Re: [Use Cases] Bibliographic Tagging

Thanks, Rob! I'll be putting these on the wiki and referencing your post
here (as Paolo did with Ray's submissions).

Additionally, everyone should feel free to add things even this "brief" to
the Use Cases page (following the table + tagging pattern ideally), and
Paolo or I (or you! ;) ) can remix them into user stories as a follow-up.

Thanks again, Rob!
Benjamin

On Wed, Dec 17, 2014 at 1:55 PM, Robert Sanderson <azaroth42@gmail.com>
wrote:
>
>
> Very quick user stories for tagging/annotating of books in a library, that
> are summaries of much longer versions (can be supplied if it would be
> useful)
>
> 1. Classify a Work with a simple tag.
> Anna tags a book with "tech" meaning that it is a technical manual
>
> 2. Classify a Work with a controlled string.
> Ben tags a book with "technical manual" from a dropdown list of strings
>
> 3. Classify a Work with a controlled URI.
> Catherine tags a book with what she sees as "technical manual" from a list
> of dropdown strings, but in the background creates a semantic tag using a
> URI from an authority list
>
> 4. Provide additional description of a Work.
> Don adds a paragraph worth of text about a book that he knows well, but
> lacks significant description or review in the discovery system.
>
> 5. Provide additional description of a Work, using external resources.
> Elaine tags a work with an external image of its cover.
>
> 6. Create a simple collection of Works.
> Frank tags 10 works with the same string, and then wants to see the list
> of those tagged resources.
>
> 7. Create a permanent collection by first tagging the Works to be part of
> the collection, and then triggering the collection creation process.
> Ginny tags 15 Works towards a curated exhibit. She then goes to an admin
> interface and selects the tag she used, and the system creates a permanent
> URI for her collection and allows her to provide additional description,
> order the items within it, and so forth. [NB collection creation out of
> scope, but including for reference]
>
> 8. Update a permanent collection by first tagging the Works to be part of
> the collection, and then triggering the collection update process.
> Harry is updating a reading list for his class.  He tags another 5 Works
> to be added to it. He then goes to an admin interface and selects the tag
> he used, and the reading list to be updated. The system adds those works to
> the existing collection, and allows him to provide additional description,
> reorder the items, and so forth.  He then has the system delete the tags it
> just processed. [Ditto]
>
> 9. Update a collection by tagging another collection to become part of it.
> Ingrid tags 2 collections of maps to be part of a larger super-collection
> of map images. She then goes to the admin interface, as previous use cases.
> [Ditto]
>
> 10. Discover resources through tags (browse).
> Jon sees a tag on a resource that he is interested in and clicks on the
> tag.  He is taken to the list of all resources that have that tag.
>
> 11. Discover resources through tags (search).
> Kelly does a search for "technical manual" and the result list is
> sub-sorted to boost resources tagged as technical manuals.
>
> 12. Filter resources through tags (facet).
> Liam does a search that returns too many results.  Some of the resources
> have tags and he filters the list based on the desired tags in the facet
> list.
>
>
> Rob
>
> --
> Rob Sanderson
> Information Standards Advocate
> Digital Library Systems and Services
> Stanford, CA 94305
>

Received on Wednesday, 17 December 2014 21:31:04 UTC