LOS ANGELES – The Digital Asset Symposium (www.digitalassetsymposium.com), presented by the Association of Moving Image Archivists (AMIA), has put together a comprehensive program that addresses the challenges of digital asset management in today’s media landscape. The event is set to take place May 4th at the Victor Borge Theater in New York City and will present six case studies from experts in the field, who will look at collection and maintenance strategies, as well as delivery efforts for reaching new and larger audiences.
"DAS is a unique international event that brings together an unparalleled cross-section of domain experts in a pragmatic, engaging and educational format to discuss the most current challenges and breakthroughs in managing digital assets today," notes program chair Chris Lacinak.
The 2016 DAS program includes:
Diamonds in the Cloud: Major League Baseball (MLB) is rich with over 600,000 hours of video content currently in its archives, and over 7,000 hours of content recorded per week during the season. Logging this content, while making it highly available to creative television production personnel, is critical to MLB Network’s business. In July 2008, the MLB Network began development of ‘Diamond,’ a customized asset management tool to log, search and retrieve all video content recorded at MLB Network. Eight years later, it has developed into much more than just an asset management system. Tab Butler, who manages the media management team, editor manpower, and post production engineering and operations for the MLB Network and the NHL Network, will provide highlights of the development journey.
Tracking Copyright–Implementing Rights Management at the New York Public Library (NYPL): As cultural heritage institutions build larger repositories of increasingly complex objects, copyright concerns have taken center stage in the management of digital assets. To address the management of copyright information, the New York Public Library has developed a rights metadata management system. This session will cover the information stored in the rights system, as well as how that information has been made programmatically actionable. This session, led by Greg Cram, associate director of copyright and information policy at NYPL, will also highlight how tracking the copyright status of objects enabled NYPL to release 190,000 high-resolution images of public domain materials.
(Below) Emerging Business Models - We're Down With OTT!: This discussion will look at the launch of Footprint.TV and USA Rugby channels online, delving in to the decision-making process as well as the results and outcome. With TV and digital media being reinvented by the Internet and changing the way consumers engage with entertainment, companies need to rethink their production, distribution and business models. Paul Hamm from Endavo, a leading provider of OTT and multi-channel network (MCN) solutions, will offer insights on the opportunities and trends that exist for all organizations today in this space.
Building the Smithsonian’s Digital Assets Vault: The Smithsonian’s Enterprise Digital Asset Management System (DAMS) has been a work in progress since 2008 that has now matured into a mission critical component of the Smithsonian’s digitization initiatives and strategy. Currently serving over 40 Smithsonian units across museums, archives, libraries, and the zoo, DAMS is entrusted to store, manage, preserve and deliver over 8 million assets as it continues to grow and evolve. Isabel Meyer, Information Technology Branch Manager at the Smithsonian Institution, will cover the building phases of the DAMS to include integration with Collection Information Systems (CIS), and asset delivery as demonstrated by representative use cases.
Smart Content and Metadata from Creation to Distribution: Metadata has never been more important across every part of an assets lifecycle and connecting it has never been more valuable. Taking a new Smart Content approach, organizations are looking across all their data to connect with users, drive new ways to partner with advertisers, drive efficiencies and help better understand the value of their content. This session will look at the impact of Smart Content across the content lifecycle and highlight some organizations putting it all together and making an impact, not only in how they work with content but in creating great new user experiences. Diane Burley, chief content strategist for MarkLogic Corporation, a Silicon Valley-based Enterprise NoSQL database platform provider, will deliver this informative presentation.
Previously announced, a session with Facing History and Ourselves, an educational non-profit, will also join DAS to demonstrate how the organization has successfully digitized its legacy media, established policies for born digital production, implemented and rolled out a DAM, established a taxonomy, and integrated with a web content management system and an online video platform. Speakers include Eva Radding, digital archive and library systems manager from Facing History and Ourselves, and Karl Facredyn, president of Orange Logic, the company behind Cortex, the DAM Facing History implemented.
For more information, visit www.DAS2016.org.