DDD Success Story: Harvard Crimson
The Harvard Crimson
is one of the nation’s oldest university newspapers, continuously published
since 1879. Digital Divide Data (DDD) has provided digitization services for
the Crimson since 2001, when the paper’s original project fell behind schedule
and faced performance problems.
As a student-run organization with a limited
budget, the Crimson can’t afford cost-overruns. As a high-visibility
organization inside and outside the education community, it faces close
scrutiny of its products and practices. Ready to put the project back on track,
the Crimson turned to Digital Divide Data.
DDD Partnership
“Our engagement with DDD has been a complete
success,” says Imtiyaz Delawala, former managing director of the paper. “Harvard
has a long history of activism, and it was important to us that DDD also has a
social mission. It’s been a great partnership.”
The Crimson sent DDD 25 years worth of back
issues that had been scanned onto CD-ROMs by the University. At the DDD
facilities, the scanned documents were double keyed using DDD’s proprietary
software. The double keyed images were cropped and straightened to ensure
flawless quality.
“Our methodology, including double-key quality
assurance, turned out a higher quality product than what the Crimson had
previously received, on budget, and at a lower cost than they expected,” says
DDD President Tim Keller. The original project left the Crimson with duplicate
documents and articles split into two files – making it difficult to locate
information in the internet. “We haven’t seen either of those problems with
DDD,” according to Dalalat.
Creating a Legacy
For the Crimson, the work being done by DDD is more than just
digitizing a stack of paper. “It’s sharing our hundred-plus year legacy with
new generations of readers.” To see how the final product turned out please
click here.
For more information, contact Jaeson Rosenfeld
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