- From: Antoine Isaac <aisaac@few.vu.nl>
- Date: Fri, 17 Dec 2010 10:12:27 +0100
- To: Jodi Schneider <jodi.schneider@deri.org>
- CC: "gordon@gordondunsire.com" <gordon@gordondunsire.com>, public-xg-lld <public-xg-lld@w3.org>
Hi Jodi, > I think this leaves the first use case to be written, hopefully by someone besides Gordon& me: >>> * Link Social Bibliography to a Bibliographic Network Is it about scenarios à la Mendeley? That is surely really important for us. I've have hoped for your action co-owner to jump in on that one, given his "social" expertise :-) > [NEW] ACTION: Uldis and Jodi to create social uses cluster [recorded > in [31]http://www.w3.org/2010/12/16-lld-minutes.html#action03] But of course we're not here to assign work in such an impolite way! As a matter of fact I've tried myself to find if there was stuff about libraries and books in the Social Web XG report [1]. But apart from one quick mention to a scenario for sharing book reviews, I did not find anything. Cheers, Antoine [1] http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/socialweb/XGR-socialweb-20101206/ > > -Jodi > > On 16 Dec 2010, at 20:54, gordon@gordondunsire.com wrote: > >> Jodi >> >> The second of these (closest collection) should be folded into Library Address Data use case, which is not clustered. This is part of the general area of collection-level description which I think will intersect with high-level provenance issues and (low-level) individual real-world objects (aka circulation control), in an LLD context. It also intersects, as you suggest in the third of your proposed use-cases, with the general area of availability/access. Access restrictions tend to be at the collection level (opening hours, loan period, intermediation tool required for format, licenses, user ability, etc.). >> >> The specific issue of finding digital manifestations is already covered by the Open Library Data use case, part of the Bibliographic Data cluster. >> >> Perhaps we could cluster your second and third proposed use cases with the submitted Library Address Data use case, and focus on availability/access at the collection level? I'd be happy to collaborate ... >> >> But not until the new year! >> >> Cheers >> >> Gordon >> >> >> On 16 December 2010 at 16:14 Jodi Schneider<jodi.schneider@deri.org> wrote: >> >>> I see the need for these 3 use cases: >>> >>> * Link Social Bibliography to a Bibliographic Network >>> * Find materials in the closest physical collection (may include library and non-library collections) >>> * Find e-books or other digital materials, according to access restrictions (e.g. free, available in my geographic locale, etc) >>> >>> Would anyone like to collaborate on writing these use cases? Or can you suggest other groups that we might might write them? >>> >>> -Jodi >>> >>> On 11 Nov 2010, at 17:32, Antoine Isaac wrote: >>> >>>> Hi Jodi, >>>> >>>> Thanks. So you think that these items should definitely covered by more use cases? I was actually not sure that this was the case... Perhaps we have in fact already some cases for them, I just did not have the time to dive into what they were describing. >>>> >>>> Cheers, >>>> >>>> Antoine >>>> >>>> >>>>> I added 4 items to the 'things that should be covered by use cases' from >>>>> http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/index.php?title=UseCaseNotes&oldid=2128<http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/index.php?title=UseCaseNotes&oldid=2128> >>>>> >>>>> * *Link Social Bibliography to a Bibliographic Network*. Link reviews, tags, lists, cover art to a work. /This seems like a variation on the enrich a record use case./ >>>>> * *Find stuff in several collections*.Searching a specific set of library and non-library collections--for instance to find a given book or DVD, or get access to an article. I'm thinking about this first as a local area search with a specific set of libraries--but then also as a 'travel' awareness search (for the harder-to-find things I'm willing to go out of my way to find, while travelling). I'd love, for instance, a mashup between TripIt/Dopplr, my calendar of availability, and my LibraryThing wishlist -- alerting me to possibilities to use items I can't get locally when I have a free day out-of-town. Jodi Schneider<http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/User:Jschneid4> 13:48, 30 June 2010 (UTC) /It seems that we don't have any such far-stretching case. Or this item rather calling for enabling mesh-ups, not doing them? (Antoine)/ >>>>> * *Find e-books* see http://efoundations.typepad.com/efoundations/2010/07/finding-ebooks.html >>>>> * archives and linked data, knitting together multiple identifiers<http://inkdroid.org/journal/2010/08/12/archival-context-on-the-web/> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I can expand with more detail if it's helpful. >>>>> >>>>> -Jodi >>>>> >>>>> On 11 Nov 2010, at 10:38, Antoine Isaac wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Dear all, >>>>>> >>>>>> I've started some clean-up of http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/UseCaseNotes >>>>>> hoping that pretty soon we could just remove it from [1], as part of an attempt to have [2] as only one list of things that should motivate our searching for new cases. >>>>>> >>>>>> It's not yet dead, though. Feedback is welcome from these who created the non-deleted items: please declare them as dead of move them to [2]! We could discuss them in a next call whether we're interested enough to include them in the list we agreed upon at the F2F... >>>>>> >>>>>> Cheers, >>>>>> >>>>>> Antoine >>>>>> >>>>>> [1]http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/UseCases#Related_topics.2C_are_these_covered_yet.3F >>>>>> [2] http://www.w3.org/2005/Incubator/lld/wiki/F2F_Pittsburgh_Outcomes#Things_that_should_be_covered_by_use_cases >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> >
Received on Friday, 17 December 2010 09:11:31 UTC