> "Come for the food Stay because we know what you did" > > We have tons of files about the video surveillance network in Chicago, > double digit gigabytes. Most of the documents are easy to read, but as > a whole body of records involve a technical deployment that takes > place over years, and could only be easily or quickly parsed by the > files' source and mostly creator, an IBM researcher. > > Long-story short this researcher uploaded a hard drive wholesale > without password protection or even a robots.txt, and Googlebot > indexed it. > > In a previous post I mentioned using a mind map to organize a > structured directory of documents, you don't have to download the > software to use the documents I'll be posting, but please keep this in > mind, a key reason I am not just dumping a big zip file: > > You will benefit from a much fuller understanding of what you read if > you participate in the process of parsing its source corpus -- even if > you want to make a docx outline with bullet points, one for each > document perhaps, and then a child indention for components, analytic > technology, application, and then sub-levels as appropriate. > > You should also read whole documents as you go to inform your > organization but the important point is ending up with the whole body > of data in a consistent structure. This is most of the hard work on > your way to higher-level data-mining and modeling with graphing software. > > Right now I'm going to use a pretty basic approach, automating > creation of a flow-chart template from the Chicago directory as I > found it, with the exception of the last node on the second tier with > children nodes, which are the document files in the top directory, I > don't want them on the same level as the other directories for the > structure purposes just mentioned. There are a lot of folders, the > technical expertise involved in this process was the same as opening a > document from the File tab in MS Word. > > This folder (image/link) > > became this mind map. See my tweets below and my previous blog post, > I'll be updating regularly, in between doing stuff I have to do to eat... >
http://blog.networkedinference.com/2017/01/also-about-video-surveillance-in.html
