Cataloguing and Indexing Group Scotland - 'Linked Data and the Semantic Web - what have libraries got to do with it?'
National Library of Scotland, June 17, 2011
http://www.slainte.org.uk/events/EvntShow.cfm?uEventID=2671
The document provides links to download audio files about the folklore and traditions of the state of Chiapas, Mexico. The audio files cover topics like the path to San Cristobal and Bolonchon, the Zoque Coiteco carnival traditions, the Carnavalero festival, the Cerro de San Bartolo hill, and many other folkloric dances, songs, stories and traditions specific to the different regions and peoples of Chiapas.
The Sex Museum in Amsterdam is located near the Central Station and combines artifacts with attraction elements across multiple rooms. Visitors are allowed to photograph throughout and will hear sounds from hidden speakers, like a woman's screams of joy, that accompany the experience. Over 20 years the museum has amassed a large collection of interesting art, objects, and photographs related to sexuality while avoiding an explicit pornographic focus.
The document discusses linking library catalog data to linked open data using RDA, FRBR and URIs. It provides an example of linking a library catalog record for a play to external data about productions and performances of that play. Challenges include lack of common identifiers, implicit vs explicit links, and issues with rights and multimedia objects. Linked data could help enrich catalog records by adding external relationships but requires unique identifiers and a shift from text strings to URIs for entities and relationships.
Welter, Debole - European Film Gateway metadata schema @EUscreen MykonosEUscreen
EUScreen is an EU-funded project to create a digital showcase of film collections from European film archives and cinemateques. It involves 21 partners from 15 countries who will provide over 700,000 film-related items. The project aims to provide centralized access to growing digital repositories, develop common standards, and address intellectual property issues. A public launch of the EUScreen portal is scheduled for October 2010.
The document introduces the concept of the Web of Data, which builds upon linked data principles to publish structured data on the web using URIs, HTTP, and RDF. It describes how linked RDF data allows machines to understand web resources in a way that overcomes the shortcomings of untyped links by defining standardized semantics. Examples are given showing how RDF can represent relationships between resources and expose additional useful information by following the links between interconnected URIs.
The document provides links to download audio files about the folklore and traditions of the state of Chiapas, Mexico. The audio files cover topics like the path to San Cristobal and Bolonchon, the Zoque Coiteco carnival traditions, the Carnavalero festival, the Cerro de San Bartolo hill, and many other folkloric dances, songs, stories and traditions specific to the different regions and peoples of Chiapas.
The Sex Museum in Amsterdam is located near the Central Station and combines artifacts with attraction elements across multiple rooms. Visitors are allowed to photograph throughout and will hear sounds from hidden speakers, like a woman's screams of joy, that accompany the experience. Over 20 years the museum has amassed a large collection of interesting art, objects, and photographs related to sexuality while avoiding an explicit pornographic focus.
The document discusses linking library catalog data to linked open data using RDA, FRBR and URIs. It provides an example of linking a library catalog record for a play to external data about productions and performances of that play. Challenges include lack of common identifiers, implicit vs explicit links, and issues with rights and multimedia objects. Linked data could help enrich catalog records by adding external relationships but requires unique identifiers and a shift from text strings to URIs for entities and relationships.
Welter, Debole - European Film Gateway metadata schema @EUscreen MykonosEUscreen
EUScreen is an EU-funded project to create a digital showcase of film collections from European film archives and cinemateques. It involves 21 partners from 15 countries who will provide over 700,000 film-related items. The project aims to provide centralized access to growing digital repositories, develop common standards, and address intellectual property issues. A public launch of the EUScreen portal is scheduled for October 2010.
The document introduces the concept of the Web of Data, which builds upon linked data principles to publish structured data on the web using URIs, HTTP, and RDF. It describes how linked RDF data allows machines to understand web resources in a way that overcomes the shortcomings of untyped links by defining standardized semantics. Examples are given showing how RDF can represent relationships between resources and expose additional useful information by following the links between interconnected URIs.
Forms part of a training course in ontology given in Buffalo in 2009. For details and accompanying video see http://ontology.buffalo.edu/smith/IntroOntology_Course.html
Linked Open Europeana: Semantics for the CitizenStefan Gradmann
The document discusses Linked Open Data and how it relates to Europeana and the Semantic Web. It describes how the Europeana Data Model (EDM) aims to make Europeana's data part of Linked Open Data by preserving original metadata while allowing for interoperability. EDM uses standards like SKOS, DCMI, and OAI ORE. The document argues that fully implementing EDM and making public data available as Linked Open Data could enable new uses of the data for citizens, including tourists planning cultural activities, teachers finding educational resources, and politicians analyzing cultural funding and contributions.
Publishing and interlinking music-related data on the WebYves Raimond
This document discusses publishing and interlinking music-related data on the web as linked data using semantic web standards like RDF, URIs, and ontologies. It describes existing music ontologies that can be used to represent information about musical works, performances, recordings and other related concepts. It also outlines how the BBC is publishing its music and other media-related data as linked open data and using ontologies to represent relationships between resources.
The document introduces the concepts of the semantic web and linked data by providing a simplified example of integrating bookstore data from two different sources. It shows how the data can be exported as RDF relations and merged by identifying common identifiers. Additional information is added to relate entities, allowing new queries across the integrated data. The semantic web provides technologies like RDF, SPARQL, and ontologies to systematically combine data from diverse sources on the web.
Europeana is a digital platform that aggregates over 30 million cultural heritage objects from various European institutions. It aims to make this content openly accessible online through its website, apps, and APIs. The Europeana Data Model was created to better structure metadata and link objects to related entities and multilingual descriptions. Europeana seeks to facilitate reuse of this content through its linked open data approach and by distinguishing between rights for metadata and digital objects. It also works on innovations like semantic search and annotation to help users discover and interact with the cultural heritage materials.
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11854758.v1
FRBR as a datamodel for bibliographic metadata focuses too much on traditional library content/publications. The model can be improved for linked data environments by making it a flexible networked model
Information Extraction and Linked Data CloudDhaval Thakker
The document discusses Press Association's semantic technology project which aims to generate a knowledge base using information extraction and the Linked Data Cloud. It outlines Press Association's operations and workflow, and how semantic technologies can be used to develop taxonomies, annotate images, and extract entities from captions into an ontology-based knowledge base. The knowledge base can then be populated and interlinked with external datasets from the Linked Data Cloud like DBpedia to provide a comprehensive, semantically-structured source of information.
D. Bretherton, D. A. Smith, J. Lambert, mc schraefel. MusicNet: Aligning Musi...MusicNet
David Bretherton, Daniel Alexander Smith, Joe Lambert and mc schraefel (Music, and Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton).
Music Linked Data Workshop, 12 May 2011, JISC, London.
The document discusses the Semantic Web and Linked Data. It provides an overview of RDF syntaxes, storage and querying technologies for the Semantic Web. It also discusses issues around scalability and reasoning over large amounts of semantic data. Examples are provided to illustrate SPARQL querying of RDF data, including graph patterns, conjunctions, optional patterns and value testing.
D2.5 Object model and metadata: Open issuesEuropeana
This document summarizes open issues regarding the object model and metadata for Europeana. It discusses defining object types, relations between objects, and improving object descriptions. It also addresses the types of abstractions that will be received and needed from content providers, and how to represent access and license information. Real-world examples from the Europeana prototype illustrate these issues.
Controlled Vocabularies and Text Mining - Use Cases at the Goettingen State a...Ralf Stockmann
The document discusses several use cases for text mining and controlled vocabularies at the Goettingen State and University Library. It describes a project called eAqua that compares semantic graphs between journal article headings and full texts. It also discusses a project called Europeana 4D that visualizes data from multiple sources on an interactive timeline and map to show connections and relationships. Guidelines are provided for how to build datasets in KML format and contribute them to the Europeana 4D prototype visualization tool.
The document discusses how linking open data and semantics can benefit digital humanities research using Europeana. It proposes fully implementing the Europeana Data Model to represent cultural heritage objects as linked open data. This would connect objects across domains and with external datasets like DBpedia. Combining this enriched semantic data with tools like SwickyNotes could facilitate new forms of digital scholarship through semantic exploration, context discovery, and knowledge generation.
The document provides an introduction to Dublin Core metadata, including its history and development. It describes Dublin Core elements, refinements, vocabularies, and provides examples of Dublin Core records at both the collection and item levels, including records for manuscripts, books, and other resources.
The document provides an introduction to the Archives Hub, XML, and EAD (Encoded Archival Description). It discusses how the Archives Hub uses XML and EAD to provide searchable descriptions of archival collections from over 180 repositories. It also summarizes key points about XML and EAD, including that EAD is the standard for encoding archival finding aids in XML and allows for sharing of data between systems.
This document discusses plans to link together data from the Theater Institute of the Netherlands (TIN) and the University of Amsterdam Library (UBA) using linked data principles. It proposes assigning URIs to entities in TIN's collection of plays, productions, and performances and representing the data in JSON. JavaScript would then be used to retrieve and display this information within UBA's online catalog. The goals are to prove the concept of linked data, convince these cultural heritage institutions to adopt it, and link their data by publishing it on the web in RDF. Challenges that could be addressed in the future include developing appropriate vocabularies, adding more URIs and relationships, and linking UBA's bibliographic metadata to TIN's
Exposing Bibliographic Information as Linked Open Data using Standards-based ...Nikolaos Konstantinou
The Linked Open Data (LOD) movement is constantly gaining worldwide acceptance. In this paper we describe how LOD is generated in the case of digital repositories that contain bibliographic information, adopting international standards. The available options and respective choices are presented and justified while we also provide a technical description, the methodology we followed, the possibilities and difficulties in the way, and the respective benefits and drawbacks. Detailed examples are provided regarding the implementation and query capabilities, and the paper concludes after a discussion over the results and the challenges associated with our approach, and our most important observations and future plans.
EJME: Enhanced Journals Made Easy (2011-11-14, KX Bonn)Driek Heesakkers
The document discusses the Enhanced Journals Made Easy (EJME) plugin for Open Journal Systems (OJS). The plugin allows authors to submit supplementary data files with journal articles. The data is integrated into the editorial workflow and publishing process. When published, the article is accompanied by a resource map and identifiers linking the article to any supplementary data files. The goal of the project is to make it easy for small academic presses to publish enhanced scholarly articles.
The document provides facts and figures about the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, including:
- It lists the various library locations and subject areas covered
- It notes the libraries have over 1.5 million volumes, 50,000 rare books, and 10,000 manuscripts
- 104 staff members work across the Smithsonian libraries
This document provides facts and figures about the Smithsonian Institution Libraries. It notes that the Smithsonian has over 1.5 million volumes, 50,000 rare books, and 10,000 manuscripts across 18 libraries located in Washington D.C., Maryland, New York City, and Panama. The libraries serve curators, researchers, post-docs, museum administrators, and the public. The document also discusses the integrated library system and traditional cataloging practices used by the Smithsonian libraries.
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11791443.v1
Presentation at IGeLU 2014 Oxford. Shift view on relevance in discovery tools from system to user context.
The concept of relevance in retrieving information resources in discovery tools like Primo needs to be redefined. It should take into account the wider context of queries and retrieved items outside the central and local indexes. Content and relevance are inextricably interlinked. Relevance is only calculated for the isolated items in the indexed content. Many indexed items may have relevant connections to each other in the real world, but these are not visible within the system in any way. Starting point should be the customer’s full connected workflow instead of just the library’s collections. Linked Open Data appears to be a relevant approach. This presentation will give some real life use cases and try to give some tentative solutions.
Forms part of a training course in ontology given in Buffalo in 2009. For details and accompanying video see http://ontology.buffalo.edu/smith/IntroOntology_Course.html
Linked Open Europeana: Semantics for the CitizenStefan Gradmann
The document discusses Linked Open Data and how it relates to Europeana and the Semantic Web. It describes how the Europeana Data Model (EDM) aims to make Europeana's data part of Linked Open Data by preserving original metadata while allowing for interoperability. EDM uses standards like SKOS, DCMI, and OAI ORE. The document argues that fully implementing EDM and making public data available as Linked Open Data could enable new uses of the data for citizens, including tourists planning cultural activities, teachers finding educational resources, and politicians analyzing cultural funding and contributions.
Publishing and interlinking music-related data on the WebYves Raimond
This document discusses publishing and interlinking music-related data on the web as linked data using semantic web standards like RDF, URIs, and ontologies. It describes existing music ontologies that can be used to represent information about musical works, performances, recordings and other related concepts. It also outlines how the BBC is publishing its music and other media-related data as linked open data and using ontologies to represent relationships between resources.
The document introduces the concepts of the semantic web and linked data by providing a simplified example of integrating bookstore data from two different sources. It shows how the data can be exported as RDF relations and merged by identifying common identifiers. Additional information is added to relate entities, allowing new queries across the integrated data. The semantic web provides technologies like RDF, SPARQL, and ontologies to systematically combine data from diverse sources on the web.
Europeana is a digital platform that aggregates over 30 million cultural heritage objects from various European institutions. It aims to make this content openly accessible online through its website, apps, and APIs. The Europeana Data Model was created to better structure metadata and link objects to related entities and multilingual descriptions. Europeana seeks to facilitate reuse of this content through its linked open data approach and by distinguishing between rights for metadata and digital objects. It also works on innovations like semantic search and annotation to help users discover and interact with the cultural heritage materials.
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11854758.v1
FRBR as a datamodel for bibliographic metadata focuses too much on traditional library content/publications. The model can be improved for linked data environments by making it a flexible networked model
Information Extraction and Linked Data CloudDhaval Thakker
The document discusses Press Association's semantic technology project which aims to generate a knowledge base using information extraction and the Linked Data Cloud. It outlines Press Association's operations and workflow, and how semantic technologies can be used to develop taxonomies, annotate images, and extract entities from captions into an ontology-based knowledge base. The knowledge base can then be populated and interlinked with external datasets from the Linked Data Cloud like DBpedia to provide a comprehensive, semantically-structured source of information.
D. Bretherton, D. A. Smith, J. Lambert, mc schraefel. MusicNet: Aligning Musi...MusicNet
David Bretherton, Daniel Alexander Smith, Joe Lambert and mc schraefel (Music, and Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton).
Music Linked Data Workshop, 12 May 2011, JISC, London.
The document discusses the Semantic Web and Linked Data. It provides an overview of RDF syntaxes, storage and querying technologies for the Semantic Web. It also discusses issues around scalability and reasoning over large amounts of semantic data. Examples are provided to illustrate SPARQL querying of RDF data, including graph patterns, conjunctions, optional patterns and value testing.
D2.5 Object model and metadata: Open issuesEuropeana
This document summarizes open issues regarding the object model and metadata for Europeana. It discusses defining object types, relations between objects, and improving object descriptions. It also addresses the types of abstractions that will be received and needed from content providers, and how to represent access and license information. Real-world examples from the Europeana prototype illustrate these issues.
Controlled Vocabularies and Text Mining - Use Cases at the Goettingen State a...Ralf Stockmann
The document discusses several use cases for text mining and controlled vocabularies at the Goettingen State and University Library. It describes a project called eAqua that compares semantic graphs between journal article headings and full texts. It also discusses a project called Europeana 4D that visualizes data from multiple sources on an interactive timeline and map to show connections and relationships. Guidelines are provided for how to build datasets in KML format and contribute them to the Europeana 4D prototype visualization tool.
The document discusses how linking open data and semantics can benefit digital humanities research using Europeana. It proposes fully implementing the Europeana Data Model to represent cultural heritage objects as linked open data. This would connect objects across domains and with external datasets like DBpedia. Combining this enriched semantic data with tools like SwickyNotes could facilitate new forms of digital scholarship through semantic exploration, context discovery, and knowledge generation.
The document provides an introduction to Dublin Core metadata, including its history and development. It describes Dublin Core elements, refinements, vocabularies, and provides examples of Dublin Core records at both the collection and item levels, including records for manuscripts, books, and other resources.
The document provides an introduction to the Archives Hub, XML, and EAD (Encoded Archival Description). It discusses how the Archives Hub uses XML and EAD to provide searchable descriptions of archival collections from over 180 repositories. It also summarizes key points about XML and EAD, including that EAD is the standard for encoding archival finding aids in XML and allows for sharing of data between systems.
This document discusses plans to link together data from the Theater Institute of the Netherlands (TIN) and the University of Amsterdam Library (UBA) using linked data principles. It proposes assigning URIs to entities in TIN's collection of plays, productions, and performances and representing the data in JSON. JavaScript would then be used to retrieve and display this information within UBA's online catalog. The goals are to prove the concept of linked data, convince these cultural heritage institutions to adopt it, and link their data by publishing it on the web in RDF. Challenges that could be addressed in the future include developing appropriate vocabularies, adding more URIs and relationships, and linking UBA's bibliographic metadata to TIN's
Exposing Bibliographic Information as Linked Open Data using Standards-based ...Nikolaos Konstantinou
The Linked Open Data (LOD) movement is constantly gaining worldwide acceptance. In this paper we describe how LOD is generated in the case of digital repositories that contain bibliographic information, adopting international standards. The available options and respective choices are presented and justified while we also provide a technical description, the methodology we followed, the possibilities and difficulties in the way, and the respective benefits and drawbacks. Detailed examples are provided regarding the implementation and query capabilities, and the paper concludes after a discussion over the results and the challenges associated with our approach, and our most important observations and future plans.
EJME: Enhanced Journals Made Easy (2011-11-14, KX Bonn)Driek Heesakkers
The document discusses the Enhanced Journals Made Easy (EJME) plugin for Open Journal Systems (OJS). The plugin allows authors to submit supplementary data files with journal articles. The data is integrated into the editorial workflow and publishing process. When published, the article is accompanied by a resource map and identifiers linking the article to any supplementary data files. The goal of the project is to make it easy for small academic presses to publish enhanced scholarly articles.
The document provides facts and figures about the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, including:
- It lists the various library locations and subject areas covered
- It notes the libraries have over 1.5 million volumes, 50,000 rare books, and 10,000 manuscripts
- 104 staff members work across the Smithsonian libraries
This document provides facts and figures about the Smithsonian Institution Libraries. It notes that the Smithsonian has over 1.5 million volumes, 50,000 rare books, and 10,000 manuscripts across 18 libraries located in Washington D.C., Maryland, New York City, and Panama. The libraries serve curators, researchers, post-docs, museum administrators, and the public. The document also discusses the integrated library system and traditional cataloging practices used by the Smithsonian libraries.
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11791443.v1
Presentation at IGeLU 2014 Oxford. Shift view on relevance in discovery tools from system to user context.
The concept of relevance in retrieving information resources in discovery tools like Primo needs to be redefined. It should take into account the wider context of queries and retrieved items outside the central and local indexes. Content and relevance are inextricably interlinked. Relevance is only calculated for the isolated items in the indexed content. Many indexed items may have relevant connections to each other in the real world, but these are not visible within the system in any way. Starting point should be the customer’s full connected workflow instead of just the library’s collections. Linked Open Data appears to be a relevant approach. This presentation will give some real life use cases and try to give some tentative solutions.
Facing the Music: Are Information Professionals and Researchers Dancing to Di...Lukas Koster
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11791518.v1
Presentation by Jane Stevenson and Lukas Koster at ELAG 2013 in Ghent, Belgium, May 30, 2013. The slides without the performance don’t make much sense. We advise you to watch the video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ovmmPNcFteA
Primo at the University of Amsterdam - Technology vs. Real LifeLukas Koster
This document discusses Primo, a discovery tool used at the University of Amsterdam library. Primo provides a single search box for users to access the library's print and digital collections, as well as institutional and publisher resources, through a unified index. It harvests and indexes content from various sources, including the library catalog and databases, and stores metadata in a central index to enable discovery and delivery of information to users through a web-based interface. The document outlines Primo's technology architecture and goals of providing gateways to all information accessible by the library.
The document discusses various library discovery tools that aim to provide a single search interface for library collections, allowing users to search local resources as well as articles, books, and other materials from publishers and other libraries, though the tools often fail to fully deliver on the promise of discovery due to limitations in content coverage and indexing.
Library of Congress New Bibliographic Framework - What is it?Lukas Koster
The document discusses the Library of Congress' proposed Bibliographic Framework as a replacement for the current MARC cataloging standard. It outlines problems with MARC and describes how the new framework will use Linked Data principles and FRBR modeling to create globally shared bibliographic data and authority files accessed through URIs. The framework will link catalog records for works, expressions, manifestations, and holdings to create a web of interconnected library data.
The document discusses using linked open data and linked data principles for libraries. It covers key concepts like URIs, RDF triples, ontologies and vocabularies. It then outlines options for libraries to both consume and publish linked data, such as enriching existing catalog data by linking to external sources, creating new information aggregates, and publishing library holdings and metadata as linked open data. Challenges include a lack of common identifiers, FRBRization of existing data, and the need for content curation and new technical systems to fully realize the benefits of linked open data for libraries.
The document discusses the benefits of a unified discovery tool that allows searching across different data sources and formats. It aggregates content from various libraries and hosts it in the cloud to provide a single search box and user experience. The tool aims to make more information easily accessible through search and recommendations while still respecting the individual characteristics of different collections.
Lukas Koster works at the University of Amsterdam library coordinating library systems. He discusses the current state of Dutch libraries, including university, public, and special libraries. He is working on a linked open data project between the University of Amsterdam library, Theater Institute of the Netherlands, and the Digital Heritage Foundation to publish their metadata as linked open data. The goals are to set an example, prove the concept, and convince other institutions to publish their data. Initial steps involve creating URIs and JSON representations of data that can be retrieved and displayed to enrich records. Future work includes using vocabularies, publishing RDF, and linking the data.
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11854836.v1
Presentation given at IGeLU 2010, Ghent - Belgium, by Roxana Popistaşu and Lukas Koster, Library of the University of Amsterdam
The document discusses the challenges of transitioning between different metadata schemas and standards such as MARC21, MARCXML, MODS, METS, EAD, AACR2 and RDA. It questions whether someone can easily distinguish between different metadata fields and classes, and expresses a wish that the person it's addressing was there to assist during these transitions between old and new standards that remove familiar comforts. It closes by lamenting the cataloging of the same books year after year.
The document discusses the SwiftBox information system created in the early 2000s to replace multiple existing systems. SwiftBox used abstract concepts and unique identifiers defined in thesauri to link objects and define their types and attributes. Objects could have fields linked to concepts in thesauri and relations between objects were also defined using thesauri terms and relations like broader term. This allowed linking of data between databases using concepts, synonyms, and multilingual labels while keeping a decoupled backend and frontend.
1. Linking library and theatre data Lukas Koster Library Systems Coordinator Library of the University of Amsterdam http://www.uba.uva.nl @lukask Linked Data and the Semantic Web – CIGS June 17 2011, Edinburgh
2. Pilot project Linking library catalogue data to theatre performance data Dutch Digital Cultural Heritage Foundation DEN as instigator http://den.nl/ Library of the University of Amsterdam Theatre Institute of The Netherlands http://tin.nl/ http://www.uba.uva.nl/
10. People Objects Newspapers Museums Publishers Books Files Archives Libraries Digital Physical Images Text Memories Movies Music Sound Statistics Research Journals Data Maps Metadata Collections Buildings History Art Science Government Societies Stories Photos Reports Private Public Games Shows Education Nature Speech War Schools Love Theatre Poetry Location Fiction Facts Fantasy Animals
11. Different contexts Subject area Theatre Godot Personal context Library context Ad Aerts (@adaerts) Search No connection
33. How we did it - URIs < base-url >/person/Beckett, Samuel < base-url >/title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot JavaScript/JQuery HTML
34. How we did it – JavaScript/JQuery < base-url >/person/Beckett, Samuel < base-url >/title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot <base-url>/ production/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot/1988-11-22/6750 JavaScript/JQuery
35.
36. Identifiers/URIs/String matching /title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot : a tragicomedy in two acts /title/Beckett, Samuel/En attendant Godot : pièce en deux actes /title/Beckett, Samuel/Wachten op Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting For Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Wachten op Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Wachtend op Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Wachten op Godot (De favorieten) /title/Beckett, Samuel/Wachten op Godot (eerste bedrijf) /title/Beckett, Samuel/En attendant Godot /title/Beckett, Samuel/Warten auf Godot
37.
38. Links: FRBR, and more Waiting for Godot Wachten op Godot (NL) En attendant Godot (FR) Production 2009 Production 2010 Performance 1 Performance 2 Performance 3 Manifestation Item Work Expression 1st Edition 2007 2nd Edition 2010 Copy 1 Copy 2 Copy 3 Theatre Text/Publisher/Library FRBR Video registration Article Scene 1 Scene 2 Scene 3 Photo Library Catalogue
42. ‘ 1st edition 1956, 1st print of this edition 1965’ ‘ Original title: En attendant Godot’ Links as text strings
43. MARC MARC record: - Identifiers to union catalogue records - Subfields with Autor name; Main title
44. JavaScript/JQuery HTML < base-url >/person/Beckett, Samuel < base-url >/title/Beckett, Samuel/Waiting for Godot < base-url >/person/068463928 < base-url >/title/841548528
45. $8 – Field link and sequence number Identifies linked fields and may also propose a sequence for the linked fields. Subfield $8 may be repeated to link a field to one or more other group of fields http://www.loc.gov/marc/bibliographic/ecbdcntf.html
Information is outside the library walls, anywhere.
Librarian hands book to theatre lover: “here is your play”`. It has … pages, no illustrations. Measures book: it is …cm high. And there is an ISBN. Here I have another one. …… TL: this looks like an instruction manual… Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFZatmOFpns Etc.
Librarian hands book to theatre lover: “here is your play”`. It has … pages, no illustrations. Measures book: it is …cm high. And there is an ISBN. Here I have another one. …… TL: this looks like an instruction manual… Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFZatmOFpns Etc.
Librarian hands book to theatre lover: “here is your play”`. It has … pages, no illustrations. Measures book: it is …cm high. And there is an ISBN. Here I have another one. …… TL: this looks like an instruction manual… Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFZatmOFpns Etc.
Restproducten! Only remainders/residuals/waste products
Cool URIs don’t change RDF/XML, N3, Turtle
Need to know URI syntax? Discover?
An old fashioned ERD data model. More or less similar to an ontology
This is an example of a triple, two directions! Two triples in one
Persistent identifiers (part of URI!) String values Working together (we know each others stuff!)
Using generated HTML, not underlying MARC fields/subfields
Production JSON also contains identifier/link to digital objects in separate TIN Objects database
We didn't sue JavaScript to remove 'subtitle' after the ' : ' yet. Working on HTML, not underlying MARC fields/subfields
For instance VIAF for ‘authors’; Wikipedia/DBPedia, etc.
All ‘implicit relations’
Librarian hands book to theatre lover: “here is your play”`. It has … pages, no illustrations. Measures book: it is …cm high. And there is an ISBN. Here I have another one. …… TL: this looks like an instruction manual… Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fFZatmOFpns Etc.