- From: Bob Morris <morris.bob@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 14:26:11 -0500
- To: Robert Sanderson <azaroth42@gmail.com>
- Cc: Stian Soiland-Reyes <soiland-reyes@cs.manchester.ac.uk>, public-openannotation <public-openannotation@w3.org>
We have been experimenting with modeling annotation "conversations" with BOM, the Bug Ontology Model http://notes.3kbo.com/bom. Although we are not presently up to date as to either BOM or OA, current versions probably would be easy to use. An example of a response part of a conversation is at http://bit.ly/VREKK0 but take care: (a)It's a link into our SVN repo, so a moving target; (b) it illustrates a response to an imaginary annotation locally named theOther:Annotation_0 that is asserted to be a bom:Issue against which an issue resolution of type bom:WontFix is asserted;(c)many of the namespace URLs might not be useful; (d)there may be better "issue tracker" ontologies out there, but the same kind of use should apply; Also, perhaps somewhat incidental to the general problem, we make a small use of an opinion ontology http://www.gi2mo.org/marl/0.1/ns.html If the advantages claimed for JSON-LD OA serialization are correct, I expect to see a complete semantic OA discussion client-side web app offered tomorrow based on BOM. Rob and Paolo will especially like bom:Won'tFix. :-) Bob Morris On Mon, Jan 28, 2013 at 2:00 PM, Robert Sanderson <azaroth42@gmail.com> wrote: > On Sun, Jan 27, 2013 at 7:35 PM, Stian Soiland-Reyes > <soiland-reyes@cs.manchester.ac.uk> wrote: > >> BTW - which of the annotation tools could be good for doing exactly >> this kind of email and review? :) > > Indeed! We should eat our own dogfood as soon as possible :) > As Laela says, it's hard to even track the discussions without > spending a lot of time on it. That does mean that there are valuable > and informed discussions going on though, which is hugely important > and a good sign that things are going well. > -- Robert A. Morris Emeritus Professor of Computer Science UMASS-Boston 100 Morrissey Blvd Boston, MA 02125-3390 IT Staff Filtered Push Project Harvard University Herbaria Harvard University email: morris.bob@gmail.com web: http://efg.cs.umb.edu/ web: http://wiki.filteredpush.org http://www.cs.umb.edu/~ram === The content of this communication is made entirely on my own behalf and in no way should be deemed to express official positions of The University of Massachusetts at Boston or Harvard University.
Received on Tuesday, 29 January 2013 19:26:39 UTC