Dataverse might be a good fit: http://thedata.org/ and http://guides.thedata.org/book/features-0
Jonathan. -- Jonathan T. Younker, MLIS Head, Library Systems and Technologies Brock University | James A. Gibson Library Niagara Region | 500 Glenridge Ave. | St. Catharines, ON L2S 3A1 brocku.ca | T 905 688 5550 x4899 | F 905 988 5490 On 09-21-11 8:40 AM, "Michael Beccaria" <mbecca...@paulsmiths.edu> wrote: >I've been looking for an out of the box solution to archive and make >accessible capstone\theses projects to web users. The caveat being that >when the author submits the paper, they would be able provide >permissions and metadata to the document (copyright and access) and, >based on those permissions, the entire document would be made public or >only the metadata. I know that there are large repository software >packages like DSpace or Fedora Commons that probably do this, but I was >looking for something smaller. I don't need to scale to millions of >documents and have all of the potential bells and whistles. Just >something that lets people create an account, upload, set permissions >and the have documents show up in the search interface. > >Anything like this around? > >Mike Beccaria >Systems Librarian >Head of Digital Initiative >Paul Smith's College >518.327.6376 >mbecca...@paulsmiths.edu