通过使用和实践社区来维持软件保存工作

F. Rios, Monique Lassere, J. Ruggill, Ken S. McAllister
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引用次数: 0

摘要

软件保存工作的简短历史反复说明了一个现象:就像在扫帚上旋转盘子一样,让事情运转起来很容易,但保持它们的稳定和移动却很困难。在电子游戏和其他形式的文化遗产(大多数软件保存工作最近都集中在这方面)的背景下,这一挑战有几个特点,一些是技术性的(例如,捕获和模拟受保护的二进制文件和专有硬件的难度),一些是法律上的(例如,在面对各种威胁的终端用户许可协议时,向存档用户提供访问保存的游戏的权限)。在其他情况下,例如保存以研究为导向的软件,可能会有额外的挑战,包括对不寻常的(甚至是独特的)软件和硬件系统的认识和培训不足,以及普遍缺乏保存“旧数据”的动力。我们相信,在这两种情况下,有一个相对容易的解决方案:培养实践社区。这样的小组旨在将志同道合的个人聚集在一起讨论、分享、教学、实现和维持特殊的兴趣小组——在这种情况下,是从事软件保存的小组。在本文中,我们提出了两种通过社区来维持软件保存工作的方法。第一个是在实践社区中强调“通过使用来保存”的重要性,也就是说,通过熟悉软件的感觉、外观和工作方式来保存软件遗产。维持软件保存工作的第二种方法是召集直接的和相邻的专家来促进跨领域障碍的知识交换,以帮助解决本地需求;一个足够多样化的社区将能够(并且渴望)在需要的基础上提供这些类型的专业知识。我们在这里概述了这些可持续性机制,然后展示了各种特定领域保存工作的网络如何转化为一个有凝聚力的、跨学科的、高度协作的软件保存团队。[本文是经过轻量级同行评审后在IDCC 2020上发表的会议预印本。]
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Sustaining Software Preservation Efforts Through Use and Communities of Practice
The brief history of software preservation efforts illustrates one phenomenon repeatedly: not unlike spinning a plate on a broomstick, it is easy to get things going, but difficult to keep them stable and moving. Within the context of video games and other forms of cultural heritage (where most software preservation efforts have lately been focused), this challenge has several characteristic expressions, some technical (e.g., the difficulty of capturing and emulating protected binary files and proprietary hardware), and some legal (e.g., providing archive users with access to preserved games in the face of variously threatening end user licence agreements). In other contexts, such as the preservation of research-oriented software, there can be additional challenges, including insufficient awareness and training on unusual (or even unique) software and hardware systems, as well as a general lack of incentive for preserving “old data.” We believe that in both contexts, there is a relatively accessible solution: the fostering of communities of practice. Such groups are designed to bring together like-minded individuals to discuss, share, teach, implement, and sustain special interest groups—in this case, groups engaged in software preservation. In this paper, we present two approaches to sustaining software preservation efforts via community. The first is emphasizing within the community of practice the importance of “preservation through use,” that is, preserving software heritage by staying familiar with how it feels, looks, and works. The second approach for sustaining software preservation efforts is to convene direct and adjacent expertise to facilitate knowledge exchange across domain barriers to help address local needs; a sufficiently diverse community will be able (and eager) to provide these types of expertise on an as-needed basis. We outline here these sustainability mechanisms, then show how the networking of various domain-specific preservation efforts can be converted into a cohesive, transdisciplinary, and highly collaborative software preservation team. [This paper is a conference pre-print presented at IDCC 2020 after lightweight peer review.]
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