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Still Image Content

ContentPreferenceFormatFormat UseNotes
   PreservationAccess 
Still ImagePreferred (in order of preference)TIFF uncompressed in any color space supported by TIFFX TIFF 6.0 has been commonly used at Harvard for digital master images, and is considered an archival format suitable for long-term preservation. For more information about the TIFF format see Adobe's TIFF resources
JPEG 2000 JP2 profile with lossless compressionX Some projects depositing content into the DRS have chosen to use JPEG 2000 for digital master images instead of TIFF. JPEG 2000 can offer storage savings - file sizes tend to be smaller and there is an opportunity to use the same file as the preservation and use copy. While JPEG 2000 is becoming more acceptable in the library community as a preservation format, there are still advantages to TIFF over JPEG 2000 for preservation. TIFF uncompressed is a simpler format internally and has more general tool support. For more information about JPEG 2000 see the JPEG 2000 website.
TIFF with CCITT T.6 (Group 4) compressionX  
JPEG 2000 JP2 profile with lossy compressionX  
JPEG JFIF; TIFF with associated alpha component; TIFF with PackBits (lossless), LZW (lossless), Modified Huffman or Group 3 Fax compressionX  
GIFX  
AcceptedJPEG (non-JFIF) X (suggested alternative: TIFF uncompressed or JPEG 2000 JP2 profile with lossless compression)
TIFF with JPEG (lossy) compressionX  (suggested alternative: TIFF uncompressed or JPEG 2000 JP2 profile with lossless compression)

 


Video Content

Harvard Library Media Preservation Services will provide reformatting services to produce these formats.

ContentPreferenceFormatFormat UseNotes
   PreservationAccess 
VideoPreferredCodec: JPEG 2000
Wrapper: QuickTime, MXF (MXF OP1a, OP1b operational patterns or AS-07)
X Recommend lossless compression
Codec: Uncompressed
Wrapper: QuickTime
X 8 bit or 10 bit
Codec: DV
Wrapper: QuickTime
X For digitized DV tape
Codec: MPEG-2
Wrapper: QuickTime
X  
AcceptedCodec: Avid DNxHD
Wrapper: QuickTime, MXF (MXF OP1a, OP1b operational patterns or AS-07)
X  
Codec: Apple ProRes
Wrapper: QuickTime
X  


UsageCodec FormatWrappersNotes
Preferred for Archival formatJPEG 2000*QuickTime, MXF (MXF OP1a, OP1b operational patterns or AS-07)Recommend lossless compression
Uncompressed*QuickTime8 bit or 10 bit
DV*QuickTimeFor digitized DV tape
MPEG-2QuickTime 
Preferred for Delivery formatH.264*QuickTimeAny of the 21 different profiles
Accepted for Archival formatAvid DNxHD*QuickTime, MXF (MXF OP1a, OP1b operational patterns or AS-07) 
Apple ProRes*QuickTime 

 


Video Formats for Preservation and Delivery Copies

* Harvard Library Media Preservation Services will provide reformatting services to produce these formats


Disk Image Formats for Preservation

FormatNotes
RAW(IMG,DD)Often disk image formats are split into smaller files that are stitched together in sequence, often in 2GB chunks. When this occurs, many systems use sequential file extension numbering to delineate the relationships, e.g., myimage.001, myimage.002, myimage.003; or yourimage.e01, yourimage.e02, yourimage.e03. When this occurs, it is imperative that original filenames AND extensions be preserved so that they can be re-instantiated upon delivery to an end user (otherwise it will not be possible to put the sequence back together in the proper order).
ISOThere are possibilities that some ISO files are merely RAW files that contain ISO file systems within them. Some ISO files may be pure copies of ISO file systems.
BIN/CUE

Often disk image formats are split into smaller files that are stitched together in sequence, often in 2GB chunks. When this occurs, many systems use sequential file extension numbering to delineate the relationships, e.g., myimage.001, myimage.002, myimage.003; or yourimage.e01, yourimage.e02, yourimage.e03. When this occurs, it is imperitave that original filenames AND extensions be preserved so that they can be re-instantiated upon delivery to an end user (otherwise it will not be possible to put the sequence back together in the proper order). Only .BIN files (and sometimes .ISO files) include sidecare .CUE files. The .CUE files serve as metadata for understanding the type and composition of data stored in the .BIN (or .ISO) file.

EWF-E01 (EWCF-ASR02)Often disk image formats are split into smaller files that are stitched together in sequence, often in 2GB chunks. When this occurs, many systems use sequential file extension numbering to delineate the relationships, e.g., myimage.001, myimage.002, myimage.003; or yourimage.e01, yourimage.e02, yourimage.e03. When this occurs, it is imperitave that original filenames AND extensions be preserved so that they can be re-instantiated upon delivery to an end user (otherwise it will not be possible to put the sequence back together in the proper order). 

 


CAD Formats for Preservation and Delivery Copies 

Deposit the native CAD file together with a derivative PDF and make both deliverable. The PDF provides an alternative “fixed” preservation copy, providing mitigation for future obsolescence/rendering risks; while the native CAD file provides a truer version of the original, for users who are able to still read the format.

Type of CAD DrawingSupported Formats
2D CAD Drawing

per CAD file, one of the following:

  • Adobe Portable Document Format / PDF
    • mimetype: application/pdf
    • fonts embedded
    • linked files embedded
  • AutoCAD Drawing / DWG
    • mimetype: application/dwg (and others)
    • prefer linked files embedded
  • Drawing Interchange Format / AutoCAD DXF
    • mimetype: application/dxf (and others)
    • prefer linked files embedded
3D CAD Drawing

per CAD file, one of the following:

  • Adobe Portable Document Format / PDF
    • mimetype: application/pdf
    • fonts embedded
    • linked files embedded
    • embedded 3D content in U3D or PRC format
  • AutoCAD Drawing / DWG
    • mimetype: application/dwg (and others)
    • prefer linked files embedded
  • Drawing Interchange Format / AutoCAD DXF
    • mimetype: application/dxf (and others)
    • prefer linked files embedded
  • Extensible 3D Graphics / X3D
    • mimetype: model/x3d+xml
    • prefer xml encoding to binary or vrml

 


Formats for Delivery Copies 

Harvard Library Delivery ServiceSupported Formats
File Delivery Service (FDS)Technically any format. Initially FDS will only deliver the following formats until additional access/use policy and metadata is developed and implemented: ICC, PDF, Plain Text, SGML, XML, ZIP.
Full-text Search Service (FTS)Plain text in ASCII or UTF-8 character encoding
Image Delivery Service (IDS)JPEG, GIF, JPEG2000 JP2, TIFF
Page Delivery Service (PDS)

Page images: JPEG2000 JP2, JPEG, GIF, TIFF (bitonal, CCITT Group 4 Fax compression)

Page text: Plain text in ASCII or UTF-8 character encoding

Streaming Delivery Service (SDS)

MP3

RealAudio, SMIL with sequential links to RealAudio files

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