Hi, I thought I'd hijack this old thread because I've recently run into a
pretty interesting use of iPython notebooks, and I think it's something
that might interest this community, so I'm going to share:
First, the shiny, this book exists:
http://bit.ly/135dHfs
Mining the Social Web: Data Mini
Hi, I parked these links in my pile of links for later, perhaps they'll help
you with your project?
Dashing is a nice framework to handle making a dashboard:
http://shopify.github.io/dashing/
Here's a writeup of how someone used Raspberry Pis and TVs to put dashboards
around their office.
htt
Honestly, your Host distro doesn't much matter, everything will be in Docker
soon. Here's a quick way to get there
https://coreos.com/blog/coreos-just-got-easier-to-try-with-panamax/
But if you want a non-nonsense just get things done distro, try Crunch Bang
http://crunchbang.org/
--Hardy
Sen
This reminds me of the the really awesome Data Science Toolkit project:
http://www.datasciencetoolkit.org/
Just passing along the link, in case anyone else likes fun toys. :-)
--Hardy
From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] on behalf of Owen
Here you go:
http://www.dlib.indiana.edu/~jenlrile/metadatamap/
--Hardy
From: Code for Libraries [CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] on behalf of P.G.
[booksbyp...@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2014 12:50 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LI
Hi, I'm not sure if you're really looking for a diff tool, so I'll just
shout an answer to a question that I think you might be asking. I use a
variation of the script posted here:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1494488/watch-a-web-page-for-changes
for watching a web page for changes. I most
Hi, you'll notice from the language you use to describe your use case,
that you use the word "convert" to describe what you're doing to the
original TIFF images. Once you're done producing a derivative from those
TIFFs, the only way back to the "original" TIFFs is to go back to the
actual originals
Did someone ask for a Hydra-like thing using Python?
https://github.com/emory-libraries/eulfedora
It's really a pretty cool piece of work, and worth a look, even if you're
absolutely sure RoR (or PHP and Drupal, or Java) is your thing.
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
Hi, Eric, I don't have any experience in this field, but I went looking a
while ago when the topic came up, and these two links are in my notes for
further exploration, if the topic ever comes around again:
http://wordseer.berkeley.edu/
http://mininghumanities.com/
May they serve you well.
--
Hi, I don't know the details of marc4J, but I do know that the Maven
Release Plugin is very very handy for doing Maven releases:
http://maven.apache.org/maven-release/maven-release-plugin/
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/
https://MO
Hi, I asked this on Google Plus earlier today, but I figured I'd better
take this question here: my brain is trying to tell me that there's a
service or app that makes "fake" metadata, kind of like "Lorem Ipsum" but
you feed it your fields and it gives you nonsense metadata back. But, it
looks righ
"Give me X number of METS records that wrap TIFFs and
> JPGs and that uses MODS, etc." That's not as trivial as hooking into an
> lorem ipsum machine, but it'd be pretty cool, imho.
>
> Kevin
>
>
> On Sat, Dec 7, 2013 at 11:51 PM, Pottinger, Hardy J. <
fancy and say, "Give me X number of
METS records that wrap TIFFs and JPGs and that uses MODS, etc."
That's not as trivial as hooking into an lorem ipsum machine, but
it'd
be pretty cool, imho.
Kevin
On Sat, Dec 7, 2013 at 11:51 PM, Pottinger, Hardy J. <
pottinge...@missouri.ed
ed using curl. I'll try and find
> that and post it
>
> thanks.
> best,chris.
>
> On Jul 29, 2010, at 7:00 AM, Pottinger, Hardy J. wrote:
>
> >> Are you okay with using ruby? I've been using active fedora lately
> >> and I
> >> love it. Here
> Following along the Ruby thread, I've got some rake task that will ingest
> images. Let me
> know if you want to take a look at that.
Well, this may come as no surprise :-) but I for one would love to see that
rake task for image ingest.
--Hardy
Hi, I was curious if anyone is incorporating a step where you embed metadata
into PDFs submitted to your repositories--particularly in cases where you are
batch loading them? I'm researching potential tools for doing so (both Doc Info
and XMP metadata), for material that we are batch loading in
Hi, this topic has come up for discussion with some of my colleagues, and I was
hoping to get a few other perspectives. For a public interface to a repository
and/or digital library, would you make the handle/PURL an active hyperlink, or
just provide the URL in text form? And why?
My feeling is
> If you don't have any confidence in the URL, then why would you bother
> giving it out at all? Links are links. Make them active.
Hi, David, I agree. And thanks!
> > My feeling is, making the URL an active hyperlink implies confidence
> > in the PURL/Handle, and provides the user with functiona
Hi, this has been a really interesting and informative discussion. I wonder if
I might be able to redirect it a bit back to my original question, with the
understanding that, as the discussion has made clear, a PURL or Handle is not
an ideal solution?
If, for the sake of argument, you are deali
> You might take a look at GoogleRefine
+1 Google Refine, watch the videos on the home page of the project, they're not
too long, and give a good overview.
http://code.google.com/p/google-refine/
--Hardy
> Does anyone know of a good (and free) Apache log file analyzer for Mac
> OSX? I have sets of Apache web logs that I need to analyze off server.
I am kinda fond of AWstats (http://awstats.sourceforge.net/). I've never
installed it on OSX, but just took a quick peek and it's in MacPorts so it
s
> Can someone point me in the direction of a good, robust broken link
> scanner other than Xenu,
Hi, check out linklint:
http://linklint.org/
I think it might be part of your solution.
--Hardy
On 6/21/11 12:36 PM, "Boheemen, Peter van"
wrote:
>The most used open source software for this (and many other mime types)
>is tika: http://tika.apache.org/
Thanks for this link, Tika looks great!
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/
Ah, a subject near and dear to my heart. :-) Thanks, Yitzchak, for
bringing this up.
In general, I think you may want to break down what it is you hope to
achieve, and see if there *are* projects that will help you get to where
you want to go, based on the resources you have at hand. If you need
Hi, Lars, you seem to be on the right track, but I'll chime in for
repositories here. Either DSpace or Fedora Commons make good "boxes" for
digitized content, you're just faced with the task of building an
interface to them. For DSpace, I'd look at using Skylight [1], for Fedora
there are lots of
Hi, Karen, my own experience with Drupal is, you need to keep it updated.
For anyone building with Drupal, I hear tell [1] the best practice these
days is to use DRUSH (Drupal Shell) to provision and deploy your site...
Keeps upgrades nice and smooth.
Also, my experience has been, for small projec
Hi, I'll just chime in for my favorite backup solution for my stuff at
home: BackuPC [1]. You set up a dedicated box on your local network, and
it backs up configured clients (Mac, Linux, Windows), whenever it finds
them. I've got it tweaked a bit to also back up a few personal web sites
that I sup
Hi, Nathan. I haven't yet managed to get it installed, but Multivio [1]
looks promising. For image viewing, PanoJS [2] is pretty cool, though I'm
a bit wary of the "piles of tiles" approach. Would be more comfortable
integrating PanoJS with something like Multivio. Would love to hear about
similar
Hi, Cynthia, we use Trac here, both for integrating code management and
how it relates to issue tracking, but also for project management. We've
recently rolled out multiple Trac instances to help other organizational
groups (mainly higher-level committees) with project tracking and wiki
space. The
> What Digital Content management systems are there out there.
>
> I can think of Greenstone, and various OAI repositories.
>
> Any suggestions, particularly for something that uses Apache
> and ModPerl?
Hi, there's always venerable ol' DLXS, it runs with Apache and is
Perl-based:
http://dlxs.
> Are you okay with using ruby? I've been using active fedora lately and I
> love it. Here is some pseudo-code. If you want something that I've
> actually syntax checked let me know.
Hi, Bess, I'm not Kyle, but I'd love to see the syntax checked code, if you're
going to share it. Thanks!
--Hardy
Ok this probably isn't quite what you're after, but Ghostwriter can use a
picture as a form, and can export to Evernote, which will OCR your text. More
of a personal productivity thing, but if that's what you need, it works pretty
well. For a use case example, google Chronodex and Ghostwriter (C
+1 Tempeh == Seal of No Approval Needed, though finding an appropriate
icon may be a challenge...
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/
https://MOspace.umsystem.edu/
"The bigger the smile you give, the bigger the smile you get. Works every
I'll just say my experience with the Confluence WYSIWYG editor hasn't been
great. Now, partly, that might have been the fact that the one page I
tried using it on had been migrated from another wiki, so, to be fair, the
WYSIWYG editor was being presented with a challenge. But, from a user's
POV, I
As Cameron Neylon pointed out in his keynote to Open Repositories 2012 in
Edinburgh a few weeks back, filtering on the supply/server side should be
considered "friction" or a barrier. We need better/more dynamic
demand-side filtering.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Axr80qm6NHw&feature=youtu.be&t=8
Hi, we're in the process of migrating an existing digital library to a new
platform, and we want to ensure that old URLs continue to resolve to the
items in the new location. The new digital library will be built on
Islandora, and I am pretty sure we can just map old URLs to new ones
within Fedora
Hi, here's something that I've just re-discovered in my pile of links to
visualization tools, perhaps it will help:
http://www.burlaca.com/2009/01/graph-visualization-apache-logs/
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
http://lso.umsystem.edu/~pottingerhj/
https://MOspace.ums
Hi, OSU's Maureen Walsh has spoken and written about her use of Exiftool
for just this use case, here is a link for you:
http://www.mpwalshmetadata.org/2011/10/repurposing-embedded-image-metadata-
for.html
HTH
--
HARDY POTTINGER
University of Missouri Library Systems
http://lso.umsystem.edu/~p
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