StatBase, an open source data management software built on Joomla and created by an in house team of librarians and IT/ digital management librarians at the New Port News Public Library. They have basic documentation and information at their sourceforge page and at their libguide page. The presentation reminded me of Counting Opinion's LibPass and LibStat browser based distribute-able software for data collection and statistics presentation. I'd love to see what some of the forms pages look like and what the presentation of the data looks like. I guess I'd have to download a copy and mount it to play around.
I missed the first speaker for the Content Containers and Beyond Session at 12:15pm EST, but wow! the sessions were archived almost immediately and so I was able to review the excellent presentation on the Digital Public Library of America. Emily Gore talked about the Ps of the DPLA which were portal, platform, and partnerships.
- things a good portal can do with an aggregated collection of over 8 million items- create online exhibitions using items from different contributed collections (making use of linked data to form links of unique items that may be spread across the states), use GPS metadata to "place" items on a map for geographic discovery (this is good for people looking at local history) and make use of time/date metadata to "place" items on a timeline (perhaps best when looking a thematically linked items to see their appearance in history and if and how the when of them relates to the when of other items).
- by providing an API (application programming interface), the DPLA is a platform for other imaginings of how to use the data, or how to make the data relevant to your local area/ collection/ needs
- the DPLA relies on two types of partnerships - content hubs and service hubs, each which contribute digital items and their associated metadata, without which the DPLA would be a seriously unfun place to visit. They also have community advocates in the GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives and Museums) "industry" to speak on the DPLA's behalf, like at conventions, local outreach events, etc. Types of partners include (and I list these for when thinking about writing a grant to look at the local level for these types of partners):
- libraries
- gov't agencies ( municipal?)
- museums
- non-profits (cultural centers, look at those that share your mission area?)
- universities
- encyclopedias (currently I'm in PR, so the Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico supported by the Puerto Rican Foundation for the Humanities is an example.)
- high schools and local universities with departments or student organizations in your area of interest
- historical societies
- international partners (continuing the PR example, el Centro de Estudios Puertorriqueños at Hunter College, the City University of New York)
- Upcoming- standardization of vocabulary to describe rights statements from free text to perhaps checkbox able descriptions to allow filters to be applied to digital objects so that users could focus in on items in the public domain, or which allow reuse. a Knight News Challenge (grant?)
And finally, there was mention of Linked Open Data Library Archives Museums #LODLAM from Jon Voss of History Pin (funded by WeAreWhatWeDo) which would allow mashups of digital objects such as overlays of images on maps and overlays of information on images.
Here's a list of links for me to do further study:
http://www.ted.com/talks/tim_berners_lee_on_the_next_web?language=en
http://entopix.com/so-you-need-to-understand-language-data-open-source-nlp-software-can-help/
http://www.getty.edu/research/tools/vocabularies/lod/index.html
http://challenge.semanticweb.org/2014/submissions/
http://code4lib.org/
http://entopix.com/so-you-need-to-understand-language-data-open-source-nlp-software-can-help/
http://www.getty.edu/research/tools/vocabularies/lod/index.html
http://challenge.semanticweb.org/2014/submissions/
http://code4lib.org/
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