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2010talks Submissions

1,401 bytes added, 14:36, 13 November 2009
Submissions for 20-Minute Talk Slots
There's something missing in the state of Denmark. Most of our web based copyright deposit material is trapped in a dark archive. After a successful pilot; money and time has been allocated to open part of the data. We tried NutchWAX and it worked well, but we wanted more. Proper integrated search with existing library material, extraction of names etc. Therefore we propose the following recipe: Take a slice of a dark archive with copyright deposit material. Get permission to publish it (the tricky bit). Add an ARC reader to get the bits, Tika to get the text and Summa to get large-scale index and faceting. We mixed it up and we will show what happened.
 
'''Talk Title:'''
'''Speaker name(s), affiliation(s), and email address(es):'''
 
 
'''Abstract of no more than 500 words:'''
 
Place your submission at the bottom of the page below this line:
 
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'''Talk Title:'''
 
JeromeDL - an open source social semantic digital library
'''Speaker name(s), affiliation(s), and email address(es):'''
 
* Sebastian Ryszard Kruk, Knowledge Hives, sebastian.kruk@knowledgehives.com
* Jodi Schneider, DERI NUI Galway, jodi.schneider@deri.org
 
 
'''Abstract of no more than 500 words:'''
 
We will tell about the idea of binding together semantics coming from two sources: legacy, well-crafted annotations provided by librarians, and less organized/structured annotations provided by the community of library users. We will present JeromeDL system that enables users to provide and manage such annotations; it also implements a number of information discovery solutions that utilize these combined annotations, including collaborative browsing, natural language query templates and collaborative filtering. We will also talk about a vocabulary service used by JeromeDL that encourages users to provide more meaningful annotations than just tags. Finally, we will show how JeromeDL-based libraries contribute to the Web 3.0 linked data by utilizing standard vocabularies, such as SIOC, FOAF, and WordNet, and publishing RDF description of library content.
 
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Anonymous user

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