The world's first full Jane-athon took place January 30, 2015 in Chicago during 
ALA Midwinter. This hackathon for creating RDA linked data about the works of 
Jane Austen and related resources was attended by over 60 delegates from 55 
institutions. Individually, or in clusters led by experienced, knowledgeable 
volunteers, the delegates used RIMMF (RDA in Many Metadata Formats) to create 
RDA/FRBR entity records from imported MARC 21 records or as born-RDA, and link 
them using RDA designators. RIMMF is an editor for data that conforms to RDA 
Toolkit and the RDA Registry.

>From a starting base of 75 entities for Jane and her best-known Works, and 
>just a few of their Expressions and Manifestations, Jane-athon players spent 
>two and a half hours RIMMFing to add 126 Works, 117 Expressions, 134 
>Manifestations, 240 Persons, and 64 Corporate bodies to the RIMMF-ball. 
>Coaches were on hand to provide tactical support, settle professional 
>differences of opinion, and note down issues for later consideration by the 
>JSC. They were kept busy. After the session, and lunch, everyone took part in 
>a de-briefing to reflect on the experience, review the results, and look at 
>the bigger picture. The RIMMF-balls of data from each contributor were merged 
>into a super ball, and that was converted into an RDF-ball suitable for open 
>linked data. Discussion on issues of duplication of RIMMF records for the same 
>entity and the need for a shared infrastructure for RDA data creation and 
>maintenance segued into consideration of the context of linked data and its 
>accommodation of multiple points of descriptive view.

A wide range of Jane-related resources was brought by participants, from Sense 
and sensibility to Seamonsters and Zombies, from Jane dolls to tattoos and tea 
strainers, a small inkling of Austen's influence on cultural heritage and a 
real test of RDA's ability to describe all kinds of content and carrier.

During the pre-session warm-up, delegates were exhorted to have fun. They seem 
to have done just that: "Awesome!"; "Like trying to think about time travel"; 
"We'll need to talk more about relationships and where they belong"; "Cool and 
fun and nice" - you had to be there!

The JSC welcomes this demonstration of RDA's ability to describe a wide range 
of resources and produce well-formed linked data, and the opportunities a 
Jane-athon offers for discussion and feedback on ways of developing RDA.

For more information, see: 

*The first Jane-athon [http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/janethon1/] 
<http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/janethon1/>  with links to slides, social 
media, and Jane data.

*A Summary of Participant Responses to the First Jane-athon 
[http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/janethon1/survey/results.html] 
<http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/janethon1/survey/results.html> .

*The RDA data created during the Jane-athon in raw unedited form 
[http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/jane1raw.html] 
<http://rballs.info/topics/p/jane/jane1raw.html> . It can be viewed and edited 
using RIMMF, available for free download 
[http://www.marcofquality.com/wiki/rimmf3/doku.php?id=download 
<http://www.marcofquality.com/wiki/rimmf3/doku.php?id=download&nocache> 
&nocache]. The data is also available as linked data in a triple store 
[http://3store.rballs.info:10035/repositories/janeathon-ala2015] 
<http://3store.rballs.info:10035/repositories/janeathon-ala2015> . A curated 
version of the data will be available soon, ready for the next Jane-athon.

*The r-balls website [http://rballs.info/] (RDA/RIMMF/RDF/record-balls) 
<http://rballs.info/> 

*The RDA Registry [http://rdaregistry.info] <http://rdaregistry.info> 

*RDA Toolkit [http://access.rdatoolkit.org/] <http://access.rdatoolkit.org/> 

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