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More cross-posting great news, from the digital humanities, digital
preservation sphere.

Cheers!
------------------------------------------------
Stephanie Beene (MA and MSIS)
Visual Resources Coordinator
Arts Librarian, LIB 343
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Phone: (503) 768-7387
Schedule an appt @:https://sbeene.youcanbook.me

*Visit @:*
http://library.lclark.edu/vrc -- Lewis & Clark's VRC's Website
http://accessceramics.org/ -- accessCeramics, a Contemporary Ceramics
resource
https://library.lclark.edu/seniorprojects/, Lewis & Clark Senior Studio Art
Digital Archive

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Wed, Apr 15, 2015 at 7:16 AM
Subject: [Digipres] NEWS: “Hydra-in-a-Box” DPLA, Stanford University, and
DuraSpace Initiative Funded by IMLS
To: [log in to unmask]


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 15, 2015

Read it online: http://bit.ly/1OwQQU7
Contact: Dan Cohen ([log in to unmask]), Tom Cramer ([log in to unmask]) or Debra
Hanken Kurtz ([log in to unmask])

Far-reaching “Hydra-in-a-Box” Joint Initiative Funded by IMLS

A tripartite DPLA, Stanford University, and DuraSpace partnership will
produce
a turnkey, Hydra-based solution that can be widely and easily adopted by
institutions nationwide.

Boston, MA  The Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), Stanford
University,
and the DuraSpace organization are pleased to announce that their joint
initiative has been awarded a $2M National Leadership Grant from the
Institute
of Museum and Library Services (IMLS). Nicknamed Hydra-in-a-Box, the project
aims foster a new, national, library network through a community-based
repository system, enabling discovery, interoperability and reuse of digital
resources by people from this country and around the world.

This transformative network is based on advanced repositories that not only
empower local institutions with new asset management capabilities, but also
interconnect their data and collections through a shared platform.

“At the core of the Digital Public Library of America is our national
network
of hubs, and they need the systems envisioned by this project,” said Dan
Cohen, DPLA’s executive director. “By combining contemporary technologies
for aggregating, storing, enhancing, and serving cultural heritage content,
we
expect this new stack will be a huge boon to DPLA and to the broader digital
library community. In addition, I’m thrilled that the project brings
together
the expertise of DuraSpace, Stanford, and DPLA.”

Each of the partners will fulfill specific roles in the joint initiative.
Stanford will use its existing leadership in the Hydra Project to develop
core
components, in concert with the broader Hydra community. DPLA will focus on
the
connective tissue between hubs, mapping, and crosswalks to DPLA’s metadata
application profile, and infrastructure to support metadata enhancement and
remediation. DuraSpace will use its expertise in building and serving
repositories, and doing so at scale, to construct the back-end systems for
Hydra hosting.

“DuraSpace is excited to provide the infrastructure for this project,” said
Debra Hanken Kurtz, DuraSpace CEO. “It aligns perfectly with our mission to
steward the scholarly and cultural heritage records and make them accessible
for current and future generations. We look forward to working with DPLA and
Stanford to support their work and that of the community to ensure a robust
and
sustainable future for ‘Hydra-in-a-Box.’”

Over the project’s 30-month time frame, the partners will engage with
libraries, archives, and museums nationwide, especially current and
prospective
DPLA hubs and the Hydra community, to systematically capture the needs for a
next-generation, open source, digital repository. They will collaboratively
extend the existing Hydra project codebase to build, bundle, and promote a
feature-complete, robust digital repository that is easy to install,
configure,
and maintain—in short, a next-generation digital repository that will work
for institutions large and small, and is capable of running as a hosted
service. Finally, starting with DPLA’s own metadata aggregation services,
the
partners will work to ensure that these repositories have the necessary
affordances to support networked aggregation, discovery, management and
access
to these resources, producing a shared, sustainable, nationwide platform.

“The Hydra Project has already demonstrated enormous traction and value as a
best-in-class digital repository for institutions like Stanford,” said Tom
Cramer, Chief Technology Strategist at the Stanford University Libraries.
“And yet there is so much more to do. This grant will provide the means to
rapidly accelerate Hydra’s rate of development and adoption--expanding its
community, features and value all at once.”

To find out more about the Hydra-in-a-Box initiative contact Dan Cohen
([log in to unmask]), Tom Cramer ([log in to unmask]) or Debra Hanken Kurtz
([log in to unmask]). An information page is available here:
https://wiki.duraspace.org/display/hydra/Hydra+in+a+Box.

---About DPLA---
The Digital Public Library of America (http://dp.la) strives to contain the
full breadth of human expression, from the written word, to works of art and
culture, to records of America’s heritage, to the efforts and data of
science. Since launching in April 2013, it has aggregated over 8.5 million
items from over 1,700 institutions. The DPLA is a registered 501(c)(3)
non-profit.

---About DuraSpace---
DuraSpace (http://duraspace.org), an independent 501(c)(3) not-for-profit
organization providing leadership and innovation for open technologies that
promote durable, persistent access to digital data. We collaborate with
academic, scientific, cultural, and technology communities by supporting
projects (DSpace, Fedora, VIVO) and creating services (DuraCloud,
DSpaceDirect,
ArchivesDirect) to help ensure that current and future generations have
access
to our collective digital heritage. Our values are expressed in our
organizational byline, "Committed to our digital future."

---About Stanford University Libraries---
The Stanford University Libraries (http://library.stanford.edu) is
internationally recognized as a leader among research libraries, and in
leveraging digital technology to support scholarship in the age of
information.
It is a founder of both the Hydra Project and the Fedora 4 repository
effort,
and a leading institution in the International Image Interoperability
Framework
(IIIF) (http://iiif.io).

---About the Hydra Project---
The Hydra Project (http://projecthydra.org) is both an open source community
and a suite of software that provides a flexible and robust framework for
managing, preserving, and providing access to digital assets. The project
motto, “One body, many heads,” speaks to the flexibility provided by
Hydra’s modern, modular architecture, and the power of combining a robust
repository backend (the “body”) with flexible, tailored, user interfaces
(“heads”). Co-designed and developed in concert with Fedora 4, the
extensible, durable, and widely used repository software, the Hydra/Fedora
stack is centerpiece of a thriving and rapidly expanding open source
community
poised to easy-to-implement solution.


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