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It’s not quite so obvious (#3) | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/2012/08/17/its-not-quite-so-obvious-3
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. It’s not quite so obvious (#3). Posted by Shaun Osborne. On August 17, 2012. Part 3 – Putting it all together. Let’s start with a picture:. JISC Open Book Block Diagram. This is a block diagram of what the ‘Open Book’ project has deployed. Some brief explanations:. Blue represents existing infrastructure/services, orange represents new ‘project’ infrastructure/services. I don’t think its too m...
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February | 2012 | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/2012/02
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. Monthly Archives: February 2012. Posted by Shaun Osborne. On February 29, 2012. The project team met again on the 22nd of February at the Natural History Museum. The main task of this meeting was to discuss and clarify an all partners understanding of the deliverables. Useful discussions also took place regarding data modelling, architecture and understanding any linkages with Contextual Wrappers #2.
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August | 2012 | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/2012/08
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. Monthly Archives: August 2012. On August 31, 2012. Release of open data. Including guidance for the reuse of this metadata, for more than 175,000 item records of the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum. This is made available via an open data service. At: http:/ data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/. The data is made available in the following ways:. Open data permanent URI identifiers. Learning technical les...
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Project Plan | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/project-plan
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. OPEN BOOK JISC 16/11 Project. Aims, Objectives and Final Output(s) of the project. The overall aim of the project is to release open metadata for the Fitzwilliam Museum’s Designated Collection (over 150,000 records), enhancing existing OAI-PMH provision (using RDF) as well as making the data available using open data technologies as advocated by the JISC Discovery programme. Release of open data for...
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JISC - Open Book Project | releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research… | Page 2
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/page/2
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. Posted by Shaun Osborne. On February 29, 2012. The project team met again on the 22nd of February at the Natural History Museum. The main task of this meeting was to discuss and clarify an all partners understanding of the deliverables. Useful discussions also took place regarding data modelling, architecture and understanding any linkages with Contextual Wrappers #2. Posted by Shaun Osborne.
jiscopenbook.wordpress.com
djs94 | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/author/ds1000
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. On August 31, 2012. Release of open data. Including guidance for the reuse of this metadata, for more than 175,000 item records of the collection of the Fitzwilliam Museum. This is made available via an open data service. At: http:/ data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/. The data is made available in the following ways:. Open data permanent URI identifiers. Using RDF and mapped to the CIDOC-CRM. Learning techn...
jiscopenbook.wordpress.com
Shaun Osborne | JISC - Open Book Project
https://jiscopenbook.wordpress.com/author/smo30
JISC – Open Book Project. Releasing open data for illuminated manuscript collection records and research…. Modelling: ‘Sets’ and ‘Contexts’. Posted by Shaun Osborne. On August 31, 2012. The Knowledge Integration’s. Collections Information Integration Middleware. This is because there are primarily three type of ‘data connections’ one might want to do in middleware:. Augment existing object records (with related but different information);. Create new data sets possibly without any object record linkage.