(p.bubestinger@av-rd.com)2021-09

“Just store them damn files. Done. Next. Why all that fuzz? Pfff. Nerds.”
And don’t let “Perfect be the enemy of good”.
“Erstens lernt man seine Nutzergruppen kennen und kann seine Arbeit priorisieren. Beides erleichtert die Zielgruppenanalyse, d.h. die stetige Überprüfung, ob man als Einrichtung auf die Anforderungen seiner Nutzer eingestellt ist und ggf. Korrekturen vornehmen sollte.”
Source: Nestor mat19, p.106
JPEG header “signature” = FF D8 FF DB

raw.txt
“This is a raw text file.”
MD5 = b3a243d2443037a783c8799fe2c4926a
raw.txt
“This is a raw text file.⎕”
MD5 = 7096384353da7d8cb59b1395e63d1250
raw.txt
“this is a raw text file.”
MD5 = a94a15d1b72bbfee7997bf237cf0347e
raw-text.txt
“this is a raw text file.”
MD5 = a94a15d1b72bbfee7997bf237cf0347e
Establish file and folder naming conventions, identifiers, and storage locations which works/scales for your collection size/needs.
What to look out for (=avoid) when naming files?
Why?
A filename is not a catalogue. Replacing (or removing) potentially “problematic” characters from file- and foldernames makes sense.
…but document it!
You’ll have to let go. At least somewhat.
Without that DB, you’re lost. Backup!
Film:
Video:
Common:

TXT vs XML vs PDF vs DOC(x)?

(*) Open formats


Therefore fact: Any data must sooner or later be migrated.
Oh, btw: this also applies to everything in your workflow/toolchains.

First of all: Don’t be intimidated. If it feels too much, it’s already a good start to write it down for yourself.
Anything is better than nothing.
“A guideline that describes the essential setting, principles, structures and objectives of a digital archive”
Define which technical properties you accept/support:
Peter Bubestinger-Steindl
p.bubestinger@av-rd.com