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This is the May 2016 edition of the Fedora Newsletter. This newsletter summarizes the most significant activities within the Fedora community over the last month.

Call for Action

Fedora is designed, built, used, and supported by the community. An easy and important way that you can contribute to the effort is by helping resolve outstanding bugs. If you have an interest in gaining a better understanding of the Fedora code base, or a specific interest in any of these bugs [1], please add a comment to a ticket and we can work together to move your interest forward.

Software development

Standards

Fedora API Specification

The Fedora community is working to establish a clearly defined specification for the core Fedora services []. This specification will detail the exact services and interactions required for a server implementation to be verified as "doing Fedora". An article on this effort was recently published in ProgrammableWeb magazine.

You are invited to comment on and contribute to the draft specifications [].

Community-driven Activity

API Extension Architecture 

The Sheridan Libraries at Johns Hopkins University was awarded an IMLS grant [] to support development on API-X through December, 2016. The deliverables include:

  1. Public release of the API-X architectures
  2. Associated documentation and dissemination
  3. Some common interest extensions

At the last meeting [] it was decided that a list of tasks would be circulated to the group before being added to an issue tracker for resolution. If you are interested in the API Extension Architecture, please join the discussion on the fedora-community mailing list [] and attend the next meeting on Thursday, May 12 at 1pm EDT.

Performance and Scalability

A number of test plans [] have been developed by the Performance and Scalability group, and some initial results are available. At the last meeting [] the group made plans to document and run additional tests and work on profiling Fedora 4 using YourKit.

If you are interested in Performance and Scalability, please join the discussion on the fedora-community mailing list [] and attend the next meeting [] on May 16 at 11am EDT.

Releases

Fedora 4.5.1 Release Notes

Conferences and events

Upcoming Events

LPForum

...

TCDL

...

OR2016

...

Previous Events

Museums and the Web

Museums and the Web [] took place April 6-9 in Los Angeles, CA. This year's conference featured a presentation by Stefano Cossu (Art Institute of Chicago) and David Wilcox (DuraSpace) on Fedora as the heart of an open source digital asset management system for museums []. 

West Coast Fedora Camp

The West Coast Fedora Camp [], hosted by the Caltech Library, took place April 11-13 in Pasadena, CA. 

DC Area Fedora User Group Meeting

The Spring DC Area Fedora User Group Meeting [] took place April 27-28 at the National Library of Medicine and included presentations, project updates, and discussions from local Fedora users. The second day of the event featured a Hydra/Fedora 4 workshop led by Esmé Cowles and David Wilcox.

References

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