Happy World Digital Preservation Day!
To celebrate ‘Data For All, For Good, Forever’, we're sharing some great resources used in the #DigiPres community and here at the library to help you keep your data flourishing.
Learn more about #WDPD2022 here https://t.co/bWlr650dRj
The library website also provides guidance and links to a range of tools related to Digital Preservation Find out how you can you improve your data management and #DigiPres practice today. #WDPD2022
https://t.co/JeQJpB34gN
New to digital preservation? Sign up for the Digital Preservation Coalition’s ‘Novice to Know-How’ training course for a brilliant overview of key issues, workflows and tools. The course is free to all Sussex students, researchers and staff #WDPD2022
https://t.co/24whdE8LKC
@ulyssesapp@ulyssesapp so I have a few scenes/ scene ideas dotted about my folder structure in sheets. I’ve put then in a filter and i want to move them about to play with scene order before i place them in the manuscript.
@DavidUnderdown9 I did some usability testing on DiAGRAM. A fantastic new resource that will help archives paint a risk picture to help with decision making. #NLHF_diagram#digipres and perhaps assist with making decisions while #workingfromhome
With COVID 19, we're doing a lot #digitalpreservation from home using our own laptops and network connections. Has anyone done any work on assessing risks in these situations? Or how the lack of home computing power slows down work on our digital #archives?
@CartonRecycling@EastbourneBC Thank you. Eastbourne is currently green on your map of local authorities - kerbside recycling. Unless @EastbourneBC has plans to procure some carton recycling banks, it goes straight from Green to Red. Surely the council could afford at least one bank?
You used to recycle tetrapaks, now you don't. This is a cut-why dress it up as anything else? At the very least you should list places where people can take their tetra paks to be re-cycled. Costly and inefficient for the council -not for the environment. #recycling#eastbourne
@Drazisaur@EastbourneAir@EastbourneBC In general, Tetra Pak cartons are comprised of 6 layers of material (including 2 types of plastic) which need to be separated. This means carton recycling is costly and inefficient. (2/2)
@EastbourneBC This is so ridiculous. As if separating out glass is some kind of hardship. Not nearly so hard as now having to drive to the nearest tetra pak recycling bank. Or dealing with the increased waste of tetra paks that now no-one can re-cycle. A massive backward step. #Eastbourne
@EastbourneAir@EastbourneBC@EastSussexCC Agreed. This is so ridiculous – as if separating out glass is some kind of hardship. Not nearly so hard as having to drive to the nearest tetra pak recycling bank. Or dealing with the increased waste of tetra paks that now no-one will be bothered to re-cycle.