[Excerpt] In 2007, OCLC published the report Shifting Gears: Gearing Up to Get Into the Flow to bring to the forefront a much needed conversation about digitization of archival collections, and access to the rich content accessible only through paper or other analog formats. The authors emphasized that any successful large digitization program would focus on access and quantity. They challenged archivists to rethink policies, procedures, and technologies that either slowed the process of mass digitization, or were unfriendly to the implementation of a rapid capture program. Recent articles, blog posts, and columns demonstrate that we as a profession continue to grapple with ways to implement digitization programs that are both sustainable a...
An Archivist's Challenges: Adapting to Changing Technology and Management Technique
[Excerpt] Digital. Digital. Digital. We have the pleasure of presenting another issue of Practical T...
This article frames digitization as a knowledge organization practice in libraries and museums. The ...
[Excerpt] In 2014, the Dalhousie University Archives began its first archival mass digitization proj...
The digitization of millions of books under corporate and non-profit programs is dramatically expand...
This paper examines the experience of one institution, the University of Maryland Libraries, as it m...
While computers and automation have seemingly taken over, they have slowly and painfully crept into ...
This paper examines the experience of one institution, the University of Maryland Libraries, as it m...
Are the highly selective models of digital content creation satisfying user demands for increasing a...
Advances in digital image capture technology and the adoption of More Product, Less Process methods ...
Two years ago, the University of Mississippi Department of Archives and Special Collections hired an...
This article is a case study comparing three large-scale digitization projects at the University of ...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
This report urges a collaborative approach for conversion of content on various types of digital med...
Archivists who work directly with unique collections, as well as librarians and other professionals ...
An Archivist's Challenges: Adapting to Changing Technology and Management Technique
[Excerpt] Digital. Digital. Digital. We have the pleasure of presenting another issue of Practical T...
This article frames digitization as a knowledge organization practice in libraries and museums. The ...
[Excerpt] In 2014, the Dalhousie University Archives began its first archival mass digitization proj...
The digitization of millions of books under corporate and non-profit programs is dramatically expand...
This paper examines the experience of one institution, the University of Maryland Libraries, as it m...
While computers and automation have seemingly taken over, they have slowly and painfully crept into ...
This paper examines the experience of one institution, the University of Maryland Libraries, as it m...
Are the highly selective models of digital content creation satisfying user demands for increasing a...
Advances in digital image capture technology and the adoption of More Product, Less Process methods ...
Two years ago, the University of Mississippi Department of Archives and Special Collections hired an...
This article is a case study comparing three large-scale digitization projects at the University of ...
In the years since Meissner and Greene published their seminal article, ʺMore Product, Less Processʺ...
This report urges a collaborative approach for conversion of content on various types of digital med...
Archivists who work directly with unique collections, as well as librarians and other professionals ...
An Archivist's Challenges: Adapting to Changing Technology and Management Technique
[Excerpt] Digital. Digital. Digital. We have the pleasure of presenting another issue of Practical T...
This article frames digitization as a knowledge organization practice in libraries and museums. The ...