Earlier this year three colleagues and I published an article discussing the digitization of sound materials from magnetic tape formats.
Please find the abstract and a link to the journal below. It is my understanding that the individual article will be embargoed until March, 2022, so the link to the individual article itself probably will not work until then.
"Some Assembly Required: Low-Cost Digitization of Materials from Magnetic Tape Formats for Preservation and Access"
Preservation, Digital Technology, and Culture 49 (3) October, 2020, 89-98
https://www.degruyter.com/journal/key/PDTC/html
Sarah Cain, Brandon Welch, Annie Oelschlager, Drew VandeCreek
February 10, 2021
Abstract
Recent work discussing the digitization and
preservation of magnetic tape materials has maintained that it should be
left to expert practitioners and that the resulting digital materials
should be stored in digital repositories. This article suggests that
librarians and archivists lacking extensive technical skills or access
to expertise can digitize these materials themselves. It provides a
detailed account, including challenges faced, of how a team of
practitioners without prior training or experience digitized historical
audio recordings on cassette and open reel tape at Northern Illinois
University Libraries. The discussion reviews the assembly of equipment
and software that the team used for digitization work, discussing each
element’s significance and how they came together as a functioning
workflow. The authors also emphasize the fact that while the
digitization of fragile and/or degraded magnetic tape materials may
contribute to the preservation of their contents, this action also
creates a new set of materials with their own preservation needs.
Realizing that many practitioners serving medium-sized and smaller
institutions lacking large financial resources may not have access to a
full-fledged digital repository, they suggest the use of the National
Digital Stewardship Alliance’s Levels of Digital Preservation rubric as a
means by which practitioners may incrementally increase the probability
that digital materials made from magnetic tapes will remain accessible.
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