- From: Krzysztof Janowicz <janowicz@ucsb.edu>
- Date: Mon, 26 May 2014 11:21:27 -0700
- To: Raphaël Troncy <raphael.troncy@eurecom.fr>, <public-locadd@w3.org>
- CC: Pascal Hitzler <pascal.hitzler@wright.edu>, Ben Adams <adams@nceas.ucsb.edu>, Karl Grossner <karlg@stanford.edu>
Hi Raphael, Karl posted the link and will add a full version there. This is a very informal paper as intro chapter to Linked Data for the digital humanities community but it has a nice discussion on why and why not to separate space and time. The OWL axiomatization of the settings paper was developed at the Geo-Vocamp together with a neat little map legend pattern and both will be ready for review within a few weeks from now. We will post the links here as soon as we can and hope they will be helpful. Let me use this chance to also advertise our ontology design patterns call at SWJ: http://www.semantic-web-journal.net/blog/special-call-ontology-design-pattern-descriptions All the best, Krzysztof On 05/24/2014 11:35 PM, Raphaël Troncy wrote: > Dear Krzysztof, > >> If you are interested in a tight integration of space and time, we are >> currently working on a so-called 'settings' ontology design pattern that >> does exactly that. It was developed during the last Geo-VoCamp in Santa >> Barbara in March 2014. We also have a more informal piece about this >> that is currently under review (I am cc-ing Karl Grossner in case he >> wants to share the draft) > > Are you saying that this work is being currently peer-reviewed? I would > definitively be interested in reading the draft and/or the summary of > the March Geo-VoCamp (any pointers?) but I understand you might not be > able to share it just right now. > Best regards. > > Raphaël > -- Krzysztof Janowicz Geography Department, University of California, Santa Barbara 5806 Ellison Hall, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-4060 Email: jano@geog.ucsb.edu Webpage: http://geog.ucsb.edu/~jano/ Semantic Web Journal: http://www.semantic-web-journal.net
Received on Monday, 26 May 2014 18:22:21 UTC