Contenu connexe
Similaire à Breaking the catalog (20)
Plus de Peter Brantley (11)
Breaking the catalog
- 9. It
does
not
even
give
you
a
hint
of
the
awesomeness
of
it.
- 16. Which
means:
what’s
relevant
to
me,
right
now,
right
here.
- 17. One
of
linked
data’s
challenges
is
contributing
to
discovery.
- 22. But
…
data
for
recommendations
is
limited
to
known
attributes
and
UGC.
- 24. Cool
when
it
works;
will
work
better
with
more
aggregation.
- 29. at
the
time
of
writing,
there’s
one
newly
released
and
top-‐selling
book.
- 39. Mozart’s
Don
Giovanni
and
José
Zorrilla’s
Don
Juan
Tenorio
via
Tirso
de
Molina’s
El
burlador
de
Sevilla
- 40. per
the
Library
Loon
...
“relationship
modeling
only
need
be
done
once”
- 49. I
will
argue
…
The
most
compelling
uses
of
LD
in
repositories
may
be
intra-‐catalog.
- 51. If
I
just
want
bib
info
(metadata),
go
yonder
to
OCLC
or
Open
Library.
- 52. If
I
want
to
find
out
what
to
watch
or
read,
I
want
to
go
to
the
largest
aggregation
of
user+meta
data
as
possible.
- 54. Library
LOD
has
to
be
network
scale,
on
a
single
platform,
to
be
end-‐user
attractive
(like
Amazon).
- 56. Because
in
a
way,
linked
open
data
is
about
a
web
of
open
data.
- 60. If
I
offered
cloud
data
services,
I’d
be
happy
to
host
any
useful
linked
open
data.
- 62. As
long
as
I
(a
platform)
could
retain
an
unrestricted
copy
of
your
data.
- 67. But
LAMS
might
not
possess
those
rights,
restricting
the
size
of
the
data
market.
- 69. We
need
to
aggregate
and
hold
data
on
a
single
network
platform
to
the
greatest
possible
extent.
- 71. And
that
data
will
help
ultimately
to
contextualize
metadata
with
desire.
- 73. I’d
like
to
see
us
build
out
a
common
open
platform
for
LOD.
- 75.
peter
brantley
director,
bookserver
project
internet
archive
san
francisco
ca
@naypinya
(twitter)