Where are Repository's Going?

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Keynote talk by Sally Rumsey and Ben O'Steen, given at the Repository Fringe 2009, Edinburgh.

Transcript of Where are Repository's Going?

Where are repositories going?

Ben O’Steen (ORA Software Developer)

Sally Rumsey (ORA Service & Development Manager)

Repository Fringe, Edinburgh 2009

Growth of repositories & historical parallel

Sir Thomas Bodley

Storage

Content

“…and you having built an Ark to save learning from deluge, deserve propriety in any new instrument or engine, whereby learning should be improved or advanced.”

http://novels.mobi/create/out_mobi/pg/1/2/5/1/12515/12515/4.php

Francis Bacon to Thomas Bodley Nov 1605

Reproduced for this presentation with kind permission of King's College London, Foyle Special Collections Library

www.kcl.ac.uk/.../exhibitions/marsex/mcoll.html

Search function

Library catalogue 1620

Jeffrey Keefer http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreykeefer/773540725/ CC licence: Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic

Radcliffe Camera 1749

Radcliffe Science Library 1861

New Bodleian 1940

Artist’s impression of new Bodleian book depository at SwindonDetails may change

* 37,000 University card holders plus 28,000 external readers

8.5M volumes

1.6M visitors each year

65,000 registered readers*

5.4M requests for full-text journal articles

1.8M requests for e-books

Bodeian Stats 2009

Bodleian Library declaration: I hereby undertake not to remove from the Library, or to mark, deface, or injure in any way, any volume, document or other object belonging to it or in its custody; not to bring into the Library, or kindle therein, any fire or flame, and not to smoke in the Library; and I promise to obey all rules of the Library.

Library terms and conditions

QUOD FELICITER VORTAT

ACADEMICI OXONIENS

BIBLIOTHECAM HANC

VOBIS REIPUBLICAEQUE

LITERORUM T.B.P.

That it might turn out happily, Oxonian academics, for you and for the republic of lettered men Thomas Bodley placed this library

Growth in numbers of digital repositories

Source: Tim Brody. ROAR Registry of Open Access Repositories. http://roar.eprints.org/

Some overarching themes

Theme

Realisation as a catalyst for change

Theme

Repositories as a concept

Institutional repository

Repository as a box

Paper in Paper out

Integration with other hard and soft systems

enderisnotmyrealname http://www.flickr.com/photos/enderisnotmyrealname/3586300347/

Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 Generic

“An effective institutional repository of necessity represents

a collaboration among librarians, information

technologists, archives and records mangers, faculty, and university administrators and

policymakers.”

Clifford Lynch. ARL Bi-monthly report No. 226 Feb 2003 http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/br/br226/br226ir.shtml

“… a university–based institutional repository is a set of services……an institutional repository is not simply

a fixed set of software and hardware.”

 

Clifford Lynch. ARL Bi-monthly report No. 226 Feb 2003 http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/br/br226/br226ir.shtml

Sally Ben

The most successful repository is the internet.

Embrace it.

Some pointers then:

• Distributed across a number of nodes.•

Some pointers then:

• Distributed across a number of nodes.• The services and storage should be

separate.•

Some pointers then:

• Distributed across a number of nodes.• The services and storage should be

separate.• There should be multiple ways to search the

content.•

Some pointers then:

• Distributed across a number of nodes.• The services and storage should be

separate.• There should be multiple ways to search the

content.• Any service or storage can disappear, be

added or upgraded without affecting the other systems unduly.

Some pointers then:

• Distributed across a number of nodes.• The services and storage should be

separate.• There should be multiple ways to search the

content.• Any service or storage can disappear, be

added or upgraded without affecting the other systems unduly.

Just think how you might make your IR work more like

the web does.

"The future is here.

It's just not evenly distributed yet.""The future is here. It's just not evenly distributed yet."

s

William GibsonNPR Talk of the Nation

30 November 1999Timecode: 11min 55sec

Link: discover.npr.org/features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1067220Also: www.npr.org/rundowns/rundown.php?prgld=5&prgDate=30-Nov-1999

"The future is here.

It's just not evenly distributed yet.""The future is here. It's just not evenly distributed yet."

s

William GibsonNPR Talk of the Nation

30 November 1999Timecode: 11min 55sec

Link: discover.npr.org/features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1067220Also: www.npr.org/rundowns/rundown.php?prgld=5&prgDate=30-Nov-1999

http://bit.ly/89AtD

For those who want to follow along:

Using google to assay the forms of usage

Using amazon's in-book search and browse to find the

phrase.

'Tim O'Reilly checked with Cory Doctorow who checked with Lorna Toolis who checked with Barry Wellman who checked with Ren Reynolds and Ellen Pozzi who point out that there's an NPR Talk of the Nation broadcast from 1999 where Gibson says,

"As I've said many times, the future is already here. It's just not very evenly distributed."

William GibsonNPR Talk of the Nation

30 November 1999Timecode: 11min 55sec

Link: discover.npr.org/features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1067220Also: www.npr.org/rundowns/rundown.php?prgld=5&prgDate=30-Nov-1999

NPR has changed their site since then, breaking the link to the

metadata about that recording...

whoops...

But the link to the actual broadcast works:

Notice anything interesting in that url?

http://discover.npr.org/features/feature.jhtml?wfId=1067220

eature.jhtml?wf Id=1067220

Hint Hint:

Realisation:

People search for Things – the fact that they can only retrieve

documents concerning those Things is incidental to them.

Things:

• People

• Places

• Dates

• Books

• CDs

• Performances/Events

• Topics/subjects

• … etc, etc

Things:

• What did they all have in common?••

Things:

• What did they all have in common?•• They all have 'names' of one sort in real-life.•• But there are plenty of those Things that

don't have names on the web...•

• How about we give them names?

Provide documents that directly relate to rather than simply

mention a Thing the person is searching for.

Provide documents that directly relate to rather than simply

mention a Thing the person is searching for.

“Relate” is a fluffy word.

The key is knowing how a Document relates to a Thing.

“Relate” is a fluffy word.

The key is knowing how a Document relates to a Thing.

Does it describe it, comment on it, refer to it, locate it, disagree with it?

The types of relationships between Named Things are

very important

Realisation – we have been avidly giving ourselves HTTP names for some time now

xkcd.com/262/

Realisation – we have been avidly giving ourselves HTTP names for some time now

• http://facebook.com/benosteen• http://twitter.com/benosteen• http://oxfordrepo.blogspot.com• Etc• Etc

Realisation – we have been avidly giving ourselves HTTP names for some time now

• Things can have multiple, simultaneous names in real-life and online.

• The real power comes from relating names:

• “This named thing {is the same as} that other named thing”

And when it comes to people on the web, there

has been a social sea-change

“Have you got a profile page on

friendsreunited?”

“Are you on facebook?”

“Are you on twitter?”

Linked Data

Linked Data and HTTP names

Real Data

• http://data.gov•• http://recovery.gov

–– - Repositories of US Federal Data and Federal

Funding information, being published in a re-usable manner using Atom and RDF.

Real Data

• http://id.loc.gov

– Library of Congress publishing their authority lists as Linked Data in RDF.

Yahoo and Google indexing RDF embedded in

HTML pages (as RDFa)O'Reilly post on Google's “adoption”http://radar.oreilly.com/2009/05/google-announces-support-for-m.html

A piece from the RDFa.info site about Yahoo and SearchMonkey's use of RDFahttp://rdfa.info/2008/03/14/yahoo-into-semantic-web/

Ben Sally

Theme

Policies

1. Accession

“Dedicated to the freeing of the refereed research literature online through author/institution self-archiving”

November 2000

“Recognised as the easiest and fastest way to set up repositories of:

• research literature• scientific data• student theses• project reports• multimedia artefacts• teaching materials• scholarly collections• digitised records• exhibitions and performances”

July 2009

“Resources range from simple materials such as Word documents or Powerpoint presentations, to complex learning packages, IMS, SCORM and VLE course modules that combine various multimedia formats such as video, audio and animation.”

http://www.jorum.ac.uk/

Success story Community specific user interfaces for

deposit, discovery and access

Deposit in multiple repositories

More needs to be done!

Institutionalrepository

Subject repository

Otherrepository

Single deposit

Sally Ben

Realisation:

We've reinvented too many “wheels”

The Web exists

and it works.

Don't fight it.

Work with it.

Using the defacto standards of the web gives you a massive

advantage.

Defacto standards

• Transfer:– Files (HTTP)– Lists of things (Atom, RSS)

• Create, Read, Update, Delete:– HTTP PUT, GET, POST, DELETE

• Names:– URIs

• Lookups:– DNS resolvers

The big advantages

• Instant community• Lots of tried and tested software that you

don't have to write from scratch !• No wheels need be re-invented• May not be perfect, but it works

The big disadvantage

• If you really are doing something unique or new (which is really unlikely) then try to get a community to help you.

•• If noone else wants to do it like you, then

think about what you are truely accomplishing.

What is new?

• Doing something new does not mean using a more refined vocabulary to describe things.

What is new?

• I mean something that we don't have defacto standards for

What is new?

• I mean something that we don't have defacto standards for:– real-time event notifications through the

browser–

What is new?

• I mean something that we don't have defacto standards for:– real-time event notifications through the

browser– Simultaneous collaborative document editing

What is new?

• I mean something that we don't have defacto standards for:– real-time event notifications through the

browser– Simultaneous collaborative document editing– Data qualified and ranked by evidence

Name some

repositories.

Participation!

Some things I consider to be Repositories

• Flickr

• Facebook

• Google Docs

• A filesytem of BagITs

• Scribd

• Slideshare

• Blogs (WP/etc)

• Wikis

• Twitter/Identi.ca

• IRs• Domain Rs (Jorum,

Pubmed, etc)• Publisher sites• Forums• CVS/SVN/Git/Hg• WebDAV• FTP

So, what do these repositories have in

common? Standards? APIs?

So, what do these repositories have in

common? Standards? APIs?

Erm.... not much, but they all contain sets of things.

“Trying to get stuff into your

repository?

Noone gives a SIP...”

Realisation: Object transfer is still in a divergent state

• Lots of containers, lots of formats, too many conventions that you just have to know..

Realisation: Object transfer is still in a divergent state

• Lots of containers, lots of formats, too many conventions that you just have to know..

•• There is no negotiation for the format of a

SIP – you deal with what you are given.

Realisation: Object transfer is still in a divergent state

• Lots of containers, lots of formats, too many conventions that you just have to know..

•• There is no negotiation for the format of a

SIP – you deal with what you are given.•• And sometimes, you just have to go and

harvest what you can.

Don't Panic

Normal Archival Process

• (paraphrased by an observer...)•

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

•• THINGS GET PERMANENT IDS NOW!•• Even if it is just on a per-box basis. The item

carries that provenance throughout.–

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.–

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.– Deal with the fragile things first, things that will

deteriorate.–

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.– Deal with the fragile things first, things that will

deteriorate.– Try to sort out issues that arise, with the next of

kin/donater.–

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.– Deal with the fragile things first, things that will

deteriorate.– Try to sort out issues that arise, with the next of

kin/donater.– Some things may stay in the box for a long

time...

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.– Deal with the fragile things first– Try to sort out issues that arise– Some things may stay in the box– Identify actions that need to be taken to ensure

future access.

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.- Characterise and catalogue the contents, using relevant tools.

Normal Archival Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.- Characterise and catalogue the contents, using relevant tools.

• - Update archival records so that people can find the content (if they are allowed to.)

Digital Process

• - Accept delivery of boxes of stuff, and record roughly what was received.

• - Triage the contents within a stable environment.- Characterise and catalogue the contents, using relevant tools.

• - Update archival records so that people can find the content (if they are allowed to.)

Digital Process

The media may be different.

And the tools may be too.

You are still likely to be doing` something like this for a while.

Not all storage is the same

The absolute biggest benefit to any repository is to separate out the concerns of storage and services.

•• It will make you life so, so much easier.•• Trust me.

Hardware, software, people and storage will

come and go.

Your content is constant.

Ben Sally

Medical scientists at Oxford

“When it's one click

deposit, I'll do it"

Bill Hubbard: Institutional Policies and Processes for Mandate Compliance. May 2009. http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/documents/OA%20Choices%20-%20researcher%27s%20view.ppt

What we need is:

Deposit by stealth and other easy

solutions

Multiple Repository Deposit Regime (MuRDeR)

Answers to related problems that worry people such as multiple versions

Automation, automation, automation

Copyright ©

“There is a supreme irony that just as technology is allowing greater access to books and other creative works than ever before for education and research, new restrictions threaten to lock away digital content in a way we would never countenance for printed material.”

Dame Lynne Brindley, CEO The British Library

Copyright for Education and ResearchGolden Opportunity or Digital Black Hole?http://www.bl.uk/ip/pdf/copyrightresearchreport.pdf

Legal Deposit as a parallel to repository

mandates

Bodley’s agreement 1610

“That one Book of every sort that is new Printed, or Re-printed with Additions, be sent to the University of Oxford for the Use of the publick Library there, … to be sent to the Library at Oxford accordingly, upon pain of Imprisonment”

Order of the Star Chamber

1637

http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=74953

“…there tower the few, the very few, Libraries of Deposit. These are the super-Dreadnoughts of the literary world, and the Bodleian claims to be among them … a really great library should have Universal scope, Independences, Size, Permanence, Wealth, and multiform Utility.”

The Bodleian Library at Oxford. Falconer Madan. 1919

http://www.archive.org/stream/bodleianlibrarya00mada/bodleianlibrarya00mada_djvu.txt

2. Management and preservation

“Preservation aims towards preserving access”

alancleaver_2000 Attribution 2.0 Generichttp://www.flickr.com/photos/alancleaver/2638883650/

Assured secure storage and permanent access needs to be

well-managed

Aided by intra- and inter-institutional advisory and support

services

Shared and distributed expertise

Sally Ben

Why do people choose to interact

with systems?

Why do people choose to interact

with systems?

Disproportionate Feedback loops

Disproportionate Feedback Loop =>

The perception that a small effort leads to a very great benefit.

Disproportionate Feedback Loop =>

The perception that a small effort leads to a very great benefit.

Which leads to more “little efforts” which add up!

High Scores

Technically trivial, but...

Psychologically addictive and drives a lot of replay

High Scores

IR High scores?

● Usage stats

● Re-usage stats (trackbacks, tweets, references)

Ben Sally

Peer review is used in the UK for 3 main purposes:

1. Allocation of research funding

2. Publication of research in scientific journals. To assess the quality of research submitted for publication and to assess its importance.

3. Assess the research rating of university departments

http://www.parliament.uk/post/pn182.pdf

Parliamentary Office for Science and Technology

3. Dissemination

Links to: Actionable raw data; Data fusion

Links to: Interactive version; Google maps; additional visualisation

Open Access

“What many people fail to realise is that the uplands of this country once belonged to us, open common land, free for all to walk at will. They were only enclosed and parcelled off to the rich by acts of parliament pushed through by the rich. An old rhyme goes:

They hang the man and flog the womanThat steals the goose from oft the commonYet leave the greater villain looseThat steals the common from the goose.”

Mike HardingThe Guardian, Wednesday 18 April 2007 http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2007/apr/18/society.guardiansocietysupplement1

Free! Free!

Free!Free!

Free!

FREE!

Free!

Free!

Free!Free!

Free!

Free!

Free!

Free!

Free!

Free!

Free! Free!

Green Open Access

Gold Open Access

Mandated open access

(as reported by SHERPA/Romeo)

Open options

Open access journals

Too complicated!

Some journals in UKPMC allow harvesting of the full text of all items, others allow it for only some items, and many do not allow it at all. See the PMC Open Access List for specifics.

Open Archives (OAI) Service

Operates two different open

access Models

Preview Time

You are here

Time

Evolution

Seismic change

Step change Incremental change

Time

Time

Evolution

Evolution

Rapid change

Time

Evolution

Trends

1. Entering a period of steady growth and change

3. Names

2. Repositories as a set of services embedded within institutional systems

Trends: Still waiting…

• Easy multiple deposit• Collaboration between publishers,

repositories, HEIs, government and research funders as a group

• Common policies• Less complexity

Crystal ball by Hamachi! CC license. Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 Generic

Available at http://www.flickr.com/photos/mawari/2091456761/

Print-on-demand is going to be big

And I don't mean printed facsimiles.

What does having a book mean if you can print one in

5 minutes for £2?

http://www.ondemandbooks.com/home.htm

How about this scenario then? It's all technically possible now

How about this scenario then? It's all technically possible now

You print off a set of articles into a book on the libraries book-printer.

Your collegues comments, tweets and reviews are interleaved with the text.

Your collegues were found from your professional social network.

How about this scenario then? It's all technically possible now

You print off a set of articles into a book on the libraries book-printer.

Your collegues comments, tweets and reviews are interleaved with the text.

Your collegues were found from your professional social network.

How about this scenario then? It's all technically possible now

You print off a set of articles into a book on the libraries book-printer.

Your collegues comments, tweets and reviews are interleaved with the text.

Your collegues were found from your professional social network.

How about this scenario?

You create a bookmark list of plates from 18th century books online which you believe to be

the work of one anonymous artist.

This list with your comments is a new resource in of itself, and can be commented on or

printed as a book.

Permanent books, temporary magazines?

Is this true?

How about facsimiles that are printed, so that a student can study with their coffee and

donuts?

And why print to paper? Why not print to digital paper, once it arrives...