education

New Issue of Fedora Commons HatCheck Newsletter Now Available

Ithaca, NY During the last four months of 2008 Fedora Commons has seen rapid growth in community efforts towards developing partnerships, software and dynamic new initiatives. The December 18, 2008 issue of Fedora Commons HatCheck newsletter reflects those activities in news, achievements, opinion, reports, and upcoming event information gathered from the community. You may view the newsletter online here:
http://www.fedora-commons.org/resources/newsletter.php

All About Repositories Webinar Series: Professional Development for Repository Managers, Developers, Curators and Decision Makers

Ithaca, NY To strengthen, engage and provide professional learning opportunities for repository user and developer communities, topics and issues of interest will be presented in an free, online web seminar series offered by DSpace Foundation, Fedora Commons and Sun Microsystems throughout 2009.
Additional information–dates, registration, and presenters–for All About Repositories Webinars will be available through DSpace, Fedora Commons and Sun web sites early in 2009.

Growing Fedora Commons’ 100+ Project Team

By Dan Davis, Chief Software Architect, Fedora Commons I find strong desire to reflect at the end of the year on our first full year of operating as Fedora Commons. It has been a wild ride which should be expected for any startup. We had the long awaited delivery of the Fedora Repository 3.0 at mid-year followed by Fedora Repository 3.1. We also maintained our commitment to the community by delivering Fedora Repository 2.2.3 and 2.2.4. Along the way we have worked with 100+ projects to help them build their systems.

2008: A Very Good Year for Partnerships, Community, and Software

By Sandy Payette, Executive Director, Fedora Commons  As Executive Director, I thought it would be appropriate for me to reflect on the major accomplishments of the year in Fedora Commons and provide a mini “annual report” for the community. Indeed, it has been a very exciting time since the startup of our non-profit organization. With a fabulous core team, and a great set of partners and community participants, I am proud to report to the whole community my view of some of the notable developments this year.

A Repository-Centered Workplace for Scholars

By Thornton Staples, Director of Community Strategy and Outreach, Fedora Commons  In our ongoing efforts to organize communities around solution areas well suited to Fedora, we have begun working on multiple fronts to encourage what we have been calling “scholars’ repositories.” Dedicated to the idea that born-digital scholarly materials will need to be created in repository-enabled environments in order to be sustained, solutions in this area will need to foster creation, management and even dissemination of content in ways that are completely under the control its owner.

Towards a Knowledge Lifecycle: Populating Repositories “Upstream”

By Sally Rumsey, ORA Services & Development Manager, Oxford University Library Services  It is no understatement that populating institutional repositories for research materials is proving something of a challenge. Some disciplines have their own popular subject-targeted repositories such as ArXiV (http://arxiv.org/) or SSRN (Social Science Research Network) (http://www.ssrn.com/). Their attraction lies in the authors’ strong allegiance to their discipline.

Sun PASIG Highlights: Preserving the World As It Is, and the World As It Will Be

Baltimore, MD Is there anyone out there who has an in-box, spam filter, hard drive, or update feed that is not brimming with outdated, digital junk? And are you even sure about whether it’s junk or not? Like old string, your institution may have a particular reason for keeping a collection of regularly updated data. It might even be an important reason. Welcome to the world of the Sun Preservation and Archiving Special Interest Group (PASIG) fall meeting.

CALL: JA-SIG 2009 “Higher Education Open Source Communities - Working Together”

The JA-SIG Conference Planning Committee is pleased to announce the Spring 2009 Conference to be held March 1-4 in Dallas, Texas. The call for proposals for JA-SIG 2009 ”Higher Education Open Source Communities - Working Together” is now open.

“The Future of Repositories”

Andreas Aschenbrenner, State and University Library, Goettingen; Tobias Blanke, King’s College London, Arts and Humanities e-Science Support Centre (AHeSSC); David Flanders, Birkbeck Library, University of London; Mark Hedges, King’s College London, Centre of e-Research (CeRch), and; Ben O’Steen, Oxford Library, Oxford Research Archive (ORA) have presented ideas around how repositories might become a more integral part of the rapidly evolving Web landscape in the November/December issue of DLib Mag

ECDL 2008 Workshop Report: DORSDL2

In the November/December issue of DLib Magazine authors Gert Schmeltz Pedersen, Technical University of Denmark; Kåre Fiedler Christiansen, The State and University Library, Denmark; and Matthias Razum, FIZ Karlsruhe report on the 2nd European Workshop which highlighted the use of Digital Object Repository Systems in Digital Libraries (DORSDL2) <http://dorsdl2.

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