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2. Diving into the Technology of Hydramata: A Pluggable, Extensible Hydra Solution for Research Repositories
- Description:
- Diving into the Technology of Hydramata". and A presentation to the Fedora Interest Group track at the 2014 Open Repositories held in Helsinki. As in the heading of the proposal, this was originally offered under the title "Extending the Hydra Head to Create a Pluggable, Extensible Architecture
- Keyword:
- Architecture, Repository, Curate gem, Hydra, Hydramata, Fedora, Import/export, Technology, Research data management, and Open Repositories 2014
- Subject:
- Hydra Project
- Creator:
- Johnson, Rick and Newman, Linda
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame and University of Cincinnati
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 06/2014
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
3. What’s in a name?: The Samvera Branch Renaming Working Group in action
- Description:
- The Samvera Branch Renaming Working Group formed in August 2020 to create a recommendation, plan, and timeline for our community to stop using long-practiced "master/slave" coding jargon that perpetuates racist systems and language, and instead embrace and implement positive change, leading by example. This presentation will detail the work of this group, A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus, and the guiding morals and philosophy for undertaking this work, where and why we prioritized change while some communities are left uncertain how to proceed with similar work, the challenges we have discovered along the way, our immediate future plans, and the forward-to-better model that we hope this group’s deliverables put forth for the Samvera Community and others in the Open Source world. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning.
- Keyword:
- Interest and Working Groups, Connect 2020, and Samvera
- Subject:
- Samvera Community
- Creator:
- Rayle, E Lynette, Dunn, Alexandra, Brittle, Collin, Lynch, Kate, Friesen, Jeremy, and Colvard, Chris
- Contributor:
- Ubiquity Press, University of California Santa Barbara, University of Notre Dame, Cornell University, Emory University, and Princeton University
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 10/28/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
4. Ye Olde Tech Call
- Description:
- A lightning talk (seven minute) presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus and A quick introduction to the Samvera Tech call to address what is it, who is it for, and how can I engage. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning.
- Keyword:
- Samvera, Community, and Connect 2020
- Subject:
- Samvera Community
- Creator:
- Friesen, Jeremy
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 10/28/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
5. What to do when your repository enters middle age
- Description:
- Our Samvera-based institutional repository is nearing eight years old, and one can safely say it is middle aged-- and with middle age comes a mid-life crisis. Over the course of the past year, the current product owners have examined the role and vision of the repository and embraced the role of maintainers, advocating for critical external needs. Balancing the technical needs and costs of an aging system while providing new services to meet user needs with a limited technical staff has required being realistic about both available resources and institutional priorities. In this talk, we will discuss our experiences, our methods for refining the focus of a large project, focusing developer work to yield maximum payoffs, and centering the repository to be more useful to the campus community by meeting users where they are. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning. and A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus
- Keyword:
- Fedora, Samvera, Digital collections, Repository, Sufia, Connect 2020, and Solr
- Subject:
- Samvera Community
- Creator:
- Brower, Don and Narlock, Mikala
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 10/28/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
6. serverless-iiif: From flail to scale in a year or less
- Description:
- A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus and After trying to navigate deployment, configuration, performance, and scaling issues of several different image servers and support infrastructure (Cantaloupe, Aware, Riiif, nginx, and SquidCache, to name a few), we decided to see if we could build something less general/configurable but far more suited to our use case and runtime environment. serverless-iiif started out as a bare bones, proof-of-concept demonstration of how a scalable, high-performance IIIF image server could be implemented in a small, inexpensive AWS Lambda function. Just over a year later, the project serves as the basis for high-volume IIIF services running in production at Northwestern University, Princeton University, the University of Notre Dame, and the Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove. This presentation will cover the project from its beginnings (as a small demo repository carved out of Northwestern's cloud repository infrastructure), through a number of forks, merges, performance enhancements, deployment improvements, and into production. We will also include performance benchmarks, current production stats, and some thoughts on future work. The 'Related URL' below links to a video recording of the session. The video has closed captioning.
- Keyword:
- Cloud services, Connect 2020, International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF), and Samvera
- Subject:
- Samvera Community
- Creator:
- Silverton, Edward, Klein, Michael B, Hartzler, Jonathan, and Pendragon, Trey
- Contributor:
- Northwestern University Libraries, University of Notre Dame, Mnemoscene, and Princeton University Library
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 10/27/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
7. Building a GLAM ecosystem: Human and machine collaborations for digitized collections
- Description:
- one size would not fit all for our campus archives, library, and museum, and community needs above all. In this presentation, team members will talk about the past two years of experimentation, development, and conversation around how to connect our community to our cultural heritage collections through multiple integrations, both human and technological. At a high-level, we’ll discuss our technical architecture that uses legacy applications like ArchivesSpace, an aging Fedora repository, and a decades-old museum database together with the IIIF framework and open-source GatsbyJS. And perhaps more importantly, we’ll outline the cross-departmental team structure that has developers talking to museum curators, library cataloguers, archivists, and everyone in between. The 'Related URL' below links to beginning of this presentation in the day's YouTube recording., The University of Notre Dame has taken a modular approach to building a new digital collections platform-integrating existing applications and connecting the people that manage and use them across the library, archives, and art museum. We began with two assumptions, and A presentation given at Samvera Connect 2020 On-line described thus
- Keyword:
- Architecture, Samvera, Workflow, Connect 2020, Metadata, and Digital collections
- Subject:
- Samvera Community
- Creator:
- Shelton, Abby and Fox, Rob
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 10/26/2020
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
8. So we all have ORCID integrations, now what?
- Description:
- In the past year, the major groundwork has been laid for repository systems to support ORCID identifiers. DSpace, Hydra, and EPrints all have support for storing and managing ORCIDs. However, we are still in the early stages of ORCID adoption. Only a small fraction of repository content is annotated with ORCIDs, and most end-users have not yet realized any benefit from the features based on ORCID. This panel will bring together representatives of major repository systems to relate the current status of ORCID implementations, discuss plans for future work, and identify shared goals and challenges. The panelists will discuss how ORCID support provides practical benefits both to repository staff and end-users, with a focus on features that exist now or will exist in the next year. and Slides from a panel session given at the Open Repositories conference in 2015 held in Indianapolis described thus
- Keyword:
- Metadata, DSpace, Hydra, Open Repositories 2015, and ORCID
- Subject:
- Hydra Project
- Creator:
- Luyten, Bram, Johnson, Rick, Scherle, Ryan, West, Peter, and Pottinger, Hardy
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame, Dryad Digital Repository, University of Missouri System, Atmire, and Digital Repository Services Ltd
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 06/2015
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
9. Hydra: many heads, many connections. Enriching Fedora Repositories with ORCID
- Description:
- Slides from a webinar in the DuraSpace 'Hot Topics' series given 2nd April, 2015.
- Keyword:
- Fedora, Architecture, Hydra, Repository, ORCID, Community, and DuraSpace
- Subject:
- Hydra Project
- Creator:
- Johnson, Rick and Paglione, Laura
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame and ORCID
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 04/02/2015
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation
10. Hydra ORCID Plug-in: An Opensource ORCID plug-in for Hydra and Fedora
- Description:
- A presentation to the ORCID Outreach Meeting and Codefest, Chicago, IL, 21-22 May 2014.
- Keyword:
- Architecture, Repository, Hydra, ORCID, and Fedora
- Subject:
- Hydra Project
- Creator:
- Johnson, Rick
- Contributor:
- University of Notre Dame
- Owner:
- rob@scientist.com
- Language:
- English
- Date Modified:
- 07/24/2023
- Date Created:
- 05/2014
- Rights Statement Tesim:
- In Copyright
- License Tesim:
- Creative Commons BY Attribution 4.0 International
- Resource Type:
- Presentation