Re: Imperative sub titles

Annette has been doing so. I'm now looking - it's still the middle of 
the night in California.



On 29/04/2016 12:33, Bernadette Farias Lóscio wrote:
> Hi Phil,
>
> Thanks a lot for your contributions!
>
> I just saw more updates on the table :) and I'm curious to know if you or
> Annette did the updates.
>
> Cheers,
> Berna
>
> 2016-04-25 13:47 GMT-03:00 Phil Archer <phila@w3.org>:
>
>> I took an action last week to provide slightly reworded subtitles for BPs
>> 1-19. I offer the following.
>>
>> However, I note that several of these are simple restatements of the title
>> and therefore add nothing. In my view, they could be omitted altogether.
>> These are marked with an asterisk.
>>
>> I can easily bash out the remaining ones and am happy to do so but I;m
>> interested to see whether others (I'm thinking of Annette) agrees with my
>> formulations.
>>
>>
>> 1. Provide metadata
>>
>> Provide metadata for both human users and computer applications.
>>
>>
>> 2. Provide descriptive metadata
>>
>> Provide metadata describing the overall features of datasets and
>> distributions.
>>
>>
>> 3. Provide locale parameters metadata
>>
>> Provide metadata describing the locale parameters (date, time, and number
>> formats, language)
>>
>>
>> 4. Provide structural metadata
>>
>> Provide metadata describing the internal structure of a distribution and
>> the schema(s) used.
>>
>> 5. Provide data license information
>>
>> Link to a license or provide license information directly.
>>
>> 6. Provide data provenance information
>>
>> Provide metadata describing the provenance of the data.*
>>
>> 7. Provide data quality information
>>
>> Describe the quality of the data.*
>>
>> 8. Provide a version indicator
>>
>> Indicate the version number or date for each dataset.*
>>
>> 9. Provide version history
>>
>> Describe the change history of the data.
>>
>> 10. Use persistent URIs as identifiers of datasets.*
>>
>> Assign persistent URIs to datasets.
>>
>>
>> 11.  Use persistent URIs as identifiers within datasets
>>
>> Where possible, reuse other people's URIs as identifiers for elements
>> within datasets, assign your own if necessary.
>>
>> 12. Assign URIs to dataset versions and series
>>
>> Assign URIs to individual versions of datasets as well as the overall
>> series.*
>>
>> 13. Use machine-readable standardized data formats
>>
>> Make data available in a machine-readable standardized format that is
>> adequate for reuse by others.
>>
>> 14. Provide data in multiple formats
>>
>> Provide data in more than one format*
>>
>> 15. Use standardized terms
>>
>> Use standardized terms when providing data and metadata.*
>>
>> 16. Reuse vocabularies
>>
>> Reuse shared vocabularies to encode data and metadata.*
>>
>> 17. Choose the right formalization level
>>
>> When reusing a vocabulary, opt for a level of formal semantics that fits
>> both data and applications.
>>
>> 18. Provide an explanation for data that is not available
>>
>> Where data is referred to that is not open, or is available under
>> different restrictions to the origin of the reference, provide an
>> explanation about how the referred to data can be accessed and who can
>> access it.
>>
>> 19. Provide bulk download
>>
>> Provide a means through which the entire dataset can be downloaded for
>> local processing.
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>>
>>
>> Phil Archer
>> W3C Data Activity Lead
>> http://www.w3.org/2013/data/
>>
>> http://philarcher.org
>> +44 (0)7887 767755
>> @philarcher1
>>
>>
>
>

-- 


Phil Archer
W3C Data Activity Lead
http://www.w3.org/2013/data/

http://philarcher.org
+44 (0)7887 767755
@philarcher1

Received on Friday, 29 April 2016 11:36:54 UTC