UVA Library Report to the Digital Library Federation
October 2004, covering July 2003-June 2004
TABLE OF CONTENTS
A. Collections
The Biddle Edition Archive
A searchable electronic collection of selected Lewis and Clark letters,
images, and press coverage surrounding the publication of the Biddle edition
of the Lewis and Clark Journals in 1814. The project was sponsored by
Douglas Seefedlt, Director of the Lewis and Clark Bicentennial Project,
and the Virginia Center for Digital History, and is built upon the full
electronic version of Biddle created by the Library in 2003.
http://www.vcdh.virginia.edu/lewisandclark/biddle/splash.html
California Newsreel
The Robertson Media Center has entered into a licensing agreement with
the documentary distributor California Newsreel to deliver online versions
of selected videos from their Library of African Cinema. These videos
have been digitized and are being delivered as MPEG streams to members
of the University of Virginia community.
Census of American Studies Resources on the Web
The Census of American Studies Resources on the Web supports the creation,
discovery, and delivery of an annotated directory of American Studies
resources on the web. Entries in the directory are proposed by members
of the larger American Studies community, reviewed, and, if accepted,
annotated, categorized, and added to the directory. The project was a
collaboration with the American Studies graduate program at UVA and the
Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, funded by a grant
from the Mellon Foundation. The resource was realized through a local
customization of the Scout Portal Toolkit.
http://infocomm.lib.virginia.edu/toolkit/SPT/SPT--Home.php
Climatology Virginia
Climatology Virginia was developed by the Science and Engineering Libraries'
Digital Lab and the Geostat Center as a resource to enhance the pure research
capabilities of those engaged in the field, while lending context wherever
possible to encourage a broad reach of understanding. Climatology Virginia
brings together many of the facets that make up climate research in the
Commonwealth and presents them via the Web. In its first phase, Climatology
Virginia includes four datasets from the National Climatic Data Center
(NCDC), augmented by extensive metadata, data from 1920-29 in text format,
selected digitized NCDC reports, and an annotated directory of climatological
resources on the Web.
http://datastore.lib.virginia.edu/vaclim/vaclim_index.html
The Digital Elvis Project
A site that provides access to all material needed for variable format
readings or stagings of the play Elvis People, written by Doug
Grissom of the UVA Drama Department, which explores the impact of Elvis
Presley on American culture.
http://etext.virginia.edu/projects/Elvis/
Early American Fiction 1789-1875
The University has completed processing of Phase 1 (1789-1849) and Phase
2 (1850-1875) of this Mellon-funded collection of 886 volumes of American
fiction in the University of Virginia Special Collections, including works
by Louisa May Alcott, Samuel Clemens, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville,
Harriet Beecher Stowe and some 90 other 19th century novelists. Each text
exists as a full set of color page-images and a searchable XML text. Biographies
and supporting manuscript materials were also digitized. Some materials
are publicly available, while the remainder is available only through
license with Chadwyck-Healy.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/eaf/
Historical Census Browser
The Geospatial and Statistical Data Center has developed mapping functionality
to compliment the online data delivery of the U.S. Historical Census Browser.
After selecting data for a given year and geographic level, users can
create online maps of census characteristics that can be overlaid with
related geographic layers showing jurisdictional boundaries, roads, and
waterways. The maps can be viewed or saved as PDF documents.
http://fisher.lib.virginia.edu/collections/stats/histcensus/
Japanese Text Initiative (JTI)
The University of Virginia Library Electronic Text Center and the University
of Pittsburgh East Asian Library sponsor the Japanese Text Initiative,
a collaborative effort to make texts of classical Japanese literature
available on the Web. Dozens of texts and a Japanese Haiku Topical Dictionary
have been added. The Japanese characters are fully searchable for all
JTI texts. A new grant from the Toshiba International Foundation supported
the expansion of the corpus by over 200 texts in 2004.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/japanese/
Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library Tibet Gazetteer
This gazetteer is a browsable and searchable XML-based database of places
within the Tibet Autonomous Region. Each record provides various information
including name translations, a link to view the location on an interactive
web map, and in some cases even census data. Future plans for the Tibet
Gazetteer include providing different views of the data, such as contemporary
cultural regions, contemporary administrative units, and historical views;
and expanding the coverage area.
http://iris.lib.virginia.edu/tibet/collections/cultgeo/gazetteer-frameset.html
The Winnifred Eaton Digital Archive
Winnifred Eaton (1875-1954), writing under the pseudonym of Onoto Watanna,
was the first person of Asian descent to publish a novel in the US. Perhaps
more significantly, she was the first Asian American to reach a national
mainstream reading audience: between 1898 and 1925, she published over
a dozen novels and dozens of short stories and nonfiction pieces, which
appeared in mass-market periodicals such as Ladies Home Journal,
Frank Leslies Popular Monthly, Century Magazine, and
Harpers Monthly. The collection is edited and compiled by
Jean Lee Cole, Assistant Professor in the Department of English at Loyola
College. Production and hosting are provided by the Electronic Text Center.
http://etext.virginia.edu/eaton/
B. Services
Collections and Reference
Find@UVa
Find@UVa is an OpenURL Resolver service that can be used to locate
full-text documents in e-journals and e-newspapers from citations Sixty
to seventy percent of UVA's current indexing and abstracting tools can
work directly with the OpenURL standard. As of September 30, 2004, Find@UVa
links from over 60 indexing and abstracting services, providing access
to over 15,000 journal titles in the collections of the University Library,
the Health Sciences Library, and the Law Library.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/indexes/finders.html
Document Delivery
The Library offers electronic document delivery for both ILL items
and items held locally. Articles are delivered in PDF format,
and both borrowing and notification of availability are handled through
the catalog and Z39.50 modules of VIRGO, the Library's SIRSI system.
Reference Instant Messaging
Three libraries -- Alderman, Science and Engineering Libraries, and
Fine Arts -- are participating in a pilot program using AOL Instant
Messenger (IM) for reference chat. The pilot will run throughout the
fall 2004 semester, offering service Monday through Friday, 11 AM to
5 PM.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/questions.html
Digitization and Media Creation
Electronic Text Center
The E-Text Center develops and maintains most of the library's collection
of electronic texts, including materials in fifteen languages.
Especially notable are the collections of materials in English and American
literature and complete works of major writers in the history of philosophy.
Etext provides training and project management expertise, access to
equipment that permits the creation and analysis of electronic texts,
and a place in which to use the electronic texts that are not available
on-line.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/
Digital Media Lab
The Digital Media Lab of the Robertson Media Center develops and provides
collections of digital images, sound, and video for use in research
and instruction. The Lab offers consulting services in digital
media production and project planning, hands-on tutorials and short
courses, a full array of scanners and video and audio digitization equipment,
and analog editing equipment.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/clemons/RMC/DML/
Instructional Scanning Services
Instructional Scanning Services is part of a suite of services maintained
by the University Library to support the UVA faculty in its use of electronic
materials for instruction. Primarily, ISS services take the form
of scanning materials into a .PDF format and uploading them to the Instructor's
Toolkit learning management system as additional readings. ISS
also links materials already in electronic format to the Instructor's
Toolkit, and scans materials for other instructional uses. Material
digitized by Instructional Scanning Services is made available as electronic
course reserves through the Instructor's Toolkit system. Course
number or the instructor's last names are added into VIRGO records representing
physical and electronic reserves, allowing online searching for all
reserves, regardless of format.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/leo/iss.html
Geospatial & Statistical Data Center
The Geostat Center provides access to a variety of online spatial and
statistical data resources and several offline electronic data products
that can be used in the Center. The GIS data collection has a
particular focus on current and historic Virginia data. The statistical
data collection includes web resources such as the Inter-university
Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) and International
Financial Statistics, as well as a variety of homegrown databases providing
web access to federally produced data. Geostat also provides computing
facilities for data manipulation, research, and instruction, and works
closely with faculty and students to train them in the use of its tools
and collections.
http://fisher.lib.virginia.edu/
Rare Materials Digital Services
Rare Materials Digital Services (RMDS) provides digitization of primary
and secondary materials from the Library's rare materials to support
the teaching and research mission of the University as well as to increase
access to these unique items. Rare Materials Digital Services also delivers
a variety of digital image collections, including the Holsinger Studio
Collection, the Jackson Davis Collection of African-American Educational
Photographs, UVA Visual History Online, and the Jefferson Architecture
Electronic Archive. RMDS also produces the Department's online exhibitions.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/rmds/services/digital.html
Production Services
Digital Library Production Services
DLPS, founded in 2001, is charged with building a sustainable core
digital collection befitting a world-class institution of higher learning.
DLPS strives to create and maintain a cost-effective, efficient production
line for producing consistent and preservable data.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/services/dlps.html
C. Systems
Fedora
The University of Virginia Library' s Digital Library Research and Development
Group is continuing to collaborate with Cornell to develop Fedora under
a new $1,400,000 Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant awarded in 2004. Phase
2 will focus on the development of tools, utilities, and new interfaces
for creating objects and submitting content; tools to support migration
of existing digital collections into Fedora; enhancements to better enable
the creation, management, and delivery of distributed, virtual collections;
better integration with 3rd party search engines; support for alternative
search interfaces to the native Fedora indexes that conform to emerging
international standards such as SRW; development of a set of integrity
and management features; and enabling the creation of peer-to-peer networks
of Fedora repositories. Version 1.0 was released under on May 16, 2003;
Version 1.2.1 was released on April 20, 2004.
http://www.fedora.info/
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/resndev/fedora.html
Central Digital Repository
In March 2002, UVA Library and Cornell University began work on Fedora,
and, alongside it, UVA began work on its first phase prototype of a Central
Digital Repository. During summer 2003, a first phase prototype public
interface was tested for the repository. Input was solicited across the
Library staff on the design, functionality and usability, as well as suggestions
for improvements and additional functionality. Improvements and additions
were categorized and prioritized, guiding the development of the interface
and disseminators (delivery programs) for the production Fedora-based
repository implementation. Approximately 10,000 images, over 100 electronic
texts, and over 3,000 UVA Special Collections finding aids have been loaded
into the Repository. Users may search by metadata across all collection
formats, or search full-text in each individual collection. All images
and page image retrieved are accompanied by menus that allow the user
to view the image in an ImageViewer (zooming, panning, brightness and
contrast, rotating), or collect the image into personal portfolios using
the Digital Object Collector Tool. The first version production Repository
and its end-user interface was released to the UVA community for its initial
experimental year in October, 2004. Access to content is currently limited
to the University of Virginia.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/collections/
Digital Object Collector Tool
UVA Library's Object Collector Tool is a Java-based desktop tool that
allows a user to "collect" references to images (including page
images) retrieved via searches of the Central Digital Repository. Menus
that accompany all images initiate the collection process. An Object Collection
window allows a user to organize images into one or more collection portfolios.
The references to these images can be saved to the user's local drive
or to a mapped network location as an XML file. The Collector Tool also
includes the same ImageViewer (zooming, panning, rotating) as is available
to online users of the Repository. The Collector Tool can be used to create
slides shows for use in the classroom, or HTML web pages for use as image
reserves. The functionality of the Collector Tool will be expanded to
include the ability to collect electronic texts and additional formats
over time.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/collections/CollectorTool.html
Digibook Scanner
With monies earmarked by the University of Virginia President's Office,
Digital Library Production Services was able to purchase a I2S RGB 10,000
Digibook scanner and Book Restorer software in August 2003. This top-of-the-line
book scanner is capable of high-resolution color capture of rare and fragile
bound books, and the software performs most aspects of post-production
image manipulation to integrate several processes into one-stop-shopping.
The Digibook is receiving a heavy workout and staff are clamoring for
another to add to production capabilities.
General Descriptive Modeling Scheme (GDMS)
Development has continued on GDMS, a DTD developed to create XML files
that are structured, annotated descriptions of digital collections. An
infinitely recursive set of structural units: each may contain a narrative,
a descriptive metadata record and references to, and metadata about, any
number of digital resources. GDMS is being tested in several faculty digital
projects to describe buildings, archeological sites and artworks, creating
structural metadata for digital objects that provide access to related
sets of digital images. GDMS has now been incorporated into its first
production system, serving as the XML standard used for Art & Architecture
objects in the UVA Library Central Digital Repository.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/metadata/gdms.html
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/metadata/
Metadata Specifications: UVA DescMeta and UVA AdminMeta
Development has continued on the UVA DescMeta and AdminMeta by our Cataloging
department and Digital Library Research and Development. The goal is to
produce a local set of descriptive elements for specifying the intellectual
content of digital resources and administrative elements describing the
provenance, source, rights, and technical specifications of each datastream
in a digital object. Initially derived from the Dublin Core specification,
they have been adapted and extended for local use. The UVA Library has
developed DTDs, crosswalks to other standards, and use guidelines.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/metadata/descriptive.html
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/metadata/administrative.html
Sirsi Rooms Suite
In 2004-2005 the UVA Libraries are undertaking a trial implementation
of Rooms , which includes three components -- OpenURL Resolver, Single
Search, and the Rooms portal software. Resolver allows OpenURL to be used
to locate documents. Sixty to seventy percent of UVA's current indexing
and abstracting tools can work directly with OpenURL, and the next upgrade
to the OPAC will add OpenURL links into records. As of September 1, 2004,
UVA Library's Resolver, re-dubbed Find@UVa, is available and linked from
a button in over 50 licensed indexing and abstracting services. SingleSearch
is a metasearch tool, which will allow us to select a group of databases
appropriate for a particular information need - a subject area, a class,
or a general search such as news services or encyclopedias - and search
them simultaneously. Search boxes can be inserted in any Web page. Rooms
is the overall name for the system, but it is also specifically the name
for the Content Management System (CMS) for managing Web pages from page
templates and a database of resources. Sirsi has turned the name a little
and calls Rooms a context management system to emphasize that searching
and other functions act differently depending on the context. Testing
of the Rooms Builder tool will commence after a version upgrade due in
2005.
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/indexes/finders.html
A. Projects
New Project Announcements
American Literature Resources CD-ROM
In 2003-2004 a Mellon Foundation grant to Alan Howard of American Studies
graduate program at UVA and the Institute for Advanced Technology in
the Humanities supported the joint production with the Library of a
CD-ROM containing the Census of Resources for American Studies and over
200 core American electronic texts. Some of the texts were digitized
by the Library for the project and addition to the Library's digital
collections. The CD-ROM was distributed overseas through the United
States Information Service.
The Cavalier Daily
Digital Library Production Services and Alderman Library Reference
Services are collaborating on a project to digitize the entire run of
the UVA student newspaper, The Cavalier Daily. The project is
currently in prototype as production and delivery standards are being
developed. The text is being double-keyboarded by Apex Covantage, Inc.;
the digitization is expected to take 5 years to complete.
Digital Library Content and Course Management Systems: Issues of Interoperation
UVa Library staff participated in a working group supported by the
Mellon Foundation and the Digital Library Federation to examine the
interaction of digital libraries and learning management (courseware)
systems. To make the most effective use of digital content in teaching,
learning applications need to be able to easily interoperate with digital
repositories so that teachers and students can discover, access, view,
quote, adapt, and evaluate appropriate learning material. A report was
published in summer 2004 that includes use cases and a checklist of
interoperability functionality and best practices.
http://www.diglib.org/pubs/cmsdl0407/
Documentary Newsreels Online
During fall 2004 the Robertson Media Center will offer online versions
of nine documentary videos from the premier documentary distributor,
California Newsreel. The videos have been purchased in support of several
classes, principally "Africa in Cinema," taught by Professor
Kandioura Drame in the Department of French. These titles are in high
demand by students of African culture and cinema; online distribution
will improve access to this material by the UVA community. This project
will be a test case for the Robertson Media Center, allowing the Library
to evaluate the distribution of motion media over campus networks and
giving us the opportunity to examine the students' degree of acceptance
of this relatively new type of online resource.
Guide to Good Practice: Cataloging Standards for Describing Cultural
Objects and Images
Fine Arts Library staff is participating in a Visual Resources Association
project sponsored by the Digital Library Federation and the Getty Grant
Program to review and evaluate existing data content standards and current
practice in order to compile a manual that may be used to describe,
document, and catalog cultural objects and their visual surrogates.
http://www.vraweb.org/CCOweb/
Production Workflow Good Practices
UVA Library staff are participating in a Digital Library Federation
initiative to document workflow designs, file-naming choices, lessons
learned, and software used or developed.
Spanish Film Project
Contemporary film can serve as a very effective tool in foreign language
instruction and films from the Robertson Media Center collection are
frequently used for that purpose. Professor David Gies proposed to create
an on-line collection of short digitized clips from Spanish films, each
to be accompanied by transcripts, downloadable activities, and a visual
dictionary of words and phrases. From later June to early July 2004,
fifteen Spanish language teachers from around Virginia selected and
translated clips from Spanish films, created lesson plans and activities,
and assembled a database of words, definitions, and images that will
comprise the on-line dictionary. The resource is being tested with UVA
and Virginia high school instructors and students during the 2004-2005
school year to guide development for the next two years of the project.
Television News of the Civil Rights Era: 1950-1970
This digital archive is based on an extensive collection of 16 mm news
footage from the Roanoke TV station, WSLS, now in the UVA Library collections.
The Virginia Center for Digital History and the Digital Media Lab are
collaborating on the digitization and delivery of selected streaming
QuickTime video clips.
http://www.vcdh.virginia.edu/civilrightstv/
Update on Existing Projects
Building an American Studies Information Community
This project, funded by the Andrew Mellon Foundation, was completed
in 2004. The project focused on building the infrastructure for an information
community by concentrating on collections and tools that are particularly
useful to scholars and students studying American Culture. A portal
website was developed that includes annotated directories and a threaded
discussion list. As part of the project over two dozen volumes related
to westward exploration were digitized for the collections and delivered
through the Information Community site as a Repository testbed. A related
project included the harvesting of approximately 100,000 records from
18 OAI (Open Archives Initiative) repositories for analysis, which led
to the development of a thesaurus of subject and geographic terms with
which an aggregated search interface can be built. Mappings were also
developed for the ingestion of harvested OAI records into a Fedora repository.
http://infocomm.lib.virginia.edu/amst/
http://www.lib.virginia.edu/digital/resndev/amst_grant.html
The Cambridge Scholarly Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson
In collaboration with David Gants, the Electronic Text Center and Rare
Materials Digital Services are helping to produce a scholarly electronic
edition of the Ben Jonson first folio and quarto. The publication and
form of this edition is still under consideration.
Clotel: A Scholarly Electronic Edition
Production on a scholarly electronic edition comprising four versions
of William Wells Browns novel (the first African-American
novel), produced in collaboration with Christopher Mulvey of University
College Winchester (formerly King Alfred's College), has been completed
and will soon be available through the Electronic Imprint of the University
of Virginia Press.
Middle High German Interlinked
A $250,000 grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) supported
the University of Virginia Library and the University of Trier, Germany,
in the digitization of some 100 medieval German texts and several related
dictionaries.
http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/german/mhg/browse/
Page Barbour Lectures: B.F. Skinners Lectures on A Technology
of Behavior, 1959
These audio tapes, housed in UVA Librarys Special Collections,
are being converted by the Digital Media Lab to digital sound files
for online delivery.
Supporting Digital Scholarship
The Supporting Digital Scholarship project has completed its third
year and issued its final report. The project was developed jointly
by Library and the Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities
(IATH) to investigate the implications of collecting digital scholarly
projects into a digital library, and funded by a grant from the Andrew
W. Mellon Foundation. The premise of the project is that scholars, given
the resources and the support needed, create digital projects that are
more like virtual museum exhibitions than like books. These projects
usually include large collections of digital versions of primary resources
with a network of complex interrelationships interwoven with original
scholarly commentary. A number of Library staff participated in both
the Technical and the Policy committees. The final report is available
at the URL below. The report discusses the technical problems encountered
in collecting selections from the Rossetti Archive (http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/rossetti/),
the Salisbury Project (http://www.iath.virginia.edu/salisbury/),
the Tibetan and Himalayan Digital Library (http://www.thdl.org/),
and the Pompeii Forum Project (http://jefferson.village.virginia.edu/pompeii/),
and policy implications for the Library in collecting such projects.
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/sds/SDS_AR_2003.html
TEI/NEH Task Force on SGML to XML Migration
Text Encoding Initiative-sponsored international working group has
completed its survey of current practice in application of the TEI encoding
scheme, in particular with respect to the usage of SGML in electronic
repositories. The group has reported on technical, organizational, or
other challenges and opportunities presented by the conversion of legacy
data to P4 XML format; and proposed migration strategies and practices.
http://www.tei-c.org/Activities/MI/
B. Programs
Content Management Services
Acquisitions, Cataloging, Digital Access Services, and Digital Library
Production Services have been reorganized into a new division of the Library that covers acquisition,
production, description, and delivery of all Library content.
Digital Research and Instructional Services
The Electronic Text Center, Geospatial & Statistical Data Center,
and Rare Materials Digital Services have been reorganized into a new division
of the Library that supports the production and use of digital content
for research and instruction.
Collection of Digital Scholarship
The UVA Library sees it as vital that we collect and preserve digital
scholarship. To that end, the Library is developing assessment standards
and workflows through which subject librarians will review and select
digital faculty research projects for processing and formal addition into
the Library's collections. This requires the development of standards
and processes for technical assessment of works alongside the more traditional
assessment of their content, as well as the development of deposit agreements
between the Library and faculty to collect and deliver their digital research.
A companion issue is the development of holistic production and metadata
standards that apply to the Library production and to production of digital
projects by the greater UVA community.
Encoding and Enforcement of Access Restrictions
UVA would like to be able to apply community standards to the encoding
of rights, and to establish a policy for the use of a digital object that
could be matched with the characteristics of the user making the request.
Under consideration is the use of a digital certificate to authenticate
the user coupled with a set of policies for either the objects and/or
their components.
Scalability of Production
UVA is looking at the development of more efficient and effective workflows
for digital content production, encompassing new local production, processing
of licensed content for local mounting, and migration of legacy content
to new standards and delivery systems.
Publications and Presentations
- Bauman, Syd, Alejandro Bia, Lou Burnard, Tomaz Erjavek, Christine
Ruotolo, and Susan Schriebman. "Migrating Language Resources from
SGML to XML: the Text Encoding Initiative Recommendations." In
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Language Resources
and Evaluation (2004): 139142.
- Grizzle, Ronda. "Fedora
and the Digital Library Architecture at UVA." 2003 Virginia
Library Association Meeting.
- Grizzle, Ronda, Ross Wayland, Ross, and Chris Wilper. "Introduction
to Fedora and its Applications -- Basic
Concepts and Content
Models." 2004 Joint Conference on Digital Libraries.
- Johnston, Leslie. "Digital
Library Services at the University of Virginia Library." LITA
2003 National Forum.
- Johnston, Leslie. "Fedora
and Repository Development at UVA." 2003 DASER Summit.
- Johnston, Leslie. "Digital
Repository Interoperability with Learning Systems." Spring
2004 Coalition for Networked Information Task Force Meeting, and Spring
2004 Digital Library Federation Forum.
- Manafy, Michelle. "This
Fedoras Big Enough for Any DAM Project." EContent
Magazine (October 2003).
- Roland, Perry. "Music
Encoding Initiative (MEI) DTD and the OCVE." 2004 Online Chopin
Variorum Edition (OCVE) meeting.
- Roland, Perry. "Design Patterns in XML Music Representation."
2003 ISMIR Conference.
- Roland, Perry. "The Music Encoding Initiative (MEI) DTD."
2003 MUSICNETWORK Workshop.
- Ruotolo, Christine. "Recommendations of the TEI Task Force on
SGML to XML Migration." 2004 ALLC/ACH Conference.
- Thomas, Judith. "Digital
Video, the Final Frontier." Library Journal (January
15, 2004).
- Thomas, Judith and Michael Tuite. "News from the Wild Frontier:
Digital Video in the Library." LITA 2003 National Forum.
- Thomas, Judith and Michael Tuite. "Collecting
Digital Video." Spring 2004 Digital Library Federation Forum.
- Staples, Thornton. "The
Fedora Project." LITA 2003 National Forum.
- Staples, Thornton. "Early
Development Experiences with Fedora." 2003 EDUCAUSE Conference.
- Staples, Thornton. "A
Digital Library Architecture for UVA." Spring 2004 Digital
Library Federation Forum.
Policies, Documentation, and Reports
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