Edition Guide Coalition for Networked Information Pre-Recorded Project Briefing Video Series April 2022
Welcome to the inaugural edition of CNI’s Pre-Recorded Project Briefing Video Series. Approximately every three or four months, CNI will release a new collection of videos aimed at providing timely reports on projects, events, and other initiatives or issues of interest to the community. We are pleased to introduce the first edition, which includes 10 pre-recorded videos on a wide array of topics.
This document contextualizes the briefings and serves as a guide to the collection. The videos highlight current issues in digital information and reflect CNI’s ongoing programmatic interests. They showcase projects and initiatives across the community and spotlight important developments around scholarly communication, teaching and learning, digital collections, and more. The value of collaboration is a theme that particularly stands out in this first collection.
It is in that spirit that Gardner Campbell, associate professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University, welcomes viewers in " The Public Debut of a Dream": Doug Engelbart's "Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework" 60 Years On. In this fascinating briefing, Campbell surveys the landscape of Engelbart’s imaginative, audacious 1962 framework for how networked computers could help advance human creativity and productivity. The Doug Engelbart Institute is honoring the 60th anniversary of the framework this year with new opportunities to explore Engelbart’s vision of human-computer co-evolution. Campbell reflects on the framework’s importance alongside Engelbart’s contemporaries and enthusiasts, and I think CNI members will find this briefing’s connection to CNI and opportunities for engagement particularly intriguing. Two briefings provide updates on projects previously introduced at CNI membership meetings. They each explore facets of scholarly communication, which has been of continual interest to the CNI community. There has been renewed attention on the role of research information management systems (RIMS) and how they figure into the broader scholarly communication ecosphere, which was a focus at the Spring 2022 Membership Meeting. In The Library-Led Research Information Management System at Oklahoma State University: Collaborations, Successes, and Challenges, Megan Macken, assistant department head of digital resources and discovery services and Clarke Iakovakis, director of scholarly services and research engagement, explain how they led the university-wide implementation of a RIM system. This briefing explains the collaboration between the library, campus IT, and data owners in configuring the data feeds, and the associated challenges in migrating data from local databases to a new system. Issues and innovations related to digital collections and curation, another area of CNI focus, are featured here. Danielle Emerling, West Virginia University, introduces an ambitious project in The American Congress Digital Archives Portal Project, which will provide access to congressional archives dispersed across multiple institutions via a single online portal. The pilot, funded by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (2021-2022), was recently completed, and the briefing examines the results and next steps to scale the project. Fedora is a heavily used open-source repository system within the CNI community; in Fedora 6: Migration & Integration Tooling for Community Use Cases, a LYRASIS team explains the latest, long-awaited update. The update strengthens Fedora’s digital preservation sensibilities, data transparency, and commitment to community standards by incorporating the Oxford Common File Layout. This briefing highlights the new features and overviews the Camel Toolbox, which is a new, community-driven suite of microservices that integrate with Fedora. Lastly, the briefing provides an update on an IMLS grant focused on developing a migration toolkit for community-wide use. From Pennsylvania State University, Ruth Tillman shares her work around the emerging field of maintenance studies in Beyond Implementation: Positioning Maintenance as a Core Commitment in Libraries. The briefing explores an under-studied and poorly understood aspect of the academic library’s systems infrastructure, and it highlights the potential consequences of underestimating and inadequately planning for proper systems maintenance. This session proposes steps for establishing a process where core maintenance tasks are not only recognized but also supported. A warm thank you to our first cohort of speakers for participating in the inaugural edition of CNI’s Project Briefing Video Series. I hope you will share these videos widely, and I welcome your comments and suggestions about this project or about any other aspect of CNI’s work. We will be announcing the call for proposals for the next edition in the coming weeks. Clifford Lynch CNI Executive Director
Diane Goldenberg-Hart CNI Assistant Executive Director
Paige Pope CNI Communications Coordinator
|