Archive for the ‘team-outreach’ Category

Vice Chancellor Welcomes IDCC Back to the South-West

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

The International Digital Curation Conference, launched seven years ago in Bath, is returning to the South-West from 6 to 7 December 2011 with a two-day event taking place in Bristol. As major funders of research increasingly require grant applicants to submit data management plans, and with successful grant holders held accountable for the stewardship of often irreplaceable digital resources, universities are under increasing pressure to improve the data management techniques of research staff.

Now in its seventh year, the International Digital Curation Conference will give people involved in data creation and management an opportunity to get together with like-minded data practitioners to discuss policy and practice. The event will be opened with a pre-conference drinks reception and welcome address from Professor Glynis Breakwell, Vice Chancellor of the University of Bath, on 5 December at the SS Great Britain.

Professor Breakwell said: “Digital curation is becoming an increasingly important issue for universities. There is a requirement for the HE sector to adapt its infrastructure to support the management of data and to equip data practitioners with the skills they need to fulfil their stewardship obligations.”

The Vice Chancellor, who has recently witnessed the award to Bath by The Sunday Times of “University of the Year”, went on to say, “I am pleased to be welcoming the International Digital Curation Conference, launched for the first time seven years ago in Bath, back to the South-West. I am sure the event will be extremely informative and contribute to the sector’s continued progress in digital data management.”

The programme will include invited speakers in plenary sessions, together with an interactive afternoon during which posters, demonstrations, a symposium and informal meetings will take place. There will also be presentations and discussion about peer-reviewed papers covering all types of digital curation research and scholarship. The conference, which is being organised by UKOLN as part of its partnership with the DCC, will take place at the Marriott Royal Hotel in Bristol. A full programme and registration details are available on the Digital Curation Centre Web site.

Patients Participate!: Lay Summaries Could Help

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

An item entitled Lay summaries could help public understand health research on the Patients Participate! Project appeared recently in the ‘Industry Trends’ section of the online publication Research Information.  The publication reports that the lay summaries produced alongside every health-related research article would bring about greater understanding among the general public, as indicated in the findings of the project.  Liz Lyon,  Director of UKOLN which works with the British Library and the Association of Medical Research Charities on the project,  commented to Research Information on the value of the Patients Participate! Guide to researchers in making their output more approachable to patients and public alike.

Research Information is also a bi-monthly printed full-colour publication produced by Europa Science Ltd,  a UK-based company which also publishes four other scientific and technical titles.

What’s on the Technology Horizon?

Monday, October 31st, 2011

A short paper entitled What’s on the Technology Horizon? presented at the Internet Librarian International Conference 2011 which described the work of the JISC Observatory has been featured in an article entitled “Technology Trends to Watch” published in the Information Today Europe Magazine.

7th International Digital Curation Conference: Register Now

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011

7th International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC11):
Public? Private? Personal? navigating the open data landscape
Marriott Royal Hotel
Bristol
UK
5-8 December 2011

Registration for IDCC11 is now open.

Register before 15 November to take advantage of the current conference registration fee and a special institutional discount. You can also take your pick from the  programme of pre- and post-conference workshops. Many of the workshops are free and all have limited availability  -  register now to avoid disappointment!

 

IMPACT Project Final Conference

Tuesday, October 4th, 2011

Practitioners interested in Digitisation and OCR are reminded that some places remain for the the IMPACT Project Final Conference which will take place on 24 – 25 October 2011 at the British Library, London. Full details are available from the UKOLN Web site.

Community Capability Model for Data-Intensive Research: First Consultation Workshop

Monday, September 26th, 2011

Microsoft Research Connections and UKOLN are working in partnership to develop a Community Capability Model for Data-Intensive Research. The ultimate aim of the Community Capability Model for Data-Intensive Research Project is to provide a framework useful for researchers and funders in modelling a range of disciplinary and community behaviours with respect to the adoption, usage, development and exploitation of cyber-infrastructure for data-intensive research.

One of this partnership’s activities is an event at the University of York on 28 September 2011, of interest to researchers, digital repository managers, staff from library, information and research organisations, data curators, data centre managers, data scientists, research-funding organisations and research networks.

Further information on the Community Capability Model for Data-Intensive Research is available in a news feature on the UKOLN Web site.

Looking Forward – What’s on the Technology Horizon?

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

An article entitled “Looking Forward – What’s on the Technology Horizon?” has been published in Information World Europe. This article introduces a talk that Brian Kelly will give at the Internet Library International (ILI) conference to be held in London on 27-28 October 2011.

Brian Kelly’s talk is based on a JISC Observatory’s Technology Output Report commissioned by UKOLN and CETIS, the JISC Innovation Support Centres.  That report provides a summary of innovations that an international panel of experts feel will have significant impact in the next year or sooner, in 2-3 years, and in 4-5 years. Brian Kelly’s talk will explore the implications on these innovations for those working in libraries and related organisations.

Digital Preservation Featured in Times Higher Education

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

A feature article entitled “Memory Failure Detected” was published recently in the Times Higher Education which described how:

A coalition of the willing is battling legal, logistical and technical obstacles to archive the riches of the mercurial World Wide Web for the benefit of future scholars

A follow-up letter to this article by Brian Kelly was printed in the Times Higher Education of 15 September 2011. It describes how the JISC is part of the coalition of stakeholders who are helping to engage with preservation of digital resources. The letter summarises UKOLN’s role in managing developments to the Twapper Keeper Twitter archiving service and describes how Twapper Keeper was used to archive over 6,000 tweets posted at the recent ALT-C 2011 Conference.

A paper entitled Twitter archiving using Twapper Keeper: Technical and Policy Challenges, which was presented at the International Conference on Preservation of Digital Objects (iPRES 2010), described how the project team addressed the technical difficulties and strategic issues associated with Twitter archiving.

UKOLN and Microsoft Research Connections in Partnership

Tuesday, September 6th, 2011

UKOLN and Microsoft Research Connections have begun co-operation on a project entitled “Community Capability Model for Data-Intensive Research”.  Activities from this partnership will be of interest to researchers, digital repository managers, staff from library, information and research organisations, data curators, data centre managers, data scientists, research funding organisations and research networks. Further details are available in a news feature on the UKOLN Web site.