Irish Record Linkage, 1864-1913 Project http://t.co/Ks3PKOCqmV More linked archival data to answer historical research questions #lodlam
— Mia (@mia_out) October 2, 2014
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Linked Open Data in Libraries, Archives & Museums
Irish Record Linkage, 1864-1913 Project http://t.co/Ks3PKOCqmV More linked archival data to answer historical research questions #lodlam
— Mia (@mia_out) October 2, 2014
via http://ift.tt/uQgBwP
National Library of Medicine Selects Zepheira to Develop Linked Data Architecture http://t.co/69jeHqlQ0m #linkeddata #lodlam #nlm #MESH
— LJ's infoDOCKET (@infodocket) October 7, 2014
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Webliography: Linked Open Data Resources on the Web http://t.co/k151bumYdA #lodlam #linkeddata
— LJ's infoDOCKET (@infodocket) October 7, 2014
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here's my presentation on #xEAC and #linkeddata for #archives for Fonds & Bonds at #dcmi14. http://t.co/AwRwWwuBzV #lodlam
— Ethan Gruber (@ewg118) October 7, 2014
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awesome! NLM Sample MARC to BIBFRAME goodness https://t.co/NgVS6aN87t via @zepheiraorg #lodlam tools
— eric miller (@erimille) September 24, 2014
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Just released: 2 case studies by @EuropeanaTech where EDM has been used to aid in teaching about metadata and LOD http://t.co/3jsETBWnpS
— Lizzy Komen (@lizzykomen) September 18, 2014
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Thanks to our friends at SemTechBiz (big ups to Eric Franzon) and amazing LODLAMers around the world who volunteered to put on sessions, we were able to put together an amazing prototype for something we hope to take on the road in 2015: the first LODLAM Training Day. We had an incredible lineup of people sharing their real-world approaches to both publishing and reusing Linked Open Data in library, archive, and museum settings. The idea with the Training Day is to get into hands-on applications and examples rather than conceptual talks, and begin giving people the means to share and create within the “web of data.”
We were bootstrapping it a bit, but we did put together videos of the talks (with the exception of Rob’s, in which we very sadly lost the last half of his talk due to camera fail), and everyone shared their slides.
You can see all of the talks in a Youtube Channel, or see the individual talks embedded below with links to their slides or examples.
* Jon Voss, Historypin and co-founder of the International LODLAM Summit
Publishing, Sharing, and Opening
* Silvia Southwick and Cory Lampert, UNLV, Librarians’ adventure into LODLAM (slides, demo videos)
* Eric Lease Morgan, Notre Dame, Publishing LOD with a bent toward archivists (post)
* Rob Sanderson, Stanford, International Image Interoperability Framework and JSON-LD (slides)
* Duane Degler & Neal Johnson, Design for Context, Now What? Creating Innovative LODLAM Sites & Apps (slides)
Discovery, Visualization, and Reuse
* Ethan Gruber, American Numismatic Society, 0 to 60 on SPARQL queries in 50 minutes (slides)
* Eetu Mäkelä, Aalto University School of Science, What to do with Linked Data? (slides)
* Jarek Wlkiewicz & Shawn Simister, Google, screencast walking through the tutorial on how to run the Cayley graph database (slides)
* Richard Wallis, OCLC, Worldcat, Works, and Schema.org (slides)
@Europeanaeu enriches its data with #AAT: new story at http://t.co/EFGnbKDgDT #LODLAM
— EuropeanaTech (@EuropeanaTech) September 9, 2014
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Who's using linked data? And for what? @OCLC Research rolling out survey results: http://t.co/DvKcwqahpO Start here: http://t.co/uDWJa6mbVj
— amy w (@amelish) September 9, 2014
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Great #lodlam @eurnews blog by @KBNLresearch : https://t.co/7k9GaM7pMw – w/ @EuropeanaTech video 😉
— Antoine Isaac (@antoine_isaac) September 1, 2014
via http://ift.tt/1hMBkGh