Glasgow in February 2018. The slides summarise work over the last decade in the key areas of exploring costs, benefits and value for data. The slides posted here have additional slide notes and references to new publications since the workshop and some modifications such as removal of animations. One day I hope to have time to synthesis this presentation in an accessible way as an article but hope this slide deck is a useful interim resource. ]]>
Thu, 21 Mar 2019 11:46:28 GMT /slideshow/dpc-datanomics-glasgow2019slideshare-137475191/137475191 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) Datanomics: the value of research data. Nbeagrie Twenty years ago format obsolescence was seen as the greatest long-term threat to digital information. Arguably, experience to date has shown that funding and organisational challenges are perhaps more significant threats. I hope this presentation helps those grappling with these challenges and shows some key advances in how to use knowledge of costs, benefits and value to support long-term sustainability of digital data and services. These are the slides from my keynote presentation to the Digital Preservation Coalition and Jisc joint workshop on Digital Assets and Digital Liabilities - the Value of Data held in Glasgow in February 2018. The slides summarise work over the last decade in the key areas of exploring costs, benefits and value for data. The slides posted here have additional slide notes and references to new publications since the workshop and some modifications such as removal of animations. One day I hope to have time to synthesis this presentation in an accessible way as an article but hope this slide deck is a useful interim resource. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/dpcdatanomicsglasgow2019slideshare-190321114628-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Twenty years ago format obsolescence was seen as the greatest long-term threat to digital information. Arguably, experience to date has shown that funding and organisational challenges are perhaps more significant threats. I hope this presentation helps those grappling with these challenges and shows some key advances in how to use knowledge of costs, benefits and value to support long-term sustainability of digital data and services. These are the slides from my keynote presentation to the Digital Preservation Coalition and Jisc joint workshop on Digital Assets and Digital Liabilities - the Value of Data held in Glasgow in February 2018. The slides summarise work over the last decade in the key areas of exploring costs, benefits and value for data. The slides posted here have additional slide notes and references to new publications since the workshop and some modifications such as removal of animations. One day I hope to have time to synthesis this presentation in an accessible way as an article but hope this slide deck is a useful interim resource.
Datanomics: the value of research data. from Neil Beagrie
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Value impact researchdataservices_esip_2017 /slideshow/value-impact-researchdataservicesesip2017/78308878 valueimpactresearchdataservicesesip2017-170727124034
Presentation to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) in Bloomington Indiana 27 July 2017. Presentation covers value and economic impact studies by Charles Beagrie Ltd and our CESSDA SaW cost -benefit advocacy toolkit. A particular focus given to Earth Sciences.]]>

Presentation to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) in Bloomington Indiana 27 July 2017. Presentation covers value and economic impact studies by Charles Beagrie Ltd and our CESSDA SaW cost -benefit advocacy toolkit. A particular focus given to Earth Sciences.]]>
Thu, 27 Jul 2017 12:40:34 GMT /slideshow/value-impact-researchdataservicesesip2017/78308878 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) Value impact researchdataservices_esip_2017 Nbeagrie Presentation to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) in Bloomington Indiana 27 July 2017. Presentation covers value and economic impact studies by Charles Beagrie Ltd and our CESSDA SaW cost -benefit advocacy toolkit. A particular focus given to Earth Sciences. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/valueimpactresearchdataservicesesip2017-170727124034-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Presentation to the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP) in Bloomington Indiana 27 July 2017. Presentation covers value and economic impact studies by Charles Beagrie Ltd and our CESSDA SaW cost -benefit advocacy toolkit. A particular focus given to Earth Sciences.
Value impact researchdataservices_esip_2017 from Neil Beagrie
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Value&impact research dataservices_idcc_2017 /slideshow/valueimpact-research-dataservicesidcc2017/72400900 valueimpactresearchdataservicesidcc2017-170221090706
These slides are from a half-day workshop run on Monday 20 February 2017 at the International Digital Curation Conference 2017 (IDCC17) on Demonstrating the Value and Impact of Research Data Services. It provides the latest overview of research findings and tools for assessing the benefits, costs, and return on investment of research data curation. The workshop organisers were Neil Beagrie and Daphne Charles (Charles Beagrie Ltd) and Mike Priddy (DANS) and the Consortium of European Social Science Archives (CESSDA). At the workshop attendees learnt from Neil Beagrie and Mike Priddy about how to apply the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas (a variant of the Business Model Canvas) developed by the CESSDA Strengthening and Widening Project (CESSDA-SaW). Although the CESSDA-SaW project work focuses on the social sciences, core elements are multi-disciplinary and relevant to a wide range of organisations at IDCC involved in development, funding, and advocacy for research data infrastructures and open access for data. CESSDA-SaW is a project funded by the Horizon 2020 programme. Its principal objective is to develop the maturity of data archive services that are aspiring to be, or are a part of the CESSDA community of social science data archives in a coherent and deliberate way towards the vision of a comprehensive, distributed and integrated social science data research infrastructure, facilitating access to social science data resources for researchers regardless of the location of either researcher or data. As part of the project, we have been developing the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas to assist data archive services. The expected learning outcomes from the workshop were that all attendees would: Understand the purpose of CESSDA-SaW, the Toolkit, Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas; Understand what is specific to social science, to different funding regimes, or maturity of services; Know the main findings from the desk research on the Toolkit and key lessons learnt; Understand economic approaches such as Return on Investment, other key arguments for Value, how it has been calculated, and why the counter-factual and cost of inaction are important; Understand how to use the Capability Development Model to undertake a self-assessment; Know what outputs will be available from CESSDA-SaW and how they might use them. ]]>

These slides are from a half-day workshop run on Monday 20 February 2017 at the International Digital Curation Conference 2017 (IDCC17) on Demonstrating the Value and Impact of Research Data Services. It provides the latest overview of research findings and tools for assessing the benefits, costs, and return on investment of research data curation. The workshop organisers were Neil Beagrie and Daphne Charles (Charles Beagrie Ltd) and Mike Priddy (DANS) and the Consortium of European Social Science Archives (CESSDA). At the workshop attendees learnt from Neil Beagrie and Mike Priddy about how to apply the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas (a variant of the Business Model Canvas) developed by the CESSDA Strengthening and Widening Project (CESSDA-SaW). Although the CESSDA-SaW project work focuses on the social sciences, core elements are multi-disciplinary and relevant to a wide range of organisations at IDCC involved in development, funding, and advocacy for research data infrastructures and open access for data. CESSDA-SaW is a project funded by the Horizon 2020 programme. Its principal objective is to develop the maturity of data archive services that are aspiring to be, or are a part of the CESSDA community of social science data archives in a coherent and deliberate way towards the vision of a comprehensive, distributed and integrated social science data research infrastructure, facilitating access to social science data resources for researchers regardless of the location of either researcher or data. As part of the project, we have been developing the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas to assist data archive services. The expected learning outcomes from the workshop were that all attendees would: Understand the purpose of CESSDA-SaW, the Toolkit, Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas; Understand what is specific to social science, to different funding regimes, or maturity of services; Know the main findings from the desk research on the Toolkit and key lessons learnt; Understand economic approaches such as Return on Investment, other key arguments for Value, how it has been calculated, and why the counter-factual and cost of inaction are important; Understand how to use the Capability Development Model to undertake a self-assessment; Know what outputs will be available from CESSDA-SaW and how they might use them. ]]>
Tue, 21 Feb 2017 09:07:06 GMT /slideshow/valueimpact-research-dataservicesidcc2017/72400900 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) Value&impact research dataservices_idcc_2017 Nbeagrie These slides are from a half-day workshop run on Monday 20 February 2017 at the International Digital Curation Conference 2017 (IDCC17) on Demonstrating the Value and Impact of Research Data Services. It provides the latest overview of research findings and tools for assessing the benefits, costs, and return on investment of research data curation. The workshop organisers were Neil Beagrie and Daphne Charles (Charles Beagrie Ltd) and Mike Priddy (DANS) and the Consortium of European Social Science Archives (CESSDA). At the workshop attendees learnt from Neil Beagrie and Mike Priddy about how to apply the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas (a variant of the Business Model Canvas) developed by the CESSDA Strengthening and Widening Project (CESSDA-SaW). Although the CESSDA-SaW project work focuses on the social sciences, core elements are multi-disciplinary and relevant to a wide range of organisations at IDCC involved in development, funding, and advocacy for research data infrastructures and open access for data. CESSDA-SaW is a project funded by the Horizon 2020 programme. Its principal objective is to develop the maturity of data archive services that are aspiring to be, or are a part of the CESSDA community of social science data archives in a coherent and deliberate way towards the vision of a comprehensive, distributed and integrated social science data research infrastructure, facilitating access to social science data resources for researchers regardless of the location of either researcher or data. As part of the project, we have been developing the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas to assist data archive services. The expected learning outcomes from the workshop were that all attendees would: Understand the purpose of CESSDA-SaW, the Toolkit, Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas; Understand what is specific to social science, to different funding regimes, or maturity of services; Know the main findings from the desk research on the Toolkit and key lessons learnt; Understand economic approaches such as Return on Investment, other key arguments for Value, how it has been calculated, and why the counter-factual and cost of inaction are important; Understand how to use the Capability Development Model to undertake a self-assessment; Know what outputs will be available from CESSDA-SaW and how they might use them. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/valueimpactresearchdataservicesidcc2017-170221090706-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> These slides are from a half-day workshop run on Monday 20 February 2017 at the International Digital Curation Conference 2017 (IDCC17) on Demonstrating the Value and Impact of Research Data Services. It provides the latest overview of research findings and tools for assessing the benefits, costs, and return on investment of research data curation. The workshop organisers were Neil Beagrie and Daphne Charles (Charles Beagrie Ltd) and Mike Priddy (DANS) and the Consortium of European Social Science Archives (CESSDA). At the workshop attendees learnt from Neil Beagrie and Mike Priddy about how to apply the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas (a variant of the Business Model Canvas) developed by the CESSDA Strengthening and Widening Project (CESSDA-SaW). Although the CESSDA-SaW project work focuses on the social sciences, core elements are multi-disciplinary and relevant to a wide range of organisations at IDCC involved in development, funding, and advocacy for research data infrastructures and open access for data. CESSDA-SaW is a project funded by the Horizon 2020 programme. Its principal objective is to develop the maturity of data archive services that are aspiring to be, or are a part of the CESSDA community of social science data archives in a coherent and deliberate way towards the vision of a comprehensive, distributed and integrated social science data research infrastructure, facilitating access to social science data resources for researchers regardless of the location of either researcher or data. As part of the project, we have been developing the Cost-Benefit Advocacy Toolkit, the Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas to assist data archive services. The expected learning outcomes from the workshop were that all attendees would: Understand the purpose of CESSDA-SaW, the Toolkit, Capability Development Model, and the Archive Development Canvas; Understand what is specific to social science, to different funding regimes, or maturity of services; Know the main findings from the desk research on the Toolkit and key lessons learnt; Understand economic approaches such as Return on Investment, other key arguments for Value, how it has been calculated, and why the counter-factual and cost of inaction are important; Understand how to use the Capability Development Model to undertake a self-assessment; Know what outputs will be available from CESSDA-SaW and how they might use them.
Value&impact research dataservices_idcc_2017 from Neil Beagrie
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Cessda saw task4-6_haguefocusgrppresentation_0616 /slideshow/cessda-saw-task46haguefocusgrppresentation0616/63983385 cessdasawtask4-6haguefocusgrppresentation0616-160713110606
Presentation on the Value and Impact of Social Science Data Archives and the CESSDA SaW Toolkit A set of 38 slides used for the Focus Group Cost-Benefit Funding Advocacy Program (Task 4.6) session at the CESSDA Saw Workshop in The Hague 16/17 June 2016. This was an interactive focus group repeated over two parallel sessions. It was aimed at European social science data archive staff with responsibility for bidding for funding or promotion and advocacy of the archive to key stakeholders. The presentation covers some of the key ideas on how the CESSDA Saw funding advocacy toolkit will be structured, its components, and key facts and approaches it will include. We expect the cost-benefit funding advocacy toolkit under development to support the negotiation with ministries and funding organisations across Europe. The results of the toolkit user requirements survey with responses from 24 European social science archives were presented and discussed, together with suggested approaches and content for the toolkit. 22 people attended the two sessions overall, representing a mix of countries at different stages on the development path for social science archives (none, new/emerging, mature). There was strong interest and support for the emerging toolkit together with open discussion of how it can be applied in the specific political and administrative context of different European countries. The slide set presented here is an extended version including a number of hidden background/ reference slides not used in the presentation. The focus group is one of a series guiding further development of the toolkit and its adoption being given to either: (a) social science data archive staff or (b) their key stakeholders (senior management in their universities, research councils and academies, funding ministries, national statistics offices, research users and depositors). CESSDA is the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives. The CESSDA SaW project Strengthening and widening the European infrastructure for social science data archives is funded by the European Commission as part of its Horizon2020 programme. ]]>

Presentation on the Value and Impact of Social Science Data Archives and the CESSDA SaW Toolkit A set of 38 slides used for the Focus Group Cost-Benefit Funding Advocacy Program (Task 4.6) session at the CESSDA Saw Workshop in The Hague 16/17 June 2016. This was an interactive focus group repeated over two parallel sessions. It was aimed at European social science data archive staff with responsibility for bidding for funding or promotion and advocacy of the archive to key stakeholders. The presentation covers some of the key ideas on how the CESSDA Saw funding advocacy toolkit will be structured, its components, and key facts and approaches it will include. We expect the cost-benefit funding advocacy toolkit under development to support the negotiation with ministries and funding organisations across Europe. The results of the toolkit user requirements survey with responses from 24 European social science archives were presented and discussed, together with suggested approaches and content for the toolkit. 22 people attended the two sessions overall, representing a mix of countries at different stages on the development path for social science archives (none, new/emerging, mature). There was strong interest and support for the emerging toolkit together with open discussion of how it can be applied in the specific political and administrative context of different European countries. The slide set presented here is an extended version including a number of hidden background/ reference slides not used in the presentation. The focus group is one of a series guiding further development of the toolkit and its adoption being given to either: (a) social science data archive staff or (b) their key stakeholders (senior management in their universities, research councils and academies, funding ministries, national statistics offices, research users and depositors). CESSDA is the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives. The CESSDA SaW project Strengthening and widening the European infrastructure for social science data archives is funded by the European Commission as part of its Horizon2020 programme. ]]>
Wed, 13 Jul 2016 11:06:06 GMT /slideshow/cessda-saw-task46haguefocusgrppresentation0616/63983385 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) Cessda saw task4-6_haguefocusgrppresentation_0616 Nbeagrie Presentation on the Value and Impact of Social Science Data Archives and the CESSDA SaW Toolkit A set of 38 slides used for the Focus Group Cost-Benefit Funding Advocacy Program (Task 4.6) session at the CESSDA Saw Workshop in The Hague 16/17 June 2016. This was an interactive focus group repeated over two parallel sessions. It was aimed at European social science data archive staff with responsibility for bidding for funding or promotion and advocacy of the archive to key stakeholders. The presentation covers some of the key ideas on how the CESSDA Saw funding advocacy toolkit will be structured, its components, and key facts and approaches it will include. We expect the cost-benefit funding advocacy toolkit under development to support the negotiation with ministries and funding organisations across Europe. The results of the toolkit user requirements survey with responses from 24 European social science archives were presented and discussed, together with suggested approaches and content for the toolkit. 22 people attended the two sessions overall, representing a mix of countries at different stages on the development path for social science archives (none, new/emerging, mature). There was strong interest and support for the emerging toolkit together with open discussion of how it can be applied in the specific political and administrative context of different European countries. The slide set presented here is an extended version including a number of hidden background/ reference slides not used in the presentation. The focus group is one of a series guiding further development of the toolkit and its adoption being given to either: (a) social science data archive staff or (b) their key stakeholders (senior management in their universities, research councils and academies, funding ministries, national statistics offices, research users and depositors). CESSDA is the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives. The CESSDA SaW project Strengthening and widening the European infrastructure for social science data archives is funded by the European Commission as part of its Horizon2020 programme. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/cessdasawtask4-6haguefocusgrppresentation0616-160713110606-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Presentation on the Value and Impact of Social Science Data Archives and the CESSDA SaW Toolkit A set of 38 slides used for the Focus Group Cost-Benefit Funding Advocacy Program (Task 4.6) session at the CESSDA Saw Workshop in The Hague 16/17 June 2016. This was an interactive focus group repeated over two parallel sessions. It was aimed at European social science data archive staff with responsibility for bidding for funding or promotion and advocacy of the archive to key stakeholders. The presentation covers some of the key ideas on how the CESSDA Saw funding advocacy toolkit will be structured, its components, and key facts and approaches it will include. We expect the cost-benefit funding advocacy toolkit under development to support the negotiation with ministries and funding organisations across Europe. The results of the toolkit user requirements survey with responses from 24 European social science archives were presented and discussed, together with suggested approaches and content for the toolkit. 22 people attended the two sessions overall, representing a mix of countries at different stages on the development path for social science archives (none, new/emerging, mature). There was strong interest and support for the emerging toolkit together with open discussion of how it can be applied in the specific political and administrative context of different European countries. The slide set presented here is an extended version including a number of hidden background/ reference slides not used in the presentation. The focus group is one of a series guiding further development of the toolkit and its adoption being given to either: (a) social science data archive staff or (b) their key stakeholders (senior management in their universities, research councils and academies, funding ministries, national statistics offices, research users and depositors). CESSDA is the Consortium of European Social Science Data Archives. The CESSDA SaW project Strengthening and widening the European infrastructure for social science data archives is funded by the European Commission as part of its Horizon2020 programme.
Cessda saw task4-6_haguefocusgrppresentation_0616 from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2013 Screening the Future /Nbeagrie/nov2015-screening-thefuture2013 nov2015screeningthefuture-2013-151030164308-lva1-app6892
This slideshare, Maintaining a Vision: how mandates and strategies are changing with digital content, is one of the 12 that I like most and is a keynote given to the 2013 Screening the Future conference in London. It is the penultimate of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The final one to come will be published in December 2015. My brief for this conference keynote was to focus on how institutional responses to collection and preservation mandates are realized and stretched by the digital...do existing institutions just 'go digital' but otherwise claim 'business as usual' [or not]? The Talk had an AV focus given the nature of the conference but I think the messages will be of broad interest. It was in three parts: The Changes: covering how digital content (including AV content) has changed the nature of typical collections across sectors; how it has shifted the scale of available content; and how content has fragmented and the number of content creators proliferated. The Responses: covering how we have seen in response the growth of cross-sectoral preservation exchange (different sectoral membership of the DPC; Technology Watch Reports; the national coalitions worldwide such as nestor, NCDD, NDSA, etc); the development of shared services and outsourcing (e.g. digital preservation services in the cloud); and in some cases a range of cross-sector mergers (particularly of national archives and national libraries). Conclusions: What is changing? We are seeing multi-media permeating sectoral boundaries; greater shared interests and convergence of interests across different sectors; and a massive shift in the scale and management of digital media. The responses? We are seeing new alliances and partnerships; digital preservation exchange across sectors; some mergers and partnerships across established boundaries; and more shared services and outsourcing. Finally, if you want to know the answer to the question "When was the beginning of the Digital Age" posed in previous posts, the answer is here in slide 8 ]]>

This slideshare, Maintaining a Vision: how mandates and strategies are changing with digital content, is one of the 12 that I like most and is a keynote given to the 2013 Screening the Future conference in London. It is the penultimate of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The final one to come will be published in December 2015. My brief for this conference keynote was to focus on how institutional responses to collection and preservation mandates are realized and stretched by the digital...do existing institutions just 'go digital' but otherwise claim 'business as usual' [or not]? The Talk had an AV focus given the nature of the conference but I think the messages will be of broad interest. It was in three parts: The Changes: covering how digital content (including AV content) has changed the nature of typical collections across sectors; how it has shifted the scale of available content; and how content has fragmented and the number of content creators proliferated. The Responses: covering how we have seen in response the growth of cross-sectoral preservation exchange (different sectoral membership of the DPC; Technology Watch Reports; the national coalitions worldwide such as nestor, NCDD, NDSA, etc); the development of shared services and outsourcing (e.g. digital preservation services in the cloud); and in some cases a range of cross-sector mergers (particularly of national archives and national libraries). Conclusions: What is changing? We are seeing multi-media permeating sectoral boundaries; greater shared interests and convergence of interests across different sectors; and a massive shift in the scale and management of digital media. The responses? We are seeing new alliances and partnerships; digital preservation exchange across sectors; some mergers and partnerships across established boundaries; and more shared services and outsourcing. Finally, if you want to know the answer to the question "When was the beginning of the Digital Age" posed in previous posts, the answer is here in slide 8 ]]>
Fri, 30 Oct 2015 16:43:08 GMT /Nbeagrie/nov2015-screening-thefuture2013 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2013 Screening the Future Nbeagrie This slideshare, Maintaining a Vision: how mandates and strategies are changing with digital content, is one of the 12 that I like most and is a keynote given to the 2013 Screening the Future conference in London. It is the penultimate of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The final one to come will be published in December 2015. My brief for this conference keynote was to focus on how institutional responses to collection and preservation mandates are realized and stretched by the digital...do existing institutions just 'go digital' but otherwise claim 'business as usual' [or not]? The Talk had an AV focus given the nature of the conference but I think the messages will be of broad interest. It was in three parts: The Changes: covering how digital content (including AV content) has changed the nature of typical collections across sectors; how it has shifted the scale of available content; and how content has fragmented and the number of content creators proliferated. The Responses: covering how we have seen in response the growth of cross-sectoral preservation exchange (different sectoral membership of the DPC; Technology Watch Reports; the national coalitions worldwide such as nestor, NCDD, NDSA, etc); the development of shared services and outsourcing (e.g. digital preservation services in the cloud); and in some cases a range of cross-sector mergers (particularly of national archives and national libraries). Conclusions: What is changing? We are seeing multi-media permeating sectoral boundaries; greater shared interests and convergence of interests across different sectors; and a massive shift in the scale and management of digital media. The responses? We are seeing new alliances and partnerships; digital preservation exchange across sectors; some mergers and partnerships across established boundaries; and more shared services and outsourcing. Finally, if you want to know the answer to the question "When was the beginning of the Digital Age" posed in previous posts, the answer is here in slide 8 <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/nov2015screeningthefuture-2013-151030164308-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This slideshare, Maintaining a Vision: how mandates and strategies are changing with digital content, is one of the 12 that I like most and is a keynote given to the 2013 Screening the Future conference in London. It is the penultimate of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The final one to come will be published in December 2015. My brief for this conference keynote was to focus on how institutional responses to collection and preservation mandates are realized and stretched by the digital...do existing institutions just &#39;go digital&#39; but otherwise claim &#39;business as usual&#39; [or not]? The Talk had an AV focus given the nature of the conference but I think the messages will be of broad interest. It was in three parts: The Changes: covering how digital content (including AV content) has changed the nature of typical collections across sectors; how it has shifted the scale of available content; and how content has fragmented and the number of content creators proliferated. The Responses: covering how we have seen in response the growth of cross-sectoral preservation exchange (different sectoral membership of the DPC; Technology Watch Reports; the national coalitions worldwide such as nestor, NCDD, NDSA, etc); the development of shared services and outsourcing (e.g. digital preservation services in the cloud); and in some cases a range of cross-sector mergers (particularly of national archives and national libraries). Conclusions: What is changing? We are seeing multi-media permeating sectoral boundaries; greater shared interests and convergence of interests across different sectors; and a massive shift in the scale and management of digital media. The responses? We are seeing new alliances and partnerships; digital preservation exchange across sectors; some mergers and partnerships across established boundaries; and more shared services and outsourcing. Finally, if you want to know the answer to the question &quot;When was the beginning of the Digital Age&quot; posed in previous posts, the answer is here in slide 8
20yrs: 2013 Screening the Future from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2010 KRDS /slideshow/oct2015-krds-2010-53585272/53585272 oct2015krds2010-151006080255-lva1-app6891
Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS), a workshop presentation from 2010 is the ninth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remaining two to come will be published at monthly intervals over November and December 2015. This presentation was given as part of the KB Experts Workshop on Digital Preservation Costs, held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 2010. Although very small in terms of budget, the KRDS projects were terrific examples of collaboration to achieve influential results and the pleasure and value of working with colleagues from many disparate fields and organisations. Ive selected it as an example of doing great things on small budgets if you have the right people, and for its influence on subsequent work both by me (e.g. impact studies) and others. For me, in terms of personal follow-up and later projects, the costs element of KRDS has been less important than the benefits side which has led to a series of project on impact with John Houghton (more on this in the final 際際滷share in December). The KB requested a briefing document on each cost model presented at the workshop in the form of responses to their set questions. I have reproduced mine for the KRDS presentation on our blog at http://blog.beagrie.com - it captures lots of interesting context for the slides. ]]>

Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS), a workshop presentation from 2010 is the ninth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remaining two to come will be published at monthly intervals over November and December 2015. This presentation was given as part of the KB Experts Workshop on Digital Preservation Costs, held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 2010. Although very small in terms of budget, the KRDS projects were terrific examples of collaboration to achieve influential results and the pleasure and value of working with colleagues from many disparate fields and organisations. Ive selected it as an example of doing great things on small budgets if you have the right people, and for its influence on subsequent work both by me (e.g. impact studies) and others. For me, in terms of personal follow-up and later projects, the costs element of KRDS has been less important than the benefits side which has led to a series of project on impact with John Houghton (more on this in the final 際際滷share in December). The KB requested a briefing document on each cost model presented at the workshop in the form of responses to their set questions. I have reproduced mine for the KRDS presentation on our blog at http://blog.beagrie.com - it captures lots of interesting context for the slides. ]]>
Tue, 06 Oct 2015 08:02:55 GMT /slideshow/oct2015-krds-2010-53585272/53585272 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2010 KRDS Nbeagrie Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS), a workshop presentation from 2010 is the ninth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remaining two to come will be published at monthly intervals over November and December 2015. This presentation was given as part of the KB Experts Workshop on Digital Preservation Costs, held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 2010. Although very small in terms of budget, the KRDS projects were terrific examples of collaboration to achieve influential results and the pleasure and value of working with colleagues from many disparate fields and organisations. Ive selected it as an example of doing great things on small budgets if you have the right people, and for its influence on subsequent work both by me (e.g. impact studies) and others. For me, in terms of personal follow-up and later projects, the costs element of KRDS has been less important than the benefits side which has led to a series of project on impact with John Houghton (more on this in the final 際際滷share in December). The KB requested a briefing document on each cost model presented at the workshop in the form of responses to their set questions. I have reproduced mine for the KRDS presentation on our blog at http://blog.beagrie.com - it captures lots of interesting context for the slides. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/oct2015krds2010-151006080255-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Keeping Research Data Safe (KRDS), a workshop presentation from 2010 is the ninth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remaining two to come will be published at monthly intervals over November and December 2015. This presentation was given as part of the KB Experts Workshop on Digital Preservation Costs, held at The Hague in the Netherlands in 2010. Although very small in terms of budget, the KRDS projects were terrific examples of collaboration to achieve influential results and the pleasure and value of working with colleagues from many disparate fields and organisations. Ive selected it as an example of doing great things on small budgets if you have the right people, and for its influence on subsequent work both by me (e.g. impact studies) and others. For me, in terms of personal follow-up and later projects, the costs element of KRDS has been less important than the benefits side which has led to a series of project on impact with John Houghton (more on this in the final 際際滷share in December). The KB requested a briefing document on each cost model presented at the workshop in the form of responses to their set questions. I have reproduced mine for the KRDS presentation on our blog at http://blog.beagrie.com - it captures lots of interesting context for the slides.
20yrs: 2010 KRDS from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2007 Brussels Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change /slideshow/sept2015-brussels2007-digital-preservation-setting-the-course-for-a-decade-of-change/52451742 sept2015brussels2007-150905143958-lva1-app6891
Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change , a conference keynote from 2007, available now on 際際滷share is the ninth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. This presentation was the opening keynote to a conference in 2007 held by the Belgian Association of Documentation (BDA) to celebrate its 60th anniversary. It dates from my time at the British Library. The conference theme was "Europe facing the challenge of the long term conservation of digitalised archives". My keynote synthesised many of the topics I was focussing on at the time (and have featured in some of my earlier slide shares in this series) including encouraging University libraries to engage more actively with research data management in the sciences, to begin developing digital special collections of individuals, and to support international efforts to ensure continuing access and preservation of e-Journals as part of the scholarly record. In addition, given the European focus I briefly covered some of the major European initiatives in digital preservation at that time. I have selected this presentation as one of the 12 in this series, not only as it is synthesising these key themes but also because it includes some thoughts on whether digital preservation needed to be evolution or revolution (or a bit of both) for libraries and archives. ]]>

Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change , a conference keynote from 2007, available now on 際際滷share is the ninth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. This presentation was the opening keynote to a conference in 2007 held by the Belgian Association of Documentation (BDA) to celebrate its 60th anniversary. It dates from my time at the British Library. The conference theme was "Europe facing the challenge of the long term conservation of digitalised archives". My keynote synthesised many of the topics I was focussing on at the time (and have featured in some of my earlier slide shares in this series) including encouraging University libraries to engage more actively with research data management in the sciences, to begin developing digital special collections of individuals, and to support international efforts to ensure continuing access and preservation of e-Journals as part of the scholarly record. In addition, given the European focus I briefly covered some of the major European initiatives in digital preservation at that time. I have selected this presentation as one of the 12 in this series, not only as it is synthesising these key themes but also because it includes some thoughts on whether digital preservation needed to be evolution or revolution (or a bit of both) for libraries and archives. ]]>
Sat, 05 Sep 2015 14:39:58 GMT /slideshow/sept2015-brussels2007-digital-preservation-setting-the-course-for-a-decade-of-change/52451742 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2007 Brussels Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change Nbeagrie Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change , a conference keynote from 2007, available now on 際際滷share is the ninth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. This presentation was the opening keynote to a conference in 2007 held by the Belgian Association of Documentation (BDA) to celebrate its 60th anniversary. It dates from my time at the British Library. The conference theme was "Europe facing the challenge of the long term conservation of digitalised archives". My keynote synthesised many of the topics I was focussing on at the time (and have featured in some of my earlier slide shares in this series) including encouraging University libraries to engage more actively with research data management in the sciences, to begin developing digital special collections of individuals, and to support international efforts to ensure continuing access and preservation of e-Journals as part of the scholarly record. In addition, given the European focus I briefly covered some of the major European initiatives in digital preservation at that time. I have selected this presentation as one of the 12 in this series, not only as it is synthesising these key themes but also because it includes some thoughts on whether digital preservation needed to be evolution or revolution (or a bit of both) for libraries and archives. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/sept2015brussels2007-150905143958-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change , a conference keynote from 2007, available now on 際際滷share is the ninth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. This presentation was the opening keynote to a conference in 2007 held by the Belgian Association of Documentation (BDA) to celebrate its 60th anniversary. It dates from my time at the British Library. The conference theme was &quot;Europe facing the challenge of the long term conservation of digitalised archives&quot;. My keynote synthesised many of the topics I was focussing on at the time (and have featured in some of my earlier slide shares in this series) including encouraging University libraries to engage more actively with research data management in the sciences, to begin developing digital special collections of individuals, and to support international efforts to ensure continuing access and preservation of e-Journals as part of the scholarly record. In addition, given the European focus I briefly covered some of the major European initiatives in digital preservation at that time. I have selected this presentation as one of the 12 in this series, not only as it is synthesising these key themes but also because it includes some thoughts on whether digital preservation needed to be evolution or revolution (or a bit of both) for libraries and archives.
20yrs: 2007 Brussels Digital Preservation: Setting the Course for a Decade of Change from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2005_warwick3 /slideshow/august2015-warwick3-2005/51264661 august2015warwick32005-150804142403-lva1-app6892
Digital Curation and Preservation: Defining the Research Agenda for the Next Decade [2005-2015]: Warwick3 -How did we do? The Warwick3 Workshop: Digital Preservation and Curation Summing up + Next Steps available now on 際際滷share is the eighth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. Ive chosen it as it briefly allows us to look back at aspirations and achievements in Digital Preservation over a 20 year period from the very first (and seminal) Warwick 1 workshop held in 1995 to today. The first Warwick workshop considered the Long Term Preservation of Electronic Materials and a UK response to the final report of the RLG/CPA Task Force on Digital Archiving. Two further Warwick workshops followed in 1999 and 2005 to review progress and set a forward agenda. The two-day workshop that took place over 7 - 8 November 2005 at the University of Warwick aimed for the first time to address digital preservation issues for both scientific data and cultural heritage and to map out a future research agenda for them. Sponsored by JISC, the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), the British Library and the Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils (CCLRC), the invitation-only event drew a wide range of national and international experts to explore the current state of play with a view to shaping future strategy. The slides are from my summing up and conclusions at the workshop close. Part of my conclusions (slides 12-13), outlined the recommendations of the previous Warwick workshop held in 1999 and reviewed the progress that had been made in implementing them over the subsequent five years with a very subjective level of achievement (some) to (good).]]>

Digital Curation and Preservation: Defining the Research Agenda for the Next Decade [2005-2015]: Warwick3 -How did we do? The Warwick3 Workshop: Digital Preservation and Curation Summing up + Next Steps available now on 際際滷share is the eighth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. Ive chosen it as it briefly allows us to look back at aspirations and achievements in Digital Preservation over a 20 year period from the very first (and seminal) Warwick 1 workshop held in 1995 to today. The first Warwick workshop considered the Long Term Preservation of Electronic Materials and a UK response to the final report of the RLG/CPA Task Force on Digital Archiving. Two further Warwick workshops followed in 1999 and 2005 to review progress and set a forward agenda. The two-day workshop that took place over 7 - 8 November 2005 at the University of Warwick aimed for the first time to address digital preservation issues for both scientific data and cultural heritage and to map out a future research agenda for them. Sponsored by JISC, the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), the British Library and the Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils (CCLRC), the invitation-only event drew a wide range of national and international experts to explore the current state of play with a view to shaping future strategy. The slides are from my summing up and conclusions at the workshop close. Part of my conclusions (slides 12-13), outlined the recommendations of the previous Warwick workshop held in 1999 and reviewed the progress that had been made in implementing them over the subsequent five years with a very subjective level of achievement (some) to (good).]]>
Tue, 04 Aug 2015 14:24:02 GMT /slideshow/august2015-warwick3-2005/51264661 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2005_warwick3 Nbeagrie Digital Curation and Preservation: Defining the Research Agenda for the Next Decade [2005-2015]: Warwick3 -How did we do? The Warwick3 Workshop: Digital Preservation and Curation Summing up + Next Steps available now on 際際滷share is the eighth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. Ive chosen it as it briefly allows us to look back at aspirations and achievements in Digital Preservation over a 20 year period from the very first (and seminal) Warwick 1 workshop held in 1995 to today. The first Warwick workshop considered the Long Term Preservation of Electronic Materials and a UK response to the final report of the RLG/CPA Task Force on Digital Archiving. Two further Warwick workshops followed in 1999 and 2005 to review progress and set a forward agenda. The two-day workshop that took place over 7 - 8 November 2005 at the University of Warwick aimed for the first time to address digital preservation issues for both scientific data and cultural heritage and to map out a future research agenda for them. Sponsored by JISC, the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), the British Library and the Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils (CCLRC), the invitation-only event drew a wide range of national and international experts to explore the current state of play with a view to shaping future strategy. The slides are from my summing up and conclusions at the workshop close. Part of my conclusions (slides 12-13), outlined the recommendations of the previous Warwick workshop held in 1999 and reviewed the progress that had been made in implementing them over the subsequent five years with a very subjective level of achievement (some) to (good). <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/august2015warwick32005-150804142403-lva1-app6892-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> Digital Curation and Preservation: Defining the Research Agenda for the Next Decade [2005-2015]: Warwick3 -How did we do? The Warwick3 Workshop: Digital Preservation and Curation Summing up + Next Steps available now on 際際滷share is the eighth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. The remainder will be published at monthly intervals over 2015. Ive chosen it as it briefly allows us to look back at aspirations and achievements in Digital Preservation over a 20 year period from the very first (and seminal) Warwick 1 workshop held in 1995 to today. The first Warwick workshop considered the Long Term Preservation of Electronic Materials and a UK response to the final report of the RLG/CPA Task Force on Digital Archiving. Two further Warwick workshops followed in 1999 and 2005 to review progress and set a forward agenda. The two-day workshop that took place over 7 - 8 November 2005 at the University of Warwick aimed for the first time to address digital preservation issues for both scientific data and cultural heritage and to map out a future research agenda for them. Sponsored by JISC, the Digital Curation Centre (DCC), the British Library and the Council for the Central Laboratory of the Research Councils (CCLRC), the invitation-only event drew a wide range of national and international experts to explore the current state of play with a view to shaping future strategy. The slides are from my summing up and conclusions at the workshop close. Part of my conclusions (slides 12-13), outlined the recommendations of the previous Warwick workshop held in 1999 and reviewed the progress that had been made in implementing them over the subsequent five years with a very subjective level of achievement (some) to (good).
20yrs: 2005_warwick3 from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2004 jisc cni-brighton /slideshow/may2015-jisc-cnibrighton2004/48848497 may2015jisc-cnibrighton2004-150601155317-lva1-app6891
The JISC Continuing Access and Digital Preservation Strategy 2002-5, presentation to the 2004 JISC-CNI conference, Brighton UK is the fifth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This presentation from 2004 is important largely for the legacy of the Strategy that established bodies such as the Digital Preservation Coalition and the Digital Curation Centre, which still have a major influence today. The presentation sets out the context and rationale for the Strategy including the predicted growth of electronic publications, scientific data, and data curation. The implications of that growth were seen as: Core funding for institutions would not grow in line with information growth; A need for more automation and tools; A need for new shared services and information infrastructure; A significant need for R&D and investment to prepare for this. Therefore the objectives of the Strategy were: As an advocacy document to secure additional funding of 贈6m over 3 years (2002-5) for new programmes in electronic records management and digital preservation; Justify the accompanying implementation plan; Provide a longer-term framework and rationale for activity extending beyond 2005.]]>

The JISC Continuing Access and Digital Preservation Strategy 2002-5, presentation to the 2004 JISC-CNI conference, Brighton UK is the fifth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This presentation from 2004 is important largely for the legacy of the Strategy that established bodies such as the Digital Preservation Coalition and the Digital Curation Centre, which still have a major influence today. The presentation sets out the context and rationale for the Strategy including the predicted growth of electronic publications, scientific data, and data curation. The implications of that growth were seen as: Core funding for institutions would not grow in line with information growth; A need for more automation and tools; A need for new shared services and information infrastructure; A significant need for R&D and investment to prepare for this. Therefore the objectives of the Strategy were: As an advocacy document to secure additional funding of 贈6m over 3 years (2002-5) for new programmes in electronic records management and digital preservation; Justify the accompanying implementation plan; Provide a longer-term framework and rationale for activity extending beyond 2005.]]>
Mon, 01 Jun 2015 15:53:17 GMT /slideshow/may2015-jisc-cnibrighton2004/48848497 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2004 jisc cni-brighton Nbeagrie The JISC Continuing Access and Digital Preservation Strategy 2002-5, presentation to the 2004 JISC-CNI conference, Brighton UK is the fifth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This presentation from 2004 is important largely for the legacy of the Strategy that established bodies such as the Digital Preservation Coalition and the Digital Curation Centre, which still have a major influence today. The presentation sets out the context and rationale for the Strategy including the predicted growth of electronic publications, scientific data, and data curation. The implications of that growth were seen as: Core funding for institutions would not grow in line with information growth; A need for more automation and tools; A need for new shared services and information infrastructure; A significant need for R&D and investment to prepare for this. Therefore the objectives of the Strategy were: As an advocacy document to secure additional funding of 贈6m over 3 years (2002-5) for new programmes in electronic records management and digital preservation; Justify the accompanying implementation plan; Provide a longer-term framework and rationale for activity extending beyond 2005. <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/may2015jisc-cnibrighton2004-150601155317-lva1-app6891-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> The JISC Continuing Access and Digital Preservation Strategy 2002-5, presentation to the 2004 JISC-CNI conference, Brighton UK is the fifth of 12 presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This presentation from 2004 is important largely for the legacy of the Strategy that established bodies such as the Digital Preservation Coalition and the Digital Curation Centre, which still have a major influence today. The presentation sets out the context and rationale for the Strategy including the predicted growth of electronic publications, scientific data, and data curation. The implications of that growth were seen as: Core funding for institutions would not grow in line with information growth; A need for more automation and tools; A need for new shared services and information infrastructure; A significant need for R&amp;D and investment to prepare for this. Therefore the objectives of the Strategy were: As an advocacy document to secure additional funding of 贈6m over 3 years (2002-5) for new programmes in electronic records management and digital preservation; Justify the accompanying implementation plan; Provide a longer-term framework and rationale for activity extending beyond 2005.
20yrs: 2004 jisc cni-brighton from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2004 iPRES Beijing e-journals /slideshow/april2015-beijing-ejournals2004/46528548 april2015beijinge-journals2004-150401040529-conversion-gate01
This is the fourth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. It was one of the four presentations I gave as part of the very first iPRES conference at the Chinese National Academy of Sciences in July 2004. iPRES was conceived in 2004 by the Chinese Academy of Science and Electronic Information for Libraries, as a forum to exchange ideas and expertise in digital preservation between China and Europe. Since then, it has expanded to attract delegates from around the world. In subsequent years ensuring continuing access and preservation of e-journals has remained a major international concern for academic libraries .]]>

This is the fourth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. It was one of the four presentations I gave as part of the very first iPRES conference at the Chinese National Academy of Sciences in July 2004. iPRES was conceived in 2004 by the Chinese Academy of Science and Electronic Information for Libraries, as a forum to exchange ideas and expertise in digital preservation between China and Europe. Since then, it has expanded to attract delegates from around the world. In subsequent years ensuring continuing access and preservation of e-journals has remained a major international concern for academic libraries .]]>
Wed, 01 Apr 2015 04:05:29 GMT /slideshow/april2015-beijing-ejournals2004/46528548 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2004 iPRES Beijing e-journals Nbeagrie This is the fourth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. It was one of the four presentations I gave as part of the very first iPRES conference at the Chinese National Academy of Sciences in July 2004. iPRES was conceived in 2004 by the Chinese Academy of Science and Electronic Information for Libraries, as a forum to exchange ideas and expertise in digital preservation between China and Europe. Since then, it has expanded to attract delegates from around the world. In subsequent years ensuring continuing access and preservation of e-journals has remained a major international concern for academic libraries . <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/april2015beijinge-journals2004-150401040529-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> This is the fourth of 12 presentations Ive selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. It was one of the four presentations I gave as part of the very first iPRES conference at the Chinese National Academy of Sciences in July 2004. iPRES was conceived in 2004 by the Chinese Academy of Science and Electronic Information for Libraries, as a forum to exchange ideas and expertise in digital preservation between China and Europe. Since then, it has expanded to attract delegates from around the world. In subsequent years ensuring continuing access and preservation of e-journals has remained a major international concern for academic libraries .
20yrs: 2004 iPRES Beijing e-journals from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs: 2001 Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia /slideshow/feb2015-melbourne-2001/44413790 feb2015melbourne2001-150208144718-conversion-gate01
20 Years in Digital Preservation: 2001 presentation on the Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia. This is the second of 12 conference presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This one is selected because of the subsequent influence the Handbook has had (I believe 15 years later it is still the most heavily used resource on the DPC website). It also seemed apposite with the online Handbook currently being worked and updated to its first major second edition. The presentation is in two parts a keynote to the Forum on the Handbook and a set of workshop slides consisting of a digital preservation questionnaire and a set of [institutional] responses probably from a repeat performance and workshop at a separate event in Australia. I have almost no information left on these events but fortunately the Pandora web archive at the National Library of Australia has an archived description of the Forum: it just shows how useful web archives are!]]>

20 Years in Digital Preservation: 2001 presentation on the Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia. This is the second of 12 conference presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This one is selected because of the subsequent influence the Handbook has had (I believe 15 years later it is still the most heavily used resource on the DPC website). It also seemed apposite with the online Handbook currently being worked and updated to its first major second edition. The presentation is in two parts a keynote to the Forum on the Handbook and a set of workshop slides consisting of a digital preservation questionnaire and a set of [institutional] responses probably from a repeat performance and workshop at a separate event in Australia. I have almost no information left on these events but fortunately the Pandora web archive at the National Library of Australia has an archived description of the Forum: it just shows how useful web archives are!]]>
Sun, 08 Feb 2015 14:47:18 GMT /slideshow/feb2015-melbourne-2001/44413790 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs: 2001 Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia Nbeagrie 20 Years in Digital Preservation: 2001 presentation on the Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia. This is the second of 12 conference presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This one is selected because of the subsequent influence the Handbook has had (I believe 15 years later it is still the most heavily used resource on the DPC website). It also seemed apposite with the online Handbook currently being worked and updated to its first major second edition. The presentation is in two parts a keynote to the Forum on the Handbook and a set of workshop slides consisting of a digital preservation questionnaire and a set of [institutional] responses probably from a repeat performance and workshop at a separate event in Australia. I have almost no information left on these events but fortunately the Pandora web archive at the National Library of Australia has an archived description of the Forum: it just shows how useful web archives are! <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/feb2015melbourne2001-150208144718-conversion-gate01-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 20 Years in Digital Preservation: 2001 presentation on the Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia. This is the second of 12 conference presentations I have selected to mark 20 years in Digital Preservation. This one is selected because of the subsequent influence the Handbook has had (I believe 15 years later it is still the most heavily used resource on the DPC website). It also seemed apposite with the online Handbook currently being worked and updated to its first major second edition. The presentation is in two parts a keynote to the Forum on the Handbook and a set of workshop slides consisting of a digital preservation questionnaire and a set of [institutional] responses probably from a repeat performance and workshop at a separate event in Australia. I have almost no information left on these events but fortunately the Pandora web archive at the National Library of Australia has an archived description of the Forum: it just shows how useful web archives are!
20yrs: 2001 Preservation Management of Digital Materials [the Digital Preservation Handbook] at the Digital Continuity Forum and workshop, Melbourne Australia from Neil Beagrie
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20yrs:1998 Society of Archivists Conference /Nbeagrie/soa98 soa98-150101045552-conversion-gate02
1998 Preserving Digital Collections: current methods and research, presentation to the Society of Archivists annual conference, Sheffield UK. This is 1 of 12 conference presentations selected from 20 years in Digital Preservation. It presented the first advocacy of a life-cycle approach to digital preservation (as published in A Strategic Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital Resources) and the work on the digital collections policy of the recently established Arts and Humanities Data Service. There is a blog post giving a full description at http://blog.beagrie.com/2015/01/01/20-years-in-digital-preservation-1998-presentation-to-the-society-of-archivists-annual-conference-sheffield-uk/ ]]>

1998 Preserving Digital Collections: current methods and research, presentation to the Society of Archivists annual conference, Sheffield UK. This is 1 of 12 conference presentations selected from 20 years in Digital Preservation. It presented the first advocacy of a life-cycle approach to digital preservation (as published in A Strategic Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital Resources) and the work on the digital collections policy of the recently established Arts and Humanities Data Service. There is a blog post giving a full description at http://blog.beagrie.com/2015/01/01/20-years-in-digital-preservation-1998-presentation-to-the-society-of-archivists-annual-conference-sheffield-uk/ ]]>
Thu, 01 Jan 2015 04:55:52 GMT /Nbeagrie/soa98 Nbeagrie@slideshare.net(Nbeagrie) 20yrs:1998 Society of Archivists Conference Nbeagrie 1998 Preserving Digital Collections: current methods and research, presentation to the Society of Archivists annual conference, Sheffield UK. This is 1 of 12 conference presentations selected from 20 years in Digital Preservation. It presented the first advocacy of a life-cycle approach to digital preservation (as published in A Strategic Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital Resources) and the work on the digital collections policy of the recently established Arts and Humanities Data Service. There is a blog post giving a full description at http://blog.beagrie.com/2015/01/01/20-years-in-digital-preservation-1998-presentation-to-the-society-of-archivists-annual-conference-sheffield-uk/ <img style="border:1px solid #C3E6D8;float:right;" alt="" src="https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/soa98-150101045552-conversion-gate02-thumbnail.jpg?width=120&amp;height=120&amp;fit=bounds" /><br> 1998 Preserving Digital Collections: current methods and research, presentation to the Society of Archivists annual conference, Sheffield UK. This is 1 of 12 conference presentations selected from 20 years in Digital Preservation. It presented the first advocacy of a life-cycle approach to digital preservation (as published in A Strategic Framework for Creating and Preserving Digital Resources) and the work on the digital collections policy of the recently established Arts and Humanities Data Service. There is a blog post giving a full description at http://blog.beagrie.com/2015/01/01/20-years-in-digital-preservation-1998-presentation-to-the-society-of-archivists-annual-conference-sheffield-uk/
20yrs:1998 Society of Archivists Conference from Neil Beagrie
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https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/profile-photo-Nbeagrie-48x48.jpg?cb=1553338142 Co-Director and principal consultant at Charles Beagrie Limited, an independent consultancy company specialising in the science and research, digital library and digital archive sectors. led the Keeping Research Data Safe consultancies and research projects that defined a Cost Model and a Benefits Framework/Toolkit for long-term curation/digital preservation of research data; managing editor and principal investigator for the Digital Preservation Coalition's Technology Watch Series titles on Email, Moving Picture and Sound, IPR, Digital Forensics, Trust and Continuing Access for e-Journals, Preservation Metadata, Web-archiving, and Computer-Aided Design (CAD). http://www.beagrie.com https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/dpcdatanomicsglasgow2019slideshare-190321114628-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/dpc-datanomics-glasgow2019slideshare-137475191/137475191 Datanomics: the value... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/valueimpactresearchdataservicesesip2017-170727124034-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/value-impact-researchdataservicesesip2017/78308878 Value impact research... https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/valueimpactresearchdataservicesidcc2017-170221090706-thumbnail.jpg?width=320&height=320&fit=bounds slideshow/valueimpact-research-dataservicesidcc2017/72400900 Value&amp;impact research...