Luomme avoimen lähdekoodin ohjelmistopakettia nimeltä OTW-Archive, jonka ansiosta fanit voivat ylläpitää omia vankkoja, täysin varustettuja arkistojaan. Tämän ohjelmistopaketin avulla voi ylläpitää jopa hyvin suuria satojen tuhansien tarinoiden arkistoja, ja siinä on sosiaalisen verkottumisen ominaisuuksia helpottamaan yhteyksien luomista fanien keskuudessa heidän töidensä kautta.
OTW käyttää tätä ohjelmistoa tarjotakseen Meidän Arkistomme (Archive of Our Own): ei-kaupallisen ja voittoa tavoittelemattoman keskeisen julkaisupaikan fanfictionille ja muille transformatiivisille fanien teoksille, jotka ovat Arkistossa OTW:n suojaamia ja voivat käyttää hyväksi OTW:n työtä näiden töiden laillisuuden ja sosiaalisen arvon julkituomisessa.
Meidän Arkistomme beta-versio julkistettiin lokakuussa 2008. Lisää tietoa projektista voi lukea Usein kysytyistä kysymyksistä. Suunnitelma alla (englanniksi).
OTW-Archive Roadmap
This roadmap is not meant to be set in stone -- it will evolve as we go. It's meant to lay out a general game plan for the development of the archive software, give all of us a sense what we're aiming for, and guide the process. Many things will change, especially once we have testers start banging on the process! Also, please be aware the version numbers are purely for our internal use, as checkpoints where we pause and make sure everything is working well before we move on. The first version released to the public will be version 1.0.
Feedback and suggestions are welcome via our contact form -- we will read and consider all comments, although we ask that you please do not expect individual responses, as we are busy working on the project! If you are interested in getting involved either with archive development or testing, please contact us with some information about your background.
We're also creating separate admin accounts. Admin accounts will have a separate login entirely, will be logged more intensively, and will not be personalized; meaning, admins will not be able to subscribe to authors or bookmark stories, and the admin accounts will all be named something generic like "Archive Admin". The idea is that admin accounts will only be used for admin functions, and admins will have their own normal user accounts for actually using the archive.
Version 0.1 also includes globalization features: the archive will be built using UTF-8 encoding and have features to allow interface translating through a web interface.
We will also be starting to build in archive configuration options here (for cases where we may want to make it easy to change the archive behavior, or others may want to use the archive software and configure it differently).
Readings represent the interaction of a user and a work: when you view a work (other than your own), a Reading is created behind the scenes. These track what you read and what version of a Work, so you can keep a history of the stories you read and be notified when an author updates a story in your history.
You will be able to subscribe to:
We're imagining the subscriptions as generating a page of all the new stuff you want to read now, and as such a major way that people interact with the archive. We'd like also to build a recommendation engine here that will help new users quickly find authors/reccers to subscribe to as they come into the archive, although this may get tabled to post-version-1.0.
Communities will likely be defined with a specific tag under the control of the community owner, who will also have control over a community front page of some kind. Stories posted with a community's tag will appear within that community. Subscriptions will be expanded so users can subscribe to a particular community. It will eventually be made possible to run a moderated community (ie, a moderator has to approve the addition of the community's tag to the story), although possibly deferred until after version 1.0.
We will also make it possible to run challenges through the archive (regular-challenge communities like sgaflashfic, or annual challenges like Yuletide or Big Bang, or one-shot challenges). Tools for running challenges (managing prompts and assignments, matching tools for exchange challenges, anonymous-posting-and-reveal, etc) will be built on top of the Community infrastructure, although these may be deferred until after version 1.0.
Crossposting control will already be built-in to subscriptions: you will only see a story appear once on your subscriptions list, even if it has been posted to five different communities you are subscribed to.
In other community-type features, we will allow users to cite other stories as their inspirations and for authors to link to stories inspired by their work. We are also tentatively planning to allow people to display number of recs and number of reads on their public and/or private homepages as well as a feature by which you can cite your betas and link to them, and readers can click on the link and find other stories the same person has betaed -- it's a good way to find a community of like-minded authors.
Users will need to be notified of connections other users make to them (eg, when they are cited as a beta, as an inspiration), and given the option (which they can refuse) of linking back.