From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Wed Jun 1 19:13:14 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:13:14 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 [cid:image001.jpg at 01D14946.B3DF76C0] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From pouchard at purdue.edu Wed Jun 1 19:31:44 2016 From: pouchard at purdue.edu (Pouchard, Line C) Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:31:44 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Message-ID: Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From anurnberger at columbia.edu Wed Jun 1 22:18:38 2016 From: anurnberger at columbia.edu (Amy L. Nurnberger) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 12:18:38 +1000 Subject: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Not sure, but researchcompendia.org might be helpful. I think it's an outgrowth of RunMyCode. Best, Amy On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:35 AM, wrote: > Send Rdap mailing list submissions to > rdap at mail.asis.org > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > rdap-request at mail.asis.org > > You can reach the person managing the list at > rdap-owner at mail.asis.org > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. I give up (Daureen Nesdill) > 2. Re: I give up (Pouchard, Line C) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:13:14 +0000 > From: Daureen Nesdill > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: [Rdap] I give up > Message-ID: > <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6 at X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu > > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" > > Hi, > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > Thanks for any assistance, > Daureen > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > Research Data Management Librarian > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > University of Utah > 801-585-5975 > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > [cid:image001.jpg at 01D14946.B3DF76C0] > > > > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/e821d554/attachment-0001.html > > > -------------- next part -------------- > A non-text attachment was scrubbed... > Name: image001.jpg > Type: image/jpeg > Size: 9908 bytes > Desc: image001.jpg > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/e821d554/attachment-0001.jpg > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 2 > Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:31:44 +0000 > From: "Pouchard, Line C" > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" > > Daureen: > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his > purposes. > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > Line > > Sent from my iPhone > Line Pouchard, PhD > Purdue University Libraries > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hi, > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > Thanks for any assistance, > Daureen > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > Research Data Management Librarian > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > University of Utah > 801-585-5975 > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/f8622269/attachment.html > > > -------------- next part -------------- > A non-text attachment was scrubbed... > Name: image001.jpg > Type: image/jpeg > Size: 9908 bytes > Desc: image001.jpg > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/f8622269/attachment.jpg > > > > ------------------------------ > > Subject: Digest Footer > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > ------------------------------ > > End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 > *********************************** > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From anurnberger at columbia.edu Wed Jun 1 22:18:38 2016 From: anurnberger at columbia.edu (Amy L. Nurnberger) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 12:18:38 +1000 Subject: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Not sure, but researchcompendia.org might be helpful. I think it's an outgrowth of RunMyCode. Best, Amy On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:35 AM, wrote: > Send Rdap mailing list submissions to > rdap at mail.asis.org > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > rdap-request at mail.asis.org > > You can reach the person managing the list at > rdap-owner at mail.asis.org > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. I give up (Daureen Nesdill) > 2. Re: I give up (Pouchard, Line C) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:13:14 +0000 > From: Daureen Nesdill > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: [Rdap] I give up > Message-ID: > <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6 at X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu > > > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" > > Hi, > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > Thanks for any assistance, > Daureen > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > Research Data Management Librarian > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > University of Utah > 801-585-5975 > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > [cid:image001.jpg at 01D14946.B3DF76C0] > > > > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/e821d554/attachment-0001.html > > > -------------- next part -------------- > A non-text attachment was scrubbed... > Name: image001.jpg > Type: image/jpeg > Size: 9908 bytes > Desc: image001.jpg > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/e821d554/attachment-0001.jpg > > > > ------------------------------ > > Message: 2 > Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:31:44 +0000 > From: "Pouchard, Line C" > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" > > Daureen: > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his > purposes. > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > Line > > Sent from my iPhone > Line Pouchard, PhD > Purdue University Libraries > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hi, > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > Thanks for any assistance, > Daureen > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > Research Data Management Librarian > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > University of Utah > 801-585-5975 > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > -------------- next part -------------- > An HTML attachment was scrubbed... > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/f8622269/attachment.html > > > -------------- next part -------------- > A non-text attachment was scrubbed... > Name: image001.jpg > Type: image/jpeg > Size: 9908 bytes > Desc: image001.jpg > URL: < > http://mail.asis.org/pipermail/rdap/attachments/20160601/f8622269/attachment.jpg > > > > ------------------------------ > > Subject: Digest Footer > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > ------------------------------ > > End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 > *********************************** > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Wed Jun 1 23:36:10 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 03:36:10 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9808@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> It looks great except for the limit on size - 20GB. I'll add it to my list for computer science. Thanks, Daureen ________________________________ From: Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Amy L. Nurnberger [anurnberger at columbia.edu] Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 8:18 PM To: rdap at asis.org Cc: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: Re: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 Not sure, but researchcompendia.org might be helpful. I think it's an outgrowth of RunMyCode. Best, Amy On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:35 AM, > wrote: Send Rdap mailing list submissions to rdap at mail.asis.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to rdap-request at mail.asis.org You can reach the person managing the list at rdap-owner at mail.asis.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." Today's Topics: 1. I give up (Daureen Nesdill) 2. Re: I give up (Pouchard, Line C) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:13:14 +0000 From: Daureen Nesdill > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6 at X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 [cid:image001.jpg at 01D14946.B3DF76C0] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: > -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: > ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:31:44 +0000 From: "Pouchard, Line C" > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill >> wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org> http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: > -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: > ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap ------------------------------ End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 *********************************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Wed Jun 1 23:36:10 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 03:36:10 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9808@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> It looks great except for the limit on size - 20GB. I'll add it to my list for computer science. Thanks, Daureen ________________________________ From: Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Amy L. Nurnberger [anurnberger at columbia.edu] Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 8:18 PM To: rdap at asis.org Cc: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: Re: [Rdap] Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 Not sure, but researchcompendia.org might be helpful. I think it's an outgrowth of RunMyCode. Best, Amy On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:35 AM, > wrote: Send Rdap mailing list submissions to rdap at mail.asis.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to rdap-request at mail.asis.org You can reach the person managing the list at rdap-owner at mail.asis.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." Today's Topics: 1. I give up (Daureen Nesdill) 2. Re: I give up (Pouchard, Line C) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:13:14 +0000 From: Daureen Nesdill > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6 at X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 [cid:image001.jpg at 01D14946.B3DF76C0] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: > -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: > ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2016 23:31:44 +0000 From: "Pouchard, Line C" > To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" > Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill >> wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu> ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org> http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: > -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 9908 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: > ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap ------------------------------ End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 1 *********************************** -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Wed Jun 1 23:45:36 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 03:45:36 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu>, Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ and other open science possibilities. http://openscience.us/other/index.html Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions Daureen From: Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [pouchard at purdue.edu] Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Mike.Smit at dal.ca Thu Jun 2 00:03:48 2016 From: Mike.Smit at dal.ca (Mike Smit) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 01:03:48 -0300 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Message-ID: GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is cheap compared to data transfer prices. Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited about. Cheers, Mike ---------------------------------------------------- Dr. Mike Smit Assistant Professor School of Information Management Faculty of Management Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 ---------------------------------------------------- On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill wrote: > Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. > > I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera > Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ > and other open science possibilities. > http://openscience.us/other/index.html > > Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions > > Daureen > > *From:* Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [ > pouchard at purdue.edu] > *Sent:* Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > Daureen: > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his > purposes. > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > Line > > Sent from my iPhone > Line Pouchard, PhD > Purdue University Libraries > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > > wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > > > I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > > > Thanks for any assistance, > > Daureen > > > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > > Research Data Management Librarian > > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > > University of Utah > > 801-585-5975 > > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > > > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From imker at illinois.edu Thu Jun 2 07:58:27 2016 From: imker at illinois.edu (Imker, Heidi J) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 11:58:27 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu>, Message-ID: Hi Daureen and all, There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: http://academictorrents.com/ We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't vouch for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the preservation sense but at least can get the data shared ... Good luck! Heidi Sent from my iPhone On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit > wrote: GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is cheap compared to data transfer prices. Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited about. Cheers, Mike ---------------------------------------------------- Dr. Mike Smit Assistant Professor School of Information Management Faculty of Management Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 ---------------------------------------------------- On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ and other open science possibilities. http://openscience.us/other/index.html Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions Daureen From: Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [pouchard at purdue.edu] Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jpetter1 at jhu.edu Thu Jun 2 08:23:54 2016 From: jpetter1 at jhu.edu (Jonathan Petters) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 12:23:54 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu>, Message-ID: Daureen et al., Another option in making such a large amount of data (100s of GB) accessible is for the research group to create a directory or partition locally from which they can grant access to the data sets. This way interested parties (presuming there are not a LOT of them) can access the data close to the systems on which they were created. This would sidestep the issue of serving up a large amount of data and the potential transfer issues that can go with it. Going this route might require the assistance of an IT rep to make sure permissions and security are handled appropriately. Just another option to consider! Jon Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. Data Management Consultant JHU Data Management Services http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ (410) 516-5957 From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Imker, Heidi J Sent: Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:58 AM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Hi Daureen and all, There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: http://academictorrents.com/ We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't vouch for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the preservation sense but at least can get the data shared ... Good luck! Heidi Sent from my iPhone On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit > wrote: GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is cheap compared to data transfer prices. Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited about. Cheers, Mike ---------------------------------------------------- Dr. Mike Smit Assistant Professor School of Information Management Faculty of Management Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 ---------------------------------------------------- On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ and other open science possibilities. http://openscience.us/other/index.html Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions Daureen From: Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [pouchard at purdue.edu] Sent: Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Daureen: Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his purposes. As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on cyber security data. Line Sent from my iPhone Line Pouchard, PhD Purdue University Libraries On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: Hi, I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a data repository for his research data. The article has already been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. I've looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer science? Thanks for any assistance, Daureen Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS Research Data Management Librarian The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library University of Utah 801-585-5975 daureen.nesdill at utah.edu ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rboehm at nd.edu Thu Jun 2 09:07:40 2016 From: rboehm at nd.edu (Reid Boehm) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 09:07:40 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Message-ID: Hi Daureen, Have you looked at the Open Science Framework? They have a cap of 5 GB, but then there are add-ons to other storage space: Box, Google Drive, AWS(?) which would allow things to be shared publicly through the OSF interface. *--Reid * *Reid I Boehm, PhD* CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for the Sciences and Social Sciences Hesburgh Libraries ? Center for Digital Scholarship *University of Notre Dame*131 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 o: 574-631-3461 e: rboehm at nd.edu OrCiD: 0000-0002-5474-0253 On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 8:23 AM, Jonathan Petters wrote: > Daureen et al., > > > > Another option in making such a large amount of data (100s of GB) > accessible is for the research group to create a directory or partition > locally from which they can grant access to the data sets. This way > interested parties (presuming there are not a LOT of them) can access the > data close to the systems on which they were created. This would sidestep > the issue of serving up a large amount of data and the potential transfer > issues that can go with it. > > > > Going this route might require the assistance of an IT rep to make sure > permissions and security are handled appropriately. Just another option to > consider! > > > > Jon > > > > Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. > > Data Management Consultant > > JHU Data Management Services > > http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ > > (410) 516-5957 > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Imker, Heidi J > *Sent:* Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:58 AM > > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > > > Hi Daureen and all, > > > > There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: > http://academictorrents.com/ > > > > We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't vouch > for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the preservation sense > but at least can get the data shared ... > > > > Good luck! > > > > Heidi > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit wrote: > > GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to > <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe > this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to > storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this > would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a > tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of > disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). > > > > I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" > approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate > documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time > period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less > resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is > cheap compared to data transfer prices. > > > > Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they > are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). > > > > Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using > BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited > about. > > > > Cheers, > > > > Mike > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------- > Dr. Mike Smit > Assistant Professor > School of Information Management > Faculty of Management > Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS > > Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 > ---------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. > > > > I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera > Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ > > > and other open science possibilities. > http://openscience.us/other/index.html > > > > > Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions > > > > Daureen > > > > *From:* Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [ > pouchard at purdue.edu] > > *Sent:* Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > Daureen: > > > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his > purposes. > > > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > > > Line > > > Sent from my iPhone > > Line Pouchard, PhD > > Purdue University Libraries > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > > wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > > > I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > > > Thanks for any assistance, > > Daureen > > > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > > Research Data Management Librarian > > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > > University of Utah > > 801-585-5975 > > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > > > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mark.conrad at nara.gov Thu Jun 2 09:09:32 2016 From: mark.conrad at nara.gov (Mark Conrad) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 09:09:32 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Message-ID: You mentioned that this is an NSF project. Where did the project tell the NSF they would store the data in the Data Management Plan they submitted with their proposal? Mark Conrad NARA Information Services IAS The National Archives and Records Administration Erma Ora Byrd Conference and Learning Center Building 494, Room 225 610 State Route 956 Rocket Center, WV 26726 Phone: 304-726-7820 Fax: 304-726-7802 Email: mark.conrad at nara.gov On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 8:23 AM, Jonathan Petters wrote: > Daureen et al., > > > > Another option in making such a large amount of data (100s of GB) > accessible is for the research group to create a directory or partition > locally from which they can grant access to the data sets. This way > interested parties (presuming there are not a LOT of them) can access the > data close to the systems on which they were created. This would sidestep > the issue of serving up a large amount of data and the potential transfer > issues that can go with it. > > > > Going this route might require the assistance of an IT rep to make sure > permissions and security are handled appropriately. Just another option to > consider! > > > > Jon > > > > Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. > > Data Management Consultant > > JHU Data Management Services > > http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ > > (410) 516-5957 > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Imker, Heidi J > *Sent:* Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:58 AM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > > > Hi Daureen and all, > > > > There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: > http://academictorrents.com/ > > > > We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't vouch > for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the preservation sense > but at least can get the data shared ... > > > > Good luck! > > > > Heidi > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit wrote: > > GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to > <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe > this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to > storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this > would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a > tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of > disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). > > > > I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" > approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate > documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time > period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less > resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is > cheap compared to data transfer prices. > > > > Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they > are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). > > > > Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using > BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited > about. > > > > Cheers, > > > > Mike > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------- > Dr. Mike Smit > Assistant Professor > School of Information Management > Faculty of Management > Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS > > Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 > ---------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. > > > > I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera > Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ > > > and other open science possibilities. > http://openscience.us/other/index.html > > > > > Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions > > > > Daureen > > > > *From:* Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [ > pouchard at purdue.edu] > > *Sent:* Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > Daureen: > > > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for his > purposes. > > > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > > > Line > > > Sent from my iPhone > > Line Pouchard, PhD > > Purdue University Libraries > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill > > wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find him a > data repository for his research data. The article has already been > published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a text > format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. He > developed software that used other software to generate the data. It is a > test of security issues with androids. He tells me his colleagues are > waiting to see where he put his data because no one knows what to do. This > project is NSF supported. > > > > I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with no > luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for computer > science? > > > > Thanks for any assistance, > > Daureen > > > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > > Research Data Management Librarian > > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > > University of Utah > > 801-585-5975 > > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > > > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Regina.Raboin at umassmed.edu Thu Jun 2 09:18:22 2016 From: Regina.Raboin at umassmed.edu (Raboin, Regina) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 13:18:22 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up (Mark Conrad) Message-ID: <67074F350C16574883B6216765F99BD257F76E80@ummscsmbx07.ad.umassmed.edu> And just to add to what Mark suggested, I see no reason why you couldn't call the NSF Directorate or Program from where this grant is funded. Best, Regina Regina Fisher Raboin Associate Director for Library Education and Research Associate Editor, Journal of eScience Librarianship (JESLIB) Lamar Soutter Library University of Massachusetts Medical School Lamar Soutter Library: "A Leader in Service and Learning" Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended?recipient(s) and may contain confidential, proprietary and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender immediately and destroy or permanently delete all copies of the original message. -----Original Message----- From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of rdap-request at asis.org Sent: Thursday, June 02, 2016 9:10 AM To: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 7 Send Rdap mailing list submissions to rdap at mail.asis.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to rdap-request at mail.asis.org You can reach the person managing the list at rdap-owner at mail.asis.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: I give up (Mark Conrad) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 09:09:32 -0400 From: Mark Conrad To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" You mentioned that this is an NSF project. Where did the project tell the NSF they would store the data in the Data Management Plan they submitted with their proposal? Mark Conrad NARA Information Services IAS The National Archives and Records Administration Erma Ora Byrd Conference and Learning Center Building 494, Room 225 610 State Route 956 Rocket Center, WV 26726 Phone: 304-726-7820 Fax: 304-726-7802 Email: mark.conrad at nara.gov On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 8:23 AM, Jonathan Petters wrote: > Daureen et al., > > > > Another option in making such a large amount of data (100s of GB) > accessible is for the research group to create a directory or > partition locally from which they can grant access to the data sets. > This way interested parties (presuming there are not a LOT of them) > can access the data close to the systems on which they were created. > This would sidestep the issue of serving up a large amount of data and > the potential transfer issues that can go with it. > > > > Going this route might require the assistance of an IT rep to make > sure permissions and security are handled appropriately. Just another > option to consider! > > > > Jon > > > > Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. > > Data Management Consultant > > JHU Data Management Services > > http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ > > (410) 516-5957 > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Imker, > Heidi J > *Sent:* Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:58 AM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > > > Hi Daureen and all, > > > > There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: > http://academictorrents.com/ > > > > We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't > vouch for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the > preservation sense but at least can get the data shared ... > > > > Good luck! > > > > Heidi > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit wrote: > > GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to > <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I > believe this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as > opposed to storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. > I suspect this would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive > way. (git as a tool requires free storage space equal to used storage > space, so 2TB of disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). > > > > I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" > approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with > appropriate documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the > data generation time period is measured in weeks, months, or years, > that would require less resources over time than storing and serving > large data files. CPU time is cheap compared to data transfer prices. > > > > Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but > they are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). > > > > Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using > BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get > excited about. > > > > Cheers, > > > > Mike > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------- > Dr. Mike Smit > Assistant Professor > School of Information Management > Faculty of Management > Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS > > Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 > ---------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. > > > > I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera > Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ > po_&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0 > E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=nmZ6V9zM > f1c3Gsq1YITSw8koQFE7vmr1nSO44muZZYQ&e=> > > and other open science possibilities. > http://openscience.us/other/index.html > her_index.html&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD > 8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g > &s=L6dhsT2jvIQaiY8nHLILUhWyFD3S6gPa52oeg10tZlY&e=> > > > > Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions > > > > Daureen > > > > *From:* Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [ > pouchard at purdue.edu] > > *Sent:* Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > Daureen: > > > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for > his purposes. > > > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > > > Line > > > Sent from my iPhone > > Line Pouchard, PhD > > Purdue University Libraries > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill 3De0aoAaOHirdbAJ3jnKKeZZPhhCtqzR8AC1nyRg4ctQzYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86ZGF1 > cmVlbi5uZXNkaWxsQHV0YWguZWR1&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn- > vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT > 1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=mOgN3yuxtHUSOTysCR4FqST6kmKc9tlGkCXMva97yqw&e=>> > wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find > him a data repository for his research data. The article has already > been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a > text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. > He developed software that used other software to generate the data. > It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his > colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one > knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. > > > > I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with > no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for > computer science? > > > > Thanks for any assistance, > > Daureen > > > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > > Research Data Management Librarian > > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > > University of Utah > > 801-585-5975 > > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > 3De0aoAaOHirdbAJ3jnKKeZZPhhCtqzR8AC1nyRg4ctQzYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86ZGF1 > cmVlbi5uZXNkaWxsQHV0YWguZWR1&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn- > vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT > 1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=mOgN3yuxtHUSOTysCR4FqST6kmKc9tlGkCXMva97yqw&e=> > > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > 3D5Ga5KW1Xbm1OQSDP41wirJ1rMsXLgks26dDYa5-5FCLKTYmGOYl4rTCAFodHRwOi8vb3 > JjaWQub3JnLzAwMDAtMDAwMy0wMTI2LTUwMzg.&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlkt > OQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E > 8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=O7-KkE9iGozv0o70HSV8oL8tDs921OK7NXKGL4AXrlk > &e=> > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > 3DG83i-5FfKLifWY3SLLuTZogC4rvmqYRfRM3JNIfd5Nq1HYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86Um > RhcEBtYWlsLmFzaXMub3Jn&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDck > gnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEg > aixBWK2g&s=hrfReg51MCu4OKqBp8isMOX-l4vzRxycAtcyyqediDE&e=> > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > 3DNgcPYnmQKHpmUWClB5qhiNsgWC-5FwVQchLngJRhDbmL7YmGOYl4rTCAFodHRwOi8vbW > FpbC5hc2lzLm9yZy9tYWlsbWFuL2xpc3RpbmZvL3JkYXA.&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Z > a5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eic > w6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=rWiDMAQcwQGJZqEEdGbD0XYoLalRxdCZmQi > 2qEXjQ1s&e=> > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap ------------------------------ End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 7 *********************************** From oneiros at grace.nascom.nasa.gov Thu Jun 2 10:00:13 2016 From: oneiros at grace.nascom.nasa.gov (Joe Hourcle) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 10:00:13 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Rdap] I give up In-Reply-To: References: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B95F6@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9B9853@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> Message-ID: On Wed, 1 Jun 2016, Mike Smit wrote: > GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to > <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I believe > this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as opposed to > storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. I suspect this > would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive way. (git as a > tool requires free storage space equal to used storage space, so 2TB of > disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). The git standard itself has problems both indexing large files, and in dealing with a 'git repo' that's of significant size (ie, larger than can fit all in memory at once). You might have to break it into smaller chunks, and then create a seperate repo for each one. > I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" > approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with appropriate > documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the data generation time > period is measured in weeks, months, or years, that would require less > resources over time than storing and serving large data files. CPU time is > cheap compared to data transfer prices. I would still store a subset of the generated data for validation. (in case a problem library or similar could result in the data being re-generated incorrectly). I've also heard of people using virtual machines for this, and then storing the whole VM ... but that gets into some messy issues if you're not using 100% open source, as you won't have the right to distribute it to others. (the original site would have to maintain their software licenses so they could re-generate the data). > Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but they > are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). > > Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using BitTorrent? > That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get excited about. I thought about, but when looking into it, it just wouldn't fit for the data we're serving: http://opendata.stackexchange.com/q/283/263 -Joe From rmacneil at researchspace.com Thu Jun 2 15:08:57 2016 From: rmacneil at researchspace.com (Rory Macneil) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 20:08:57 +0100 Subject: [Rdap] Invitation to Connecting Journals To Research Data Repositories Workshop (June 7) In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <6ea89b07-749c-0fa9-4b9d-28fdee5df58c@researchspace.com> Hi Eleni, Thanks for this invitation. I completed the online registration form, but have not received a confirmation email. I just wanted to be sure that the registration was successfully processed -- could you confirm please? Also, the form I completed was for the Connecting Journals Workshop (I think!). When I met with Merce yesterday she suggested that I also attend the the Workshop on Data and Software Citation. I tried to register for that but haven't been able to access the site with the application form today. Would it be possible for you to include me on the Data and Software Citation registration list as well? Thanks for your help! Please let me know if you need another additional information. Best, Rory Macneil On 28/05/2016 03:56, Castro, Eleni wrote: > > Hi everyone, > > I apologize in advance for cross-posting but just in case you have not > seen this message, I am helping coordinate a workshop at Harvard > Medical School on June 7 on connecting journals to research data > repositories, which Merce Crosas and Piotr Sliz are chairing. The > invitation and more information can be found below... > > On behalf of the Dataverse Project team at Harvard University and > the SBGrid Consortium from Harvard Medical School, we would like > to invite you to attend our Connecting Journals to Data > Repositories Workshop > , > which is taking place on June 7 at the Harvard Medical School. > This workshop will bring together journal editors, publishers, > data repositories, librarians, researchers, and funders to discuss > how various tools, workflows, and policies can > help efficiently connect compliant community data repositories > with journals. > > This event is free and open to the public. Please register by > Thursday June 2 and feel free to share this with anyone else you > might think would be interested: > http://www.software4data.com/#!register/z49gr > > > > If you have any questions feel free to contact me. > > Best regards, > Eleni > > > -- > Eleni Castro > Research Coordinator, > IQSS, Harvard University > 1737 Cambridge Street, K318 > Cambridge, MA 02138 > 617-496-0703 > ecastro at fas.harvard.edu > http://www.iq.harvard.edu > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rmacneil at researchspace.com Thu Jun 2 15:20:23 2016 From: rmacneil at researchspace.com (Rory Macneil) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 20:20:23 +0100 Subject: [Rdap] Invitation to Connecting Journals To Research Data Repositories Workshop (June 7) In-Reply-To: References: <6ea89b07-749c-0fa9-4b9d-28fdee5df58c@researchspace.com> Message-ID: Eleni, Thanks for that and see you next week. Rory On 02/06/2016 20:17, Castro, Eleni wrote: > Hi Rory, > > Thank you for your email. > > I can confirm that you have been successfully registered for the > Connecting Journals to Research Data Repositories Workshop on June 7. > > As for the Workshop on Data and Software Citation I am cc'ing Michelle > to see if there is still space to register for that one. > > See you next week, > Eleni > > On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 9:08 PM, Rory Macneil > > wrote: > > Hi Eleni, > > > Thanks for this invitation. I completed the online registration > form, but have not received a confirmation email. I just wanted > to be sure that the registration was successfully processed -- > could you confirm please? > > > Also, the form I completed was for the Connecting Journals > Workshop (I think!). When I met with Merce yesterday she > suggested that I also attend the the Workshop on Data and Software > Citation. I tried to register for that but haven't been able to > access the site with the application form today. > > > Would it be possible for you to include me on the Data and > Software Citation registration list as well? > > > Thanks for your help! Please let me know if you need another > additional information. > > > Best, > > > Rory Macneil > > > > On 28/05/2016 03:56, Castro, Eleni wrote: >> >> Hi everyone, >> >> I apologize in advance for cross-posting but just in case you >> have not seen this message, I am helping coordinate a workshop at >> Harvard Medical School on June 7 on connecting journals to >> research data repositories, which Merce Crosas and Piotr Sliz are >> chairing. The invitation and more information can be found below... >> >> On behalf of the Dataverse Project team at Harvard University >> and the SBGrid Consortium from Harvard Medical School, we >> would like to invite you to attend our Connecting Journals to >> Data Repositories Workshop >> , >> which is taking place on June 7 at the Harvard Medical >> School. This workshop will bring together journal editors, >> publishers, data repositories, librarians, researchers, and >> funders to discuss how various tools, workflows, and policies >> can help efficiently connect compliant community data >> repositories with journals. >> >> This event is free and open to the public. Please register by >> Thursday June 2 and feel free to share this with anyone else >> you might think would be interested: >> http://www.software4data.com/#!register/z49gr >> >> >> >> If you have any questions feel free to contact me. >> >> Best regards, >> Eleni >> >> >> -- >> Eleni Castro >> Research Coordinator, >> IQSS, Harvard University >> 1737 Cambridge Street, K318 >> Cambridge, MA 02138 >> 617-496-0703 >> ecastro at fas.harvard.edu >> http://www.iq.harvard.edu >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Rdap mailing list >> Rdap at mail.asis.org >> http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap >> > > > > > -- > > Eleni Castro > Research Coordinator, Data Curation and Outreach > IQSS, Harvard University > 617-496-0703 > http://www.iq.harvard.edu/people/eleni-castro > http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9767-8536 > > > ~Got Data? Check out the Dataverse Project. ~ > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From daureen.nesdill at utah.edu Thu Jun 2 16:11:32 2016 From: daureen.nesdill at utah.edu (Daureen Nesdill) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 20:11:32 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] I give up (Mark Conrad) In-Reply-To: <67074F350C16574883B6216765F99BD257F76E80@ummscsmbx07.ad.umassmed.edu> References: <67074F350C16574883B6216765F99BD257F76E80@ummscsmbx07.ad.umassmed.edu> Message-ID: <4BB8E3E08D34034DB9A7D4F285555FB13C9BA231@X-MB4.xds.umail.utah.edu> I'm still waiting for the student to get back to me with the answer to that question. I also provided him with information about tera PROMISE http://openscience.us/other/index.html And the list of open science portals http://openscience.us/other/index.html since they are supported by NSF I looked at the DMP info for CISE and found out they require the data to be in a subject repository. When he does get back to me I'll talk to him about chunking the data and ask him. The software developed used proprietary software to produce the data. The software developed is described in a paper that was published in March. Researchers are asking for the data. I'm going to have to put together a talk for the dept specifically on data management, repositories and the OSTP. You people are providing a lot of good information. This is actually the first time I've heard about data issues with computer science researchers. Thanks Daureen -----Original Message----- From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Raboin, Regina Sent: Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:18 AM To: 'rdap at asis.org' Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up (Mark Conrad) And just to add to what Mark suggested, I see no reason why you couldn't call the NSF Directorate or Program from where this grant is funded. Best, Regina Regina Fisher Raboin Associate Director for Library Education and Research Associate Editor, Journal of eScience Librarianship (JESLIB) Lamar Soutter Library University of Massachusetts Medical School Lamar Soutter Library: "A Leader in Service and Learning" Confidentiality Notice: This e-mail message, including any attachments, is for the sole use of the intended?recipient(s) and may contain confidential, proprietary and privileged information. Any unauthorized review, use, disclosure or distribution is prohibited. If you are not the intended recipient, please contact the sender immediately and destroy or permanently delete all copies of the original message. -----Original Message----- From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of rdap-request at asis.org Sent: Thursday, June 02, 2016 9:10 AM To: rdap at mail.asis.org Subject: Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 7 Send Rdap mailing list submissions to rdap at mail.asis.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to rdap-request at mail.asis.org You can reach the person managing the list at rdap-owner at mail.asis.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Rdap digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Re: I give up (Mark Conrad) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 09:09:32 -0400 From: Mark Conrad To: "Research Data, Access and Preservation" Subject: Re: [Rdap] I give up Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" You mentioned that this is an NSF project. Where did the project tell the NSF they would store the data in the Data Management Plan they submitted with their proposal? Mark Conrad NARA Information Services IAS The National Archives and Records Administration Erma Ora Byrd Conference and Learning Center Building 494, Room 225 610 State Route 956 Rocket Center, WV 26726 Phone: 304-726-7820 Fax: 304-726-7802 Email: mark.conrad at nara.gov On Thu, Jun 2, 2016 at 8:23 AM, Jonathan Petters wrote: > Daureen et al., > > > > Another option in making such a large amount of data (100s of GB) > accessible is for the research group to create a directory or > partition locally from which they can grant access to the data sets. > This way interested parties (presuming there are not a LOT of them) > can access the data close to the systems on which they were created. > This would sidestep the issue of serving up a large amount of data and > the potential transfer issues that can go with it. > > > > Going this route might require the assistance of an IT rep to make > sure permissions and security are handled appropriately. Just another > option to consider! > > > > Jon > > > > Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. > > Data Management Consultant > > JHU Data Management Services > > http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ > > (410) 516-5957 > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Imker, > Heidi J > *Sent:* Thursday, June 02, 2016 7:58 AM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > > > Hi Daureen and all, > > > > There is academic torrents for sharing large data files: > http://academictorrents.com/ > > > > We don't have any experience using it here so sorry to say we can't > vouch for it but worth looking into. It's not a repo in the > preservation sense but at least can get the data shared ... > > > > Good luck! > > > > Heidi > > Sent from my iPhone > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 11:04 PM, Mike Smit wrote: > > GitHub was my first thought as well, but GitHub caps regular files to > <100MB, and files uploaded using its Large Files protocol to 2GB. I > believe this is due to the challenge of versioning large files, as > opposed to storage limits, so one could try uploading 1000 1GB files. > I suspect this would attract GitHub's attention in a not-very-positive > way. (git as a tool requires free storage space equal to used storage > space, so 2TB of disk would be required: $60/month at market cloud rates). > > > > I would suggest that for data generated by software, that the "right" > approach is to release the software, ideally open-source, with > appropriate documentation for re-generating that data. Unless the > data generation time period is measured in weeks, months, or years, > that would require less resources over time than storing and serving > large data files. CPU time is cheap compared to data transfer prices. > > > > Computer science is a pretty broad area - there are repositories, but > they are more focused than the discipline (e.g. machine learning repositories). > > > > Has anyone built a data repository that distributes files using > BitTorrent? That's the kind of thing a computer scientist would get > excited about. > > > > Cheers, > > > > Mike > > > > > > ---------------------------------------------------- > Dr. Mike Smit > Assistant Professor > School of Information Management > Faculty of Management > Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS > > Mike.Smit at dal.ca // 902-494-1901 > ---------------------------------------------------- > > > > > > On Wednesday, 1 June 2016, Daureen Nesdill > wrote: > > Hmmm. The student said he had checked Github and the 1 TB is an issue. > > > > I finally went to IEEE looking for information and learned about Tera > Promise http://openscience.us/repo/ > po_&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0 > E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=nmZ6V9zM > f1c3Gsq1YITSw8koQFE7vmr1nSO44muZZYQ&e=> > > and other open science possibilities. > http://openscience.us/other/index.html > her_index.html&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD > 8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g > &s=L6dhsT2jvIQaiY8nHLILUhWyFD3S6gPa52oeg10tZlY&e=> > > > > Thanks for the reminder about export control restrictions > > > > Daureen > > > > *From:* Rdap [rdap-bounces at asis.org] on behalf of Pouchard, Line C [ > pouchard at purdue.edu] > > *Sent:* Wednesday, June 01, 2016 5:31 PM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* Re: [Rdap] I give up > > Daureen: > > > > Has the student tried Github? It has a publication workflow where the > data is uploaded to zenodo and acquires a DOI. > > > > It's not exactly a computer science repository but it might work for > his purposes. > > > > As zenodo is in the EU, there might be export control restrictions on > cyber security data. > > > > Line > > > Sent from my iPhone > > Line Pouchard, PhD > > Purdue University Libraries > > > On Jun 1, 2016, at 7:14 PM, Daureen Nesdill 3De0aoAaOHirdbAJ3jnKKeZZPhhCtqzR8AC1nyRg4ctQzYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86ZGF1 > cmVlbi5uZXNkaWxsQHV0YWguZWR1&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn- > vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT > 1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=mOgN3yuxtHUSOTysCR4FqST6kmKc9tlGkCXMva97yqw&e=>> > wrote: > > Hi, > > I have a graduate student in computer science requesting me to find > him a data repository for his research data. The article has already > been published and folks are asking to see the data. The data is in a > text format and 1 terabyte uncompressed; compressed it is 100-200 GB. > He developed software that used other software to generate the data. > It is a test of security issues with androids. He tells me his > colleagues are waiting to see where he put his data because no one > knows what to do. This project is NSF supported. > > > > I?ve looked through re3data and conducted a few google searches with > no luck. Does anyone have any information about data repositories for > computer science? > > > > Thanks for any assistance, > > Daureen > > > > > > > > Daureen Nesdill, MS, MLIS > > Research Data Management Librarian > > The Faculty Center @ the J. W. Marriott Library > > University of Utah > > 801-585-5975 > > daureen.nesdill at utah.edu > 3De0aoAaOHirdbAJ3jnKKeZZPhhCtqzR8AC1nyRg4ctQzYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86ZGF1 > cmVlbi5uZXNkaWxsQHV0YWguZWR1&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn- > vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT > 1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=mOgN3yuxtHUSOTysCR4FqST6kmKc9tlGkCXMva97yqw&e=> > > ORCID http://orcid.org/0000-0003-0126-5038 > 3D5Ga5KW1Xbm1OQSDP41wirJ1rMsXLgks26dDYa5-5FCLKTYmGOYl4rTCAFodHRwOi8vb3 > JjaWQub3JnLzAwMDAtMDAwMy0wMTI2LTUwMzg.&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlkt > OQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E > 8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=O7-KkE9iGozv0o70HSV8oL8tDs921OK7NXKGL4AXrlk > &e=> > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > 3DG83i-5FfKLifWY3SLLuTZogC4rvmqYRfRM3JNIfd5Nq1HYmGOYl4rTCAFtYWlsdG86Um > RhcEBtYWlsLmFzaXMub3Jn&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Za5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDck > gnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eicw6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEg > aixBWK2g&s=hrfReg51MCu4OKqBp8isMOX-l4vzRxycAtcyyqediDE&e=> > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > 3DNgcPYnmQKHpmUWClB5qhiNsgWC-5FwVQchLngJRhDbmL7YmGOYl4rTCAFodHRwOi8vbW > FpbC5hc2lzLm9yZy9tYWlsbWFuL2xpc3RpbmZvL3JkYXA.&d=CwMFaQ&c=8hUWFZcy2Z-Z > a5rBPlktOQ&r=NoAn-vdhDckgnJ2YOtD8d9ZgCptSJ0E1_1GhK5-XcNk&m=esNgPgl5eic > w6cNRY3E8mkPoc8EcT1WMLEgaixBWK2g&s=rWiDMAQcwQGJZqEEdGbD0XYoLalRxdCZmQi > 2qEXjQ1s&e=> > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap ------------------------------ End of Rdap Digest, Vol 69, Issue 7 *********************************** _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap From brad.eden at valpo.edu Thu Jun 2 14:32:46 2016 From: brad.eden at valpo.edu (Brad Eden) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 13:32:46 -0500 Subject: [Rdap] Call for editorial board members: Digital Library Perspectives Message-ID: Please excuse duplication. I am looking for new editorial board members for the journal *Digital Library Perspectives* (a description of the journal is provided below). The editorial board serves as the peer reviewers for the journal, and I am looking to expand the number as well as add international board members. If you are interested, please send me a short 100 word statement of your interest and background, and a CV to the email below (not the listserv). If you have any questions, please contact me directly via email. Thanks. Brad Bradford Lee Eden, Ph.D. Editor Dean of Library Services Christopher Center for Library and Information Resources Valparaiso University Valparaiso, Indiana 46383 brad.eden at valpo.edu 219-464-5099 _______________________________________________ *Digital Library Perspectives (DLP)* Journal history: Previously published as *OCLC Systems & Services: International Digital Library Perspectives* *Aims & Scope* *Digital Library Perspectives (DLP) *is a peer-reviewed journal concerned with digital content collections. It publishes research related to the curation and web-based delivery of digital objects collected for the advancement of scholarship, teaching and learning. And which advance the digital information environment as it relates to global knowledge, communication and world memory. The journal aims to keep readers informed about current trends, initiatives, and developments. Including those in digital libraries and digital repositories, along with their standards and technologies. The editor invites contributions on the following, as well as other related topics: - ? Digitization - ? Data as information - ? Archives and manuscripts - ? Digital preservation and digital archiving - ? Digital cultural memory initiatives - ? Usability studies - ? K-12 and higher education uses of digital collections -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hcoates at iupui.edu Thu Jun 2 17:49:29 2016 From: hcoates at iupui.edu (Coates, Heather) Date: Thu, 2 Jun 2016 21:49:29 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Research Data Management Librarian, Ruth Lilly Medical Library Message-ID: <34de66d00b604d88908c202ee5f6408d@bl-cci-exch05.ads.iu.edu> Come work with us! [cid:image001.jpg at 01D1BC03.DC173FD0] RESEARCH DATA MANAGEMENT LIBRARIAN RUTH LILLY MEDICAL LIBRARY, INDIANA UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Based in vibrant Indianapolis, IN, the Ruth Lilly Medical Library seeks a dynamic, collaborative, and talented librarian to consult with faculty, students, and other researchers on data management planning and data curation activities; develop instructional programming and documentation to support scholars in this area; and work with colleagues in University Information Technology Services, the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, University Library, and the Regenstrief Institute to adapt, design, and develop tools and repository services for storing and sharing research data. The successful candidate will demonstrate a clear vision of the services, infrastructure, and skills required to provide high quality assistance and tools to Indiana School of Medicine (IUSM) researchers. This is a newly created tenure-track faculty position which will report to the Associate Director of Public Services. Please visit the library website (http://library.medicine.iu.edu/research-data-management-librarian) to view the full job description. Application materials (cover letter and CV) should be sent to the Search Committee: mdlibapp at iupui.edu Applications will be reviewed beginning June 30, 2016. Position is open until filled. Minimum salary: $55,000 Indiana University School of Medicine is an EEO/AA Employer, M/F/D/V Apologies for cross postings. Heather Coates, MLS, MS Digital Scholarship and Data Management Librarian Liaison to the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health University Library @ IUPUI Phone: (317) 278-7125 Email: hcoates at iupui.edu http://ulib.iupui.edu/digitalscholarship "Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better." --Samuel Beckett -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 4244 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu Fri Jun 3 11:09:14 2016 From: qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (Zhang, Qianjin) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 15:09:14 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Message-ID: Hi, I have a researcher in internal medicine looking for suggestions on how to download climate data from NOAA online tools more effectively. His research is about analysis of seasonality in infectious diseases with nationwide VA databases. He has geocoded locations of ~130 hospitals in continental US, and is trying to get datasets of monthly mean climate data (especially temperature and humidity) from 2003 to 2013 for those locations. He checked several NOAA online tools, but could only find a way to order one location at a time. Does anyone have suggestions on climate data download? Thank you! Best, Marina -- Qianjin (Marina) Zhang Engineering & Informatics Librarian Lichtenberger Engineering Library The University of Iowa 2001 Seamans Center Iowa City, IA 52242 qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (319)-335-5301 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From rboehm at nd.edu Fri Jun 3 11:29:30 2016 From: rboehm at nd.edu (Reid Boehm) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 11:29:30 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Hi Marina, Have you all checked with EOSDIS? I think that among the NASA data centers there may be some other options. https://earthdata.nasa.gov/ I hope that helps, *--Reid * *Reid I Boehm, PhD* CLIR Postdoctoral Fellow in Data Curation for the Sciences and Social Sciences Hesburgh Libraries ? Center for Digital Scholarship *University of Notre Dame*131 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 o: 574-631-3461 e: rboehm at nd.edu OrCiD: 0000-0002-5474-0253 On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 11:09 AM, Zhang, Qianjin wrote: > Hi, > > > > I have a researcher in internal medicine looking for suggestions on how to > download climate data from NOAA online tools more effectively. His research > is about analysis of seasonality in infectious diseases with nationwide VA > databases. He has geocoded locations of ~130 hospitals in continental US, > and is trying to get datasets of monthly mean climate data (especially > temperature and humidity) from 2003 to 2013 for those locations. He checked > several NOAA online tools, but could only find a way to order one location > at a time. > > > > Does anyone have suggestions on climate data download? > > Thank you! > > > > Best, > > Marina > > -- > > Qianjin (Marina) Zhang > > Engineering & Informatics Librarian > > Lichtenberger Engineering Library > > The University of Iowa > > 2001 Seamans Center > > Iowa City, IA 52242 > > qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu > > (319)-335-5301 > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jpetter1 at jhu.edu Fri Jun 3 11:32:48 2016 From: jpetter1 at jhu.edu (Jonathan Petters) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 15:32:48 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <5f46cfaf2ff845beacb733de8bc32ae3@ESGEBEX15.win.ad.jhu.edu> Marina, In my previous life I was an atmospheric science researcher, and have downloaded a reanalysis dataset or two from UCAR sites.... Without detailed context (e.g. which sites the researcher is trying to download from, which parameters they want), my general suggestion is that they contact the appropriate climate data manager. In many cases there is one since climate data sets are widely re-used. Some atmospheric science data centers have data request forms, while others just e-mail service accounts. Such a data manager, properly motivated, could likely retrieve the specific datasets your internal medicine researcher requests and make them available via an anonymous FTP site. If this support exists, I'd make use of it! Jon Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. Data Management Consultant JHU Data Management Services http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ (410) 516-5957 From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Zhang, Qianjin Sent: Friday, June 03, 2016 11:09 AM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Hi, I have a researcher in internal medicine looking for suggestions on how to download climate data from NOAA online tools more effectively. His research is about analysis of seasonality in infectious diseases with nationwide VA databases. He has geocoded locations of ~130 hospitals in continental US, and is trying to get datasets of monthly mean climate data (especially temperature and humidity) from 2003 to 2013 for those locations. He checked several NOAA online tools, but could only find a way to order one location at a time. Does anyone have suggestions on climate data download? Thank you! Best, Marina -- Qianjin (Marina) Zhang Engineering & Informatics Librarian Lichtenberger Engineering Library The University of Iowa 2001 Seamans Center Iowa City, IA 52242 qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (319)-335-5301 -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mayernik at ucar.edu Fri Jun 3 11:40:28 2016 From: mayernik at ucar.edu (Matthew Mayernik) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 09:40:28 -0600 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: <5f46cfaf2ff845beacb733de8bc32ae3@ESGEBEX15.win.ad.jhu.edu> References: <5f46cfaf2ff845beacb733de8bc32ae3@ESGEBEX15.win.ad.jhu.edu> Message-ID: Hi Marina, I agree with Jonathan. A couple of UCAR services that might a) have the data of interest, and b) provide additional mechanisms to download are: NCAR Research Data Archive - http://rda.ucar.edu/ - think of this as the "reference library for atmospheric data". They have decent search/browse, but you might also just contact them directly with the question, and they could point you in the right direction. Unidata - http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/data/ - they provide data "feeds", including many from NOAA. Often these are real-time feeds, but they might have a mechanisms to set up a feed for past time periods. Again, they should have good support if you contact them. Best, Matt Matthew Mayernik, Ph.D. Project Scientist & Research Data Services Specialist NCAR Library / UCAR Integrated Information Services National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) mayernik at ucar.edu On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 9:32 AM, Jonathan Petters wrote: > Marina, > > > > In my previous life I was an atmospheric science researcher, and have > downloaded a reanalysis dataset or two from UCAR sites?. > > > > Without detailed context (e.g. which sites the researcher is trying to > download from, which parameters they want), my general suggestion is that > they contact the appropriate climate data manager. In many cases there is > one since climate data sets are widely re-used. Some atmospheric science > data centers have data request forms, while others just e-mail service > accounts. > > > > Such a data manager, properly motivated, could likely retrieve the > specific datasets your internal medicine researcher requests and make them > available via an anonymous FTP site. If this support exists, I?d make use > of it! > > > > Jon > > > > Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. > > Data Management Consultant > > JHU Data Management Services > > http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ > > (410) 516-5957 > > > > > > > > *From:* Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] *On Behalf Of *Zhang, Qianjin > *Sent:* Friday, June 03, 2016 11:09 AM > *To:* Research Data, Access and Preservation > *Subject:* [Rdap] Climate Data Question > > > > Hi, > > > > I have a researcher in internal medicine looking for suggestions on how to > download climate data from NOAA online tools more effectively. His research > is about analysis of seasonality in infectious diseases with nationwide VA > databases. He has geocoded locations of ~130 hospitals in continental US, > and is trying to get datasets of monthly mean climate data (especially > temperature and humidity) from 2003 to 2013 for those locations. He checked > several NOAA online tools, but could only find a way to order one location > at a time. > > > > Does anyone have suggestions on climate data download? > > Thank you! > > > > Best, > > Marina > > -- > > Qianjin (Marina) Zhang > > Engineering & Informatics Librarian > > Lichtenberger Engineering Library > > The University of Iowa > > 2001 Seamans Center > > Iowa City, IA 52242 > > qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu > > (319)-335-5301 > > > > _______________________________________________ > Rdap mailing list > Rdap at mail.asis.org > http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu Fri Jun 3 13:51:17 2016 From: qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (Zhang, Qianjin) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 17:51:17 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: References: <5f46cfaf2ff845beacb733de8bc32ae3@ESGEBEX15.win.ad.jhu.edu> Message-ID: Hi Matt, Jonathan and Reid, Thank you for your suggestions! A few updates on this consulting request: The researcher is interested in monthly summary data of temperature (average, maximum, and minimum) and humidity (precipitation) for 150 locations of hospitals. Although he could locate nearest land-based station and order dataset for location from NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, he?s looking for efficient way to get data for 150 locations. We contacted NOAA and they would get back to us in a few days. I?ll forward the suggestions you?ve provided to the researcher for reference. I appreciate all your help! Best, Marina From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Matthew Mayernik Sent: Friday, June 03, 2016 10:40 AM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: Re: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Hi Marina, I agree with Jonathan. A couple of UCAR services that might a) have the data of interest, and b) provide additional mechanisms to download are: NCAR Research Data Archive - http://rda.ucar.edu/ - think of this as the "reference library for atmospheric data". They have decent search/browse, but you might also just contact them directly with the question, and they could point you in the right direction. Unidata - http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/data/ - they provide data "feeds", including many from NOAA. Often these are real-time feeds, but they might have a mechanisms to set up a feed for past time periods. Again, they should have good support if you contact them. Best, Matt Matthew Mayernik, Ph.D. Project Scientist & Research Data Services Specialist NCAR Library / UCAR Integrated Information Services National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR) mayernik at ucar.edu On Fri, Jun 3, 2016 at 9:32 AM, Jonathan Petters > wrote: Marina, In my previous life I was an atmospheric science researcher, and have downloaded a reanalysis dataset or two from UCAR sites?. Without detailed context (e.g. which sites the researcher is trying to download from, which parameters they want), my general suggestion is that they contact the appropriate climate data manager. In many cases there is one since climate data sets are widely re-used. Some atmospheric science data centers have data request forms, while others just e-mail service accounts. Such a data manager, properly motivated, could likely retrieve the specific datasets your internal medicine researcher requests and make them available via an anonymous FTP site. If this support exists, I?d make use of it! Jon Jonathan Petters, Ph.D. Data Management Consultant JHU Data Management Services http://dmp.data.jhu.edu/ (410) 516-5957 From: Rdap [mailto:rdap-bounces at asis.org] On Behalf Of Zhang, Qianjin Sent: Friday, June 03, 2016 11:09 AM To: Research Data, Access and Preservation Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Hi, I have a researcher in internal medicine looking for suggestions on how to download climate data from NOAA online tools more effectively. His research is about analysis of seasonality in infectious diseases with nationwide VA databases. He has geocoded locations of ~130 hospitals in continental US, and is trying to get datasets of monthly mean climate data (especially temperature and humidity) from 2003 to 2013 for those locations. He checked several NOAA online tools, but could only find a way to order one location at a time. Does anyone have suggestions on climate data download? Thank you! Best, Marina -- Qianjin (Marina) Zhang Engineering & Informatics Librarian Lichtenberger Engineering Library The University of Iowa 2001 Seamans Center Iowa City, IA 52242 qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (319)-335-5301 _______________________________________________ Rdap mailing list Rdap at mail.asis.org http://mail.asis.org/mailman/listinfo/rdap -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From oneiros at grace.nascom.nasa.gov Fri Jun 3 14:25:41 2016 From: oneiros at grace.nascom.nasa.gov (Joe Hourcle) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 14:25:41 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: References: <5f46cfaf2ff845beacb733de8bc32ae3@ESGEBEX15.win.ad.jhu.edu> Message-ID: On Fri, 3 Jun 2016, Zhang, Qianjin wrote: > Hi Matt, Jonathan and Reid, > > Thank you for your suggestions! > A few updates on this consulting request: > > The researcher is interested in monthly summary data of temperature > (average, maximum, and minimum) and humidity (precipitation) for 150 > locations of hospitals. Although he could locate nearest land-based > station and order dataset for location from NOAA National Centers for > Environmental Information, he?s looking for efficient way to get data > for 150 locations. > > We contacted NOAA and they would get back to us in a few days. I don't know if the Wunderground API would be of use or not -- I'm not sure if it's forecast or recorded information, but it was mentioned in a question about historical weather data: http://opendata.stackexchange.com/q/4242/263 -Joe From natalie.meyers at nd.edu Fri Jun 3 19:33:02 2016 From: natalie.meyers at nd.edu (Natalie Meyers) Date: Fri, 3 Jun 2016 19:33:02 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Message-ID: Hi Marina, I concur with Matt, Jonathan and Reid and will add only one more suggestion, FetchClimate 2 tool is great for creating quickly creating delimited climate data sets w monthly interval averages etc. You may want to Try:http://fetchclimate2.cloudapp.net/ It has some features that suit the request you are trying to fulfill: - Multiple Point Selection: enables selection of single or multiple regions or points - Data: - Enables the user to select between particular data sets - Delivers air temperature, precipitation etc - Time series: retrieves annual, seasonal, monthly, and daily data - Output: present the results graphically or export it to CSV - Provides access through the web interface, a client application, or programmatically through a REST API Is there a particular computational model your researcher is working with ? Natalie Meyers -- *Natalie K. Meyers* *E-Research Librarian* *University of Notre Dame* 1136A Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 *o:* 574-631-1546 *f:* 574-631-6772 *e: *natalie.meyers at nd.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu Tue Jun 7 10:43:06 2016 From: qianjin-zhang at uiowa.edu (Zhang, Qianjin) Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2016 14:43:06 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Climate Data Question In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Thanks for the info, Natalie! Best, Marina From: Natalie Meyers [mailto:natalie.meyers at nd.edu] Sent: Friday, June 03, 2016 6:33 PM To: rdap at mail.asis.org; Zhang, Qianjin Subject: Re: [Rdap] Climate Data Question Hi Marina, I concur with Matt, Jonathan and Reid and will add only one more suggestion, FetchClimate 2 tool is great for creating quickly creating delimited climate data sets w monthly interval averages etc. You may want to Try:http://fetchclimate2.cloudapp.net/ It has some features that suit the request you are trying to fulfill: ? Multiple Point Selection: enables selection of single or multiple regions or points ? Data: ? Enables the user to select between particular data sets ? Delivers air temperature, precipitation etc ? Time series: retrieves annual, seasonal, monthly, and daily data ? Output: present the results graphically or export it to CSV ? Provides access through the web interface, a client application, or programmatically through a REST API Is there a particular computational model your researcher is working with ? Natalie Meyers -- Natalie K. Meyers E-Research Librarian University of Notre Dame 1136A Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 o: 574-631-1546 f: 574-631-6772 e: natalie.meyers at nd.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From hoadriank at gmail.com Tue Jun 14 20:36:53 2016 From: hoadriank at gmail.com (Adrian Ho) Date: Tue, 14 Jun 2016 20:36:53 -0400 Subject: [Rdap] Reminder: ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit Editor Message-ID: Of possible interest. Apologies for cross-posting. ACRL invites applications from prospective contract editors for the ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit. Details are shown below and also available at: http://www.acrl.ala.org/acrlinsider/archives/11981 The application deadline is 5 pm Pacific on June 20, 2016. *ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit Call for Applications* ACRL is accepting applications from prospective contract editors for the ACRL Scholarly Communication Toolkit , an online educational resource maintained by the ACRL Research and Scholarly Environment Committee to support advocacy efforts designed to transform the scholarly communication landscape. The Toolkit aims to assist academic librarians in: 1. integrating a scholarly communication perspective into library operations and programs; and 2. preparing presentations on scholarly communication issues for administrators, faculty, staff, students, or other librarians. *Required:* - Membership in ACRL. - Demonstrated experience with advocating for positive change in the scholarly communication ecosystem. - Knowledge of a wide range of scholarly communication issues as pertaining to academic and research libraries and higher education. - Experience with creating and maintaining online resources on various scholarly communication topics. - Demonstrated ability to work autonomously with a tight schedule. - Available to provide updates during periodic conference calls with designated members on the ACRL Research and Scholarly Environment Committee. - Must be able to complete a revamp of the Toolkit by Sept. 23, 2016. *Strongly preferred:* - Experience with the design and usability of online resources. - Ability to publish online content using WordPress. - Familiarity with the Chicago Style. *Expectations: * Based on the findings of a survey conducted in mid-2015 and the inputs from different parties, the ACRL Research and Scholarly Environment Committee plans to revamp the Toolkit so that it will continue to serve as a valued and up-to-date resource for the academic and research library community. Specifically, the Toolkit will provide an introduction to select topics in the area of scholarly communication and connect colleagues with resources that are useful for their professional practices. The contract editor?s responsibilities include: - Update and create content on six scholarly communication topics (author rights, digital repositories, economics of scholarly communication, open educational resources, research data management, and scholarly publishing) - Present information in an engaging manner - Review, select, and link to materials that inform and support librarians? practices in the area of scholarly communication - Conduct basic usability testing and incorporate feedback into the Toolkit design The revamped Toolkit should be available approximately one month before this year?s Open Access Week (Oct. 24-30, 2016). ACRL will provide a modest honorarium to the contract editor. *How to apply: * To apply, please submit the following documents electronically as a single PDF document: 1. A statement addressing the following questions (maximum 800 words). Please use examples of your professional experiences, including links to relevant resources: - Why do you want to be the contract editor of the Toolkit? - Demonstrate your knowledge of scholarly communication issues by discussing two topics of your choice in detail. - What experience do you have in creating and maintaining online resources? - Are there relevant experiences of which you would like us to be aware? 2. Your resume. 3. The names and contact information for two references who have direct knowledge of your experience and expertise. The single PDF application must be submitted via email *by 5 p.m. Pacific on June 20, 2016*, to Steven Harris, member of the ACRL Research and Scholarly Environment Committee, at stevenharris at unr.edu. ACRL has formed a small review team to consider applications and conduct telephone interviews. The group will select the contract editor and notify all applicants by July 19, 2016. If you have questions of any kind, don?t hesitate to contact Steven Harris at stevenharris at unr.edu or (775) 682-5671. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jamenebk at ku.edu Wed Jun 15 14:28:18 2016 From: jamenebk at ku.edu (Brooks Kieffer, Elizabeth Jamene) Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2016 18:28:18 +0000 Subject: [Rdap] Extended Deadline: KU Metadata Librarian Message-ID: Hi everyone, The University of Kansas Libraries has extended its application deadline for its Metadata Librarian search. The new deadline is July 5. https://employment.ku.edu/academic/6075BR This is a full-time, tenure-track opportunity. Please pass on to folks who might be interested. Best, Jamene Jamene Brooks-Kieffer Data Services Librarian The University of Kansas 440 Watson Library 1425 Jayhawk Boulevard Lawrence, KS 66045 785-864-5238 jamenebk at ku.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: