Digital preservation at Big Data scales: proposing a step-change in preservation system architectures
Autor: | James Edward Mooney, David Maynard Gerrard, Dave Thompson |
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Přispěvatelé: | Gerrard, DM [0000-0002-5659-4720], Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository |
Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Big Data
Process (engineering) Computer science Business analytics Big data 050801 communication & media studies Library and Information Sciences 0508 media and communications Image processing Architecture Digital preservation Digitization business.industry 05 social sciences Data science Metadata Business analysis Scalability 0509 other social sciences 050904 information & library sciences business FOS: Civil engineering Information Systems |
DOI: | 10.17863/cam.18112 |
Popis: | Purpose The purpose of this paper is to consider how digital preservation system architectures will support business analysis of large-scale collections of preserved resources, and the use of Big Data analyses by future researchers. Design/methodology/approach This paper reviews the architecture of existing systems, then discusses experimental surveys of large digital collections using existing digital preservation tools at Big Data scales. Finally, it introduces the design of a proposed new architecture to work with Big Data volumes of preserved digital resources – also based upon experience of managing a collection of 30 million digital images. Findings Modern visualisation tools enable business analyses based on file-related metadata, but most currently available systems need more of this functionality “out-of-the-box”. Scalability of preservation architecture to Big Data volumes depends upon the ability to run preservation processes in parallel, so indexes that enable effective sub-division of collections are vital. Not all processes scale easily: those that do not require complex management. Practical implications The complexities caused by scaling up to Big Data volumes can be seen as being at odds with preservation, where simplicity matters. However, the sustainability of preservation systems relates directly to their usefulness, and maintaining usefulness will increasingly depend upon being able to process digital resources at Big Data volumes. An effective balance between these conflicting situations must be struck. Originality/value Preservation systems are at a step-change as they move to Big Data scale architectures and respond to more technical research processes. This paper is a timely illustration of the state of play at this pivotal moment. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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