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Gmail: Email from Google. Colour Me Red – the Ingect system for Research Data Collections | Data Bites : Ifs, ANDS and buts. By Peter Sefton (USQ) & Vicki Picasso (University of Newcastle). The Australian National Data Service (ANDS) has funded a Metadata Store software development project by the Australian Digital Futures Institute (ADFI) at USQ. For the development ADFI will be working with the University of Newcastle in NSW and Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne. The Metadata Store project is to develop a software system to store metadata around research data collections.

The system doesn’t really have a definitive name at this stage however the work titles are: ReDBox – named for the world-famous white-board diagram that the authors published earlier this year, a backronym for Research Data Box. In this post we want to provide the ANDS-partner community with some information to outline the technical architecture of the system, as we see it at this stage as well as to briefly describe the model for implementation of the infrastructure. There are three main drivers for this: Grants database. eSciDoc. Fedora Commons. The Hydra Project. Hydra Space shortcuts Child pages Pages The Hydra Project 47 more child pages Browse pages ConfigureSpace tools Pages Skip to end of banner JIRA links Go to start of banner The Hydra Project Skip to end of metadata Created by Daniel Davis, last modified by Richard Green on Apr 22, 2014 Go to start of metadata Community Meetings & Calls Strategy & Steering The Boneyard Archived Pages with deprecated content Technology Licensing Releases Gems and documentation Hydra Efforts / Grab Bag Except where otherwise noted, content within the Hydra wiki is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

Recently Updated Show More Search the Hydra wiki Page tree No labels Overview Content Tools Powered by a free Atlassian Confluence Open Source Project License granted to Fedora Commons. This Confluence installation runs a Free Gliffy License - Evaluate the Gliffy Confluence Plugin for your Wiki! This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. MediaShelf | preserve, curate, enrich, disseminate. Active-fedora. Ruby on Rails - Wiki. Ruby on Rails emphasizes the use of well-known software engineering patterns and principles, such as active record pattern, convention over configuration (CoC), don't repeat yourself (DRY), and model–view–controller (MVC). History[edit] On December 23, 2008, Merb, another web application framework, was launched, and Ruby on Rails announced it would work with the Merb project to bring "the best ideas of Merb" into Rails 3, ending the "unnecessary duplication" across both communities.[7] Merb was merged with Rails as part of the Rails 3.0 release.[8][9] Rails 3.2 was released on January 20, 2012 with a faster development mode and routing engine (also known as Journey engine), Automatic Query Explain and Tagged Logging.[11] Rails 3.2.x is the last version that supports Ruby 1.8.7.[12] Rails 3.2.12 supports Ruby 2.0[13] Technical overview[edit] Like many web frameworks, Ruby on Rails uses the model–view–controller (MVC) pattern to organize application programming.

Framework structure[edit]