Some Frequently Asked Questions about the Tufts Digital Library and Digital Repository
- What is the Tufts Digital Library (TDL)?
- What is the Tufts Digital Repository (TDR)?
- What is Fedora? How can I learn more about Fedora?
- How is Fedora used at Tufts?
- Who built the Tufts Digital Library?
- Who built the Tufts Digital Repository?
- Who manages the Tufts Digital Repository?
- How do digital materials get into the repository, can I deposit my materials in the repository?
- What is the difference between the Tufts Digital Library and the Tufts Digital Repository?
The TDL is a web-based digital library application designed to access digital content in the Tufts Digital Repository (TDR).
The TDL web site provides tools for finding digital resources in the digital repository, as well as viewing and using those resources.
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
The Tufts Digital Repository is a repository system allows the DCA to preserve and manage digital content of enduring value created at Tufts University or used in teaching and research at Tufts University.
This digital repository is based on Fedora, an Open Source digital repository architecture.
For more information about what Fedora is and how it works, visit the Fedora web site: http://fedora.info/.
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
For more information about what Fedora is and how it works, visit the Fedora web site: http://fedora.info/.
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
Fedora is a general purpose repository service developed jointly by The University of Virginia Library and Cornell University. The Fedora project is devoted to the goal of providing open-source repository software that can serve as the foundation for many types of information management systems.
For more information about what Fedora is and how it works, visit the Fedora page at: http://fedora.info/.
The short answer is: we use Fedora as our central digital repository service.
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
For more information and publications about how we have designed our digital repository and supporting applications, please visit our project page: http://dl.tufts.edu/projects/
Digital Collections and Archives (DCA) and Academic Technology (AT) at Tufts University develop, manage, and maintain the Tufts Digital Library .
For more information about either DCA or AT, please visit their respective web sites:
DCA: http//dca.tufts.edu/
AT: http://at.tccs.tufts.edu/
DCA: http//dca.tufts.edu/
AT: http://at.tccs.tufts.edu/
Academic Technology at Tufts University develops the Tufts Digital Repository to meet requirements and specifications supplied by the DCA.
The DCA manages and maintains all digital repository content.
As the stewards of the digital repository, the DCA has created policy and guidelines that describe the accession, submission, and deposit processes.
Please contact the DCA for more information.
It is useful to think of the digital library as *presenting* tools and digital content from the repository for access and use, and to think of the digital repository as *preserving* digital content for the long term. The Tufts Digital Library is just one application that can access and use the content in the Tufts digital repository.
The digital repository provides a means for all manner of applications (for example. courseware, teaching and learning, digital library, and content management applications) to utilize digital materials that it manages and maintains.
The Tufts Digital Library is one such application. Another application currently in use is the Visual Understanding Environment (VUE) developed by Academic Technology. Using VUE's concept mapping interface, faculty and students can design customized semantic networks of digital resources drawing from digital repositories, local files and the Web.
(For more information about VUE, please visit the VUE web site: http://vue.tccs.tufts.edu/)