Autumn leaves float across the Tasman sea

Connections, it is all about connections… that’s all I could think about whilst swimming this morning. A gorgeous Sunday in Sydney, Australia. Blue dome sky and a stupendously bright tree radiating autumn. The reason I have connections on the brain is that my sister Cara and I exchanged images via email last week. She sent me a beautiful picture of golden leaves and I returned with this flaming tree. We were connecting our sense of the season change across the Tasman sea.

Linked Open Data Designers

Where is this post going you ask? Well, it is going in the direction of something that always bothers me: who are the beneficiaries of the efforts made to provide linked open data? What impact are we going to have as a community of archivists, curators, developers, information managers, librarians, architects — as designers — on our communities, people like my sister, or the researchers I work with? This is a HUGE season change within the GLAM sector. I finally found the time to read a post by Marshall Breeding: The Systems Librarian, 26 May 2013 “Linked Data: the Next Big Wave or Another Tech Fad?. I recommend it, there is a potted history of library automation, and straight shooting comment on the rise of MARC and changes ahead. More on that front by William Y Arms as a part of a special issue of Library Hi Tech, August 2012 – The 1990s: The Formative Years of Digital Libraries for the curious.

Autumn in Sydney, Australia
Autumn in Sydney, Australia

Family History Research and Scale

So I ask myself, what is going to help my sister, our family historian, do her incidental genealogical searching about our family in New Zealand, Australia, Scotland, Ireland and England? Well, I’d really like every local history database, index, register or set of cards turned into linked open data thanks very much. Many of these precious local history treasures are nurtured without much wider awareness of their existence, except by information professionals like us, and those eager researchers doing local or family history. You just have to look at the credits on television shows such as Who do you think you are? derived from the BBC series Who do you think you are? that proliferate and a stream of GLAM names big and small flutter across the screen. Who is going to do that? Well, there’s a question, most small GLAMs do not have the developers on hand to turn their treasures into linked open data. Listen to an interview on Museopunk by Jeffrey Inscho and Susie Cairns with Michael Edson from the Smithsonian and Paul Rowe from Vernon Systems and you’ll get the picture pretty quickly.

In this, the inaugural episode of the Museopunks podcast, the Punks chat to Michael Edson, Director of Web and New Media Strategy at the Smithsonian Institution, and Paul Rowe, CEO of Vernon Systems, about museums in the Age of Scale. How can museums rethink their practices to work at web scale, from the smallest institutions up to the biggest?

This is a perennial problem, and more importantly now, not one to be shirked, while the discussion on linked open data is hot. Family history research is huge and if you trace the fortunes of large providers of user-pays family history information it might offer a clue that this is a V-A-S-T area for social value to be generated (commercial value to some). Digitisation has been driven by heavy usage demands and at the front of that queue are family history researchers. If I were a gambling woman, I’d punt that if these sources of local and family history were prioritised for transformation enormous amounts of social value would be provided. The question I guess might be next, how to coordinate this? Whose role might it be to provide such an online service… ahem… (*whispers* a large cultural institution or a consortium of them?). Perhaps we can have a good old fashioned debate about this at the 2013 summit.

Autumn in Napier, New Zealand
Autumn in Napier, New Zealand

Humanities, Arts and Social Science (HASS) Researchers

The next big question I ask myself as one of the multitude of designers in the realms of digital development is: What about the HASS researchers? Part of my job at Intersect Australia is to support HASS researchers wherever I can, to get their “eResearch” needs met. That can mean being a project manager, a metadata nerd, an analyst, a product owner, whatever it takes. Last week I dug out a paper for a colleague about big data challenges for biological science. On reflection, I have thought how far that discipline has come and my efforts to support the notion of humanities informatics. Secretly, I hope that the deluge of linked open data that pours out from the GLAMs is going to permit AMAZING research to be done that hasn’t before. What I see on the horizon is a level by which discovery of cultural flow, social phenomena or cultural history, will benefit general researchers of culture and social history, and, at the same time, benefit HASS research in totally new ways. Also… watch too what comes out of digital humanities linked open data projects, that’s all I can say (hint: HuNI)!

GLAM Linked Open Data Ecosystems

I’ve mentioned a discussion on linked open data ecosystems I’d like to have at the 2013 summit, at the same time I’m thinking WT? – ecosystems – really? Ages ago I spoke with a chap (Jamie Norrish co-author of EATS the Entity Authoring Tool) whose thoughts I respect immensely at the LODLAM-NZ meetup in Wellington 2011 and he said in so many words: why linked open data Ingrid, it isn’t scalable. Without knowing a darn thing about “scale” in computing terms, except that computer scientists tell me that there is a problem with scaling up linked open data, I said in so many words: GLAMs will establish their own ecosystems. Not all the web may be semantic, but maybe some parts of it really will deliver value by being so, i.e. GLAMs. He seemed to think that was an ok answer. My colleague on the humanities virtual lab project HuNI (Humanities Networked Infrastructure), Conal Tuohy @conal_tuohy and I haven’t had this discussion yet, we’ve both been too busy working, him hurling code around like a concert conductor, me writing RDF weaving patterns.

Reliance on the Ecosystem

Speaking of which, Con is the brains behind the information design (amongst other parts of the lab design) on HuNI – see the Corbicula the linked data gateway tool he has developed and put into the LODLAM 2013 summit challenge – and right now he’s working on faceted search. I’m attempting to mind meld with him when I can and rely on his knowledge of RDF and ontology development (he’s an old hand at TEI). At some point we will need to pop our heads above the build and the data transformation process and answer a question about the services and aggregate we create from a range of Australian scholarly cultural datasets (for the lab) and where it sits in the context of Australian GLAM datasets (providing linked open data services). Hence the minor obsession with looking at linked open data ecosystems. Conal has harvested party identifiers from the National Library of Australia. More recently I’ve learned that Griffith University have identifiers for the ANZSRC codes (that’s standard research codes for Australian and New Zealand research). Perhaps reliance is another useful topic for the summit?

The 2013 LODLAM Summit

I’m seriously looking forward to being part of it – and not just because my Kiwi twang will duet with that of Chris McDowell’s and the Australian high notes accumulated by years in Sydney will merge into a chorus with those of Rowan Brownlee, Kerry Kilner, Eleanor Whitworth and Cate O’Neill.  But.. because linked open data is about connections across boundaries – cultural flow and all – I’m really looking forward to hearing about the connections the folks from other parts of the globe want to make too.

LODLAM 2013 Session ideas

As an organizer of Open Data Bay Area, I thought I could usefully seed some ideas by sharing some of the suggestions we’ve received for our meetings. Here’s some of the topics about which people have expressed interest to us, and bear in mind that we’re coming from tech-heavy San Francisco:

Toolsets for working with Linked Open Data

Your first SPARQL query

Ontologies for beginners

Visualizing Linked Open Data

Getting from data to LOD

 

Looking forward to seeing old and new faces in Montreal!

Congratulations to the Winners the LODLAM Challenge Heat #2!

It was not easy. For all those who entered, thank you for making this a difficult decision.

After much deliberation and taking into consideration the popular vote, we are pleased to announce the two finalists from Heat 2 of the LODLAM Challenge:

Pundit

Mismuseos.net

Although not a finalist, we want to give special shout-out and an honorable mention to WWI Linked Data.

Nice work, Everyone!

This rounds out the slate of 5 challenge finalists that will be competing head-to-head at the LODLAM Summit June 19-20, 2013 in Montreal.

All finalists have earned travel grants for the trip to Montreal and the chance to win a $2000USD cash prize.

A big thank-you to all the teams who submitted entries. It was great to see such creativity and wide range of ideas.

The LODLAM community rose to the challenge and amazed us.

If you didn’t get a chance to look at the entries – check out the talent in both heats:

Challenge Entries Heat #1

Challenge Entries Heat #2

 

See you in Montreal!

 

 

Linked Open Data in Art

On behalf of Eleanor Fink, I’m passing on some links to presentations at a recent meeting at the Smithsonian on Linked Open Data across art museums, and some amazing work being done on that front. Eleanor, as well as some of the folks highlighted here, will be at the LODLAM Summit in Montreal, and are also on this listserv if you have any questions.

Thanks, Jon

Begin forwarded message:

Introduction from Eleanor Fink:
Art Clouds 712FX1X

SAAM, Rachel Allen and Georgina Goodlander
http://www.slideshare.net/georginab/linked-open-data-and-american-art

University of Southern California, ISI presentations from Craig and Pedro
http://www.slideshare.net/szeke/karma-tools-for-publishing-cultural-heritage-data-in-the-linked-open-data-cloud
http://www.slideshare.net/szeke/american-art-collaborative-goals

Research Space from Dominic Oldman

Europeana slides from Antoine Isaac:
http://www.slideshare.net/antoineisaac/europeana-american-art-collaborative-lod-meeting/
http://www.slideshare.net/antoineisaac/edm-american-art-collaborative-lod-meeting/

Yale Center for British Art, Lec Maj
YCBA technology page http://britishart.yale.edu/collections/using-collections/technology
The SlideShare:
http://www.slideshare.net/lecmaj/2013-0429-american-art-collaborative-lod-meeting-washington-dc-web

Getty, Dr. Patricia Harpring
http://www.slideshare.net/PatriciaHarpring/harpring-vocabslodwe-exsaam-april-2013

Smithsonian Institution Research, Thornton Staples
https://www.dropbox.com/sh/1zfpxpgovx91vkk/jWjLYDBXQy/staplesLDataSAAM042913.pptx

Smithsonian Libraries, Joel Richard
http://www.slideshare.net/joelrichard/linked-open-data-and-systematic-taxonomy

LODLAM Challenge Heat 2 open for voting!

Please spread the word and have fun checking out the video entries!

Many thanks to all of the entrants this year–they’ve put in so much time and care to share their work/ideas/vision and put in for some good-natured international competition.  Who needs the Olympics?

As seen on Twitter:
jonvoss
It’s AWN! Public voting open thru May 9 for #LODLAM Challenge entries! http://bit.ly/159vnxA #OpenGLAM #linkeddata
5/2/13 8:23 AM