Mike, thanks for the link to Seth's excellent post.
I do take issue with this paragraph, though:
"""
And then we need to consider the rise of the Kindle. An ebook costs
about $1.60 in 1962 dollars. A thousand ebooks can fit on one device,
easily. Easy to store, easy to sort, easy to hand to your
On a related project, I also just pushed some major code updates to the Orbeon
xforms application we use at Stanford for MODS and TEI editing.
It's at https://github.com/cfitz/orbeon-forms .
It uses the Orbeon Form Runner forms environment, which you can read about
here: http://www.orbeon.com
On Mon, May 16, 2011 at 8:05 AM, Elisa Graydon wrote:
> Does anyone have any experience transferring records from Millennium to
> OCLC for batch load updating? I need to transfer records and every time I
> try, the transfer fails. I have called OCLC and Millennium multiple times
> and neither hav
Does anyone have any experience transferring records from Millennium to OCLC
for batch load updating? I need to transfer records and every time I try, the
transfer fails. I have called OCLC and Millennium multiple times and neither
have been able to help me. It is not an issue with a firewall. I
I will be out of the office starting 05/14/2011 and will not return until
05/20/2011.
I will respond to your message when I return. If you need immediate
assistance, please e-mail auroralibrar...@aurora.org or call the Aurora St.
Luke Medical Center Library at (414) 649-7356.
Just to clarify, are you picturing some sort of feedback loop? I'm
just trying to get a better picture of the process (sounds like an
interesting project).
In other words, do you have something like:
1) take in a full-text document (like, say, a novel?)
2) Run it through NER, pull out locations,
Hi Ken,
If Wittenberg University were a Voyager ILS library, I would point you towards
the (free, open-source) ShelfLister client [1]. Although not "ajaxy", one of
the specific use cases is collection development/weeding projects and it meets
many of your requirements:
- current shelf-list
Apologies for cross-post. Just a last-minute reminder of the code4lib
NYC METRO SIG meeting tomorrow morning, Tues May 17, 10a-12n at METRO,
57 East 11th Street in New York. Come hang out, share your latest
project, etc. etc.
code4lib is:
http://code4lib.org/about
Free! Register at:
http://ww
Hi Eric,
I'm not sure that there can be answers to your question without some
more information first (and, possibly, more mining on your part).
First off, these "names" -- can they be fairly confidently identified
as identities? If so, VIAF (http://viaf.org/) would be your first
step. While VIA
Eric,
Jean Godby and I have been looking into this very problem. First, I
want to draw your attention to the difference between NER and the
subsequent problem of Identity Resolution. For example, in a given
text, an NER tool would identify "Kennedy" as a name, but that name
could refer to several
Hi Eric,
If you think wikipedia articles could be used as good endpoints for your
purposes then have a look at this opensource tool
http://wikipedia-miner.sourceforge.net/
-Original Message-
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of
Eric Lease Morgan
Sent: 16
Apologies to those who may also be on the EAD list who would have already
received this email. EADitor is one of several active XForms projects
detailed in "XForms for Libraries: An Introduction", an article in the 11th
issue of the code4lib journal (http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/3916)
***
What are some of the ways to best insert Linked Data endpoints into an XML file?
I have been playing lately with named-entity recognition/extraction technology.
[1] Feed a text file, such as a novel, into the recognition program. Get back a
rudimentary XML file where things like names, places, a
Seth Godin is not a library professional -- he's a marketing guru with
a string of best-selling books and a blog that manages to be both
insightful AND brief on an astonishingly consistent basis.
(http://sethgodin.typepad.com/ -- highly recommended). So he's
outside the library world, looking in,
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