Architectures for Collaboration: Roles and Expectations for Digital Libraries in the Now
An archived version is now online. Registration (free) is required. The presentation was recorded on January 30, 2007.
The collective expertise of digital libraries in making available the diverse literatures of science and artistic expression, in concert with the increasing sophistication of commercial partners and the development of distributed, interactive forms of publishing, require libraries to chart the engineering of new architectures for teaching, learning, and research. Digital libraries must work to forge the new collaborations required to enable and build these services.
Guest Speaker: Peter Brantley
Peter Brantley is responsible for the development and management of the technical infrastructure and the technical staff supporting the California Digital Library (CDL) operations. In partnership with the UC campus library staff and the wider digital library community, he also oversees development of new technologies and provides leadership in establishing a technical research agenda. Brantley joined the CDL in 2003. His background includes significant experience with research libraries and digital library development programs. Before coming to CDL, he was the director of information technology services for the Division of Libraries and NYU Press at New York University. He previously worked in academic IT director positions at UCSF and UC Berkeley, and long ago worked as a systems analyst with Random House.
