Trevor Owens is a Digital Archivist with the National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIPP) in the Office of Strategic Initiatives at the Library of Congress. At the Library of Congress, he works on the open source Viewshare cultural heritage collection visualization tool, as a member of the communications team, and as the co-chair for the National Digital Stewardship Alliance’s Infrastructure working group. Before joining the Library of Congress he worked for the Center for History and New Media and before that managed outreach for the Games, Learning, and Society Conference. He has a BA in the History of Science from the University of Wisconsin, an MA in American History from George Mason University and is currently finishing his doctorate in Research Methods in George Mason University’s College of Education and Human Development.
Most Recent Posts
- Glitching Files for Understanding: Avoiding Screen Essentialism in Three Easy Steps November 5th, 2012
- The is of the Digital Object and the is of the Artifact October 25th, 2012
- Archivematica and the Open Source Mindset for Digital Preservation Systems October 16th, 2012
- Media Archaeology and Digital Stewardship: An interview with Lori Emerson October 11th, 2012
- Developing a Health and Medicine Blogs Collection at the U.S. National Library of Medicine October 2nd, 2012
- Yes, The Library of Congress Has Video Games: An Interview with David Gibson September 26th, 2012
- Exhibiting Video Games: An interview with Smithsonian’s Georgina Goodlander September 25th, 2012
- Born Digital Minimum Processing and Access September 24th, 2012
- Sharing, Theft, and Creativity: deviantART’s Share Wars and How an Online Arts Community Thinks About Their Work September 17th, 2012
- The AIMS Project and the Stewardship of Born-Digital Archival Materials: An interview with Bradley Daigle September 10th, 2012