id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_l4auw4z2ircodetsqhe2bdhaqa Madeleine Casad Enduring Access to Rich Media Content: Understanding Use and Usability Requirements 2015.0 .htm application/xhtml+xml 4779 243 42 Through an NEH-funded initiative, Cornell University Library is creating a technical, curatorial, and managerial framework for preserving access to complex born-digital new media objects. The Preservation and Access Frameworks for Digital Art Objects (PAFDAO) was undertaken in collaboration with Cornell University's Society for the Humanities and the Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art, a collection of media artworks housed in the Library's Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections. The project aims to develop scalable technical frameworks and associated tools to facilitate enduring access to complex, born-digital media objects, working primarily with a test bed of nearly 100 optical discs from the holdings of the Goldsen Archive. The nature of the project's test collection, a set of CD-ROM artworks from Cornell's Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art2, has meant that the project provides a case study in new media preservation that may be informative to library and museum contexts alike. ./cache/work_l4auw4z2ircodetsqhe2bdhaqa.htm ./txt/work_l4auw4z2ircodetsqhe2bdhaqa.txt