

Panel: Beyond Floppy Disks
Brian Dietz, Bertram Lyons, Porter Olsen
Cultural heritage institutions are collecting a larger variety of media than ever before including external hard drives, computers, and files from hosted cloud services. While there are established workflows and best practices for smaller media objects, many institutions are just now beginning to tackle these … Read more →

Lightning Talks: Not Your Average BitCurator: How Repositories are Using BitCurator Tools in Different Ways
Matthew Farrell, Don Mennerich, Ben Goldman, Elizabeth Charlton, Jarrett Drake, Doug White, Euan Cochrane, Kari Smith
As institutions become exposed to alternative digital forensic tools and their individual strengths and limitations, they are exploring the benefits of expanding their digital curation toolset beyond reliance on any single product. Moreover, the modular architecture of tools like BitCurator has fostered a growing community … Read more →

Breakouts: Where Should Access Happen?
BitCurator Consortium
As processes for acquiring, analyzing, and describing electronic records stabilize, institutions invariably consider access to such materials. Where and how will researchers interact with digital archives? What tools should be available to them? What is the Web’s role in access? In this breakout session, forum … Read more →

Overview of BitCurator
Matthew Farrell, Duke University Libraries
A webinar given to the Association of Southeastern Research Libraries (ASERL) on the purpose and usage of the BitCurator environment This content is shared for reuse with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (4.0) license.

Simplifying and Improving Access to the Contents of Disk Images in Born-Digital Collections
Kam Woods
This content is shared for reuse with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (4.0) license.

A Content Model for Disk Images
Matthew Farrell, Duke University Libraries
A presentation of how to model the data collected with BitCurator This content is shared for reuse with a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike (4.0) license.