Wednesday, March 31, 2021 10am to 11am
About this Event
Part Two: “Leveraging Digital Library Infrastructure for Enabling Access to Unique Collections”
Mark Phillips, Ph.D., Associate Dean for Digital Libraries at the University of North Texas Libraries in Denton, Texas
Digital libraries, digital archives, institutional repositories, and digital collections have evolved from experiments and research projects to stable and expected platforms in university libraries today. In the past year we have seen the unprecedented shift to online and remote access to our collections. Platforms and infrastructure we use for describing, preserving, and providing access to collections have been thoroughly tested and there are many things we can learn from this experience. This presentation will discuss the challenges and opportunities in making our unique collections available online.
The CU Museum of Natural History, University Libraries, and Research Computing are pleased to announce the Curating the Campus speaker series. The series will feature three nationally recognized speakers, each of whom will engage in exploring how digital cultural heritage collections can contribute to the campus research and teaching mission as well as the engagement of audiences on campus and in the wider community. The talks will take place throughout the spring on the last Wednesday of the month. All are welcome to attend.
Registration required to receive the zoom link.
About this Event
Part Two: “Leveraging Digital Library Infrastructure for Enabling Access to Unique Collections”
Mark Phillips, Ph.D., Associate Dean for Digital Libraries at the University of North Texas Libraries in Denton, Texas
Digital libraries, digital archives, institutional repositories, and digital collections have evolved from experiments and research projects to stable and expected platforms in university libraries today. In the past year we have seen the unprecedented shift to online and remote access to our collections. Platforms and infrastructure we use for describing, preserving, and providing access to collections have been thoroughly tested and there are many things we can learn from this experience. This presentation will discuss the challenges and opportunities in making our unique collections available online.
The CU Museum of Natural History, University Libraries, and Research Computing are pleased to announce the Curating the Campus speaker series. The series will feature three nationally recognized speakers, each of whom will engage in exploring how digital cultural heritage collections can contribute to the campus research and teaching mission as well as the engagement of audiences on campus and in the wider community. The talks will take place throughout the spring on the last Wednesday of the month. All are welcome to attend.
Registration required to receive the zoom link.