Hi Alexander, > On 5 Oct 2014, at 15:57, Alexander Garcia Castro <[email protected]> > wrote: > > metadata, sure. it is a must. BUT good and thought for the web of data. not > designed for paper based collections. From my experience it is not so much > about representing everything from the paper as triplets. there will be > statements that won't be representable, also, such approach may not be > efficient. > > why don't we just go a little bit further up from the lowest hanging fruit > and start talking about self describing documents? well annotated documents > with well structured metadata that are interoperable. this is easy, > achievable, requires little tooling, does not put any burden on the author, > delivers interoperability beyond just simple hyperlinks, it is much more > elegant than adhering to HTML, etc. You lost me here. Who or what does the "well annotated documents and well structured metadata”? If it isn’t any burden for the authors. "Easy and little tooling" - I wonder what methods and tools you have in mind?
These have proved to be hard problems - otherwise we wouldn’t be having this painful discussion. Best Hugh > > On Sun, Oct 5, 2014 at 3:19 AM, Hugh Glaser <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On 5 Oct 2014, at 11:07, Michael Brunnbauer <[email protected]> wrote: > > > ... > > Basic metadata is good. Publishing datasets with the paper is good. Having > > typed links in the paper is good. But I would not demand to go further. > > > +1 > ++1 - the dataset publishing can include the workflow, tools etc, and > metadata about that. > > > -- > Hugh Glaser > 20 Portchester Rise > Eastleigh > SO50 4QS > Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155, Home: +44 23 8061 5652 > > > > > > > -- > Alexander Garcia > http://www.alexandergarcia.name/ > http://www.usefilm.com/photographer/75943.html > http://www.linkedin.com/in/alexgarciac > -- Hugh Glaser 20 Portchester Rise Eastleigh SO50 4QS Mobile: +44 75 9533 4155, Home: +44 23 8061 5652
