Declaration of Metadata Independance:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that Metadata is essential to all Users, and that the Creation of Metadata endows certain inalienable Rights, that among these are the right to collect, the right to share and the pursuit of Happiness through the reuse of the Metadata… (read more)
Via.
Posted November 6, 2008 by Casey
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: declaration of independence, lib20, libraries, library 2.0, metadata. Be the first one.
There can be no arguments about it, machine tags are cool and they solve problems. And now they work in WordPress with bSuite too (svn only, for the moment).
It’s not just because flickr popularized them that I like them, though it helps and you should definitely look at that stuff:
The announcement
Excitement from O’Reilly Radar, ProgrammableWeb, [...]
Posted December 17, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: folksonomy, machine tags, metadata, scriblio, tagging, tags, taxonomy. Be the first one.
(It’s old, but I just stumbled into it again…) Karen Calhoun’s report, The Changing Nature of the Catalog and its Integration with Other Discovery Tools, included a lot of things I agree with, but it also touched something I’m a bit skeptical about: automated metadata production.
Some interviewees noted that today’s catalogs are put together mainly [...]
Posted May 10, 2007 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: automation, computer generated metadata, ease of use, lib20, libraries, library 2.0, library catalogs, metadata, opac. Be the first one.
Eleta explained it this way, and credited it to R. David Lankes:
Your data:
Your metadata:
CANDY BAR, data, metadata, metaphor
Posted October 10, 2006 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: CANDY BAR, data, metadata, metaphor. 3 Comments.
Oliver Brown introduced me to microformats a while ago, the Ryan Eby got excited about them, then COinS-PMH showed how useful they could be for libraries, but I still haven’t done anything with them myself (other than beg Peter Binkley to release his COinS-PMH WordPress Plugin).
What are microformats? Garrett Dimon explains the theory:
When writing markup [...]
Posted December 8, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information, Technology. Tags: data standards, libraries, library, metadata, microformat, microformats, networked information, semantic web. 5 Comments.
I’d meant to point out these two articles from Library Journal ages ago, but now that I’m putting together my presentations for next week (NEASIS&T & NELINET), I realized I hadn’t.
Roy Tennant writes in Doing Data Differently that “our rich collections of metadata are underused.” While Roland Dietz & Carl Grant, in the same issue, [...]
Posted November 10, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Libraries & Networked Information. Tags: dis-integration, integration, libraries, library journal, library systems, metadata, using metadata. 3 Comments.
I’m a big fan of the WP Geo plugin, but I want more.
My biggest complaint is that I want to insert coordinates using Google Maps or MultiMap URLs, rather than insert them in the modified story editor. So I wrote a bit of code that reads through the URLs in a post, finds the “maps.google” [...]
Posted September 26, 2005 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Technology. Tags: beta, blog, blog gis, blogmap, blogmaps, geo, geocoding, geolocation, geotagging, gis, google maps, lat, latitude and longitude, lon, map, mapping, maps, metadata, multimap, plugin, plugins, wordpress, wordpress plugin, wp plugin. 8 Comments.
A an old John Udell piece at InfoWorld hints at GeoURLs, but the GoeURL site is down, and has been for a while. The concept sounds interesting: you mark pages with coordinates, then use GIS to map those pages to geographic locations, finding pages and people of interest along the way.
To join GeoURL, you add [...]
Posted November 26, 2004 by Casey Bisson
Categories: Technology. Tags: geographic, geolocation, gis, map, metadata, semantic web. One Comment.