Reimagining the Format Model: Introducing the Work of the NSLA Digital Preservation Technical Registry |
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Authors: | Peter McKinney Steve Knight Jay Gattuso David Pearson Libor Coufal David Anderson |
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Affiliation: | 1. National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa, Wellington, New ZealandPeter.McKinney@dia.govt.nz;3. National Library of New Zealand Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa, Wellington, New Zealand;4. National Library of Australia, Canberra ACT, Australia;5. Future Proof Computing Group, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, UK |
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Abstract: | In this article we introduce the work of the National and State Libraries Australasia Digital Preservation Technical Registry project.Any technical registry model must allow digital preservation analysts to understand the technical form of the content they are tasked with preserving, understand the capabilities they have in relation to that content, and reflect on the community position in relation to those capabilities. We believe the solution outlined here is well placed to deliver the information required to answer these questions, and in a manner that makes it easy to understand, reference and augment.The primary focus of this article is to describe the format model, which is the most radical part of the Digital Preservation Technical Registry. The flexibility the model provides delivers on all of the requirements outlined by the NSLA partners and project team members; this includes the ability to reference many layers constituting a format, including relationships between specifications and implementations of real-world formats. We seek input from members of the community on the model and suggestions for use cases and requirements that we have not envisaged. |
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Keywords: | technical registry format NSLA digital preservation |
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