Scott,

Depending on the primary technologies you are using at your institution, you 
could look at implementing the open source solution SobekCM.  ( 
http://sobek.ufl.edu )   We are using this at our institution ( 
http://ufdc.ufl.edu/ufir ).  We developed the system in-house over the last 
six-seven years and it works quite well as our IR.

It runs on Windows servers, with a Microsoft SQL DB and Solr backend.  You can 
use the free Microsoft Express SQL if you like, assuming you don't reach 
100,000 items in your IR.  I am able to roll out a new instance within a day 
usually, but would obviously take slightly longer to learn the system and how 
to do that.  The system is coded primarily in C# (with the obvious javascript 
thrown in as well) and we are actively pursuing two grants that will beef the 
IR functionality up even more; one to add a local authority system (for people, 
places, etc..) to assist with linked data and increased support for datasets.

It works with Shibboleth authentication, LDAP through Active Directory, or you 
can use a built in authentication system, which obviously doesn't give your 
faculty single signon.

We welcome active participation in the code development as well, so if you 
wanted to contribute back to the code base at GitHub we would love it.

Mark


Mark V Sullivan
Digital Development and Web Coordinator
Technology and Support Services
George A. Smathers Libraries
University of Florida 
352-273-2907 (office)
352-682-9692 (mobile)
[email protected]




-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of scott 
bacon
Sent: Tuesday, September 17, 2013 9:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Institutional Repository Costs

It may be a fool's errand to ask how much it would cost to implement an open 
source institutional repository, but here goes!


Let's first focus on open source and say that there won't be vendor costs for 
ingesting or downloading materials, that we already have our own purchased 
servers dedicated to the IR, our own digitization program (scanners and staff), 
and that we have already tallied cloud-based storage and preservation costs.


I have heard that the costs of implementing an open source IR can be as cheap 
as how much employee time is dedicated to the project. So you have a programmer 
spend a year or so on implementation and hire a librarian to manage it after 
that, let's say. Beyond that, are there any hard-and-fast costs associated with 
getting an IR up and running?


I have also read somewhere that it costs just as much to implement an open 
source IR as it does a proprietary one, but we'd certainly like to reap the 
benefits of having ultimate control over our own system if at all possible.


By the way, if it helps, my institution is classified *Master's S*, with an 
undergraduate enrollment of just under 10,000.


Numbers will vary wildly of course, but if anyone could give an idea of the 
cost of any component of a project like this, open source or proprietary, it 
would be most helpful.


Thanks,

Scott Bacon

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