Presentation during the 2016 American Library Association (ALA) Annual Conference in Orlando (Florida), given at the ALCTS Program "Linked Data - Globally Connecting Libraries, Archives, and Museums", Sponsor: ALCTS International Relations Committee, Co-Sponsor: Linked Library Data Interest Group
Presentation given at the Library of Congress BIBFRAME Update Forum at ALA Midwinter Meeting 2019, January 27, 2019
Agenda at
https://www.loc.gov/bibframe/news/bibframe-update-mw2019.html
d:swarm - A Library Data Management Platform Based on a Linked Open Data Appr...Jens Mittelbach
D:SWARM is a graphical web-based ETL modelling tool that serves to import data from heterogeneous sources with different formats, to map input to output schemata and design transformation workflows, to load transformed data into property graph database. It is developed in a collaborative project by SLUB Dresden (www.slub-dresden.de) and Avantgarde Labs GmbH (www.avantgarde-labs.de) features additional functionalities like exporting of data models as RDF and sharing mappings and transformation workflows.
Mark Zöpfgen: Software-Supported Bibliographic Recording and Linked Datambruemmer
Mark Zöpfgen (German National Library) presented their library activities in content extraction and semantic web. They maintain the National Bibliography, which contains all national print and electronic publications since 1913. They produce an authority file (called GMD “Gemeinsame Normdatei”) with metadata. Activities in content extraction and semantic web comprise several projects. In these they build an ontology for generating the data and which enables a multilingual access to subjects in order to make the German National Library internationally available. Manual effort is also invested in providing high quality translations of the subject headings of the bibliographical records into English and French. So far, an Open Linked Data Service for spreading the data is available and downloadable in RDF format under creative commons zero license. The main goals of the German National Library comprise the following topics:
-constant improvement of the poor formal state of the bibliographical highly reliable data.
-building an integrated portal with search engine and linked data.
-integration of German bibliographical data into The European Library and finding standards for the provision in the linked data format.
-increase precision of multi-language term mappings under the assumption that there is rarely 1-1 matching.
-the motivation of external parties to work with RDF data and improve search possibilities.
Slides by Brian Kelly, UKOLN related to a peer-reviewed paper on "A Contextual Framework For Standards" presented at the "Workshop on E-Government: Barriers and Opportunities" held in Edinburgh on 23 May 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/e-government-2006-05/
Presentation during the 2016 American Library Association (ALA) Annual Conference in Orlando (Florida), given at the ALCTS Program "Linked Data - Globally Connecting Libraries, Archives, and Museums", Sponsor: ALCTS International Relations Committee, Co-Sponsor: Linked Library Data Interest Group
Presentation given at the Library of Congress BIBFRAME Update Forum at ALA Midwinter Meeting 2019, January 27, 2019
Agenda at
https://www.loc.gov/bibframe/news/bibframe-update-mw2019.html
d:swarm - A Library Data Management Platform Based on a Linked Open Data Appr...Jens Mittelbach
D:SWARM is a graphical web-based ETL modelling tool that serves to import data from heterogeneous sources with different formats, to map input to output schemata and design transformation workflows, to load transformed data into property graph database. It is developed in a collaborative project by SLUB Dresden (www.slub-dresden.de) and Avantgarde Labs GmbH (www.avantgarde-labs.de) features additional functionalities like exporting of data models as RDF and sharing mappings and transformation workflows.
Mark Zöpfgen: Software-Supported Bibliographic Recording and Linked Datambruemmer
Mark Zöpfgen (German National Library) presented their library activities in content extraction and semantic web. They maintain the National Bibliography, which contains all national print and electronic publications since 1913. They produce an authority file (called GMD “Gemeinsame Normdatei”) with metadata. Activities in content extraction and semantic web comprise several projects. In these they build an ontology for generating the data and which enables a multilingual access to subjects in order to make the German National Library internationally available. Manual effort is also invested in providing high quality translations of the subject headings of the bibliographical records into English and French. So far, an Open Linked Data Service for spreading the data is available and downloadable in RDF format under creative commons zero license. The main goals of the German National Library comprise the following topics:
-constant improvement of the poor formal state of the bibliographical highly reliable data.
-building an integrated portal with search engine and linked data.
-integration of German bibliographical data into The European Library and finding standards for the provision in the linked data format.
-increase precision of multi-language term mappings under the assumption that there is rarely 1-1 matching.
-the motivation of external parties to work with RDF data and improve search possibilities.
Slides by Brian Kelly, UKOLN related to a peer-reviewed paper on "A Contextual Framework For Standards" presented at the "Workshop on E-Government: Barriers and Opportunities" held in Edinburgh on 23 May 2006.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/workshops/e-government-2006-05/
Delivered by Brian Kelly of UKOLN at the Annual Conference of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals in Scotland (CILIPS), which took place 1-3 June 2009.
In the days of AACR2 and MARC 21, the distinction between a rules standard and a format standard seemed to be straightforward: The rules standard provided instructions on which pieces of information are relevant, and how to build and provide them. The format standard then accommodated these pieces, creating structured elements in a defined technical framework so that information could be created, stored and communicated.
Nowadays, the line between rules standards and format standards seems to be blurred. Based on relatively new models, the standard "Resource Description and Access" not only provides instructions in a toolkit, but adds blocks for handling the information on its own, e.g. as "RDA in RDF" data. On the other hand, "BIBFRAME" was developed, one of the goals being to define a successor to the MARC 21 format. Based on a model with a slightly different approach, it aims to cover different rules standards, among which RDA is the most prominent one. Both RDA and BIBFRAME are based on Linked Data principles, but they have chosen different paths.
In my lightning talk I share some observations, from a German perspective, collected over some years of active participation in MARC 21 standardization and BIBFRAME experimentation, as a bystander of the FRBR and RDA development, and still as a newbie in Linked Data. There are more questions than answers.
How Far Have We Come? From eLib to NOF-digi and Beyondlisbk
Slides and audio recording of a rehearsal of a talk on "How Far Have We Come? From eLib to NOF-digi and Beyond" given by Brian Kelly, UKOLN.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/cultural-heritage/events/cilip-scotland-2009/
SKOS Introduction - Based on an Example from PracticeVera G. Meister
The Berlin Semantic Web MeetUp is an informal meeting of interested scientists, practitioners and other experts for the exchange of knowledge and experiences in the field.
Mendeley at ETH Zurich - Looking back and aheadETH-Bibliothek
Why Mendeley Institutional Edition at ETH Zurich?
Implementation of MIE at ETH Zurich
Looking back: experiences with MIE so far
Looking ahead: plans and wishes
>businessresearchmethods
schi18939_FM_i-xxxii.indd 1 2/15/18 2:08 PM
The McGraw-Hill/Irwin Series in Operations and Decision Sciences
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Benton
Purchasing and Supply Chain Management
Second Edition
Burt, Petcavage, and Pinkerton
Supply Management
Eighth Edition
Bowersox, Closs, Cooper, and Bowersox
Supply Chain Logistics Management
Fourth Edition
Johnson, Leenders, and Flynn
Purchasing and Supply Management
Fifteenth Edition
Simchi-Levi, Kaminsky, and Simchi-Levi
Designing and Managing the Supply Chain:
Concepts, Strategies, Case Studies
Third Edition
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Brown and Hyer
Managing Projects: A Team-Based Approach
First Edition
Larson and Gray
Project Management: The Managerial Process
Seventh Edition
SERVICE OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons
Service Management: Operations, Strategy,
Information Technology
Ninth Edition
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Hillier and Hillier
Introduction to Management Science:
A Modeling and Case Studies Approach
with Spreadsheets
Sixth Edition
Stevenson and Ozgur
Introduction to Management Science with
Spreadsheets
First Edition
MANUFACTURING CONTROL SYSTEMS
Jacobs, Berry, Whybark, and Vollmann
Manufacturing Planning & Control for Supply
Chain Management
Sixth Edition
BUSINESS RESEARCH METHODS
Schindler
Business Research Methods
Thirteenth Edition
BUSINESS FORECASTING
Keating, Wilson, and John Galt
Solution
s, Inc.
Business Forecasting and Predictive Analytics
with ForecastXTM
Seventh Edition
LINEAR STATISTICS AND REGRESSION
Kutner, Nachtsheim, and Neter
Applied Linear Regression Models
Fourth Edition
BUSINESS SYSTEMS DYNAMICS
Sterman
Business Dynamics: Systems Thinking and
Modeling for a Complex World
First Edition
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Cachon and Terwiesch
Operations Management
First Edition
Cachon and Terwiesch
Matching Supply with Demand: An Introduction
to Operations Management
Fourth Edition
Finch
Interactive Models for Operations and Supply
Chain Management
First Edition
Jacobs and Chase
Operations and Supply Chain Management:
The Core
Fourth Edition
Jacobs and Chase
Operations and Supply Chain Management
Fifteenth Edition
Jacobs and Whybark
Why ERP? A Primer on SAP Implementation
First Edition
Schroeder, Goldstein, and Rungtusanatham
Operations Management in the Supply Chain:
Decisions and Cases
Seventh Edition
Stevenson
Operations Management
Twelfth Edition
Swink, Melnyk, Cooper, and Hartley
Managing Operations across the Supply Chain
Third Edition
PRODUCT DESIGN
Ulrich and Eppinger
Product Design and Development
Sixth Edition
BUSINESS MATH
Slater and Wittry
Practical Business Math Procedures
Twelfth Edition
Slater and Wittry
Math for Business and Finance: An Algebraic
Approach
Second Edition
BUSINESS STATISTICS
Bowerman, O’Connell, Murphree, and Orris
Essentials of Business Statistics
Fifth Edition
Bowerman, O’Connell, and Murphree
Business Stati ...
The Masterclass Knowledge Management (KM) is a set of six presentations describing and explaining KM via definitions, concepts, instruments and many practical examples, insights, stories and exercises as well as links and references.
The material is the result of 25 years of research, consulting of challenging clients, discussions with appreciated peers and communities as well as ten years of lecturing on KM at various universities in Germany and Austria including discussions with many inspiring students.
Contents:
KM 1 – Knowledge and KM
KM 2 – KM Processes 1
KM 3 – Soc.-t. KM Systems 1 / Processes 2
KM 4 – Socio-technical KM-Systems 2
KM 5 – Plan & Control Knowledge & KM
KM 6 – KM and Idea / Innovation Mngt.
The Masterclass Knowledge Management (KM) is a set of six presentations describing and explaining KM via definitions, concepts, instruments and many practical examples, insights, stories and exercises as well as links and references.
The material is the result of 25 years of research, consulting of challenging clients, discussions with appreciated peers and communities as well as ten years of lecturing on KM at various universities in Germany and Austria including discussions with many inspiring students.
Contents:
KM 1 – Knowledge and KM
KM 2 – KM Processes 1
KM 3 – Soc.-t. KM Systems 1 / Processes 2
KM 4 – Socio-technical KM-Systems 2
KM 5 – Plan & Control Knowledge & KM
KM 6 – KM and Idea / Innovation Mngt.
Presented by Matthias Arnold at the Annual Conference of the Visual Resources Association, March 12-15, 2014 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Session #8: VRA Core 4 Unbound: Expanding Core capabilities through embedded metadata, APIs, and editors
ORGANIZER: Trish Rose-Sandler, Center for Biodiversity Informatics, Missouri Botanical Garden
MODERATOR: Greg Reser, University of California, San Diego
PRESENTERS:
Matthias Arnold, University of Heidelberg
Greg Reser, University of California, San Diego
Trish Rose-Sandler, Center for Biodiversity Informatics, Missouri Botanical Garden
Since the publication of the VRA Core 4.0 (Core 4) data standard in 2007 many institutions have developed tools that extend its capabilities either to support a local need or to enable the interaction of Core 4 data with data encoded in other standards. The proliferation of these tools within the last few years illustrate how the Core 4 has moved from a US-based standard developed for a specific audience to having a much more international uptake and even adoption within communities not originally envisioned e.g. biodiversity.
The speakers will talk about tools they have developed that help demonstrate how Core 4 can be incorporated within embedded metadata standards; how it can be used in conjunction with scientific data standards; and how a Core 4 editor can easily convert, store, and exchange data in XML.
This presentation was delivered by Carolyn Hansen of the University of Cincinnati during the NISO VIrtual Conference, BIBFRAME & Real World Applications of Linked Bibliographic Data, held on June 15, 2016
Angel Day 2013 - Lean Startup: How to get business value earlier with less riskspragmatic solutions gmbh
The myth goes that the more perseverance, brilliance, good timing and a good product, the higher the chance for success. I will show you why exactly the opposite is true: Survival and, even more so, success are highly correlated with the successful application of the "Build-Measure-Learn Feedback Loop". The fact that this lean framework can be learned and taught is the final kill of the myth. I will give examples of how you can deliver more business value earlier and with less risks by testing everything as soon as possible using a so-called Minimum Viable Product.
VRA Core 4 in Transcultural Studies - Adopting Core 4 XML in a DH Environment.Matthias Arnold
This presentation has two parts: first, I introduce the Heidelberg Research Architecture (HRA) at the Cluster of Excellence "Asia and Europe" at Heidelberg University. At the core of the HRA's development is the Tamboti metadata framework, a "suite of web applications that forms an integrated environment for interdisciplinary and internationally distributed studies in transcultural dynamics."
In the second part I present Ziziphus, the VRA Core editor which is currently being developed by the HRA. It uses VRA Core 4 XML as a base and provides a user-friendly interface where editors can add and edit image metadata without being exposed to the raw XML. To use VRA Core 4 for transcultural studies within Tamboti a number of adjustments were made and developed into a local extension. In four examples these extensions are discussed, before a screencast demonstrates the use of the editor.
Read the abstract of the session: http://vra32.sched.org/event/884f2b768c79cabed9236a10e64da10a
Linguistic Linked Open Data, Challenges, Approaches, Future WorkSebastian Hellmann
Hellmann keynote TKE (2016), Challenges, Approaches and Future Work for Linguistic Linked Open Data (LLOD)
While the Linguistic Linked Open Data (LLOD) Cloud (http://linguistic-lod.org/) has evolved beyond expectations - thanks to the effort of a vibrant community - overall progress has to be seen under a more scrutinizing light.
Initial challenges which have been formulated by Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Nordhoff and me as early as 2011[1][2] have been discussed extensively in the LDL, MLODE and NLP & DBpedia workshop series and in several W3C community groups. In particular, the LIDER FP7 project (http://www.lider-project.eu/) - originally conceived to tackle these challenges and build a Linguistic Linked Open Data Cloud - rather gave them more shape and uncovered that there is yet quite a long road ahead to solve problems such as proper metadata, contextualisation of knowledge, data quality, hosting, open licensing and provenance, timely updated network links, knowledge integration and interoperability on the largest possible scale - the Web.
The invited talk attempts to give a full account of these abovementioned challenges and presents and critically evaluates pertinent efforts and approaches including evolving standards such as the NLP Interchange Format (NIF)[3][4], DataID[5], SHACL[6], lemon[7] and the LIDER guidelines[8] as well as practical services such as LingHub[9], LODVader[10], RDFUnit[11] (just to mention a few).
As a glimmer of hope, the talk will conclude with the recent efforts of the DBpedia community to coordinate the creation of a public data infrastructure for a large, multilingual, semantic knowledge graph, which is, of course, not a panacean golden hammer, but a potential step in the right direction to bridge the gap between language and knowledge.
________________
[1] Towards a Linguistic Linked Open Data cloud : The Open Linguistics Working Group (http://www.atala.org/IMG/pdf/Chiarcos-TAL52-3.pdf ) Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Hellmann, and Sebastian Nordhoff. TAL 52(3):245 - 275 (2011)
[2] Linked Data in Linguistics. Representing Language Data and Metadata (http://www.springer.com/computer/ai/book/978-3-642-28248-5 ) Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Nordhoff, and Sebastian Hellmann (Eds.). Springer, Heidelberg, (2012)
[3] http://persistence.uni-leipzig.org/nlp2rdf/ontologies/nif-core
[4] https://www.w3.org/community/ld4lt/
[5] http://wiki.dbpedia.org/projects/dbpedia-dataid
[6] http://w3c.github.io/data-shapes/shacl/
[7] https://www.w3.org/2016/05/ontolex/
[8] http://www.lider-project.eu/guidelines
[9] http://linghub.lider-project.eu/
[10] http://lodvader.aksw.org/
[11] http://aksw.org/Projects/RDFUnit
State of of the art of Project Management in Europe: 2005
Reflexions and examples on Different Models and Cultural Influences
Joint presentation Alex Matthey & Thomas Walenta
at the PMI Moscow Conference 2005
Das Doppelhaus: Werkstattbericht aus der MARC/RDA Working Group
Vortrag beim 109. Deutschen Bibliothekartag 2021
Auf der Basis des IFLA Library Reference Model (LRM) wurden im Zuge des 3R-Projekts neue Entitätentypen und neue Elemente in das Regelwerk Resource Description and Access (RDA) eingebracht. Um sie nutzbar zu machen, gilt es, sie im Datenformat MARC 21 abzubilden, soweit es notwendig und zugleich technisch möglich ist. MARC 21 ist auch über 50 Jahre nach seiner Entstehung noch immer das international am weitesten verbreitete bibliografische Datenformat.
Das Network Development and MARC Standards Office (NDMSO) der Library of Congress hat im Dezember 2019 die "MARC/RDA Working Group" gebildet, zusammengesetzt aus internationalen Fachleuten für RDA und MARC 21. Für den deutschsprachigen Bereich ist Reinhold Heuvelmann benannt worden.
Die Gruppe hat in bisher vier halbjährlichen Zyklen Analysen erstellt zu den neuen Themenbereichen "Manifestation Statements", "Mode of Issuance", "Extension Plan", "Type of Binding" und "Data Provenance", die dann als Diskussionspapiere und Anträge für das MARC Advisory Committee vorbereitet worden sind. Bisher resultieren daraus die neuen Felder 334 "Mode of Issuance", 335 "Extension Plan" und 881 "Manifestation Statements". Auch an dem Thema der "Representative Expression" und ihrer Attribute wird weitergearbeitet. Mit dem vorläufigen Abschluss der Arbeiten ist für das Frühjahr 2022 zu rechnen.
Der Vortrag stellt den aktuellen Stand und den Fortgang der Arbeiten dar und versucht auch, die Spannungsfelder bei der Regelwerks- und Formatentwicklung zu beleuchten.
Open Access, Embargo, Lizenzangaben, Creative Commons, Rights Statements, Rechteinhaber – diese Begriffe bezeichnen ein aktuell intensiv diskutiertes Themenfeld. Kann ich eine Online-Publikation bekommen, sofort, kostenfrei und egal wo ich mich gerade befinde? Und wenn ja: Was kann und darf ich dann damit machen, und was eventuell nicht? Und was sollte ich sonst beachten?
Diese Angaben sind bisher in Metadatenformaten unterrepräsentiert. Teils liegen sie an unterschiedlichen Stellen und in unterschiedlicher Form vor, teils sind die Elemente nicht besetzt, teils fehlen die Aussagemöglichkeiten ganz. Hier gilt es Verbesserungen zu erreichen: Ziel ist es, konsistente und maschinell auswertbare Daten zu ermitteln, zu erstellen und transportieren zu können, auf deren Basis den Endnutzenden die Informationen zu Zugang und Nutzung und ihren Bedingungen angeboten werden.
Der Vortrag schildert das Vorgehen im Datenformat MARC 21: Von der Ermittlung des Bedarfs und dem Auftrag durch den Standardisierungsausschuss, über die Analysen und Diskussionen in der Themengruppe Lizenzangaben als Untergruppe der Fachgruppe Datenformate und in der DINI Gruppe Lizenzen, bis zur Zusammenarbeit mit OCLC an Diskussionspapieren und einem MARC-Antrag und der internationalen Standardisierung im MARC Advisory Committee, resultierend in der abschließenden Entscheidung. Ein Ausblick auf Empfehlungen und die Anwendung der Formatelemente, deren Einführung bevorsteht, rundet den Vortrag ab.
Delivered by Brian Kelly of UKOLN at the Annual Conference of the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals in Scotland (CILIPS), which took place 1-3 June 2009.
In the days of AACR2 and MARC 21, the distinction between a rules standard and a format standard seemed to be straightforward: The rules standard provided instructions on which pieces of information are relevant, and how to build and provide them. The format standard then accommodated these pieces, creating structured elements in a defined technical framework so that information could be created, stored and communicated.
Nowadays, the line between rules standards and format standards seems to be blurred. Based on relatively new models, the standard "Resource Description and Access" not only provides instructions in a toolkit, but adds blocks for handling the information on its own, e.g. as "RDA in RDF" data. On the other hand, "BIBFRAME" was developed, one of the goals being to define a successor to the MARC 21 format. Based on a model with a slightly different approach, it aims to cover different rules standards, among which RDA is the most prominent one. Both RDA and BIBFRAME are based on Linked Data principles, but they have chosen different paths.
In my lightning talk I share some observations, from a German perspective, collected over some years of active participation in MARC 21 standardization and BIBFRAME experimentation, as a bystander of the FRBR and RDA development, and still as a newbie in Linked Data. There are more questions than answers.
How Far Have We Come? From eLib to NOF-digi and Beyondlisbk
Slides and audio recording of a rehearsal of a talk on "How Far Have We Come? From eLib to NOF-digi and Beyond" given by Brian Kelly, UKOLN.
See http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/cultural-heritage/events/cilip-scotland-2009/
SKOS Introduction - Based on an Example from PracticeVera G. Meister
The Berlin Semantic Web MeetUp is an informal meeting of interested scientists, practitioners and other experts for the exchange of knowledge and experiences in the field.
Mendeley at ETH Zurich - Looking back and aheadETH-Bibliothek
Why Mendeley Institutional Edition at ETH Zurich?
Implementation of MIE at ETH Zurich
Looking back: experiences with MIE so far
Looking ahead: plans and wishes
>businessresearchmethods
schi18939_FM_i-xxxii.indd 1 2/15/18 2:08 PM
The McGraw-Hill/Irwin Series in Operations and Decision Sciences
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
Benton
Purchasing and Supply Chain Management
Second Edition
Burt, Petcavage, and Pinkerton
Supply Management
Eighth Edition
Bowersox, Closs, Cooper, and Bowersox
Supply Chain Logistics Management
Fourth Edition
Johnson, Leenders, and Flynn
Purchasing and Supply Management
Fifteenth Edition
Simchi-Levi, Kaminsky, and Simchi-Levi
Designing and Managing the Supply Chain:
Concepts, Strategies, Case Studies
Third Edition
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Brown and Hyer
Managing Projects: A Team-Based Approach
First Edition
Larson and Gray
Project Management: The Managerial Process
Seventh Edition
SERVICE OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Fitzsimmons and Fitzsimmons
Service Management: Operations, Strategy,
Information Technology
Ninth Edition
MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Hillier and Hillier
Introduction to Management Science:
A Modeling and Case Studies Approach
with Spreadsheets
Sixth Edition
Stevenson and Ozgur
Introduction to Management Science with
Spreadsheets
First Edition
MANUFACTURING CONTROL SYSTEMS
Jacobs, Berry, Whybark, and Vollmann
Manufacturing Planning & Control for Supply
Chain Management
Sixth Edition
BUSINESS RESEARCH METHODS
Schindler
Business Research Methods
Thirteenth Edition
BUSINESS FORECASTING
Keating, Wilson, and John Galt
Solution
s, Inc.
Business Forecasting and Predictive Analytics
with ForecastXTM
Seventh Edition
LINEAR STATISTICS AND REGRESSION
Kutner, Nachtsheim, and Neter
Applied Linear Regression Models
Fourth Edition
BUSINESS SYSTEMS DYNAMICS
Sterman
Business Dynamics: Systems Thinking and
Modeling for a Complex World
First Edition
OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT
Cachon and Terwiesch
Operations Management
First Edition
Cachon and Terwiesch
Matching Supply with Demand: An Introduction
to Operations Management
Fourth Edition
Finch
Interactive Models for Operations and Supply
Chain Management
First Edition
Jacobs and Chase
Operations and Supply Chain Management:
The Core
Fourth Edition
Jacobs and Chase
Operations and Supply Chain Management
Fifteenth Edition
Jacobs and Whybark
Why ERP? A Primer on SAP Implementation
First Edition
Schroeder, Goldstein, and Rungtusanatham
Operations Management in the Supply Chain:
Decisions and Cases
Seventh Edition
Stevenson
Operations Management
Twelfth Edition
Swink, Melnyk, Cooper, and Hartley
Managing Operations across the Supply Chain
Third Edition
PRODUCT DESIGN
Ulrich and Eppinger
Product Design and Development
Sixth Edition
BUSINESS MATH
Slater and Wittry
Practical Business Math Procedures
Twelfth Edition
Slater and Wittry
Math for Business and Finance: An Algebraic
Approach
Second Edition
BUSINESS STATISTICS
Bowerman, O’Connell, Murphree, and Orris
Essentials of Business Statistics
Fifth Edition
Bowerman, O’Connell, and Murphree
Business Stati ...
The Masterclass Knowledge Management (KM) is a set of six presentations describing and explaining KM via definitions, concepts, instruments and many practical examples, insights, stories and exercises as well as links and references.
The material is the result of 25 years of research, consulting of challenging clients, discussions with appreciated peers and communities as well as ten years of lecturing on KM at various universities in Germany and Austria including discussions with many inspiring students.
Contents:
KM 1 – Knowledge and KM
KM 2 – KM Processes 1
KM 3 – Soc.-t. KM Systems 1 / Processes 2
KM 4 – Socio-technical KM-Systems 2
KM 5 – Plan & Control Knowledge & KM
KM 6 – KM and Idea / Innovation Mngt.
The Masterclass Knowledge Management (KM) is a set of six presentations describing and explaining KM via definitions, concepts, instruments and many practical examples, insights, stories and exercises as well as links and references.
The material is the result of 25 years of research, consulting of challenging clients, discussions with appreciated peers and communities as well as ten years of lecturing on KM at various universities in Germany and Austria including discussions with many inspiring students.
Contents:
KM 1 – Knowledge and KM
KM 2 – KM Processes 1
KM 3 – Soc.-t. KM Systems 1 / Processes 2
KM 4 – Socio-technical KM-Systems 2
KM 5 – Plan & Control Knowledge & KM
KM 6 – KM and Idea / Innovation Mngt.
Presented by Matthias Arnold at the Annual Conference of the Visual Resources Association, March 12-15, 2014 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Session #8: VRA Core 4 Unbound: Expanding Core capabilities through embedded metadata, APIs, and editors
ORGANIZER: Trish Rose-Sandler, Center for Biodiversity Informatics, Missouri Botanical Garden
MODERATOR: Greg Reser, University of California, San Diego
PRESENTERS:
Matthias Arnold, University of Heidelberg
Greg Reser, University of California, San Diego
Trish Rose-Sandler, Center for Biodiversity Informatics, Missouri Botanical Garden
Since the publication of the VRA Core 4.0 (Core 4) data standard in 2007 many institutions have developed tools that extend its capabilities either to support a local need or to enable the interaction of Core 4 data with data encoded in other standards. The proliferation of these tools within the last few years illustrate how the Core 4 has moved from a US-based standard developed for a specific audience to having a much more international uptake and even adoption within communities not originally envisioned e.g. biodiversity.
The speakers will talk about tools they have developed that help demonstrate how Core 4 can be incorporated within embedded metadata standards; how it can be used in conjunction with scientific data standards; and how a Core 4 editor can easily convert, store, and exchange data in XML.
This presentation was delivered by Carolyn Hansen of the University of Cincinnati during the NISO VIrtual Conference, BIBFRAME & Real World Applications of Linked Bibliographic Data, held on June 15, 2016
Angel Day 2013 - Lean Startup: How to get business value earlier with less riskspragmatic solutions gmbh
The myth goes that the more perseverance, brilliance, good timing and a good product, the higher the chance for success. I will show you why exactly the opposite is true: Survival and, even more so, success are highly correlated with the successful application of the "Build-Measure-Learn Feedback Loop". The fact that this lean framework can be learned and taught is the final kill of the myth. I will give examples of how you can deliver more business value earlier and with less risks by testing everything as soon as possible using a so-called Minimum Viable Product.
VRA Core 4 in Transcultural Studies - Adopting Core 4 XML in a DH Environment.Matthias Arnold
This presentation has two parts: first, I introduce the Heidelberg Research Architecture (HRA) at the Cluster of Excellence "Asia and Europe" at Heidelberg University. At the core of the HRA's development is the Tamboti metadata framework, a "suite of web applications that forms an integrated environment for interdisciplinary and internationally distributed studies in transcultural dynamics."
In the second part I present Ziziphus, the VRA Core editor which is currently being developed by the HRA. It uses VRA Core 4 XML as a base and provides a user-friendly interface where editors can add and edit image metadata without being exposed to the raw XML. To use VRA Core 4 for transcultural studies within Tamboti a number of adjustments were made and developed into a local extension. In four examples these extensions are discussed, before a screencast demonstrates the use of the editor.
Read the abstract of the session: http://vra32.sched.org/event/884f2b768c79cabed9236a10e64da10a
Linguistic Linked Open Data, Challenges, Approaches, Future WorkSebastian Hellmann
Hellmann keynote TKE (2016), Challenges, Approaches and Future Work for Linguistic Linked Open Data (LLOD)
While the Linguistic Linked Open Data (LLOD) Cloud (http://linguistic-lod.org/) has evolved beyond expectations - thanks to the effort of a vibrant community - overall progress has to be seen under a more scrutinizing light.
Initial challenges which have been formulated by Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Nordhoff and me as early as 2011[1][2] have been discussed extensively in the LDL, MLODE and NLP & DBpedia workshop series and in several W3C community groups. In particular, the LIDER FP7 project (http://www.lider-project.eu/) - originally conceived to tackle these challenges and build a Linguistic Linked Open Data Cloud - rather gave them more shape and uncovered that there is yet quite a long road ahead to solve problems such as proper metadata, contextualisation of knowledge, data quality, hosting, open licensing and provenance, timely updated network links, knowledge integration and interoperability on the largest possible scale - the Web.
The invited talk attempts to give a full account of these abovementioned challenges and presents and critically evaluates pertinent efforts and approaches including evolving standards such as the NLP Interchange Format (NIF)[3][4], DataID[5], SHACL[6], lemon[7] and the LIDER guidelines[8] as well as practical services such as LingHub[9], LODVader[10], RDFUnit[11] (just to mention a few).
As a glimmer of hope, the talk will conclude with the recent efforts of the DBpedia community to coordinate the creation of a public data infrastructure for a large, multilingual, semantic knowledge graph, which is, of course, not a panacean golden hammer, but a potential step in the right direction to bridge the gap between language and knowledge.
________________
[1] Towards a Linguistic Linked Open Data cloud : The Open Linguistics Working Group (http://www.atala.org/IMG/pdf/Chiarcos-TAL52-3.pdf ) Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Hellmann, and Sebastian Nordhoff. TAL 52(3):245 - 275 (2011)
[2] Linked Data in Linguistics. Representing Language Data and Metadata (http://www.springer.com/computer/ai/book/978-3-642-28248-5 ) Christian Chiarcos, Sebastian Nordhoff, and Sebastian Hellmann (Eds.). Springer, Heidelberg, (2012)
[3] http://persistence.uni-leipzig.org/nlp2rdf/ontologies/nif-core
[4] https://www.w3.org/community/ld4lt/
[5] http://wiki.dbpedia.org/projects/dbpedia-dataid
[6] http://w3c.github.io/data-shapes/shacl/
[7] https://www.w3.org/2016/05/ontolex/
[8] http://www.lider-project.eu/guidelines
[9] http://linghub.lider-project.eu/
[10] http://lodvader.aksw.org/
[11] http://aksw.org/Projects/RDFUnit
State of of the art of Project Management in Europe: 2005
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at the PMI Moscow Conference 2005
Similar to Experience with the Bibframe model (20)
Das Doppelhaus: Werkstattbericht aus der MARC/RDA Working Group
Vortrag beim 109. Deutschen Bibliothekartag 2021
Auf der Basis des IFLA Library Reference Model (LRM) wurden im Zuge des 3R-Projekts neue Entitätentypen und neue Elemente in das Regelwerk Resource Description and Access (RDA) eingebracht. Um sie nutzbar zu machen, gilt es, sie im Datenformat MARC 21 abzubilden, soweit es notwendig und zugleich technisch möglich ist. MARC 21 ist auch über 50 Jahre nach seiner Entstehung noch immer das international am weitesten verbreitete bibliografische Datenformat.
Das Network Development and MARC Standards Office (NDMSO) der Library of Congress hat im Dezember 2019 die "MARC/RDA Working Group" gebildet, zusammengesetzt aus internationalen Fachleuten für RDA und MARC 21. Für den deutschsprachigen Bereich ist Reinhold Heuvelmann benannt worden.
Die Gruppe hat in bisher vier halbjährlichen Zyklen Analysen erstellt zu den neuen Themenbereichen "Manifestation Statements", "Mode of Issuance", "Extension Plan", "Type of Binding" und "Data Provenance", die dann als Diskussionspapiere und Anträge für das MARC Advisory Committee vorbereitet worden sind. Bisher resultieren daraus die neuen Felder 334 "Mode of Issuance", 335 "Extension Plan" und 881 "Manifestation Statements". Auch an dem Thema der "Representative Expression" und ihrer Attribute wird weitergearbeitet. Mit dem vorläufigen Abschluss der Arbeiten ist für das Frühjahr 2022 zu rechnen.
Der Vortrag stellt den aktuellen Stand und den Fortgang der Arbeiten dar und versucht auch, die Spannungsfelder bei der Regelwerks- und Formatentwicklung zu beleuchten.
Open Access, Embargo, Lizenzangaben, Creative Commons, Rights Statements, Rechteinhaber – diese Begriffe bezeichnen ein aktuell intensiv diskutiertes Themenfeld. Kann ich eine Online-Publikation bekommen, sofort, kostenfrei und egal wo ich mich gerade befinde? Und wenn ja: Was kann und darf ich dann damit machen, und was eventuell nicht? Und was sollte ich sonst beachten?
Diese Angaben sind bisher in Metadatenformaten unterrepräsentiert. Teils liegen sie an unterschiedlichen Stellen und in unterschiedlicher Form vor, teils sind die Elemente nicht besetzt, teils fehlen die Aussagemöglichkeiten ganz. Hier gilt es Verbesserungen zu erreichen: Ziel ist es, konsistente und maschinell auswertbare Daten zu ermitteln, zu erstellen und transportieren zu können, auf deren Basis den Endnutzenden die Informationen zu Zugang und Nutzung und ihren Bedingungen angeboten werden.
Der Vortrag schildert das Vorgehen im Datenformat MARC 21: Von der Ermittlung des Bedarfs und dem Auftrag durch den Standardisierungsausschuss, über die Analysen und Diskussionen in der Themengruppe Lizenzangaben als Untergruppe der Fachgruppe Datenformate und in der DINI Gruppe Lizenzen, bis zur Zusammenarbeit mit OCLC an Diskussionspapieren und einem MARC-Antrag und der internationalen Standardisierung im MARC Advisory Committee, resultierend in der abschließenden Entscheidung. Ein Ausblick auf Empfehlungen und die Anwendung der Formatelemente, deren Einführung bevorsteht, rundet den Vortrag ab.
From enthusiasm to hesitation,and beyond: some German remarks on BIBFRAMEReinhold Heuvelmann
Presentation given during the European BIBFRAME Workshop, September 26 and 27, 2017at the German National Library in Frankfurt
See more information at
https://wiki.dnb.de/display/EBW
Presentation given at the first meeting of the "LIBER MARC Harmonization Task Force" on January 14, 2002 in the German National Library in Frankfurt am Main
Entitäten, Relationen und mehr - Erweiterungen in MARC 21 Authority durch di...Reinhold Heuvelmann
Präsentation gehalten von Daniela Trunk (Deutsche Nationalbibliothek) beim Normdatenanwendertreffen im Rahmen des 6. Bibliothekskongresses Leipzig 2016
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Vortrag im Rahmen des Berliner Bibliothekswissenschaftlichen Kolloquiums, Institut für Bibliotheks- und Informationswissenschaft, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, am 2. Februar 2016
Die Bibliographic Framework Initiative "BIBFRAME" ist bereits einige Jahre "alt". Nach Planungen im Jahr 2011, nach Vertragsabschluss zwischen der LoC und der Firma Zepheira sowie Veröffentlichung des ersten Modellpapiers "Bibliographic Framework as a Web of Data" in 2012 folgten ein arbeitsintensives Jahr 2013, das unter Beteiligung der DNB von den Aktivitäten der Early Experimenters Group geprägt war, ein konsolidierendes Jahr 2014, in dem das bestehende Vokabular auf Praxistauglichkeit hin geprüft wurde, und ein Jahr 2015, in dem BIBFRAME mit unterschiedlichen Ansätzen (LC Pilot, Libhub.org, LD4L/LD4P) weiter vorangetrieben wurde.
In meinem Vortrag gehe ich der Frage nach, welchen Stellenwert die BIBFRAME-Initiative im Umfeld der Linked Library Data einnimmt. Wie verhalten sich BIBFRAME und andere existierende und neu entstehende Vokabularien zueinander? Sind RDA und BIBFRAME als Seiten derselben Medaille zu sehen? Welche Bezüge gibt es zu schema.org und den bibliothekarischen Erweiterungen dieses Vokabulars? Welche Rolle spielen in Zukunft noch die klassischen Datenformate, wie MARC 21 und seine Derivate? Was macht den Framework-Charakter der Initiative aus? Und: Welchen Beitrag kann die deutschsprachige Community bei der Diskussion und Entwicklung dieser Fragen weiterhin leisten?
https://www.ibi.hu-berlin.de/de/bbk
https://www.ibi.hu-berlin.de/de/bbk/abstracts/ws1516/heuvelmann
Die Bibliographic Framework Initiative "BIBFRAME" blickt jetzt auf drei Jahre zurück. Nach dem Abschluss des Vertrags zwischen der Library of Congress und der Firma Zepheira im Mai 2012 und nach der Veröffentlichung des ersten maßgeblichen Modellpapiers "Bibliographic Framework as a Web of Data: Linked Data Model and Supporting Services" im November 2012 folgten ein arbeitsintensives Jahr 2013, das unter Beteiligung der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek von den Aktivitäten der Early Experimenters / Early Implementers Group geprägt war, und ein konsolidierendes Jahr 2014, in dem das bestehende Vokabular auf Praxistauglichkeit hin geprüft wurde und ergänzende Initiativen, wie der "BIBFRAME Editor" und libhub.org, aufgesetzt wurden. Nun ist es Zeit zu fragen, was erreicht wurde und wie es weiter geht. In dem Vortrag soll beleuchtet werden, welchen Stellenwert die BIBFRAME-Initiative im Umfeld der Linked Library Data einnimmt, bisher, und besonders in den kommenden Jahren. Dabei soll die Frage untersucht werden, wie wichtig die Offenheit ist, die durch den Framework-Aspekt betont wird, im Gegensatz zu dem eher starren Standard bisheriger Prägung. Wie verhalten sich BIBFRAME und andere existierende und neu entstehende Vokabularien zueinander? Sind RDA und BIBFRAME als die beiden Seiten derselben Medaille zu sehen? Was hat es mit schema.org und den bibliothekarischen Erweiterungen dieses Vokabulars auf sich? Welche Rolle spielen in Zukunft noch die klassischen Datenformate, wie MARC 21 und seine Derivate? Und ganz wichtig: Welchen Beitrag kann die deutschsprachige Community bei der Diskussion und Entwicklung dieser Fragen weiterhin leisten?
Seit drei Jahren zieht die Bibliographic Framework Initiative "BIBFRAME" Aufmerksamkeit und Hoffnungen auf sich. Wie hat sich das Rahmenkonzept für künftige bibliografische Metadatenformate bisher entwickelt? Welche Aktivitäten gibt es bei den einstigen Early Experimenters, und darüber hinaus? Welche Ausprägungen gibt es? Wie gut passen RDA-Daten aus dem deutschsprachigen Raum zu BIBFRAME? Und wie verhalten sich BIBFRAME und andere existierende und neu entstehende Vokabularien zueinander?
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The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
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1. Reinhold Heuvelmann
Experience with the Bibframe model
Library of Congress
New Bibliographic Framework Initiative
Update Forum
January 27, 2013
1
2. Looking back …
2 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
3. … and moving on
3 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
4. „Learn what you can“
4 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
5. MARC design features …
… and their equivalents ?
– communications format
– MARC record
– record control number 001
and other identifiers
– local elements
fields XX9 / X9X / 9XX
5 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
6. Examples
– language _in_dependent solutions
– multipart monographs
– omitting ISBD punctuation
– initial articles
6 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
7. Experiences October - December 2012
– model defined on a high level
– tight schedules
– intentionally _un_coordinated
– experiments
– DNB priorities & resources
7 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
8. GND authority data in Bibframe
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<rdf:RDF xmlns:bf="http://bibfra.me"
xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#"
xmlns:marc="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim">
<bf:Person rdf:about="http://d-nb.info/gnd/118634313">
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, Ludwig</bf:label>
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann</bf:label>
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, Ludvig</bf:label>
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, Ludovicus</bf:label>
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, L.</bf:label>
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, ...</bf:label>
[...]
<bf:label>Wittgenstein, Ludwig J.</bf:label>
<bf:titles>Prof.</bf:titles>
</bf:Person>
</rdf:RDF>
8 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
9. Internal and external formats at DNB
MAB
Pica MARC
Bibframe
9 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
10. Next steps
– learn more, follow discussions
– inform the community in German speaking countries,
channel back the response
– continue collaboration in EE Group
– mapping Pica => Bibframe
– implement conversion
– collect requirements for „sustainibility“
10 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
11. Standardized
Cultural
Heritage
Information
Flow
Framework
=> SCHIFF
11 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013
12. Thank you !
Questions ?
r.heuvelmann@dnb.de
12 Reinhold Heuvelmann | Experience with Bibframe model | LC Bibframe Update Forum | January 27, 2013