Re: Linked Open Data Around-The-Clock news

Michael--

Sounds like a good idea.  Perhaps you and I can follow up to discuss how
to put it on the agenda.

--Jeanne

**********************************************************
Jeanne Holm
Evangelist, Data.gov
U.S. General Services Administration
Cell: (818) 434-5037
Twitter/Facebook/LinkedIn: JeanneHolm
**********************************************************




On 9/9/11 9:02 AM, "Michael Hausenblas" <michael.hausenblas@deri.org>
wrote:

>
>Gannon,
>
>Thanks for your feedback. As usual, very interesting! I'll have a
>deeper look into it and maybe we can follow-up on the eGov IG meetings?
>
>Cheers,
>	Michael
>--
>Dr. Michael Hausenblas, Research Fellow
>LiDRC - Linked Data Research Centre
>DERI - Digital Enterprise Research Institute
>NUIG - National University of Ireland, Galway
>Ireland, Europe
>Tel. +353 91 495730
>http://linkeddata.deri.ie/
>http://sw-app.org/about.html
>
>On 9 Sep 2011, at 16:19, Gannon Dick wrote:
>
>> Hi Michael,
>>
>> Thank you for using a lower-case "n".  My first thought was "Oh
>> {expletive deleted}, here we go again!", but the "n" made me click.
>> Around-The-Clock News (and Weather && Community Culture) are
>> something entirely different Around-The-Clock data[1,2].  An always-
>> on/off "user" schedule assumption works for appliances, but a
>> cadastral map, even coarse grained, is necessary to prevent
>> encroachment on the personal privacy of human users. A reference
>> from the GPS on an appliance to a cadastral map renders anonymous
>> the "location" of a human appliance user. Also known as "hide in
>> plain sight" :o)
>>
>> INSPIRE Spatial Things, Spatial Objects, and Theme=CP (Cadastral
>> parcels
>> ) help quite a bit.  The US Library of Congress Country URI (Spatial
>> Things) and Geographic Area URI (Spatial Objects) help too, although
>> a PURL[3] could be used to reconcile LOC-ID and INSPIRE URI formats.
>>
>> The complete data sets, unfortunately, are very big.  An LDAP
>> "Address Book" tool to hold map fragments off-line is a good idea.
>> I have US and Australian Weather Stations as a test case in an
>> OpenOffice DB. It's a slow monstrosity and hard to move.  The
>> extracts (with links) are a bit better, but still large files.
>>
>> --Gannon
>>
>>
>> [1] "Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human
>> Condition Have Failed"
>> http://yalepress.yale.edu/book.asp?isbn=9780300078152
>> [2] "The Latitude Effect"
>> http://tinyurl.com/white-nights-forever
>> [3] PURL Home Page
>> http://purl.org/docs/index.html
>>
>> --- On Fri, 9/9/11, Michael Hausenblas <michael.hausenblas@deri.org>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> From: Michael Hausenblas <michael.hausenblas@deri.org>
>>> Subject: Linked Open Data Around-The-Clock news
>>> To: "Linked Data community" <public-lod@w3.org>
>>> Date: Friday, September 9, 2011, 7:20 AM
>>>
>>> All,
>>>
>>>
>>> FYI: we have re-launched the LATC (Linked Open Data
>>> Around-The-Clock) project homepage [1]. Check out the freely
>>> available reports on best practices for Linked Data
>>> publishing and consuming, the Publication & Consumption
>>> Tools Library and the 24/7 Interlinking Platform.
>>>
>>> Note that our ongoing work, sponsored by the EC under the
>>> FP7 Programme, is available via the project's repository
>>> [2].
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>>     Michael - LATC co-ordinator
>>>
>>> [1] http://latc-project.eu/
>>> [2] https://github.com/LATC
>>> --
>>> Dr. Michael Hausenblas, Research Fellow
>>> LiDRC - Linked Data Research Centre
>>> DERI - Digital Enterprise Research Institute
>>> NUIG - National University of Ireland, Galway
>>> Ireland, Europe
>>> Tel. +353 91 495730
>>> http://linkeddata.deri.ie/
>>> http://sw-app.org/about.html
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
>

Received on Friday, 9 September 2011 16:08:58 UTC