Friday 7 April 2017

Archivematica Camp York: Some thoughts from the lake

Well, that was a busy week!

Yesterday was the last day of Archivematica Camp York - an event organised by Artefactual Systems and hosted here at the University of York. The camp's intention was to provide a space for anyone interested in or currently using Archivematica to come together, learn about the platform from other users, and share their experiences. I think it succeeded in this, bringing together 30+ 'campers' from across the UK, Europe and as far afield as Brazil for three days of sessions covering different aspects of Archivematica.

Our pod on the lake (definitely a lake - not a pond!)
My main goal at camp was to ensure everyone found their way to the rooms (including the lakeside pod) and that we were suitably fuelled with coffee, popcorn and cake. Alongside these vital tasks I also managed to partake in the sessions, have a play with the new version of Archivematica (1.6) and learn a lot in the process.

I can't possibly capture everything in this brief blog post so if you want to know more, have a look back at all the #AMCampYork tweets.

What I've focused on below are some of the recurring themes that came up over the three days.

Workflows

Archivematica is just one part of a bigger picture for institutions that are carrying out digital preservation, so it is always very helpful to see how others are implementing it and what systems they will be integrating with. A session on workflows in which participants were invited to talk about their own implementations was really interesting. 

Other sessions  also helped highlight the variety of different configurations and workflows that are possible using Archivematica. I hadn't quite realised there were so many different ways you could carry out a transfer! 

In a session on specialised workflows, Sara Allain talked us through the different options. One workflow I hadn't been aware of before was the ability to include checksums as part of your transfer. This sounds like something I need to take advantage of when I get Archivematica into production for the Borthwick. 

Justin talking about Automation Tools
A session on Automation Tools with Justin Simpson highlighted other possibilities - using Archivematica in a more automated fashion. 

We already have some experience of using Automation Tools at York as part of the work we carried out during phase 3 of Filling the Digital Preservation Gap, however I was struck by how many different ways these can be applied. Hearing examples from other institutions and for a variety of different use cases was really helpful.


Appraisal

The camp included a chance to play with Archivematica version 1.6 (which was only released a couple of weeks ago) as well as an introduction to the new Appraisal and Arrangement tab.

A session in progress at Archivematica Camp York
I'd been following this project with interest so it was great to be able to finally test out the new features (including the rather pleasing pie charts showing what file formats you have in your transfer). It was clear that there were a few improvements that could be made to the tab to make it more intuitive to use and to deal with things such as the ability to edit or delete tags, but it is certainly an interesting feature and one that I would like to explore more using some real data from our digital archive.

Throughout camp there was a fair bit of discussion around digital appraisal and at what point in your workflow this would be carried out. This was of particular interest to me being a topic I had recently raised with colleagues back at base.

The Bentley Historical Library who funded the work to create the new tab within Archivematica are clearly keen to get their digital archives into Archivematica as soon as possible and then carry out the work there after transfer. The addition of this new tab now makes this workflow possible.

Kirsty Lee from the University of Edinburgh described her own pre-ingest methodology and the tools she uses to help her appraise material before transfer to Archivematica. She talked about some tools (such as TreeSize Pro) that I'm really keen to follow up on.

At the moment I'm undecided about exactly where and how this appraisal work will be carried out at York, and in particular how this will work for hybrid collections so as always it is interesting to hear from others about what works for them.


Metadata and reporting

Evelyn admitting she loves PREMIS and METS
Evelyn McLellan from Artefactual led a 'Metadata Deep Dive' on day 2 and despite the title, this was actually a pretty interesting session!

We got into the details of METS and PREMIS and how they are implemented within Archivematica. Although I generally try not to look too closely at METS and PREMIS it was good to have them demystified. On the first day through a series of exercises we had been encouraged to look at a METS file created by Archivematica ourselves and try and pick out some information from it so these sessions in combination were really useful.

Across various sessions of the camp there was also a running discussion around reporting. Given that Archivematica stores such a detailed range of metadata in the METS file, how do we actually make use of this? Being able to report on how many AIPs have been created, how many files and what size is useful. These are statistics that I currently collect (manually) on a quarterly basis and share with colleagues. Once Archivematica is in place at York, digging further into those rich METS files to find out which file formats are in the digital archive would be really helpful for preservation planning (among other things). There was discussion about whether reporting should be a feature of Archivematica or a job that should be done outside Archivematica.

In relation to the later option - I described in one session how some of our phase 2 work of Filling the Digital Preservation Gap was designed to help expose metadata from Archivematica to a third party reporting system. The Jisc Research Data Shared Service was also mentioned in this context as reporting outside of Archivematica will need to be addressed as part of this project.

Community

As with most open source software, community is important. This was touched on throughout the camp and was the focus of the last session on the last day.

There was a discussion about the role of Artefactual Systems and the role of Archivematica users. Obviously we are all encouraged to engage and help sustain the project in whatever way we are able. This could be by sharing successes and failures (I was pleased that my blog got a mention here!), submitting code and bug reports, sponsoring new features (perhaps something listed on the development roadmap) or helping others by responding to queries on the mailing list. It doesn't matter - just get involved!

I was also able to highlight the UK Archivematica group and talk about what we do and what we get out of it. As well as encouraging new members to the group, there was also discussion about the potential for forming other regional groups like this in other countries.

Some of the Archivematica community - class of Archivematica Camp York 2017

...and finally

Another real success for us at York was having the opportunity to get technical staff at York working with Artefactual to resolve some problems we had with getting our first Archivematica implementation into production. Real progress was made and I'm hoping we can finally start using Archivematica for real at the end of next month.

So, that was Archivematica Camp!

A big thanks to all who came to York and to Artefactual for organising the programme. As promised, the sun shined and there were ducks on the lake - what more could you ask for?



Thanks to Paul Shields for the photos

Jenny Mitcham, Digital Archivist

2 comments:

  1. Hi Jenny,

    Can we come and see it in production sometime in May?

    Thanks,
    Masud

    Jenny Mitcham, Digital Archivist

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Masud - I think it will be end of May ...so perhaps June! I'm planning to talk about it at the Jisc Research Data Network event here in York in June too.
      Cheers,
      Jen

      Jenny Mitcham, Digital Archivist

      Delete

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