From: Sebastian R. <seb...@ou...> - 2010-11-12 20:30:16
|
the material i presented today at the SIG meeting is up at http://tei.oucs.ox.ac.uk/Oxford/2010-11-12-CRM/ I'll be doing more work on this on the SIG site, I expect, so this is just a snapshot -- Sebastian Rahtz Information and Support Group Manager, Oxford University Computing Services 13 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6NN. Phone +44 1865 283431 Sólo le pido a Dios que el futuro no me sea indiferente |
From: Piotr B. <ba...@o2...> - 2010-11-15 22:20:59
|
Thanks Sebastian, I can't wait to catch a breath after Zadar and start playing with this, to derive a GOLD mapping for FreeDict. I'll be sure to report on that here. Best, Piotr (somewhat smelly from his 11-hour journey back...) On 2010-11-12 21:30, Sebastian Rahtz wrote: > the material i presented today at the SIG meeting is up at http://tei.oucs.ox.ac.uk/Oxford/2010-11-12-CRM/ > > I'll be doing more work on this on the SIG site, I expect, so this is just a snapshot |
From: Øyvind E. <oyv...@il...> - 2010-11-16 10:29:35
|
Den 15. nov.. 2010 kl. 23.20 skrev Piotr Bański: > Thanks Sebastian, > > I can't wait to catch a breath after Zadar and start playing with > this, > to derive a GOLD mapping for FreeDict. I'll be sure to report on > that here. Great! Looking forward to it ;-) Regards, Øyvind |
From: Richard L. <ri...@li...> - 2010-11-17 17:32:39
|
In message <25D...@ou...>, Sebastian Rahtz <seb...@ou...> writes >the material i presented today at the SIG meeting is up at >http://tei.oucs.ox.ac.uk/Oxford/2010-11-12-CRM/ > >I'll be doing more work on this on the SIG site, I expect, so this is >just a snapshot Interestingly, I'm producing very analogous CRM in the context of SKOSifying an artist authority file. Looking at your RDF pointed out some properties and classes I had missed, so thanks for that. More generally, I am wondering if it would be useful to agree and publish some design patterns for the use of CRM to encode core properties of say people, places, events and named periods? If other implementers could just pick up a standard structural template and drop their data into it, our combined RDF resources would respond much better when dropped into a triple store vat and stirred vigorously. There are so many ways to use the CRM, even if you're using it correctly ... (Previously, perhaps influenced by the seductive simplicity of e.g. dbpedia, I have dismissed the CRM as being to verbose for use in Linked Data RDF. But then, once you realise how little a simplistic list of assertions lets you say about historical events, it becomes clear that you need something more richly-structured. Also, if you can use URLs to refer to related entities, the structure becomes quite manageable.) Richard -- Richard Light |
From: Sebastian R. <seb...@ou...> - 2010-11-17 17:55:48
|
On 17 Nov 2010, at 17:12, Richard Light wrote: > More generally, I am wondering if it would be useful to agree and > publish some design patterns for the use of CRM to encode core > properties of say people, places, events and named periods? absolutely! thats very much what I want to achieve here, to put up all the common patterns that we can agree on > If other > implementers could just pick up a standard structural template and drop > their data into it, our combined RDF resources would respond much better > when dropped into a triple store vat and stirred vigorously. huzzah to that > There are > so many ways to use the CRM, even if you're using it correctly ... which is indeed a major problem -- Sebastian Rahtz Information and Support Group Manager, Oxford University Computing Services 13 Banbury Road, Oxford OX2 6NN. Phone +44 1865 283431 Sólo le pido a Dios que el futuro no me sea indiferente |