Here is a concise guide to the nuts and bolts of converting flat media (books, papers, maps, posters, slides, micro formats, etc) into digital files. It provides librarians and archivists with the practical knowledge to understand the process and decision making in the digitization of flat media. Instead of having to learn by trial and error, they will get a well-rounded education of the practical aspects of digitization and have a better understanding of their options. This is the stuff they don't teach you in school. People can be lured into thinking that all it takes to digitize something is a scanner and some metadata. This guide illustrates the practical aspects of digitization such as: the physical challenges of scanning books without cutting the spine, the differences between a "scanner" that uses a scanning head vs a "scanner" that uses a camera, the different options for workflow for digitized items, and the reasons for choosing one scanner over another for reasons other than price. Digitizing Flat Media: Principles and Practices is intended to give librarians and archivists the benefit a seasoned digitization professional guiding them and helping them figure out exactly what needs to be done when.
Autorentext
Joy M. Perrin is the Digital Initiatives Librarian at the Texas Tech University Libraries. She holds a Master of Library Science from the University of North Texas. Ms. Perrin has 22 years' experience in libraries and is the author of the book Digitizing Flat Media: Principles and Practices.
Today, Joy is a tenured faculty member at Texas Tech University and the head of the Digital Resources Unit at the Texas Tech University Libraries.
Inhalt
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: The Principles for Starting a Digitization Project
Chapter 2:Principles for Different Material Types
Chapter 3: Scanners
Chapter 4: Other Equipment
Chapter 5: Digital File Basics
Chapter 6: Software and Processing
Chapter 7: Metadata in Practice
Chapter 8: Digitization Project Planning Principles
Chapter 9: A Digital Collection's Life After Digitization
Index
About the Author