Search Results

651. Oregon Digital and the Joys of Migrating...Again and It's 2019 Do you know where your metadata is?

652. Deployment with Elastic Container Service

653. EmergingHydraRepository Architecture for 2016 - 2017

654. Duke Digital Repository: User-Driven Batch Ingest

655. Hyrax for Research Data Repository

657. Sites of Memory, Acts of Erasure: On the Powers, Meanings and Limitations of the Historical Archive and Samvera Connect 2019 Keynote Address

658. Making TACOs for Hydras

659. A Digital Archive for the UK City of Culture 2017

660. ETDs - IR Honey?

661. Lightning talks

663. Migration to Samvera: Challenges to Making the Move and What the Community Can Do To Welcome New Users

666. Outcomes of the Bridge2Hyku Project: A full migration toolkit from ContentDM to Hyrax/Hyku

667. Samvera Connect 2018: Opening remarks

669. Box Set: Implementing Admin Sets in Hydra-in-a-Box

670. Working Group and Interest Group updates

673. Valkyrie update

674. Rapid Digitization of Latin American Ephemera with Hydra

675. A Community that develops Shared APIs, implements them in Software, and exposes interoperable Content and International Image Interoperability Framework

676. Images & Metadata Editor at Northwestern University and Repository

677. State of the Samvera Community (2019)

678. Structural Modeling of Archival Collections

679. Why Can't We All Just Get Along?

680. Hyrax update

682. Avalon Media System

683. Hyku update: Rumors of Hyku’s Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated

684. Bulk Imports in a Sufia-based Repository

685. Hydra at Trinity College Dublin

686. Avalon update

688. Oral Histories in Hydra at Temple University Libraries

690. Fulcrum, Deep Blue Data, and The Michigan Daily Archives

691. Samvera - Rails 6 Features: And thoughts on using them

692. Collaborative Hydra Development

695. Plum(b)ing Workflow, Preservation, and Delivery with Plum

696. Quicksearch

698. Digital Initiatives at Ohio State

699. Hydra, meet TEI. TEI, meet Hydra.

700. Make “bad” decisions with confidence!: Using a decoupled, pluggable architecture for object processing and Colenda @ the University of Pennsylvania